Hello, hi, salutations! Iâm Gtypewriter, I write G/t shorts and stories (And yes, the shorts are written on an actual typewriter). I started out on DA but decided to expand onto tumblr, soooo here we are.
Art for the header image and this one done by @dreamerart7ââ
Character list and descriptionsâ
I do commissions as well, commission sheet listed hereÂ
Master list:
Avian Duality (Characters belonging to @smoll-staceâ). A story of two species of Avians at constant war:
The Hammer and The Scalpel. A Private Military Company collects a batch of borrowers to utilize as assets, maintaining a deal to keep borrowers hidden from the modern world:
Juno and Stanley. An all powerful entity falls for a lonely human, what could possibly go wrong:
In which the stars waved back, Friendship, Cosmic, Comfort, Trinkets, A Little Chat, Ad Initium, Closure, Same Old Same Old, Dusted Memories, Endâs Mercy, Iterum, De Novo, Captivate, Sight for sore eyes, Ghost, Eight Maids,Â
Ava and Theo. Fantasy. Yeah thatâs it:
What now, Understanding, Forced Rest, Thunderstorm,Â
Zeyan and Cas. The front of a galactic war is brought upon earth:
Caught in a Crossfire, Beach, Free Space, Hush, Bait, Six Geese ,Rendezvous Pt 1 ,Rendezvous Pt 2
Serif and Warren. Bastard mer terrorizes sailor:
Deadly Tides, Different Era, Mer People,Â
Erik, Liam, and Dr. Brenner. SIze shifter breaks out of government facility, shenanigans ensue:
Size shifting, Hand Held,Â
Reace and his Handler. Multi size mercenary stuff (I really need to work on this):
Welcome to Simul, Labyrinth,Â
A Tale of Two Captains. Titanfall II ripoff (Trust me it is):
A Dollar More, No Quarter, Ambition, Tactic, Favor, Shell, Evaluate
Gifts/Requests. Stuff Iâve written for people, usually being @smoll-staceâ @dreamerart7â:
A little surprise, Hold me, For you... Darling, Shelter, Migraine Solutions, Dance Under Siege, 3am Shenanagans, Wakey Wakey, Breathe, Dealâs changed, I Was Bored, Rain Serenade, Creature, Snacks, Hide, Mini Giant, Redraw, Exhausted, Gt Prom, Candy, Fan Art, Hat Day 2022, The Ultimate Move, Besieged Villa, Intruder, Better, Weâre Even, Last Minute, The Hunterâs Remorse, Intervention, Defining Winter, Quick Bite, All Nighter, H.A.T Nearly, Closer, Mirror, Forlorn, Spice, Nuzzle, Sunrise, Linger, Solitude, Delight, Journey, Deadline, Chills, Downtown Scuffle, A Town Without Pity,Â
Other Stuff I canât really categorize:Â
Alright so borrowers as pest control is nothing new, so can we get humans as pest control for giants, hunting down giant bugs using a car that's got a fifty cal duct taped on the hood and with spikes all over the body
The first of 20, to be posted everyday until the conclusion to the first arc.
CW: Death
The sounds of gunfire and yells had oddly been drowned out to low consistent hum as a young soldier sat against a concrete barrier in the middle of an intersection, belonging to a city being torn apart. His hands tightly gripped his assault rifle as he stared at the body next to him. Their neck had a wide gash on its side, a fatal wound. It was the squad captain. âFuckâ The soldier thought to himself.
âGET DOWN, C.A.S DANGER CLOSE!â At the warning from another soldier to his left, it all came back in a wave of sound that flinched him back to reality. Hordes of creatures, definitely not any he'd recognize, approaching their position and eager to turn them and any human they saw into multiple pieces. With a grunt, he threw himself down to the ground just as he heard the roar of approaching jet engines.
A shockwave blew over them as the jet roared atop the streets and released its payload. Hundreds of rounds from its main gun, the sound akin to thunder striking every half second, followed by two ground shaking explosions from dropped ordinance. âGood hits but thereâs still more coming!â The other soldier said, quickly scrambling to his feet. He did the same, getting up to a crouched position and bracing his rifle on top of the concrete barrier.
The street in front of them was completely cratered, littered with chunks of tarmac and the corpses of the creatures they had been sent to exterminate. The only way he could describe them was mixing animals from earth together and then mutating them beyond recognition. The most common in the city they had been deployed seemed to have a body of a leopard, and skin of a lizard. However, thatâs where the familiarities ended, and where he struggled to even begin to describe them. That wasnât his job anyways.
There were only three of them left, a machine gunner and radio operator, both of which were to his left side. Distant screeches indicated that the fight was far from over, and they readied themselves for another hoard. âHow many mags you got left?â He asked the gunner.
âJust this one.â The gunner muttered.
âTwo, and about half empty on this one.â The radio operator responded.
âGod damn it.â He murmured under his breath. The soldier was also running low, as he only had a single spare magazine. There still was the combat knife on his hip holster but he doubted its effectiveness.
In the distance, faint skittering could be heard, along with some quiet growls. âHere they come.â The gunner said, as about a dozen rounded the corner in a full tilted sprint.
The three remaining soldiers greeted the creatures with a hail controlled fire, shooting in four round bursts to maximize their dwindling resources. But no matter how many they dropped, several more would take their place. Worse still, they were starting to learn. At the beginning of the engagement the soldiers could maintain accurate shots, but now the creatures were starting to weave and duck behind ruined cars.
âLast mag!â The radio operator called out, dropping the empty magazine onto the floor.
âIâm running dry here too, canât be more than half left.â The gunner responded. To everyoneâs relief though, the hoard started to thin. It seemed to understand the message, and the still standing creatures began to retreat into the alleyways.
The soldier let out a tired sigh. He ejected his current magazine to check how many rounds he had left. Only three. âWhatâs the status of evac? We canât hold out for much longer.â
âTheyâve been saying the same damn thing over and over but Iâll try them again.â The radio operator said with a frustrated sigh. He put down the backpack containing the radio and took out the talking piece.Â
While he tried to get in touch with other units in the area, the sound of flapping wings started to cut through the air. âHoh shit!â The gunner aimed up and the other soldier followed. He froze for a second, as what appeared to be a swarm pterodactyls darting between buildings directly to their position.Â
Both of them started firing again, forgoing the conservative bursts. The radio operator stood his ground, frantically trying to concentrate through the gunshots and screeches of injured alien creatures cutting through the air. A few car alarms were added to the symphony of chaos as some of the flying carcasses dropped onto still intact vehicles.
âFuck, Iâm out!â The soldier ducked behind the concrete barrier and looked over to the radio operator. âYour last mag, give it to me!â
âHang on.â The radio operator put the talking piece aside and pulled out his last magazine from the front of his chest armor. However, just as he tossed it, one of the creatures managed to break through.
A pair of claws pierced the manâs shoulders, and within a second, he was out of his field of vision. The radio operator's screams grew faint, and the other soldier remained still. Staring at the spot where they last were. The magazine he had thrown skittered to a stop next to his boot.
âFuck this.â The gunner stood up, now mindlessly spraying into the sky at the flying creatures. âGet up! Weâre retreating, high command sent us to die-â
Just as he was about to finish, another broke through. Its beak impaled his chest, breaking clean through the armor plate and into his chest. The last standing soldiers quickly scrambled away, keeping close to the barrier as the gunner dropped his weapon. Before he could fall over, the creature positioned itself on his shoulder, and carried him away, just like the radio operator.
With the roar of beating wings getting closer, he laid down and covered his mouth. Dozens of shadows flitted by unimpeded, until the intersection was left in an ear ringing silence.
The soldier knew he had to move, but still found himself frozen in place. His head darted on a swivel, looking for any potential threats waiting for his first move. What got him to finally break out of the paranoia induced daze was faint static emanating from the radio backpack. He remembered that their operator had gotten into contact with someone, and as of the moment, it was the only step he could take to ensure that maybe, just maybe, heâd make it out of this nightmare alive.
He got on his hands, taking the magazine that was thrown to him and storing it in a slot on his chest armor. Crawling towards the device, he used the still standing barriers as cover. Once there, the soldier re-attached the mouth piece to the side and put the radio on his back.
His attention was stolen to⊠Something.
He looked around, a certain feeling settling into his stomach. Something was giving off alarm bells in his head, however none of his senses were picking it up just yet.
Then he felt it, the slightest ground tremor. He knew it wasnât from a heavy vehicle, each rumble came in a pattern. All he could determine was that it was getting closer with how they grew in intensity, and that he didnât want to stick around to find out what it was. The soldier scrambled to his feet and started running down the ruined avenue. The tremors were now accompanied with crunching tarmac, and nearby windows shattering from the earth breaking weight.
He decided to take his chances in a pharmacy to his left, knowing that outrunning the thing wouldnât be possible. The soldier bashed through the door with his shoulder and ran to the very back. He took cover behind one of the aisles and sat down against it.
Dust started to sift and fall from the ceiling as the footsteps grew closer. A few bottles of pills and over the top medication jumped off the shelves onto the floor. The next one resulted in a shockwave rushing into the ruined pharmacy. A couple of aisles fell down and several windows shattered from the impact. He bit the inside of his cheek to prevent a yelp from coming out. A bead of sweat snaked down his forehead as he realized that another step had not yet been taken. With heavy hesitation, he leaned to the side to peek out to the street.
Taking up most of the view from the windows was⊠Something. He had to blink several times and wipe the dust from his eyes to properly take in what had crushed a section of street.
The skin was a dark green, and reptilian in nature. A faint hexagonal pattern with black highlights covered the flesh and four claws dug into the surface of the road. The soldier immediately hid behind the aisle again, ragged breaths tearing through his chest as one thought ran through his head.
âWhy the fuck isnât moving past?â
He closed his eyes and pressed his head against the metallic shelf.
A harsh flinch left the soldier as the entirety of the store shook once more. He didnât dare to peek past the aisle but could assume that the creature was moving away, especially since each tremor grew fainter. Though even as his ears rang through the silence, he refused to move. Fear of how close to death he was kept the soldier chained to the floor, and the paranoia of what could be outside froze his legs.
The faint static which emanated from the radio backpack changed him back from a statue to a living person as he scooted away from the shelf. He took the device and placed it in front of him. The soldier grabbed the talking piece and twisted one of the dials, switching it to a general frequency. âHello?â He tried. âIs anybody left?â
The only response was static. The soldier kicked a shelf in front of him with a frustrated growl. âGod damn it donât tell me Iâm the only one left!â The yelling echoed throughout the store, and again, was returned with static.
He looked at the radio, waiting for a response. The grip on the talking piece loosened, and it slipped slightly in his hand. It eventually fell to the floor as he slumped back, and stared up at the partially broken ceiling.
âIâm gonna die hereâŠâ
âHello? Does anybody read me? This is-â The soldier immediately sprang back up, hands blindly looking for the microphone. It bounced a bit in his hand out of sheer panic but he got it in a firm grip before speaking.
âY-Yes?! I read you. What the hell's going on out there? I lost my squad and need immediate-â
âHold on there, take a breath for me.â He looked at the radio with narrowed eyes, close to throwing an insult and a demand on the side. However, one look at his shaking hand told him that the advice was given to him for a reason.Â
The soldier took in a deep inhale, and exhaled an unsteady breath. After he was clear, he spoke again. âPlease, I need an immediate evac. Iâve lost my entire fire team and thereâs too many of these things stalking around.â A sigh left the other voice on the line, which gave him very little confidence.
âAlright, hereâs the deal. Carrion City has been declared a total loss. These⊠Things, these creatures, whatever the hell they are, they overran the civilian evacuation sites.â The soldiers' brow furrowed.
âHow did they get through? We were holding the perimeter⊠Mostly.â He admitted the last part with a whisper.
âThe subway tunnels, one mustâve found them and the rest followed. With efforts hampered, and everyone scrambling to pull out and divert resources to neighboring cities⊠Yeah it's bad.â The voice said.
The soldier stared down at the radio for a minute, and he relaxed a bit. He scooted back towards the shelf to lean against it. âIâm gonna die here, arenât I?â He replied with a quiet tone.
âHey.â The voice firmly said. âI didnât say that. I said things are pretty shitty right now.â It clarified. âNow, I can help you get out. But youâve gotta be doing most of the legwork and listen to every word I say like its gospel. You do want out right?â
âYes, god please get me the fuck out here.â The soldier breathed.
âAlright good, then up on your feet soldier. I can only direct you, not move you.â With a deep exhale, he pushed himself up. Grabbing the radio, he slung it over his back. âBefore you go, whatâs your name?â
He ejected the empty magazine from his rifle, which hit the floor with a hollow thud. Taking the last magazine given to him by the late radio operator, he put it in and pulled back the bolt to chamber a round. âItâs Cade.â
And yet another crossover with @lorichu featuring Juno and Fran, this time with Stanley coming along. I guess you could consider this a continuation of Hijacked Routine
âHello JunoâŠâ Fran said after having caught her breath. âI didnât know you could look like that.â She commented, eyes wandering his mundane features. They then wandered to the brown haired more casually dressed person next to him. âHowâs the maiden?â
Redness developed on Stanleyâs face as Juno turned to him. âHow are you doing? Besides your legs and arms I havenât checked up on you.â
â...Maiden?â Was all he could muster. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âYou know I still donât know but it makes sense.â Juno said, his answer doing little if anything at all to answer the question. He turned towards her and glanced at the very dead and burnt cashier. âSo why exactly did you kill that minimum wage worker?â
âIs she a criminal?â Stanley whispered to him.
âNo, sheâs Fran.â Juno simply said.
She observed the short interaction, prepared very much for a routine job that would put her life on the line. Not for this again. âHesperian owns this burger chain, a chunk of their communications runs through here.âÂ
âCults can own a fast food chain?â Juno asked with a tilted head.
âHesperian owns a lot more than this fast food chain.â She responded, turning around to head back inside. There was still a job to do, and it was likely that Juno and his maiden would leave. From their reactions, they didnât know about Red Star burgers and probably stopped by for food. The two could just find somewhere else to eat.
Pulling out her phone, Fran entered the kitchen and began scrolling through the intelligence report she had gotten from an abandoned Cydonian cell. Apparently, a lot of Hesperian services and online traffic were routed through this particular rest stop. This would require equipment, equipment that certainly wouldnât fit in a fast food kitchen. While checking for additional details, Fran bumped into someone.
She nearly drew her pistol but froze upon hearing a familiar voice. âOop, sorry.â Juno moved aside to allow her through.
âWhereâs the fridge?â Stanley called out from the other side of the kitchen.
âWha- What are you two still doing here?â Fran asked with confusion and a sliver of annoyance.
âWe didnât get our food, you killed the guy who was going to make it.â Juno stated. âDo you know where the fridge might be?â
âYou canât just magic a burger out of thin air?â She asked.
âI could do that, but Stanley has been wanting me to do stuff the human way. So⊠Thatâs off limits.â He said with a sheepish smile. âBesides, this is fun?â
She stared at him before giving an exasperated groan and looking around before pointing at a large steel door. Juno disappeared from her sight completely, though no flinch left Fran. It wasnât exactly anything new for her. âFound it!â A muffled voice sounded as Stanley made his way over to join him. While the space dragon and its maiden went about preparing their food, she continued on with her mission.
Fran headed to the back door to check if the equipment was stashed outside, but there was only another car and a dumpster waiting at the back. She went back in, thinking that there mustâve been a hidden entrance. Maybe a clue as to where it was kept.
She started at the rear portion of the kitchen, as the other part was currently being used. Judging by the frantic tone of Juno as the sound of pots and pans falling over echoed through the kitchen, Fran surmised it couldâve been going better.
While trying to move one of the tables, she looked up seeing Stanley approach. âDo you need help with that?â He asked, offering a cautious smile.
âI donât think youâd want to be involved with what I do.â Fran said, managing to move the table an inch.
âHonestly, out of all the things Iâve been involved with because of Juno. This is pretty tame.â He said, moving to sit on the adjacent table.Â
She paused, looking up at him. This was fairly tame to her too, not only because of how long this fight against Hesperian involved her. But of recent events having come across and having to deal with a dragon. Stanley, as far as she was concerned, was a civilian. Then again, a civilian seemingly in a relationship with a cosmic entity of unknown power.
âAlright.â Fran relented. âHelp me with this table.â
Stanley hopped off and crouched down on the opposite end. On a silent countdown, they both moved the steel table. Which only revealed more tiled floor. âSo how did you two meet anyway?â She asked, moving on to the next table.
âThatâs a fun story.â Stanley said with a small smile. âI was out camping near where I live. I had a few days off but all I really did was sit around and do some errands. I wanted to do something that day so I figured star gazing might be fun.â He moved to the opposite end of the table, gripping the underside as Fran did. âBought a cheap telescope and just looked up. Didnât really know what I was doing.âÂ
He took a breath and Fran took that as the cue to start moving. Both of them lifted up, and moved the table back. This revealed yet more floor tile. âAt some point, I saw a constellation that kind of looked like an eye.â She stood up, looking around to see potential hiding spots and glossing over the colored flames emanating from Junoâs side of the kitchen. âTurns out, it was his eye.â
Fran paused her thoughts, turning to Stanley. âWhat do you mean it was his eye?â
âIt blinked, and then it was more than an eye, it was a whole face and before I knew it he was right behind me.â A soft chuckle emanated from him. âGod he was so smug about it.â
While she did find the story endearing, a question took priority. âSo was Juno just really close to the telescope in his⊠I guess space body. Or was he actually the stars?â
Stanley took a moment, with a thoughtful hum sounding from him. âI actually donât know. I wouldnât be surprised if he was the actual constellation.â
She stared at him slightly disturbed before continuing. âI assume the rest is history then?â
âFor him, a very long one.â Stanleyâs statement drew a furrowed brow from her, as it wasnât exactly what she expected as an answer. Nor was its meaning readily apparent. For now, she decided to leave it alone. âWhat about a hidden hatch? Like in the movies, under a carpet or something.â
That on the other hand got her looking again. The kitchen didnât seem to have any mats or coverings that would fit Stanleyâs description, though she figured that the walk-in fridge might have what they were looking for. Fran silently walked over to the steel door, with the maiden in tow.
She opened the door and looked down. There was indeed a large black non-slip mat covering most of the ground. Kicking up the edge and shoving it forward revealed the hatch that she was looking for. âThese definitely arenât standard in restaurants.â Pulling up the handle, she had eyes on the staircase leading into a dark hallway. The lights slowly flicked on, illuminating a path forward.
âThatâs definitely not ominous.â Stanley said under his breath.
Fran didnât respond, only descending the stairs. He followed behind, ignoring the shower of colorful flames and sparks emanating from the grill area.
They both slowly went down the hallway, which opened up to a small hub. The open area led to three separate rooms. âSo what exactly are you looking for?â He asked.
âServers, computer screens. Something that looks important.â She replied, taking the left side door first.
Inside was a small armory, with a variety of guns lining the walls. A crate of different types of ammunition sat in the center. The room would be important but that was for later, and she closed the door to check the center one.
A bed and other living accommodations implied it to simply be a personal quarters for whoever manned the restaurant. Less important than the armory.
The door to the right finally revealed what she was looking for. A tight closet like space with the walls composed of server machinery and a desk with a computer sitting on top. There was a pair of headphones and a filing cabinet underneath.Â
She got to work immediately, opening up one of the panels. This was practiced, nearly automatic. From there, Franâs thoughts started to wander away from the mission at hand. âHey Stanley, could I ask you about Juno?â
He had taken a seat in the office chair in front of the computer, turning his head over at her. âUh sure. What is it?â
Fran took out a USB and plugged it into the server. âJuno is immortal, right?â
âPretty sure he is, I mean heâs been around since the universe started.â Stanley responded, idly spinning in the chair.
She crouched, waiting for the stored malware to upload. âIf thatâs the case, how do you two deal with that?â
Stanley was quiet for a moment, putting a foot down to stop spinning. âWhat do you mean by that?â Fran nearly explained though stopped herself, realizing how personal her inquiry was. A sad smile formed on his face. âItâs just something weâve accepted.â He quietly said. âIt wasn't easy, actually it nearly ended things.â
Fran moved to sit down on the ground. âIf you donât mind me asking, how did it work out?â She asked.
âI guess we were both afraid.â Stanley murmured, with him leaning forward to rest his arms on his legs. âI had found someone who really cared about me, and I didnât feel out of place. But moving forward would mean that in the end, itâll hurt him. And that would be on me. And Juno of course was afraid for his own reasons. I just⊠I just didnât want to be selfish. But I didnât wanna lose him either.âÂ
Even as the USB blinked green, she paid it no mind. âI think we both agreed that it would be worth it. And⊠I have something thought out for when I go.â
Having finally noticed that the USB had done its job, evident by the series of lights and alerts on the servers, Fran pulled it out. âIâm sorry, I shouldnât have pried.â
âItâs okay.â Stanley said with a quiet chuckle. âSomething tells me you needed it. Most people I imagine wouldâve asked about the adventures and what all Juno can do. But you were after something very specific.â He watched as she stood up, checking the machinery as it began to loudly hum. âI hope my answer helps in some way.â
Fran paused, letting out a sigh. âMe too.â She muttered. âYou should go, these servers will melt down soon. I just need to grab something.â
He nodded and stood from the rolling chair, setting it aside before disappearing around the corner towards the hallway. She also left the room, though headed to the armory instead. The malware would not have gone unnoticed, and a silenced pistol was at its optimal when the user was unnoticed and had the element of surprise. This time she wouldnât have such advantages.
All of the weapons save for one were ignored, the lever action rifle with its silver barrel and dark brown wooden handle. Fran grabbed it from the rack as if pulling a coat from a hanger along with several handfuls of bullets which she stuffed into her pockets. Keeping eight in her hand, she slid them into the feed located on the side, inserting them like coins into a vending machine. Fran then gripped the lever and pushed downwards, racking a round.
Now fully armed, she went back upstairs. Being sure to keep the hatch open in order to let the flames from the soon to be burning servers a chance to jump up to the store and burn it down as well.
Upon exiting the walk in fridge, she could already hear the sounds of trucks and other cars pulling in. Fran guessed they werenât there for the burgers. And as expected, Juno was completely oblivious to the oncoming storm she was to face. Colorful flames still danced across the grill and Stanley was scolding the cosmic entity for the unorthodox cooking method.Â
A faint smile pulled at her lips, which quickly vanished as she looked away towards the door. Towards a job that never seemed to be finished no matter how many times she slashed a knife, fired a gun, or dropped another body.
Fran stepped past the door and took cover behind a booth. The grip on the handle and barrel tightened as the footsteps drew closer, and she steeled her breath.
The moment right before she would've popped out to fire, Fran realized that the only thing audible now was her breathing. There were no footsteps, just idling engines outside and the faint bickering still emanating from the kitchen.
With a heavy amount of hesitation, she peaked up from the booth. Fran was greeted with an empty parking lot containing her car and the one the two had ridden in. There wasnât a single trace of Hesperian anywhere. She was stuck staring at the scene, wondering if she was even awake at the moment.
Her focus was broken when Stanley and Juno exited from the back. The human was holding two to-go bags and a cup of coffee. âHey Fran, weâre heading out.â He greeted casually, walking past. âIt was nice talking to you.â Stanley shot her a small smile. She was only able to respond with a half wave and a face unsure of what expression to display.
Stanley exited the establishment but Juno stuck around, standing next to her. â...Did you kill them?â She whispered.
âKill them? No.â He responded with an offended scoff. âTheyâre just somewhere else. Sent a few to Nepal.â
â...Nepal?â She looked at him with brows contorted in exasperation.
Juno simply shrugged. âI doubt theyâll cause much trouble when dispersed into countries where English isnât the primary language.â An amused smile tugged at his lips. âThatâll be a fun puzzle, getting back home.â
Her grip on the rifle had loosened, but she still kept it in hand. âI didnât think youâd interfere, considering last time.â
âWell last time I didnât know you were up against cultists bent on ending the world.â He replied. âAnd⊠You seemed tired.â
Fran switched the safety off, and though she didnât need it, she slung the weapon over her shoulder. The weapon settled into position, like it was meant to be there. Like it was a part of her. âWhat do you mean by that?â She asked with a flat tone.
Juno shot her a sad smile, not directly answering. âYou should join us in town. You could probably use a break.â
âMy work isnât done yet.â She simply said, moving past him towards the door. âMaybe next time when Iâm not in the middle of something.â
Fran didnât get any further responses, and took that as her cue to leave. Sure enough, while walking out to the parking lot, Stanleyâs car began to drive away.Â
Upon getting closer, her steps slowed down and her eyes narrowed. Something was off about her car, as the body sparkled as if embedded with glitter. Stepping in front of it, Fran realized it wasnât a trick of light or the exhaustion getting to her. The car was covered in glitter, and the above street lamp further revealed a hot pink paint job.
âNo.â Franâs operations relied on being hard to track and to not be noticed. She couldnât do anything remotely close to a job- âNo!â She yelled with a frustrated growl, knowing exactly who was responsible. The driver side door was nearly ripped off its hinges as she tossed the rifle to the passenger seat and got in.
Turning the key and stomping the gas, her car rocketed out of the lot towards the road that Juno and Stanley had taken.
It seemed like sheâd be heading to town anyways.
And yet another crossover with @lorichu featuring Juno and Fran, this time with Stanley coming along. I guess you could consider this a continuation of Hijacked Routine
CW: Death, and whimsy
Cutting through the night within a lone road surrounded by miles of Pennsylvanian forest were the headlights of an unassuming four door sedan. The inside of which was faintly lit up courtesy of the body of stars sitting in the passenger seat. Stanley was at the wheel, enjoying âAinât No Mountain High Enoughâ which was playing from the car radio. Juno was next to him, clearly enjoying it as well as he sang the lyrics and bobbed his head. The only issue was that Stanley had secretly turned down the volume, and yet the song belted out perfectly from Junoâs lips. The singerâs exact voice, down to the instruments being played.
âYouâre doing it again.â He simply pointed out with an amused smile.
Juno stopped, the song abruptly taking a much lower volume. âDoing what?â
âYouâre singing.âÂ
âI thought thatâs one of the things you do on a road trip?â Juno replied with a tilted head.
âYes but youâre cheating, youâre just repeating the audio of the song.â Stanley elaborated.
The cosmic entity would need more than that. âIs that not what singing along is?â
âJuno, you sing along with your actual voice and add to the song.â The smile on Stanleyâs face only grew the longer he had to explain such a simple concept.
âYou wouldnât like my real voice.â Juno said, with it now the humanâs turn to get confused.
âWhat do you mean?â His brow furrowed as he glanced at Juno. âI like your voice.â
Juno hesitated, idly fiddling with his hands. âThis voice doesnât exactly belong to me.â
âWell then who does it belong to?â Stanley asked.
Again, he wasnât the quickest to give an answer. âThe first human I met, 4,000 BCE I think? Ancient Mesopotamia, he was a farmer. Nice guy too.â
The casual delivery wouldâve shocked him in the early days of their relationship, but there was a different question rattling in Stanleyâs head. âSo then what do you actually sound like?â
âYou wouldnât want to hear that.â Juno quickly replied. âIt doesnât even really register as a voice.â
âOh câmon, it canât be that bad.â His intrigue only grew at the look that Juno tossed him, a firm confidence that he wanted to challenge. âPlease?â He offered a coy smile, a tactic that tended to yield results in his favor.
Juno looked at him for another moment and sighed. He turned towards the road, and opposite to Stanleyâs expectation, his mouth didnât move.Â
What emanated from the cosmic entity raised the hairs on his arm as a low vibrating pulse filled the car. The lights on the dashboard flickered throughout the duration and he kept his grip on the steering wheel tight trying to keep a casual composure. â...It sounds nice.â Stanley said, nearly phrasing it as a question.
Juno looked over with a deadpan expression, but that didnât deter him. âItâs unique, and itâs definitely you.â That managed to get a faint smile out of the entity as he focused back on the road.
A yawn left Stanley. âI think I need a break soon.â He said with a long sigh.
âYou know, I could get us to the nearest-â
âNo, we're doing this properly.â Stanley said with a huff. âTake my phone and see if thereâs any diners or restaurants along the way.â
Juno silently took the phone off the holder on the center console, holding it up to his face and staring at the blank screen. His eyes flickered with a spark of electricity, and the phone immediately opened up to the map.
âYou can also just put in the password and tap the map icon. Thatâs an option.â Stanley commented.
The entity simply grinned. âAnd whereâs the fun in that.â He zoomed out from their current route and pressed the food icon. From there, it showed that there was a burger joint not too far from them. âWhat about Red Star burgers? Theyâll probably have coffee.â He suggested.
âRed Star burgers?â Stanley repeated. âIf itâs close, we can give it a shot.â His eyes occasionally flicked to the side of the road to watch for any relevant signage. Sure enough, an exit sign with the Red Star logo veered past.
He took the off ramp and followed the road to the lone burger joint. The parking lot was completely empty, which bothered Stanley a bit but he didnât dwell on it too long. He parked the car at the furthest spot, wanting out as soon as possible to stretch his legs.
With the parking brake on and the engine off, Stanley got out. Closing the door a long sigh followed by a stretch of his arms preceded. âOh thatâs better.â
âYou know there wouldnât be a need if I just teleported us there.â Juno said with a smug expression.
âShut up, I know youâre having fun.â He walked to the front of the car and waited. The body of stars did the same, though by the time they had joined him, it was replaced with a well fitted black suit and pale skin. Stanley looked over at him with an amused exhale, it didnât exactly complement his sweater and jeans but that was the charm of it.
Leaning against Juno and hooking an arm they headed inside. Like Stanley had guessed, the place was empty. The only occupant was a single cashier on their phone, who quickly put it away hearing them enter. The two walked up to the counter, with Stanley quickly skimming over the menu. Juno leaned down closer. âWhat should I order?â He whispered.
âWhatever you want.â Stanley said, quickly putting together his order mentally.
âI donât really want food, I donât get hungry. The only thing I really want is your tea.â Juno replied.
âThatâs really sweet but should I just order for you in that case?â He asked, receiving a nod from him. Stanley directed his gaze to the cashier who was looking at them with a raised brow. âUhh. Could we get two coffees with cream and sugar, and two cheese burgers?â
âYou want fries with that?â The employee said with as much enthusiasm as a graveyard fastfood worker could muster.
âUh⊠Yeah I think weâll have fries with it.â Stanley said as the employee nodded, inputting the items and heading to the kitchen. He took out his card and tapped the wireless kiosk. With that done, both of them headed over to the booth at the window facing the parking lot.
As they did, another car pulled up. Like Stanley, it parked farther from the building. âI think our next stop is Honesdale, itâs a nice little town.â Stanley said, lounging in the booth.
âWe should probably stay there for at least a day, you've been driving for quite a bit.â Juno suggested. His eyes glanced for a moment at the car and its driver who was getting out. Usually he wouldnât pay any mind but something told him to keep his gaze on them. As they stepped into the light, he could make out dark hair which was pinned back. She wore fairly plain clothes, and a simple jacket accompanied with jeans.
For a moment they locked gazes, and it took her a moment to figure out why some random guy was staring at her. What gave it away were the gray eyes, and strange attire. Both of them thought the same thing.
Oh fuck.
She froze while Juno quickly averted his gaze back to Stanley, offering an embarrassed smile and trying to catch up on what was being said to him. âMhm?â He simply said.
âSo should be fun.â Stanley finished off.
He did his best to ignore the woman entering the restaurant who side eyed him, though kept going. âDid you find a place to stay? At the town.âÂ
âNo not yet, I should probably do that right now.â Stanley pulled out his phone, and while he was distracted, Juno looked to his left to find her heading to the counter. There had been hope that she was just getting a bite to eat. That crumbled apart when he spotted the pistol holstered on her hip, and when she disappeared into the back kitchen.
Oh shit.
âThis looks nice, itâs an actual house.â Juno directed his attention back to Stanley, who was showing him a pin on the map along with a picture of the place.Â
âYeah looks nice.â He said a little too quickly, with furrowed brows developing on Stanley.
âWhatâs wrong-â
âNothing's wrong.â Juno delivered immediately, a wince forming as a loud crash could be heard in the kitchen.
Stanley looked in the direction of the commotion with a flinch, turning his head back to the cosmic entity. â...Juno, is there something going on?â
âNo! Nothing's going on, everything's normal and fine.â He offered a weak smile which cracked as frustrated yells and the banging of kitchen ware grew louder. âMust be a difficult burger to cook.â
The human simply gave him a deadpan expression.
âOkay fine.â Juno sighed. âDo you remember that one time I disappeared for an hour seemingly with no explanation? Thank you, by the way, for not throwing yourself off a building to try and get my attention.â
Stanley scoffed at the last bit but answered nonetheless. âI remember, you got kidnapped by cultists and someone helped you get free.â
âYes, she did.â Juno said, deliberately not going any further.
â...Juno. Did the woman that just entered the restaurant just so happen to be-â He never got to finish the sentence as a muffled explosion shook the tables. Both of their heads turned just in time to see the cashierâs body fly out the kitchen into the wall.Â
The aforementioned woman slowly trudged past the door to the back, her hair singed and slightly smoking. She was heavily breathing, and after a moment, turned her head towards them.
It's Juno month, it's been decided. One Juno a week (barring last week)
There was a routine established that on the outside to most people would look fairly normal. Stanley of course had work, a nine to five data entry. His coworkers were pretty close to each other, enjoying themselves with drinks after their shifts. The environment wasnât much his taste, and so he always went back home.
Usually Juno would be waiting for him or stop by shortly after his shift. The day would wind down, though sometimes the two would do something after hours. And while at a base level many other people enjoyed this simple structure of a day, it wasnât quite the same with someone like Juno.
Stanley was currently standing over the stove waiting for the kettle to boil water. Two mugs of tea sat to the side on the counter along with a french press. A few years ago, it wouldâve just been the store bought tea bags sitting in them. But given his new access to the entirety of the world, and thus actual high quality tea leaves, he figured he would do it properly.
Juno was in the living room, having insisted on rearranging the trinket shelf and its array of shrunken down planets and stars. He thought the order was fine, but nonetheless was curious as to what the cosmic entity had in mind. Plus there was the thought of a body of stars organizing another body of stars.
Making tea was as automatic as his heart beat, allowing his mind to wander. It took him not to a place but rather a person. Juno.
Theyâd been together for a year now. For Stanley it more so felt a month with how quickly it went by, and for Juno? Likely just a moment. That particular thought always shook his perceived foundation of the two of them. This was the deepest connection he felt to anyone, and it certainly felt like it was supposed to be more. Go further than a traditional friendship and make the inevitable step to the next level.
The low whistle of the kettle hardly deterred the thought, and the creeping insecurities. He knew Juno appreciated his company, of course he did. The entity could have literally anything it wanted and yet still chose to stop by. As far as he knew, Juno didnât know anybody else. But what kind of appreciation was it? The same kind of appreciation you show to an antique at a thrift store, or the kind for the person you wanted to spend the rest of your life with?
It wasnât easy to think it was the latter. Stanley was average as average could be. Juno was quite literally everything else.
âIs it supposed to be whistling for that long?â Juno called out.
He flinched and quickly pulled the kettle off the stove. âNo, I just got a bit distracted.â Stanley quickly replied. Opening the french press, he put some of the leaves in and poured the hot water.Â
Juno didnât make sound unless he wanted to, and most cases meant him talking. Because he wants to be heard. Other sounds however, Stanley discovered that he needs to make a conscious effort to actually be audible. Such sounds included footsteps, meaning that the entity quite literally moved around like a ghost. It led to many jumps but in time Stanley found himself to be able to just feel the entity.Â
While waiting for the tea to seep, he looked to his side. Sure enough, Juno was just there. âIs something wrong? You seem⊠Not here.â
An amused breath left him. âNot wrong, I wouldnât describe it that way.â He said bracing his hands on the counter and leaning on it. Stanley repeatedly tapped his index finger, with Juno immediately picking up on it.
âAh. Iâll leave it be then.â The cosmic entity replied.
âNo Juno, it's okay.â Stanley quickly responded, pulling his hands off the counter to stop the tick. âI⊠I actually have been wanting to talk about this for a while now.â Juno turned towards him, an entire universe at full attention directed entirely at the human. âI wanted to ask you a question.â
Juno paused for a beat. âWell, go on.â He gave a slight smile. âYou certainly donât need my permission to ask one.â
He of course knew that, but wanted to buy time to brace himself for the answer. âDo you⊠Do you like me?â A bit of him died from how the question was phrased. âOkay not like that kind of âlikeâ you obviously like me-or or Iâm fairly certain you like me- you like me right?â
The cosmic entity looked at him with a raised brow and slowly nodded. Stanley continued. âOkay. Then do you like me?â
Juno blinked. âYou already asked me that.â
âNo no I mean a different kind of like-â In that moment his brain snapped. âDo you love me?â Stanley abruptly said.
This time surprise formed on Junoâs face, and for a moment he was quiet. Before a soft chuckle broke out. Stanleyâs face twisted in confusion as Juno broke down into a full on laugh. Of all the possible answers and reactions, this was on the very bottom.
âSorry.â Juno breathed. âBut no.â
Stanley nearly flinched at the bluntness and casualness of the delivery. The laugh didnât make it any better.
He of course noticed and did his best for a comforting smile. âMay I explain? I promise this isnât some cruel joke.â
Stanley was teetering on a tight rope over an abyss of emotion, completely unsure of what exactly to feel. Having been essentially frozen on all levels, he managed a hesitant nod.
Upon completion of said nod, he found himself out of the apartment. The human looked around with a furrowed brow. Surrounding him was a dense forest that spread as far as the eye could see, with the terrain occasionally interrupted by a gentle hill. Beneath Stanley was a stone platform, clearly old with its cracks and vines snaking around the surface. Moving to the side and looking over, he found that he was on some kind of ancient pyramid. Sort of.
One side had a section which was completely flat, leading to a sheer drop to the ground. A tremor shook the foundation and Stanley quickly grabbed the railing which bordered the platform. He looked to the side and saw the source of the now rhythmic quakes. Juno was slowly circling the pyramid, moving to the flat section. His body was in its usual view of space form, but there were noticeable differences. The laurel adorned on his head for one. It was made of the same material as the surface of a star. Its pointed edges swayed and flickered. There were rings on his fingers and even a pair of earrings made of gas giants.
âA long time ago, I played gods. Not all of them, but some.â His voice echoed through the trees and through Stanleyâs very being. âI didnât know how to blend in or be human. So I figured I wouldnât be one while trying to understand how humans worked.â
He looked up with wide eyes. Juno had a tendency to be big, but this was easily double the difference in size he was used to. Stanley watched as the cosmic entity walked up to the flat side. Despite the height of the pyramid, Junoâs head still easily loomed over him. âThis lot of followers, honestly my favorite.â He said with a soft smile. âThey built this pyramid so that I wouldnât have to lean down while talking to them. I told them I could make myself smaller but they insisted.â
â...Uh huh?â Stanley meekly responded, still staring up.
âI was good to them, you know how it is.â He said with a chuckle. âWhat they felt for me, well⊠Itâs the exact same thing I hold for you.â Juno leaned a bit closer, casting the top half of the pyramid in darkness. âAnd it isnât love, itâs more than that.â
It took Stanley a moment to form the courage to respond. âA-And what would that be?â Junoâs head slowly came down, and he resisted the urge to back pedal. His surroundings turned to night as the cosmic entity quite literally became the sky for him. The head was a bit to his side, with Junoâs lips right next to him.
âItâs devotion.â Stanley heard the words, felt them rattle his body and raise the hairs on his arms. âI am completely, and utterly,â A pause. âDevoted to you.â The last three words were spoken magnitudes softer, and felt as though it gently brushed over him.
Daylight returned as Juno pulled back, and he looked down with the same soft smile. âDoes that answer your question?â
A very much red faced Stanley didnât immediately respond, needing a minute to regain composure and not squeak out an answer.
The Tacitus had been assigned to what was known as a âvacationâ post. The ship currently orbited an ocean world, populated by a few tropical islands which were home to upscale resorts. With how deep into friendly territory the system was, a potential attack was confidently an impossibility. Having dealt with numerous battles, the vessel and its crew were given a chance for respite. The entirety of the troop complement had been flown down to the resorts along with some of the crew whose idea of relaxation was tropical paradise. This did not include Eve, or her co-captain, Gerrin. They were on the bridge along with the few who decided to stay. For them, long uninterrupted moments of quiet and the allowance to breathe freely was enough.
This had been interrupted when their screening tech turned in their direction. âGot an approaching vessel Captain, ten klicks out and not responding to any communications.âÂ
Eve walked over to check, and sure enough the dot on the map was approaching. Though it was quite slow, and not exactly heading to them directly. It would pass close, but civilian craft still were to keep a greater distance from military vessels. âThis should be a nice distraction.â She simply said, walking back to her post. âAnd theyâre not responding to any hails?â
âNo maâam.â The tech responded.
âWell, let's see what weâre dealing with. Donât move the ship just yet. Maybe itâs a fresh pilot and they didnât see us.â She instructed, with Gerrin scoffing.
âDidnât see a several thousand foot long warship?â He said.
âIf youâd like to discuss your own blunders during the academy Iâd be more than happy.â Eve said with a smug tone followed by a faint smirk.
â...Point taken.â Gerrin simply said as the bridge waited for the approaching ship to come into view.
Everyone had their expectations of what the ship would be, at the bottom of that list was a vessel so traditional to what that word used to mean.
The first thing that had caught her eye was the silver curved hull, the carved patterns mimicking planks of wood and port holes. Eveâs eyes then found their way to the golden sails, which were angled towards the systemâs sun. They billowed in reaction to light, moving as if wind were somehow blowing over them in the vacuum of space. On the decks, crewmen operated such mechanisms like ropes and levers. Attached to the bottom rear of the ship was a set of dual ion engines which gave off a blue glow as it propelled the relic forward.
âFollow them.â Eve murmured, her gaze never leaving the window. âEasy on the engines, they probably canât go very fast.â
The navigation officer nodded, focusing back on their console. Applying the slightest bit of power to the engines and inputting a set of commands to follow the strange ship, they began on a path that put them side to side.
âZoom in.â Eve said, with the window flickering and showing a magnified view. Now it was as if they were directly next to the ship. It made the crew more visible, with some giving nervous smiles and waves. No doubt at the very least a little bit intimidated with the warship that was following alongside them.
âThat ship is probably older than the Sol Consulate, they didnât respond because theyâre not equipped with compatible communication equipment.â She theorized, thinking of a way that they could communicate. Her eyes lit up. âCan we code the exterior lights to blink in sequence?âÂ
One of the techs looked at her with a raised brow. âWhat would that do?â
âWeâll communicate via morse code, an old ship like that, all of the crew should know it.â She said, with everyone else Gerrin included giving her a look. â...Donât tell me none of you know morse code.â Everyone else conveniently looked elsewhere. âShame on all of you.â She scoffed.
Eve looked at her own console, waiting for one of the techs to code in the control for the exterior lights. A red button appeared and she began tapping the sequence for her message.
Turning back to the window, a small smile appeared on her face in accordance with the sailors who also adorned some of their own. Her smile only grew as a spotlight was pointed in their direction and she translated the message.
âWhat did you tell them?â Gerrin asked.
âI told them they were the most beautiful ship in this system.â She replied. âThey said they were flattered, and that they would bless us with fair winds for our next deployment.â Her eyes lingered on the ship still, and she tapped another sequence.
âWhat now?â Her co-captain asked as the other ship blinked a response.
âI asked if we could join them on their journey.â She looked over to the communications officer. âInform one of the other ships to cover our post. Weâll be departing for aâŠâ Eve thought for a moment. âImpromptu navigations system test.â
My first ever commission, how neat. These guys belong to @flowerrose14 and @rainecloud020604
TW: Violence
Atop the apartment building next to the police station sat a ventilation unit which pulled in air for its air conditioning units or for heating during the winter. The vent itself was secured by screws at each corner, and one by one they slowly began to rotate. After a minute, one would fall out. At three missing the vent swung downwards, and at the final one, dropped to the floor.
Anthony bristled as he was hit with a wall of wind, hair ruffling while he held up a gloved hand to block it. Continuing forward to the edge, he put the crowbar that had been used on his belt. Anthony tapped the side of his left boot with the heel of the other to disable the magnetic grips. The human had a rope with a hook attached on his hip holster, though opted for a different option. He took the grapple launcher slung over his shoulders and embedded the hook onto the edge, jumping off to rappel down to the ground.
From there, it was a quick jog to the side of the roof. He brought out the grapple launcher again, and folded out a tucked in screen on the left side of the main body. Anthony aimed up at the top of the wall which stood in the way of the edge. After some buffering, he was given a firing solution. The screen directed him to the proper angle, and once there he pulled the trigger.
An electronic pulse sounded as the magnetic rails accelerated the hook and attached cable upwards. It completed its arc and snagged itself to the outer edge of the wall. Anthony gave it a quick tug to confirm that the hook was secure.
Once he was sure that it wouldnât slip, the human pulled a secondary trigger sitting just below the first one.Â
Having tightened his grip, Anthony was immediately shot upwards. The spool of cable attached to the right side of the gun rapidly spun with a metallic whir as the motors worked. He eased off the trigger which slowed him down just beneath the edge of the wall. Bracing his feet on it, he simply climbed up.
The human was greeted with the chasm that was the alleyway between his building, and the police station. Since it wasnât jumpable under any circumstance, he pulled the trigger on the grapple gun again. Essentially resetting it as the hook was fed back into the barrel.
He pulled out the screen again, reading the number provided at the top. The gun had a built-in range finder, and to his relief the station was just barely close enough to still use the grapple. Again he aimed at the ledge of the other building and awaited for a firing solution. When it was provided, Anthony adjusted and fired. This time the pulse was more strained and he even felt a bit of heat from the barrel as it worked over time to propel the hook through the air.
Anthony kept deathly still, not wanting to interrupt the trajectory. To the point of holding his breath in until he could hear the distinct echoing thunk of the hook impacting the ground.
For this instance, simply reeling himself in was impossible. Unless the end goal was to become a meat pancake as he swung face first into the opposing building at terminal velocity.
Instead, Anthony pressed a button on the side of the launcher and moved the stock away from his shoulder. The panel covering the end of the stock flipped open and he placed the opening onto the ground. Another button press and the drill hidden inside began to extend and burrow downwards. After a minute the mechanical whir stopped, indicating that it was done.
He shook the anchored grapple gun which didnât even budge. It was time.
Anthony took out an ascender and attached it to the cable. Without hardly any hesitation he jumped off the ledge, with the ascender pulling him along to the other side. The human swayed a bit as wind blew over the ravine like chasm below him.
It didnât take very long to reach the other side and he leapt onto the ledge, landing with such practiced precision he hardly stumbled and kept going. The grapple gun would have to be retrieved later. Anthony was headed to the ventilation shaft, intending to infiltrate the same way he did for the apartment.
After some considerable effort manually turning the screws and climbing inside it was a matter of navigating the hallways of silver metal to find the correct room. It would take several attempts as he skimmed over other rooms and the supply closet. Anthony nearly moved on with this particular office but froze seeing a tiny doll-like figure on the desk.
âBen.â He murmured, taking out the crowbar. There werenât any visible screws, not that heâd use that to get past the vent. Getting in quiet was still a priority, and a metallic vent cover impacting the ground wouldnât exactly fly in a library.
Anthony braced the crowbar between one of the many slits which acted as its filter. He pulled back and bent the thin plates of metal which formed a gap wide enough for him to fit. Taking out the rope, he attached the grapple to the bent plate and jumped down.
During his descent, Anthony kept a loose grip on the rope up until around a hundred feet to the desk. From there, he tightened his hands to slow himself down. Small wisps of smoke shot out from where Anthony had closed his fingers, the friction burning the rope and warming his hands. Though the gloves still held up as he came to a stop just five feet from the desk.
Anthony quickly let go and sprinted over Benjamin who was laid out limp on the ground. He stopped and crouched over him, trying to shake his brother awake. âYouâre burning up.â His gaze switched to Benjaminâs legs, where the ankles were bent at an odd angle. âFuck, we gotta take you to the infirmary. Câmon.âÂ
He slipped his hands under his brotherâs shoulders, lifting up and attempting to to put his around to make carrying easier. Anthony froze however, both hearing and feeling approaching footsteps.
âNo no no itâs too soon.â He growled to himself, gently setting Benjamin down and taking out a vial of liquid from his pocket. The green solution swirled violently, almost begging to be unleashed. Anthony flicked the cork off using his thumb and downed it instantly like a shot of alcohol. It went down as such, with a bitter almost burning sensation.
Flinging the vial away, he turned around with narrowed eyes. Just as Gadriel entered. Their neutral expression upon seeing him changed into a smug smirk. âJust when I needed more leverage to break your brother, you show up.â He said with an amused hum, closing the door behind him.Â
âYou wonât get away with this you son of a bitch, and youâll pay for what youâve done to us.â Anthony said in a low tone, walking towards the edge of the desk.
Gadriel simply looked at him with a âreally?â sort of expression before the smugness returned. âDo you have any idea how much you and your crew hold him back?â He asked in a calm tone, resisting the temptation to grin at the rage starting to boil in Anthonyâs eyes. âBenjamin is a fine specimen with so much potential, so much loyalty, and so much grit. I mean, he bore an injection of Noxus and still would not give in. Had to⊠Temporarily disable his ankles to prevent further escape.â Gadriel began walking towards them.
The human at this point had his fists clenched and was just about ready to use them. He felt the strain of his skin wanting to stretch and expand, bones becoming brittle in order to break and become stronger. Anthonyâs desired response could not be formed into words, only in the next moves he would make.
Stepping over the edge, he jumped. Much to the surprise of Gadriel, whose confidence eroded into complete shock. The human, instead of falling to their death, was just⊠There. In front of him, eye to eye.
âHow-â The giant never got to finish his sentence. A boot impacting his stomach stole the breath and words out of his mouth, sending him flying backwards into a bookshelf. The force broke several of the shelves, raining books and other trinkets on top of him.
âGet up.â Anthony commanded with a growl in his tone. He only got a pained groan in response. âI SAID GET UP!â He roared.
Gadriel aimed a glare at him and shoved the books off of himself. âVermin.â He hissed while standing back up.Â
While waiting, Anthony got into a fighting stance and raised his arms up. When the other giant was getting back on their feet, he punched his left arm downwards and then his right in quick succession to warm them up.
Gadriel sloppily stumbled forward and threw a hit aimed at Anthonyâs face. He simply raised up his arms, blocking it with his forearms. In the same motion he dropped his left and jabbed a punch at Gadrielâs side.
At the slightest falter of the giant Anthony went on the full offensive, no longer blocking and aiming to hit every weak spot he could think of. Gadriel would find himself bombarded with a fury of hard hitting yet precise strikes that would alight his entire upper body with pulses of sharp pain. Then came a full strength hit to the nose.
It was almost concussive, as Gadrielâs vision blurred and he stumbled backwards. With hardly a second of respite, Anthony shoved him against the wall. A hand found its way to his throat, pinning him down. With a choked breath he struggled to pry the now giant human off of him, but was only met with another punch to the face.
Anthony pulled back to strike another blow, however paused upon hearing a faint cough. He looked back and his grip on Gadriel loosened completely. As the giant fell limp to the floor Anthony rushed over to the table and crouched over the stirring human. âBen?â He whispered, tentatively reaching out and resting a hand behind him. Tilting the humans head up, he slipped a bit more of his hand under him to prop up Benjamin.
The humanâs eyes began to open. However once they were he immediately started to panic, looking around frantically and trying to crawl away. A pained groan left him every time he moved his ankles.
âHey.â Anthony said softly, lowering himself a bit more and leaning closer. âItâs okay, itâs not him.â He chanced a hesitant smile. âCâmon, you know this face, right?â
Benjamin slowly moved his head to look back at the familiar giant, eyes glistening slightly as the recognition kicked in. â...Anthony?â He murmured. âHow-â
âLetâs not get into that right now. In fact, letâs just get out of here.â He carefully pulled the human onto his hand, minding the ankles and trying not to move them too much. âI need both hands free.â Anthony moved the hand to the inner pocket of his jacket. âThink you can get settled in?â
His passenger simply nodded and he waited for Benjamin to climb inside. He inwardly winced as the pained yelp that came from his brother as they inevitably landed on their feet inside. âYou okay?â Anthony lightly pressed his thumb inside the pocket against the humanâs shoulder to reassure himself that his brother was really there. He felt a miniscule grip on the pad of his thumb, eliciting a relieved smile.Â
Looking at Gadriel's crumpled form the smile faltered into something darker. He walked over and crouched down, delivering one last punch to the giantâs face before quickly exiting the office. Anthony closed the door and headed down the hall.Â
He kept his pace brisk but didnât sprint, not wanting to attract too much attention. Once at the elevator, he pressed the down button and entered. Getting out in theory would be easier than getting in, now that Anthony was at the proper size to interact with the world normally. All he needed to do was walk out and not be noticed.
The elevator doors opened to the scene of the busy lobby, all it took was one person to turn his direction. âWho the hell are you?â One of the paper pushers asked. Anthony froze as more stares were directed at him. His white jacket and orange clothes didnât exactly fit the older style that everyone else had.Â
âUhhhhâŠâ Anthony started spamming the close button.
âHey! Stop right there!â One of the officers yelled, running towards the now closed elevator doors. He selected the top floor again.
âOkay, different way.â Anthony casually said to himself, tapping his boot on the floor while trying to think of an alternative exit. The doors opened again and before he left, a red button with the label âemergency stopâ above it caught his eye. Without much thinking Anthony pressed it resulting in two things happening.
The elevator shuddered with a metallic clunk, which he assumed to mean it was immobile. Then came the alarm which sounded from a speaker inside. âShit.â He hissed, stepping out into the hall. His gaze gravitated to the fire alarm and then to the staircase down a separate hall. Already he could hear the pounding of footsteps as officers raced upstairs to get him.
Anthony pulled the alarm lever, resulting in a building wide ringing echoing through the halls. The effect was almost immediate, with other employees exiting their offices and making their way to the staircase. A grin formed on his face hearing âout of the way!â and â move!â along with other annoyances as a mob descended upon his pursuers.
He on the other hand had a much easier time heading up to the roof. From there Anthony was able to grab the grapple gun he had used. Grabbing the cable, he simply yanked the gadget out of place. The drills would be slightly bent but they were easily replaceable and the main function of the gun could still be fulfilled. He wrapped the length of cable around his fist and went over to the back of the building where the fire escape was located. A quick descent and mad dash to the forest left the officers who finally made it to the roof baffled as to where their intruder could have gone.
My first ever commission, how neat. These guys belong to @flowerrose14 and @rainecloud020604
TW: Dehumanization, torture
Benjamin had thought crash landing on an alien planet with no easy way off was the worst day he could have had. That was then eclipsed by being hunted down by a local power hungry giant and having to evade capture. At the very least crashlanding was a scenario that he was trained for, it even had a manual to refer to. Trying to keep everyone alive and stop Gadriel from stealing the technology on the ship did not have such guidance printed on paper. Of course, that was eclipsed by actually getting captured and being injected with what he could only describe as napalm.
He was currently on his knees doubled over on the desk, struggling to keep himself from fully laying on the ground. His arms were shaking, and throughout what felt like hours soldiering through the burning sensation alight in his entire body, he could feel that Gadriel was talking to him. Hearing was out of the question as it had been replaced by a thundering heart, elevated through the adrenaline flowing alongside the mysterious liquid that had been injected.
Eventually it did start to subside. The strength in Benjaminâs arms and legs slowly came back, steadying his shaky stance into something more collected. The pain lulled itself out to flashes of discomfort as the liquid was flushed out of his system. At last he could hear more than the beat of his own heart. Above him was a constant creak from the ceiling fan, and the ruffling of paper in front as the giant still seemed to be working.
He was tempted to stand, but refrained. Currently, Benjamin was at a complete disadvantage on all fronts. Every action mattered, and every scrap of advantage he could get his hands on no matter how small would be worth it. Even if it was just a slight discrepancy of information.
Benjamin gave a pained groan and allowed himself to fall onto the desk. From there, heâd let out a noise that would indicate the solution was working. Gadriel still didnât pay any mind, giving him an opportunity to finally think.
The primary concern of course was escape, with the biggest obstacle being his size. In fact, most of his problems on this planet seemed to be derived by that single factor.
From his current position, he couldnât see anything of help. The edge of the desk held nothing but a several story drop and the furniture past that were too far to be of any use. His gaze went back to what was actually on the desk, particularly to a wooden tray. He couldnât see inside it but Benjamin figured it was one of those organizers meant to hold various office supplies.
Before he could think any further, his ears rang at a high pitched bell being struck in rapid succession. The bombardment of noise continued again, coming from the side his head wasnât facing. A curious âHm?â was heard from Gadriel, and Benjamin flinched as the shadow of his hand temporarily casted him in darkness.
A distinct click noise sounded before the giant spoke. âYes?â Despite the increased volume of everything around him, Benjamin was unable to hear what the person on the other line was saying. Though he figured that it couldnât have been good news for Gadriel as the giant gave an annoyed huff. âFine, yes Iâll be there shortly.â Benjamin suppressed a flinch as the handset of the phone was slammed back onto the hook. From there, it was a silence that made his skin crawl. Everything was still, and so was he.Â
The human didnât dare to move, almost feeling pinned down by the looming stare being directed out of sight. Benjamin practically was holding his breath as Gadriel stood up from the desk, with a low rumble sounding as the chair was pushed in. He waited for the creaking of the door followed by it being closed, still not moving until the ground no longer shook from his captorâs footsteps.
After having let out a deep breath, he pushed himself back up and resumed his analysis of the desk. He was more so interested in the wooden tray, and Benjamin quickly walked over to check what was inside.
Given his stature, he had to climb up the wall of the tray to properly take in its inventory. The contents were what one would expect in an office, a stapler, note paper, pens, and some thumbtacks to the side. Benjamin stared at the assortment of tools at his disposal with a furrowed brow. Nothing immediately screamed useful, after all they were just office supplies. How could they possibly help him down?
It was then that Benjamin realized he needed to think outside of his own head. He wanted climbing gear, or a hoverpack, but it was clear that he needed to make use of what was around him.
The human hopped off the tray, starting to walk off in a random direction. âWhat would Anthony do?â He muttered to himself, looking around. This time with a different headspace. His gaze landed on the old rotary phone. â...Heâd definitely cut the power line out of spite.â He scoffed to himself. âNot exactly helpful.â
Benjamin then turned to the chair that the giant had been using and tilted his head. He looked at it a bit longer as the gears in his mind were jumpstarted. After a moment he realized why it had caught his attention in the first place. The back support was cushioned, and so was the seat. âDangerous and stupid.â He whispered to himself.
Turning back to the supply tray, he jogged over and climbed up into it. Benjamin grabbed two thumbtacks and tossed them over the wall onto the desk. Once he was out, wielded the two like ice picks and began walking to the edge of the desk closest to the office chair.
The closer he got, the wider the gap heâd have to jump appeared. â...Really dangerous and stupid.â Benjamin said with a shaky breath. âGod how does he do it.â
He paused just at the edge and looked at the distance required to get to the back of the chair. The grip tightened on the thumbtacks and he took a deep breath. âFor the crew.â Benjamin muttered, trying to move his legs to back up and do a running start. âDo it for them.â With heavy hesitation he began backing up, pausing ten paces away from the edge.
Benjamin stood there for a moment before breaking out into a sprint. The hammering of the heart was back in his ear as he leapt off the desk into the air. As he sailed towards the back of the chair, time seemed to slow down.
His vision was filled by the back cushion and he pointed the sharp end of the thumbtacks forward.
The pointed ends effortlessly plunged into the plush surface, and the force caused his hands to slip. Benjaminâs breath caught as he struggled to regain the strength of his grip, with his left hand failing on him.
A yelp left him as it slipped off the thumbtack, leaving the human hanging on the other one. With a frustrated growl he grabbed the left thumbtack and gasped for air.
He had completed his first objective, get off the desk. Though that still left him with just another which was to get off the chair.
Benjamin slowly pulled out the right thumbtack and lowered it. Once secured into the cushion, he did the same with the left one. He repeated this process dozens of times and occasionally stopped to catch his breath.
Eventually, he made it down. Twenty feet descended, thirty more to go.Â
Placing the improvised climbing picks down he observed his surroundings. The chair stood on a wheel base, so using the same method of climbing wouldnât work. Benjamin carefully made his way to the edge of the seat and began scouting his surroundings for any points of interest. Thatâs when he spotted the seat adjuster.
âHow does he live like this?â He grumbled to himself. Jumping to the cushion had already shot his nerves but the next stunt blew that way out of the water.
He carefully placed himself over the edge of the seat, aligning himself with the end of the adjuster. This time it was a lot more difficult to execute the next move. At the very least with jumping to the seat, there was cushion to at least guarantee that the injury would only hurt. And not be excruciatingly painful.
It didnât exactly compare to letting himself fall several feet down to what was essentially a giant pole that he could easily slip off if not careful. Leading to a thirty foot drop and what would most certainly be a critical injury.
Benjaminâs entire body had tensed up, and he figured that now was the time. Any further hesitation would just leave him frozen in fear for Gadriel to come in.
With that possibility constantly playing out in his head, it was enough to allow his legs to relax slightly.Â
âHoh shit-â Benjamin said with a sucked in breath as he slipped off the cushion and dropped. His stomach sank as he held out his arms to catch the seat adjustor.Â
The humanâs hands managed to catch on, though the impact drew a pained grunt as his fingers bore the brunt of his weight abruptly pulling on them. Benjaminâs heart started to race again as he dangled several stories above the ground. Looking to his right, it was about ten feet to the cylinder supporting the actual seat.
A grimace formed his face. Benjaminâs arms were already sore from the climb and now the impact.Â
Despite this, he knew he needed to push on. He wouldnât give up on those depending on him simply because his arms hurt a bit.
With a deep breath, Benjamin began scooting his hands to the right side to get him closer to the support cylinder. Much like the climb down from the back cushion, the process was tedious. Progress for him was measured in inches, but he did eventually make it to his destination. Bracing both feet against the cylinder relieved some of the weight on his hands, offering a bit of respite for the time being.
Benjamin looked at the support structure and realized that it was essentially a giant pole. He couldnât fit his arms around it completely but he figured it still would be enough to slow his descent down to prevent injury.
Prepping himself only took a few deep breaths before swinging himself back and aiming for the cylinder. He grabbed it with both hands and hugged it as hard as he could.
The human would find himself sliding down towards the base, not at the rate he hoped for but slow enough that the landing would just hurt a bit.
A small grumble of discomfort sounded from him as landed on the base. From there, it was just another short hop to the ground.
He wasted no time gunning for the door. Getting down from the desk had already taken more time than he was comfortable with, and every second just meant a higher likelihood of Gadriel coming back. Benjamin pushed his legs to maintain the sprint towards the door, which loomed ever higher as he got closer. A hopeful smile lit up his face, the door was just a few dozen paces away.Â
All it took was the slightest tremor to wipe the smile, and for him to slow down to a crawl. Another tremor, each one growing stronger and coming quicker than the last. Gadriel was back.
From everything he had down to reach the door, Benjamin was exhausted. Almost ready to give up. Still, the human gathered up his strength and turned around to run away from the door. Not only did he have to deal with the consequences of Gadriel discovering his escape attempt, he was keen on not getting smacked like a fly from the towering piece of wood known as the door.
Having less stamina, Benjamin ultimately did not make it. He was still in range, and when the door swept open, it was almost as if heâd been hit by a semitruck.
The impact was nearly bone breaking and it sent him flying to the side towards the wall. Benjamin rolled several times with pained yelps, with his body and limbs taking hits at awkward angles. He came to a rest several feet away from the wall, barely able to stand up again after taking such punishment.
Inevitably, the human was cast in darkness. âSee? This is exactly what I mean. How could you have possibly gotten down from the desk?â He only groaned at what was said, using his hands to lift himself up a bit. Looking to his left, Benjamin spotted the underside of a closet. The gap between it and the floor was low enough to make it difficult to get him if he was under. Reaching out, he began to crawl over.
âTrying to get back to the desk? Here, let me help you.â A harsh flinch left Benjamin as fingers the size of tree trunks wrapped around his body. The sudden heat emanating from the appendages made his skin crawl as the grip tightened around him, his stomach dropping as he was lifted into the air.Â
Gadriel kept him close to his chest while walking back to the desk. His gaze was directed at his chair, where the two thumbtacks that Benjamin had used were left behind. âHuhâŠâ He muttered, picking them up and placing them back onto the tray. From there he sat down, but didnât put the human back quite yet.
âYou know, if you were actually one of us, Iâd kill to have you a part of the force.â The giant said almost off handedly, with Benjamin looking at him with a furrowed brow. âResilience like yours is rare, and that loyalty? Itâs hard to come by nowadays.â He said, bearing a stare down at the human. âIf only you could provide that to us, because if you did we could provide something in return.â
Benjamin again was prepared to deny the offer but was interrupted by Gadriel. âIf I remember correctly, you had a child aboard your ship did you not?â The giant tilted his head, eyes gleaming seeing the slightest glimmer of an emotion that he had not yet seen in the human. A protective fire aimed directly at him with confidence that rivaled his own.
âIf you hurt her-â
âI will do no such thing, I just think that with all of you on the run. All that stress and wondering how youâre going to survive the next day. Is that really the best thing for her?â Gadriel leaned on the desk with his elbows, taking up a more relaxed stance. â...You do want whatâs best for her, right?â He asked with a faux tone of empathy, bringing the hand a bit closer to his face.
âI do.â Benjamin said, with the giant arcing a brow and waiting with bated breath. âAnd whatâs best for her and my crew is that they leave this planet and get as far as they can from you.âÂ
The silence that followed saw Gadrielâs usually neutral facade journey through several emotions. At its forefront, shock. Which twisted into confusion fused with a bit of annoyance. And finally, unfiltered unapologetic hatred.
He didnât even say anything while opening up his hand and allowing Benjamin to fall through. This time, there was no cushion or part of the chair to save the human.Â
A distinct snap preceded a yell of pain as Benjamin landed on his ankles and fell to the surface of the desk, splayed out in front of the giant.
Gadrielâs expression slowly returned to something more neutral, with the exception of his eyes which held a glimmer of contempt. Opening the drawer, he pulled out some files. âI still have work to do, so keep it down.â
My first ever commission, how neat. These guys belong to @flowerrose14 and @rainecloud020604
TW: Dehumanization, torture
Stop squirming.
Gadriel found himself distracted as he entered the moderately busy police station. Detectives and paper pushers alike participated in a daily dance consisting of typing, exchanging files, and moving past the interns delegated to coffee duty. Still, even as he had a live and very much resistant passenger in his inner coat pocket, he navigated the floor to the elevator.
Iâm so close, just a few more, maybe even one more step until everything's in place.Â
The doors opened and he stepped inside, a bit relieved that no one else occupied the elevator. Gadriel selected the top floor, and leaned back against the wall.
Just one little obstacle, and then we have an entire world to ourselves.
He was pulled out of his internal dialogue by feeling yet more movement in the pocket.
Surely it realizes thereâs no point in this?
As if to answer, Gadriel felt the miniscule form start to rise up. Perhaps it had found leverage and was attempting to pull itself up and out. He simply held the spot where the human was and closed his fist. Obviously, they were no good to him dead. A firm, but not suffocating grasp wrapped around the humanâs fabric prison. It brought no harm, only an all encompassing presence that silently told him to stop.
He felt a swell of emotion, it was difficult to put into words. A mix of pride, and satisfaction. A powertrip with the dial turned to the max setting.
Thatâs what will sell, that feeling. And that was just a small taste of the potential.
The doors opened, bringing him back to the real world. He peeled off the back wall of the elevator and headed straight down the hall to his office.
Gadriel fetched the key from his pants and opened the door. Walking over to his desk, he opened his trenchcoat and dug his hand into the inner pocket.
It took a few tries, by virtue of the human refusing to stay still, and by Gadriel not wanting to break anything. Eventually his hands settled for a tight grip around the torso, lifting it up out of the pocket.Â
Once out, he held his hand an inch above the desk before letting go. The human stumbled slightly, and he watched. Not out of amusement, as Gadriel honed in on their gaze. Once it was back on its feet they were looking around, and not in a frantic way. The human took in their surroundings, almost analyzing them before moving on to a different point of interest.
âDonât bother escaping, there isnât a safeway down.â Gadriel said, turning around to hang his trenchcoat on the hangar fixed to the door. He heard the faint pitter patter of tiny steps against the surface of the desk, though he continued on as if not hearing anything.Â
Even as he faced the desk again, Gadriel simply sauntered over. As predicted, the human barely made it halfway to the edge.Â
Raising his hand, he formed a fist and slammed it down just in front of them. He had to cloak his surprise behind a neutral face as the human was actually sent back a bit and stumbled over. While it recovered, Gadriel took a seat.Â
Doing so was strange, and only because of the situation he found himself in. He was the center of attention, an image so unavoidable that every action, no matter how insignificant to him, mattered greatly. Gadriel was sitting down, something he did so thoughtlessly so often. Now, that action held greater weight than him simply doing it out of comfort or rest.
He sat up straighter than he usually would, fixing his posture to be ever so slightly taller. Gadriel rested his other hand behind the human, and directed a neutral stare down at it. The feeling swelled again, alighting his nerves like a refreshing chill. It only solidified his resolve. This kind of high, no one could resist it.
At this point, the human finally got back on its two legs. Gadriel watched as it turned around to fully face him and much to his surprise, actually met his gaze. While thinking he idly drummed the fingers on his left hand, which slightly broke the humanâs firm stance. A subtle reminder of their position.
âItâs funny, Iâve had to deal with some rather problematic people of interest throughout my career. Of all of them, Iâm not quite sure theyâd come close to the amount of headaches youâve caused me.â Despite the first two words, Gadrielâs face hardly suggested any amusement. âItâs⊠A humbling experience.â His tone sounded as if the words had to crawl and fight their way up to be said.Â
The human simply looked up at him with confused unease, not sure what to make of what the giant in front of him was saying. âItâs infuriating for one. You gave me so much trouble and to see you here now, and understand how helpless you truly are. How could you have ever slipped away so many times?â
The edge of Gadrielâs lip curved upwards, practically imperceptible to someone his size, but very much noticeable to the human. âIt drives me mad to one end but at the same time⊠It fascinates me.â The slightest slip of curiosity escaped his tone. âThe way youâve gotten away from my grasp, that requires more than just using your size to your advantage. Youâre,â He paused, carefully selecting his next word. âDifferent.â
Gadriel only received a continuation of the perplexed stare and lack of words, and so continued. âWhat Iâm trying to say is that you strike me as the more reasonable of your crew, so I wonât dance around and Iâll get straight to the point.â He leaned in slightly, casting a shadow over the human. âYouâre going to tell me the location of your ship, and how to reverse engineer its technology.â
Even being surrounded completely on all sides, they stood their ground. It took them a moment to muster a steady voice. âNo.â It said, âI know what you want, and I canât let that happen.â
The slightest curve of a smile appeared on Gadriel's face, though it contained no warmth. âI get it.â He said with a fake sympathetic almost mocking tone. âYou want what's best for your kind. I want whatâs best for my people. But sometimes, whatâs best is to be on the right side of history.â Gadriel made sure his gaze bore into the humanâs. âI know I am, not sure about yourself if you continue on this path.â
He relaxed slightly, attempting to try a different angle. âIf you gave us the ship, and showed us how to utilize its technology, no harm would ever come to any of you.â Gadriel moved his hands a bit away from the human, though they were still plenty close enough to just snatch them. âIn fact, youâd probably be hailed as a hero. Modern day prometheus granting us fire from the gods. Key to a new era of prosperity for our people. Youâd be treated like royalty, youâd have a life better than the one you have now.â
Gadriel lowered himself slightly. âArenât you tired of running? Worrying about surviving day to day? I can make all of those problems disappear.â He said in a quieter tone. The human was more or less still rigid in the same position, which he silently took in with disappointment. Though still pressed on. âAll you need to do is tell me where the ship is. Weâll take in your crew and they can rest easy knowing that you made the right choice.â
He was unsure if the words got to the human, as it was quiet for a solid minute. Gadriel leaned in a bit closer as they started to speak. âI made my choice already, and I wonât give up the ship to someone like you.â
The last three words echoed within Gadrielâs head, and his expression soured along with narrowed eyes. Of all the things that couldâve been said, an insinuation that he was somehow lesser than the creature in front of him completely cut out the possibility of talking things out.
Without warning, his hand shot towards the human. He barely left them any room to breathe as they were rocketed up to his face, being stared down by a sharp glare. âThen what happens next is entirely on you.â Using his freehand, Gadriel opened the drawer on his desk.
The humanâs eyes widened seeing a needle the size of a car in the giantâs hand, and all the shaky confidence seemed to crumble there as the struggles started up again. Gadriel only needed to tighten his grip. âSquirming will only help circulate the fluid through your body quicker.â He simply said.
Gadriel deliberately hovered the needle above the hand holding the human. As he tested it by pushing the injector slightly, a drop fell from the tip.Â
It landed right next to them, the reaction was immediate. Their eyes started to water, and they closed after only a few seconds. âFeel that?â After looking away, they coughed a few times. âAwful to inhale. Even worse once inside.â
He lowered the syringe, aiming to inject through the shoulder. âWait!â The human rasped with a cough. They didnât get to say another word.Â
âYou made your choice, now youâll live by it.â Gadriel calmly said as the needle punctured just below their collar bone.
A yelp left them as the effect of the needle puncturing their skin was similar to being stabbed with a knife. Then came the burning.
Had the human been his size, Gadriel wouldâve been worried about the pained screams attracting the attention of the station staff. The small pair of lungs could only produce a volume which barely made it to the door. To an outside perspective, the room was quiet.
âItâs a shame you really wonât be able to pay attention to this because itâs actually quite fascinating.â He pulled out the syringe, with blood starting to seep out the wound. âThe serum, despite the amount of pain youâre feeling, isnât really doing anything harmful.â
Gadriel put the syringe back into the drawer, and in the same motion he placed the human back onto the desk. They collapsed onto the ground, attempting to hold themself up on shaking arms. âAll itâs doing is simply telling your pain receptors that youâre burning.â He pulled out a different drawer, though it only contained some files and paperwork. âItâs so difficult nowadays to get approval to use it, but thatâs the great thing about you.â
As if it were any other day, he took out a pen and began reading. âThe ethics board only outlined rules for people such as myself.â The human managed a winced look up at Gadriel, which fell flat as it only met a wall paper blocking the giantâs face. âLet me know when youâre ready to talk. Or want an additional dosage, thereâs plenty.â
The joint owned apartment had two doors. One for the giant occupant, and a much smaller one to the side which led onto a catwalk attached to the wall. The human size door slowly opened, revealing a slightly slumped over Ciel. His tie was messy, suit jacket barely on, and dress shirt wrinkled beyond what would be considered acceptable. He closed the door and locked it with a tired sigh, taking the long journey to his side of the apartment.
While walking along the metal pathway, he spotted the door to the giant sized bathroom which was slightly ajar. Donovan was likely in there, recovering from a late night job like he was. Ciel wouldâve left him to their own devices had he not heard a winced breath. And then another.
Curiosity got the best of him, and he changed paths accordingly. It would be a few minutes until the human got to the larger bathroom, exiting from a door out of the wall just next to the entrance. From there he was greeted with a sight that compelled him to take his time to announce himself.
The giant was standing in front of the mirror, leaned over on the sink shirtless. Next to his left hand was a glass of scotch with two spherical pieces of ice, and on the other hand was a cigarette. Occasionally Donovan took a drag, followed by a sip of his drink.
Mustâve been a tough job.
Ciel directed his gaze to the giantâs chest specifically, trying to not get distracted by certain features and focus on what could possibly warrant such a combination. He found it in the form of a knife slash in the center of the chest, stitched and surrounded by lighter cuts underneath the stitching.Â
By this point, the human had been standing there for a couple of minutes. Still not making his presence known. Donovan looked over at the human entrance on instinct, scoffing on it being correct. âHow long have you just been staring at me?â
A smirk formed on Cielâs face. âNot long enough.â He said, casually leaning against the door frame. âNeed help with that?âÂ
âI know how to patch myself up.â Donovan said while grabbing a double edged dagger that had been sitting in the sink. The blade had small specks of blood decorating the edge.
He held it up to the stitching and tried to slip it under to cut the threads. His breath hitched as the blade started to cut into the skin and he quickly pulled back. âGod damn it.â He muttered. His eyes narrowed and he turned towards the human, expecting a reaction.
As predicted, Ciel was staring at him with a shit eating grin. âYou mustâve been a surgeon in a previous life.â The comment drew the giant away from the sink and he put the cigarette out by pressing the lit end onto the counter. Heavy steps forced Ciel to lean against the door frame to maintain composure as the lights above were eclipsed by the immense form of Donovan. Despite the display, he simply shot him a smirk. This was standard intimidation for debt collection and other odd jobs. While anyone outside of their criminal organization mightâve crumbled, his heart simply raced. The same way it did when a job got more exciting, or after walking away from a fight that he had no chance in winning.
âUse your words, I believe in you.â The smirk only grew seeing the restrained contempt in Donovanâs eyes.
âTake the damn stitches off.â The giant said with a huff, lowering his hand next to the catwalk. Ciel took his sweet time, slowly peeling off the door frame and sauntering to the railing. He vaulted the barrier and landed on the hand which rose up to the chest.
Donovan went back to the sink where he grabbed the glass of scotch to take a swig. Putting it back down he adjusted the hand so that it would be directly in front of the wound.Â
Ciel took out the switch blade stored in his pocket, flicking the knife out and moving to the closest thread. He braced a hand on the warm surface, suppressing a smug smile feeling an ever so slight flinch. Placing the blade on the thread, Ciel slowly began to cut through.
At a smaller scale, accidental cuts were less of a concern. And with how tightly wound the stitches were, they practically pulled apart once Ciel was halfway through a thread.
When one snapped, heâd pulled it out from the skin. Slowing down anytime a sound of discomfort was heard from Donovan. Occasionally Ciel would feel the pad of a thumb run down his back, taking its time to give silent thanks.
The process continued until all that was left was the slash mark the length of a car. âI think thatâs it. Canât do anything with the scar, though I wouldnât want to anyway. It looks nice on you.â He looked up to meet an exasperated and bashful smile on Donovanâs face.Â
âThanks.â He simply said, starting to move to the catwalk again.
âWhat do you think youâre doing?â Ciel asked. âI donât work for free.â The human said with a knowing grin.
Donovan stopped, looking down with an amused expression. âReally?â
âIâm afraid so.â Ciel had crossed his arms. âPay up.â He said it in a similar tone used for some of their more problematic debtors, and to see it used in such a trivial exchange finally brought out the mischievous glint usually present in Donovanâs eyes.
He silently complied, raising the hand upwards to his face.
Much like Ciel had done, he took his team in dishing out his payment. His smug face hovered near the hand, a teasing smile adorned on his lips. The human stood waiting, growing more and more unamused as the seconds ticked by. Donovan leaned in a bit closer, opening his mouth again but quickly closing them.Â
âReally?â He huffed, taking a step closer to the edge.Â
Donovan finally gave in and leaned his head forward, gently pressing lips that covered the entirety of the humanâs top half. A soft smile lit his face feeling a smaller pair return the favor, which turned smug as Ciel pulled back. He simply pushed forward, quickly eliminating the gap.
The human started to backpedal but that didnât help much as he crashed into Donovanâs fingers, which curled inwards and pressed him more into his lips.
âDawn.â A muffled voice said. âI-I got it.â
He simply smirked, not moving an inch. âYou sure? I wanna make sure Iâm fully paid off.â Donovan pressed again, resulting in another kiss.
âYeah-â Ciel was cut off as another came. âCâmon-â And another. âAsshole-â
The human was somehow more disheveled than when they had come in. Cielâs hair was completely tussled and clothes crumpled as if just coming straight out of the drier. And of course there was the face, completely flustered in a red shade.
1 cent for every word, so a 1,000 word one shot would be 10 dollars with up to 3 characters. Adding more characters will cost 5 dollars each.
In terms of multi-chapter commissions the price will not change if the amount does not exceed four chapters. Past that, the rate is bumped up to 1.5 cents a word.
Doâs and Donâts
-I will do g/t and non g/t (though I prefer g/t)
-I will not do vore, fetish related topics, or nsfw. I will refuse anything that I am not comfortable with that isnât listed here
Examples of my work: (more on the master post under the gifts/requests section)
Actual Commissions: (youâll see something here soon, I just need to post it)
Works for other people that were not paid, but you can assume the same level quality: Avian Duality, Hijacked Routine Pt 1, Town Without Pity
Having to update the commission sheet after like two years because I finally got one and when they asked about it I had to dig through to find it and when I did it was just 'huh... it really does say that'
Part 2 of the gift for @smoll-stace, elite ball knowledge required for some of the references
TW: Blood, violence, dehumanization, fearplay
Sleep never brought dreams for Ciel anymore, just a flash of darkness or memories. His apartment shaking before the walls are torn apart by a massive gloved hand. Running, so much running while his lungs burned. The weight of a weapon that he wished he could put down for good.
Waking up was both the best and worst part about sleep. He could escape the painful memories, only to go on about his day to make more. His eyes slowly opened and he was greeted by a dull throbbing on the leg that was injured. Which reminded the human of his current predicament or rather where it left him the last time he was awake. Unconscious in a giantâs hand.
His eyes shot open and he looked around confusingly at the expanse of fabric surrounding him on all sides. It took Ciel a moment to process that he was on a giant bed, likely captured and surrounded by dozens of them. One was already terrifying enough, he didnât even want to entertain the idea of an army of them being in close proximity.
He tried standing, though a pained yelp left him. The throbbing of his leg graduated to an intense stabbing on the actual wound. Ciel collapsed backwards into the soft surface with a groan, and thatâs when a particular thought hit him.
How am I still alive?
The gash was big enough to have bleeding out a real possibility. He took the time to actually look at his injured leg and found a thick bandage covering instead of the cloth he originally had.
The growing confusion in Ciel was abruptly cut by goosebumps and the hairs on the back of his neck rising. It was a feeling that he was all too familiar nowadays and it meant only one thing. His eyes darted around the room frantically until he turned to his right and froze.
Standing next to the bed silently staring at him was a giant, though with the red eyes, Ciel thought it was the same one that heâd encountered. Only there were more details that could be made out. A darker complexion, orange hair, and an actual face that wasnât obscured. A face whose gaze gently rested on the human with concern.
Ciel however was not interested with the giantâs true intentions, only with somehow escaping a place teeming with beings that could kill him so effortlessly. He moved to stand up again, only to bite his inner cheek to suppress another pained yell. The sharp throbbing had only gotten worse, completely immobilizing the human.
His gaze snapped to the giant as he heard a scoff, with them moving closer to the bed and crouching down. Ciel decided to ignore the pain and try again. Though as he did, the giantâs hand reached over. He closed his eyes and turned away, preparing for whatever punishment was coming.
A warm heat enveloped him before the surface beneath sank down. He found himself sliding backwards, wincing slightly as his injured leg was moved.
Cielâs breath became caught in his throat as the living platform was raised upwards to the giantâs face. He shrank a bit under the gaze of narrowed eyes, though they werenât exactly meeting him. They were focused on the now growing spot of red on the bandages. âYou opened the wound again.â Came a grumble that resonated in the air.
The hand once again was lowered to the bed and it stayed there unmoving. Ciel looked down at the palm and fingers, then back to the giant with a confused expression. They nodded to the bed and he hesitantly began to scoot off. âYou know how to replace bandaging?â The question came after he was off, catching him off guard as he was actually being addressed to. Like an equal.
Ciel slowly nodded, with the giant standing up and walking away. They entered what he presumed to be the bathroom, likely to get more bandaging for him. This time, he didnât bother to move. Not that heâd get very far anyway.
Now alone, he started to focus on other things besides the giant and his current situation. Like how soft the blanket and mattress felt beneath him. For the first time in several weeks, perhaps even months, a smile touched his face. He laid down on his back and felt⊠Comfortable. It certainly beat a thin cot in a subway station where his unitâs headquarters was.
He closed his eyes and for a moment, Ciel could almost imagine that he was back in his apartment in bed. Maybe he was going to sleep after a long day at the library, or perhaps about to wake up to go to campus. Either way, it was the closest resemblance to a normal life ever since the invasion.
His thoughts were interrupted by the faint tremors and a sliding door opening. He opened his eyes, only for his gut to churn. The face looming over him held orange eyes and a lighter complexion. Worse, a sinister grin decorated their features. âWell what do we have here?â They drawled with a smug tone.Â
With hardly anytime to react, a hand moved into his line of vision and almost blocked it entirely. âNo!â Ciel yelled as the fingers closed around him, the grip making it difficult to breath as he was lifted out from the bed. The throbbing in his leg was back in full force as the pad of one of the fingers rested against it.
The bathroom doors were flung open and the other giant froze. His eyes glowed furiously as he stormed towards him, only to get shoved back. âHey take it easy I just wanna check your catch. Itâs broken by the way, might wanna get a replacement.âÂ
âGet your fuckin hands off him!â The other giant yelled getting up and pulling their fist back for a punch. The one holding Ciel simply ducked and kicked him back, looking at him with a tilted head. His gaze went back to the human he was holding, and then to the giant on the ground. His confusion was replaced again with that same sinister grin.Â
âThereâs no way.â He said with a smug snicker. âYou know, I always wondered why the kingâs son was sent to a post like this, figured it must be punishment. I mean to leave behind all the luxuries for all of this? I get this invasion is hardly requiring any effort, but itâs still a step down.â As the downed giant tried to get up, he walked over and planted his boot on his chest. âSo that brings the question, what were you punished for?â
The grip on Ciel changed, and now he was suspended in the air with two fingers pressed against his sides. He tightly gripped the appendages as the other giant looked up with a hardened glare. âYouâre a sympathizer. You actually care about these tiny helpless creatures.â The giant accused, holding up his other hand. He lightly tapped the wound, eliciting a sharp yell from Ciel as the gash was further agitated. âThatâs why your father sent you down here with us, so youâd realize the truth of these vermin. Doesnât seem to be working though.â
He dragged the boot off of the giantâs chest, walking away to the door. âIâll see to it that this human is delivered to him, Iâm sure heâd love to-â His voice was interrupted by a loud bang which drew a harsh flinch from Ciel and left his ears ringing a bit. Still being held, he looked up at the giantâs face. His eyes widened seeing a hole in the middle of their forehead, blood dripping down and all.
The giant stumbled and his grip began to loosen on him. âOh shit.â Ciel said, scrambling to grab the finger. Even though it wouldnât matter as everything attached to the giant would come down, making sustaining further injury inevitable.
Just before the body could fully fall, another hand quickly swept him out of the air. Ciel found himself settled into the dip of the palm, and a thick line of bandage falling next to him. Looking up, it was the red eyed giant again. Their glow had significantly dimmed, bringing in worry as he leaned down to inspect the wound again.Â
Ciel instinctively wanted to scoot back at such proximity, but he found the will to stay where he was. â...You saved me?â The question of course was not alone, and the implications weighed heavy. Though there wasnât much time to deliberate on them, an officer quickly rushed over to the doorway. They looked at the giant and human with complete utter shock.Â
âWhat have you done-â Their question was unable to be fully said as the giant drew their pistol and fired into their knee. Ciel clamped their ears as he stepped over the body and quickly began walking down the hall.
âKeep low and replace your bandages.â The giant simply said as alarms started to blare. Ciel didnât argue and began to rip away the stained cloth covering his wound. He did his best to ignore the shouting and yelling along with the occasional ear ringing gunshot as the giant fought their way out of the base.
In order to keep himself steady, Ciel had pressed himself against the wall or rather chest behind him. The running gait of the giant still wasnât the most steady in the world, but he managed to get the wrapping off and start the process of applying the new one. At some point they made it outside and he bristled at the abrupt drop in temperature.
While applying the new bandage, the giantâs pace began to slow down. Once he was fully done, Ciel checked their surroundings and was surprised to see that the lights of the base were completely gone. All that was left were trees, the night sky, and both of them.
Small clouds of white formed and disappeared above him courtesy of the heavy breaths of the giant carrying him. Who went over to a tree and roughly sat down against it.
For a while, thatâs what both of them did. Sat in silence contemplating the different but still equally insane situations they had found themselves in. A giant who had defected, and a human in the captivity of one that didnât seem hell bent on killing him.
Eventually, the hand holding him was raised up to the giantâs face. Ciel found it a bit easier to meet his gaze, still hesitant on the count that for all intents and purposes, his life was held by a complete stranger.
âGuess weâre stuck in this together, you and me.â The rumble of his voice was followed by a sigh which blew Cielâs hair a bit. His head then tilted slightly. âWhatâs your name?â He asked. For something as small as a name the human was still wary in giving it out. âCâmon, if weâre gonna be working together I need to call you something. Unless youâre fine with a stupid name.â
The humanâs expression snapped to confusion. âLike cricket. I could call you cricket.â His expression was soured by offense. âYouâre about the size of one-â
âCiel.â He quietly grumbled, looking away. âMy nameâs Ciel.â
The faintest of smiles appeared on the giantâs face. âDonovan.â
My return fire gift for @gtypewriter, a look back at how his boy Kane is adjusting to life in Nettles.
--------------------
It being winter wouldn't stop Jay from taking a short five-minute break outside. Her office in the Nettles town hall was a labyrinth of boxes, like always, but now that the long process of sorting documents was finally complete, it had come time to digitize them. And, not only were there no working scanners inside the town, but there weren't any outside it that could handle an almost city block sized sheet of paper.
That had left Jay only one option: transcribe everything herself.
Every inch of her was sore from sitting at her desk for so long. Her arms ached almost as much as her poor fingers, and she could feel the strain pounding behind her eyes. Somewhere in the deep recesses of her mind Jay recalled the joy she'd felt when they'd finally put the label on the last box. That high had carried her for a couple of days until she checked in with her superiors who clearly valued redundancy over her mental state.
Getting from her office at the back of the building all the way up to the front door took longer than she planned on staying outside, but Jay needed to move her body before it all atrophied. She needed both hands to lift the latch on the smaller "her" sized door beside the larger main entrance, and because she was so mentally drained, she walked right into the waist high snow drift that was waiting for her on the other side.
Startled awake, Jay hopped back and dusted her pants off. "I guess it didn't stop snowing this morning," she said with a soft chuckle. Grabbing the snow shovel she'd left by the door just for this occasion, Jay brandished it with only the slightest twinge of pain. "And everyone thought I was crazy for requesting this."
Once she got moving, the act of shoveling helped more than Jay'd expected. The snow itself was very light and powdery, making for a quick and easy clean of the small amount of space she required. She didn't have to stop and think about where she was throwing the snow either, since the only person she could possibly inconvenience with it was herself. To everyone else in Nettles, this light dusting of snow barely reached up the sides of their shoes.
That boost of energy didn't last very long though. Sooner than she'd have liked the exhaustion from the rest of the day caught up with her and forced Jay to stop prematurely. Even so, she had cleared enough room to reach the wall and lean up against it. Without an immediate new task Jay's tired mind began to wander. A chilly gust of wind began cutting through the built-up heat from all her physical labor. It was already pretty late in the day, later than she'd expected. Soon enough she'd call it a night and head home, back to Collin.
Movement on the wide street in front of town hall snapped Jay back to the present. She'd of course seen the larger residents of Nettles move quickly before, but even from a distance their size mixed with that kind of speed couldn't help but startle her. Shame heated her face while her heart raced. 'I should be better by now,' Jay scolded herself.
When the runner skidded to a stop Jay realized that it was Kane. After his own equally strange arrival he'd been slowly acclimating to the uniqueness that was Nettles. Everyone in town, not just Jay and the rest of the Scouts, had taken it upon themselves to lend a hand with getting him settled, and that group effort had really paid off. Kane was still quiet and mostly kept to himself, but he seemed to like his new home well enough.
His bright red eyes didn't shine as much in the last few beams of daylight, but they had their usual uncanny glow as Kane swept his gaze over the town hall's crumbly facade. A moment later his entire posture stiffened, and his more focused eyes darted lower, to stare directly at Jay. She knew he had heightened senses compared to a normal human of any size, but that almost animalistic sharpness to his expression made her jump. The tiniest shift in the set of his mouth told Jay that he acknowledged her reaction and thought nothing more of it. That could have been for any number of reasons, but none of them mattered enough to make an impact on him.
Using the same blinding speed that had brought him into the square, Kane went to Jay's side. A single, extremely precise sweep of his hand cleared the rest of the snow from in front of her door, allowing his other, dryer, palm to settle in its place.
"What's wrong?" Jay asked as she took an instinctual step closer to Kane's hand. "Are you ok?"
This time it was Kane who flinched back at her directness, but he was quick to course correct. "No, but I found something. Tracks, in the snow. Close to town." He nodded vaguely in the direction he'd come jogging from. "I don't know what made them, and I'm not allowed to go into the woods alone, so I came to get help."
Jay's smile brightened at the idea that she fit his definition of "help", especially in this scenario. "While we could just go together, I think bringing another Scout along would be in our best interest," she replied plainly. "Collin took the day off to spend time with his brother, but Trevor should be home. Let's ask him."
Even the simple action of nodding in agreement was done with a level of careful formality. "We should hurry," Kane added. "If it's a boar we need to take care of it before it hurts someone."
Phantasmal pains ached through Jay's arm. "Agreed."
Having become all but desensitized to being carried, Jay didn't waste any time stepping up onto Kane's hand. As he began to both lift her and stand up, Kane tilted his wrist. It happened so suddenly that Jay was tipped over as well, falling onto her side against his palm. Kane's clawed fingers wrapped around her in a gentle but secure hold, and he kept his arm locked against his body before he started moving again.
This wasn't anything new. Jay understood that, and should have been ready for it, but it still caught her off guard. It also wasn't that Kane didn't have experience around small people like her, just that he had specific training on how he should interact with them. Maybe once he officially graduated into a fully-fledged Scout and had his own uniform he'd be open to other methods, but for now, Jay could endure.
What Jay did know without a shadow of a doubt was that he wouldn't drop her. She might be more on edge, but she wasn't in danger.
Much like Collin had done when Jay returned to Nettles, Trevor had opened his home to Kane until they figured out something more permeant. Also, like Jay and Collin, that solution might never be necessary because the pair had settled into the arrangement quite naturally. Trevor's home, like the man himself, had a very easy going and welcoming atmosphere about it, one that anyone would find appealing were they in need of somewhere to stay.
When they arrived there was a light shining through the house's one fully intact window, meaning that they thankfully didn't have to fan out and search for Trevor. Kane cut right to the point and just opened the front door, the sound of which drew the man in question towards the front of the house.
"Oh, you're back early," Trevor commented when he met them near the kitchen. His gaze instinctually drifted down to Kane's partially raised arm. "And you brought company... Aren't you supposed to be out patrolling for another hour?"
Given his generally laid-back attitude, it was easy to forget just how seriously Trevor took his job as a Scout. Most people knew Collin as the brains of the operation, but in reality, it truly was an equal partnership. Having met them first on a mission, Kane understood that as well as Jay. "I found tracks in the snow," he reported. "They were much closer than I'd seen before, but led back into the woods, so I went for backup."
Trevor started to roll his eyes but stopped himself short. 'Nobody follows that rule, not even the youngest Scout applicants,' he muttered. 'Regulations and orders mean something completely different to him.' Easing out of his senior officer stance, Trevor loosely crossed his arms. "And you came to get some extra muscle, smart." He locked eyes with Jay and shot her a quick wink. "No offense, Ranger South. I know you're no slouch in a fight."
"Even I know better than to cross paths with a crag boar shorthanded," Jay quipped right back. "But if we're going to find this thing, we should really get going."
On that Trevor agreed. "Give me a second to suit up."
Mostly suiting up just meant Trevor put on his Scout uniform, however, in this instance, he also grabbed his longest hunting knife, a coil of rope, and an axe. They might not know what made the tracks that Kane saw, but Trevor had been on enough tracking mission to understand that you do not go unprepared for anything. Especially when "anything" usually amounted to a prolonged confrontation with an angry, territorial boar.
Rejoining them at the door, Trevor spared Jay a glance before focusing back on Kane. He held his open palm between them. "You're gonna want your hands free if things take a turn," Trevor said. "We both will."
Kane stalled for a moment, then slowly pried his arm away from his side. His fingers opened carefully, one at a time, to ensure that Jay was transferred safely. Only the smaller woman caught the understanding glimmer in the Scout's eyes, offering him her own silent thanks in return. Trevor then ferried her to his shirt pocket, dipping the tips of his fingers through the opening as well to treat the Ranger with the same level of care. The two larger men shared look, and without another word they headed out into the snow.
After retracing their steps back to town hall, Kane took point and led them towards the edge of town. Unlike the wilder wastelands further out, this section of Nettles was still in mostly working order. There were small clusters of occupied houses, the occasional shop, and a handful of public spaces like makeshift parks and community gardens. Like everything else in this shell of a town these offerings didn't compare to their counterparts on the outside, but to the residents of Nettles, they meant the world.
Just as they reached the end of road Kane had turned on to, Jay and Trevor saw what had gotten his attention. Cutting between the fresh snow banks was a set of deep, messy tracks. They did turn back around and head into the trees, but the fact that they were there at all added a touch of dread to their anxious thoughts.
"I should know what these are," Jay grumbled when Trevor had crept forward to get a better look. "Part of our training was sight identification of regional animal tracks, and we got quizzed on them constantly."
Trevor's assessment was just as lacking. "There's only so many things in this forest it even could be, and I've seen them all a hundred times." His eyes narrowed as he kept staring at the prints. "Collin would know. Even with how the snow's distorted them. He could tell us without breaking a sweat."
Silently absorbing their frustration, Kane shuffled up beside Trevor. "So what now? Should we just go get Collin?"
Determination sparked in the Scout's eyes. "Just because we don't know what it is doesn't mean we can't track it," Trevor chuckled. "Besides, with all three of us here, I know we'll be fine." Neither Jay nor Kane had the heart to interject when Trevor was all fired up, so they simply went along for the ride as the Scout started off towards the trees.
For a while the only sounds around them were Trevor and Kane's lightly crunching footsteps and the soft whooshes of snow sliding down from far off branches. The forest around Nettles was usually very quiet, but that silence was always amplified after heavy snowfalls. So little activity meant nothing had come through to disturb their trail, which they stayed glued to until the trees broke to reveal a small clearing...
And their quarry.
Two bucks ambled along the opposite side of the clearing, picking at handful of pine branches within their reach. Multiple trees in their path already had patches of their bark striped off, and it looked like the buffet hadn't closed just yet.
While Jay and Trevor both relaxed, Kane tensed up. "What are we going to do?" he whispered, his voice drifting on the in a puff of fog. "Can we take two at once?"
Breathing a cloudy chuckle, Trevor put his hand on Kane's shoulder. "Nah. Those guys are no threat."
"But the animals changed when they grew," Kane insisted.
Trevor gave Kane's shoulder a pat before letting his arm fall to his side. "And not all changes were the same," he countered. "The boars were already plenty nasty to begin with, and their bigger size made them all bit more crazy." He exhaled a sigh and crossed his arms just below Jay. "None of the littler critters survived the transition. Birds, bugs, and a lot of the smaller rodents died out almost right after the accident. Something didn't mesh right with them. As for the bigger guys like deer and wolves, well, they sorta just mellowed out. They've found a balance and are living out the rest of their days in relative peace. We only kill them if we absolutely have to."
"Because they're dying out on their own," Jay filled in. In addition to all of the town's problems, the revelation about the surrounding wildlife had hit her hard. "Their populations are stagnant and can only sustain themselves for so long. Eventually they'll all go extinct."
The unspoken parallels hung around them like the heavier cloud cover rolling in from the east. It was going to snow again tonight. "It's the fate of all of us inside the wall," Trevor said with a darker chuckle. "Our clocks are ticking down until the day we're all eventually gone." An old ache he'd never bothered to process tugged at his heart, but he let the pain just slide down his back. "That's why I'm glad I got the chance to meet and get to know you two. For the only people I've ever known from the outside, I'm pretty sure I hit the jackpot."
"I never dreamed I'd get to actually come here," Jay admitted with a hollow laugh of her own. "All I ever wanted to do when I was younger was help and protect you guys, and now I get to do that alongside you, not just from some tower at the gate."
Now that they weren't bothering to keep quiet anymore the deer across field decided it was best to move on. In more ways than one, Kane wished he could've joined them. "I'm not sure if I count as someone from the outside," he mumbled, drawing a pair of concerned gazes. "I have no idea who I was before I became this."
Having been born a "monster", Trevor had never put much thought to what it would be like to suddenly become one. He reached for Kane again, this time wrapping his arm around his stiff shoulders to pull him closer. "Well, you're here now. That means you're one of us," Trevor declared with a brighter version of his standard mischievous grin. "The ship's going down, and there's nothing any of us can do about it, but you're welcome to stay for the ride. However long that ends up being."
Jay had never felt more out of place in Nettles. She'd chosen to be here, but she could also leave whenever she wanted. There was nothing stopping her from going back to the gate and just walking through. The only thing trapping her was her desire to stay. Even if she was helping make their lives better, what right did she have to live among them? They'd never truly be equals, not in all the ways that really mattered.
"That counts for you too, Jay." Trevor's sudden acknowledgement yanked Jay out of her head. When she looked up, she was faced with the brunt force of two very sharp stares. Despite the brighter glow of Kane's eyes in the twilit dimness, the one she found harder to meet was Trevor's darker gaze. The Scout's brow furrowed deeper when she'd lifted her head, almost as if he knew where her thoughts had wandered off to. "I doubt they'd ever let you just walk free out there after all this. Especially not since Kane." Keeping his one arm around Kane's shoulders, Trevor brought his other hand up to lay over his pocket. "It'd be a different sort of cage, but a cage all the same."
Why? Why did Trevor always seem to know exactly what Jay needed to hear? 'He might prefer deflecting to make Collin be the more likable one,' Jay thought through the subtle sting of tears, 'but he's just as observant and sensitive. He's got such a big heart.'
She held on to the moment for a couple seconds longer before gracing them both with a smile. "Well, if they let me choose my cage, then I think I'm good to stay right here," she replied with a hint of a laugh. "If they want me somewhere else, they'll have to come in and get me."
The heartier chuckle that rumbled in Trevor's chest spread out to warm both Jay and Kane. "And we're not just gonna let them take you," Trevor quipped. He pulled Kane in closer into a deliberate half hug. "Either one of you. They'll have to burn this whole place to the ground first."
As Trevor began to guide the strange little huddle back towards town, Kane and Jay had a chance to share a passing glance. They were the only two true outsiders in all of Nettles, but now that didn't seem to carry the same weighty stigma. If the only people who hadn't accepted them were themselves, what were they so worried about?
This part of the ruins were quiet, apart from wind funneled in courtesy of the still standing office buildings surrounding the streets. The ground was littered with debris and wrecked cars. Among the desolation was a lone human soldier, stumbling their way in the dark. It was nearly pitch black, save for the dim moonlight cast upon the city.
Ciel hadnât made much progress with his previous orders, regrouping with any other surviving units. He was alone, having been separated from his squad from a single threat. One giant, thatâs all it took for them to nearly get wiped out.
He shuddered at the fresh memory. The human was typically equipped with an AT-4, one of the few hand held weapons that could hurt a giant. During the chaos of the engagement, he dropped it out of panic while avoiding certain death. That came in the form of a boot slamming inches away from him and tossing him into convenient cover.
With nothing but a combat knife, he just kept going. Holding out hope that once their commander saw how little was left, they could retreat.
His thoughts were interrupted by a faint tremor, and at that moment, Ciel froze. Another shook the ground, and he discovered himself paralyzed. He felt sick to his stomach as it churned, his head working over time but not producing any results. Half of his thoughts were the consequences of what was coming, and what to do to avoid it. Neither half was really working together. It was only when the tremors became so powerful that it physically shook him out of his frozen stance that he began to run.
What was apparent during the opening hours of the invasion was the futility of running away. It took a person dozens of steps to cover a city block, as opposed to a few casual strides from their towering opposition. Keeping this in mind, Ciel ducked through the door of a convenience store. He ran to the back and sat behind the counter.
At this point he was gasping for breath like coming out from underwater after several minutes. He greedily took more air in as if it would calm his hammering heart and ease the dread it pumped with every beat.
The tremors still came closer, and their effect became more audible. The cracking of tarmac, the shifting of glass shards, the dust that fell from the ceiling. Each step was a reminder in the physical and psychological of how outmatched he was. It was no different than waiting out some terrible natural disaster, you couldnât fight it. You just needed to wait for it to pass.
Ciel dared a peak past the counter. Several cars went flying past the store, with one crashing just in front. His hand went to his mouth as a black boot came down, the vehicle practically disappearing in a quick crunch of metal and glass. He looked away and pressed himself against the counter again. His hand was still tightly clamped to his mouth, and he did his best to keep still. Especially since the owner of said boot hadnât moved on.
He didnât bother to check on the giant and instead started looking for a way out. On the right side of the store was a door. Ciel wasnât sure where it led, but it was a better option than just walking out the front.
With the pace of a sloth, he started to get back onto his feet. Once standing, he slowly started making his way to the door. Ciel glanced to the street and silently cursed, as the giant still hadnât moved on. For the single moment he was distracted, Cielâs step landed on several pieces of glass. The crinkle and shatter seemed like a bomb going off compared to the stale silent air. He didnât need to look at the store front to know that it was time to start moving.
Ciel broke out into a sprint as the front of the store turned into a blast of glass and debris. Shelves were torn apart and thrown to the back, barely missing the human as he bashed the door open with his shoulder. Looking back, his eyes widened seeing a hand that filled up the entire store. It felt around, ripping up the tiles on the ground and scraping against the roof.
From the door he entered, Ciel found himself in the storage room. There was another door at the rear which had a red sign labeled âexitâ. He ran over and got out of the building, now on the street block adjacent to where the giant was. Ciel picked a random direction to head down, he didnât care if it got him to the rendezvous point. He just needed to go anywhere that wasnât where he currently was.
For a moment, he thought the giant had lost him. Until the sound of crumbling brick rumbled through the air. Glancing back, he paled seeing the towering figure plow through the apartment building atop the convenience store. It more or less pushed it out of the way as if it were a heavy door, stepping onto the street and looking in his direction.
Ciel pushed himself to run faster, and whatever glimmer of hope he had for escape evaporated at the tremor which nearly tripped him. Each one made it harder to stay upright, though that wasnât the biggest threat.
His breath hitched as a crumpled SUV flew past him, crashing into a street lamp. Every step resulted in debris and other objects being flung forward. Ciel was never given the time to duck as a piece of road passed him, its jagged edge slicing the side of his thigh and sending him tumbling to the ground at full speed.
A pained cry left Ciel as he hit the hard tarmac, rolling a couple of times and ending up on his back. Each movement of his leg elicited a ragged breath.Â
Despite this, he used what little strength he had to sit up and assess the damage. The sight of a wide gash with bits of rock embedded inside made him nauseous. The additional darkness surrounding him as the giant caught up to him didnât help either.
He slowly turned his gaze upwards, body starting to tremble as he craned his neck further up. Wondering if there was any end to the looming presence in front of him.
Finally, Ciel met a glowing pair of red eyes staring down at him. He couldnât make much of a face or even expression as they wore a mask which covered their mouth and nose. His head filled in a guess that matched with how he felt. Small beyond comprehension, already feeling crushed by the weight of their shadow and gaze.
He remembered that he wasnât completely unarmed. His shaking arm reached for the knife on his hip holster. Once in hand, he pointed it at the giant. With conviction the strength of paper.
In response, the giant took out a pistol and aimed it down at him. The image was comical at a glance, a weapon fit to wipe out entire armored battalions aimed down at someone smaller than their finger.
Ciel gaped up at the barrel which was almost big enough for him to fit through. At that size, he wouldnât even need to be hit directly to be killed. The shockwave alone at the current distance would rupture his organs, and the impact would send debris through similar to a bullet.
He looked down slightly, avoiding the gaze of the giant before him. His arm slowly lowered to the ground where he dropped the knife. Ciel closed his eyes, shielding him with a single arm as he waited with bated breath.
The gunshot, the impossibly loud boom that would shatter him, none of it came.
It took him a while to gain the courage to open his eyes and move his hand away. When he did, Ciel looked up.
The massive pistol was gone, and the giant was crouching over him. Now that it was closer, its eyes bathed Ciel and the surrounding ground with a crimson glow. While he was relieved to not be dead, there was little comfort in the thing that could very easily kill him being even closer.
Its brow was furrowed, and that was the only gleam of emotion that Ciel could gather. Not enough to decipher intention, and not knowing was eating him on the inside. Whether or not he lived through this was still up in the air.
He thought that maybe if he slowly crawled away, the giant would let him go. Ciel tried but the slightest movement from his legs reminded him of the gash on his thigh, and he was starting to become light headed from the blood loss.
The eyes above him shifted ever so slightly, and thatâs when he noticed a new detail about the giant. The pointed ears, which were currently angled downward. Ciel also noticed the hand at its side now moving into view towards him.
He ignored the throbbing pain to scramble away. The human was already slow compared to the giant on foot, but scooting backwards he may as well have not moved at all.
Seeing the approaching two fingers he closed his eyes again, thinking that maybe the giant didnât want to waste an entire bullet on him.
Ciel harshly flinched as he felt something pinch his sides, and he opened his eyes upon feeling himself be lifted up.Â
The humanâs stomach dropped as the ground left him, replaced by fingers which curled under him to form a fleshy platform. The index and thumb that held him in place opened up, allowing Ciel to settle in the dip of its palm.Â
He grabbed the leathery surface as the hand continued to ascend, feeling a present pulse and warmth which seemed to surround him. Reminding the human that he was not on solid ground, or any kind of ground he was familiar with.
From where Ciel was seated, the city didnât exist nor did any other surrounding environment. All there was, was him. Or at least he guessed him.
The cold still air was replaced by the heat radiated by the giantâs body, and given a steady beat with its breathing. To his sides the city had been replaced by fingers curled up to box him in, and in front was a face bearing down on him. Framed by the dark sky, with all its attention directed on the tiny figure.
Ciel more or less was frozen in place, both from fear and the blood continuing to spill out the wound. His vision started to blur, and he began to fall on his side. Before he did, he couldâve sworn itâs thumb moved under him. Allowing his head to rest as he fell unconscious.