Scourge Masterlist
Chapter 1
Collapse
Chapter 2
Collision
Chapter 3
Threshold
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
TBA
AO3
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Today's Document
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
dirt enthusiast

No title available
One Nice Bug Per Day
DEAR READER
No title available
Claire Keane
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
occasionally subtle

tannertan36
No title available

roma★
wallacepolsom

JVL

No title available

Origami Around

seen from Germany
seen from Australia

seen from Italy

seen from Singapore
seen from Australia
seen from Sweden

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Hungary
seen from Israel

seen from United States
seen from Algeria

seen from Belgium

seen from Italy
@loulasav
Scourge Masterlist
Chapter 1
Collapse
Chapter 2
Collision
Chapter 3
Threshold
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
TBA
AO3
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Scourge
WC: 2.2K
Chapter 3
Threshold
Previous chapter • m.list • next chapter
A low, whistling breath of a laugh caught in the back of Sukuna's throat as he stepped from the treeline. His bare feet crunching the frozen, morning dew.
His upper eyes fixed on you.
The lower pair, split between Uraume's rigid posture and the open door of the shed, cataloged everything behind you. The tools lining the walls, the chain overhead swaying faintly, and the weapon embedded in the table.
The hunting coat's zipper dragged open as the heavy fabric parted to reveal the layers beneath.
"So."
The word settling into the space like you were checking a list, as you shrugged the coat off and hung it on a nail. Weight shifting to one hip, arms folded across your chest, leaning against the doorframe.
Your gaze passed over the expanse of tattooed skin, four arms, and a face that belonged to a bygone era—to settle on Uraume's decidedly meeker form.
"Sorcerers, I presume?"
Said as flatly as asking about the weather.
Sukuna's mouth opened, a cutting retort about perceptiveness of insects forming—
"I wasn't talkin' to ya."
Your gaze unshifting. It remained cold, locked on Uraume.
A moth's wing flicker of something sharper sat behind the amusement in his eyes.
You had just looked at the King of Curses and decided he wasn't worthy of addressing first.
Uraume's spine went rigid. Their chin lifted a fraction, pink eyes darkening as the insolence registered.
"Mind your tongue when you are speaking to Master Sukuna."
The words came out clipped, each syllable carved from the very ice they wield.
Your eyebrow raised, and a faint smirk settled into place.
"That name supposed to mean somethin' to me?"
Uraume's composure cracked as your insolent words sat in the air like campfire smoke.
Their jaw tightened, pink eyes narrowing to razor-thin slits as frost crept along their fingers.
"How. Dare. You."
The seething words came out low, each one forced through clenched teeth.
"He could kill you and that entire dingy hole you people call a village without breaking stride."
Your hand came up.
Turned over.
Fingers flexing once, examining them as if Uraume's death threat had been a comment about dinner plans.
A small, flat sound escaped your nose.
"Mhm."
Your voice carried no urgency, just the bone-deep certainty of someone who had been surrounded by worse. You slid one nail under another, scraping out a thin line of dried blood from the deer.
"So could just about anything nowadays."
Uraume's lips parted, breath hitching as they opened their mouth to snap back—
A laugh cut through the space.
The sound came from both of Sukuna's mouths. The one throwing it out in a bark, the maw on his stomach echoing it with a guttural, unholy harmony.
"I'll give you this."
Sukuna's lower eyes half-lidded, the upper pair bright with genuine amusement.
"You're at least entertaining."
He stepped forward until his frame blocked your view of Uraume.
The heat rolling off his body punched through the winter air and hit you like you'd opened an oven door.
Four broad shoulders nearly consumed the doorway.
One upper hand braced against the wood above your head.
He lowered himself until you were forced to finally acknowledge him.
His upper eyes held yours, looking at you like you were an amusing stray cat.
The lower set tracked everything else—
The tension that barely hunched your shoulders.
The position of your hands under your biceps.
The way your weight sat, seemingly, relaxed against the wall but leaning forward a little too far.
Every involuntary micro-movement your body betrayed told him one thing.
You know why he is here.
"Gojo."
His voice dropped, stripped of any pretense of performance.
"He was here. I can feel his presence all over this little hovel of yours. Where is he?"
Something shifted behind your eyes.
Not fear or recognition of his authority, but a flicker of rapid calculations.
"Maybe I know where he is."
You tilted your head a degree.
"Maybe I got an awful memory."
You shrugged with one shoulder.
"Or maybe I want to hear what I'm gettin' for that info."
Behind him, Uraume's breaths shortened.
Their hands, hidden within their sleeves, curled into fists.
The sheer audacity of this vainglorious woman, standing in a shed that smelled of blood and moldering wood. Haggling with Sukuna as if he were a simple merchant in the marketplace.
Sukuna's expression didn't change, but something behind his eyes recalibrated.
The smirk stayed in place, but his eyes went flat and cold. The stray cat was no longer amusing and he was going to drown it, just to watch the ripples.
The wood of the doorframe cracked faintly under his grip.
His body leaning into the space, close enough that the individual striations in his irises were visible and the way crimson bled into darker rings at the edges.
"I'll make your death mercifully faster than you deserve."
The words came out conversational, but the promise behind them was absolute.
Still you didn't flinch.
Not when his face was a finger's breadth from yours.
Not when his warm, suspiciously metallic, breath stirred the strands that had escaped your braids.
Not when the sheer size of him blocked out the gray morning light and replaced it with his shadowed silhouette.
Your lips twitched upward.
"Anyone ever tell ya that ya ain't a very good negotiator?"
Both sets of his lips curled back, showing canines sharper than any human should possess.
"You misunderstand your position."
The words wrapped around you tight like a silken noose.
His lower left hand released the frame and gestured—
At the shed.
At you who had backed themselves into a corner.
At the fact that there was nowhere to run.
"This was never a negotiation."
Behind you, the blood had slowed to a drip. The contents surface dark and reflective, the smell of iron dense enough to coat the back of your throat.
The seconds ticked by as you silently held his gaze.
Then your shoulder left the frame—your body pivoting back toward the interior of the shed.
"Mm."
Dismissive, the kind of noise you might make at a dog that had barked too many times on the street to be threatening.
"Well, as lovely as y'all have been."
Slowly pulling your sleeves up over your elbows, revealing old burns and pale jagged lines, criss-crossing the skin in varying sizes and depths.
"That deer's dry 'nough."
Without a backward glance you walked toward the carcass.
Heavy boots tracking through the blood-darkened patches on the wooden floor, leaving prints that would never be fully scrubbed out.
You crouched, balancing on the balls of your feet, and settled your steady gaze on the bucket of blood.
As if the most dangerous thing to have ever existed wasn't standing six feet behind you, now seething.
A snarl ripped through Sukuna's teeth, low and grinding like tectonic plates shifting against each other.
She needs to learn.
He thought as he stepped forward into the doorframe—
And stopped.
His foot, mid-stride, met the threshold and found it occupied by something that was not wood or air.
It pressed against his chest.
Not solid.
Or visible.
But there.
A resistance that met his forward momentum and pushed him back.
The air inside the shed shimmered faintly, a barely perceptible distortion, like the haze of heat rising off blacktop.
His eyes snapped to the workbench.
Sneaky rat.
Still embedded point-first in the wood, handle upright. The knife's position—not thrown or dropped—placed, precisely and deliberately. And where the metal met the grain, a faint trace of something that pulsed with a heartbeat rhythm.
A conditional barrier with activation triggers after placement.
The realization settled cold and clear.
Ready to react to—
His eyes narrowed.
Malediction.
He pressed a hand against it, feeling the texture of the construct woven into the very architecture of the shed.
Elegant in its design, the veil had sat dormant for years, yet it remained perfectly stable.
No cursed energy leak, no visible or tangible tells.
It was work that required not just power, but considerable skill.
Gojo's presence was all over this place, clinging to the walls like mold, but he didn't create this.
Not with this level of subtlety.
A low chuckle slipped from you as you turned your head slightly, just enough for him to see the curve of your cheek and the edge of a grin that didn't need to be as wide as it was to be infuriating.
Sukuna's eyes cut toward the sound.
"Oh, yous were gonna try your luck killin' me, weren't ya?" Your voice shifting to a mocking lilt.
Uraume stepped forward, hand outstretched, palm flat against the invisible wall.
The barrier responded to them differently.
The shimmer intensified, brightened, and then pulsed outward.
Uraume's arm was flung back as if struck, their body stumbling a full step before they caught themselves.
Sukuna brought his hand to the barrier and flexed his fingers against the shimmer.
A bolt arced across the veil as his arm was thrown back, skin singeing to black before he healed it just as quick.
The barrier increases its reaction to each action against it.
The distinction was maddening and fascinating in equal measure.
Clever.
A short, derisive laugh bubbled up from you as you turned your head back to the bucket.
"Ya know," you said, conversationally, "he said people'd come lookin' for him."
You stuck your arm into the bucket. Blood sloshed, wet and heavy, coating your forearm to the elbow.
"Said they'd be dangerous."
When your arm pulled free, crimson ran in thick, slow rivulets to the floor.
You balanced your forearms on your thighs, blood staining the fabric of your pants, dripping from your fingertips onto the stained floor.
Your back still to them.
Still to him.
The laughing quality of your voice was a violence all its own.
"Said I'd needa go with him and Roland if I wanted to survive."
Sukuna's patience thinned.
Not the theatrical kind he wore like armor. The real kind, one that had been eroding for years across oceans and dead cities and empty sorcerers who couldn't tell him what he needed to know.
His breath came sharp through his nose, nostrils flaring.
You turned your head, looking over your shoulder.
The movement was slow, deliberate, and carried the weight of someone who found this deliciously fun.
"Looked pretty shocked when I told him to shove his protection up his ass."
Sukuna's lower left hand came up. Two fingers extended, cursed energy coiling at the tips, the familiar tension of a dismantle loading the air like a breath before a scream.
"If I cared about dyin'," you said, your voice cutting through the gathering energy, "I woulda gone with the jackasses."
The words landed in the silence like a stone in water.
A deep chuckle rumbled from your soon-to-be assaliant and as his mouth opened—
Your hand slammed to the ground.
The motion was fast. Your palm struck the wooden floor with a metallic crack, and when you pulled it away, something remained.
A stake.
Iron, wrapped in blood-stained talisman paper. The characters inscribed on its surface were not Japanese nor English, but something else entirely.
You had driven it into a pre-drilled hole in the floor with enough force to seat it deep, the wood around it splitting in hairline fractures that radiated outward like a spiderweb.
The air changed.
A pressure shift that hit Sukuna's skin like he'd fallen straight through the atmosphere.
A second barrier formed visibly. It didn't creep or build. It erupted, pouring outward in a wave that raced past the shed, past the blood-soaked drag path of the deer, past the rusted outbuilding and the reeking shed, until it encompassed the entire property in a dome of shimmering distortion that caught the weak morning light and turned it prismatic for half a beat before settling into black.
The forest beyond went quiet.
Not the held-breath quiet of his arrival, but a sealed one.
Like a bell jar had been dropped over this tiny section of the forest.
The barrier humming at a frequency that made Uraume's teeth ache and Sukuna's skin prickle with the recognition of craftsmanship he had never seen in his lifetime.
His eyes burned into yours.
Not with the bored half-lidded contempt he had offered the sorcerer in the office tower.
Not with the flat dismissal he had given the sorcerers who offered no information.
Not how he had looked at you mere minutes ago.
Not with the predatory amusement born from the fascination that he reserved for Gojo, Mahoraga, or Megumi.
This was something rawer.
With a grin on your face you stood and walked to a rag hanging from a nail by the door.
Something took a seat behind those four crimson irises—rage, yes, but threaded through with something deathly close to being impressed.
"Now."
Your voice was clean, steady, and carried the unmistakable weight of someone who had just changed the hierarchy of the present company.
You began wiping the blood from your arm, the towel darkening.
"Let's discuss my terms for that info ya want."
The deer's swaying from the barrier eruption stilled. Blood dripped from its nose onto the floor in a rhythm that might have been a clock, if clocks still worked in this timeline.
Tap…
Tap…
Tap…
"Terms."
He repeated.
The blood dripped behind you, like sand in an hourglass. Each drop a measure of something slipping through his fingers.
Time…
Patience…
And through it all, you waited.
And for the first time in longer than he cared to admit—
Sukuna had absolutely no idea what would happen next.
Dividers:
@kodaswrld
@cafekitsune
Photos:
Background - myself
Don’t go in the woods - I can’t reliably figure out who to credit it too but the oldest is a movie Bloodsprayer
Sukuna - @aiiana_0 on instagram
A/N: Chapters 1 and 2 have been updated because I was half asleep when I posted them.
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Scourge Masterlist
Chapter 1
Collapse
Chapter 2
Collision
Chapter 3
Threshold
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
TBA
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
MDNI CURSED LIKE ME
CHAPTER 10: An Unconscious Revelation
Chapter Summary: You've met the King of Curses, Ryomen Sukuna, and your punishment is to become his personal servant... But there's something about your new ruler that's almost... familiar?
Chapter Warnings: N/A
Taglist: open!
Taglist: @khaotickaleidoscope @ostara-27 @loulasav @chosomyfavwife @brunettebunnyx
Go check out @scatteredwitch420’s new chapter!! 💚💚
Scourge
WC: 2.2K
Chapter 3
Threshold
Previous chapter • m.list • next chapter • AO3
A low, whistling breath of a laugh caught in the back of Sukuna's throat as he stepped from the treeline. His bare feet crunching the frozen, morning dew.
His upper eyes fixed on you.
The lower pair, split between Uraume's rigid posture and the open door of the shed, cataloged everything behind you. The tools lining the walls, the chain overhead swaying faintly, and the weapon embedded in the table.
The hunting coat's zipper dragged open as the heavy fabric parted to reveal the layers beneath.
"So."
The word settling into the space like you were checking a list, as you shrugged the coat off and hung it on a nail. Weight shifting to one hip, arms folded across your chest, leaning against the doorframe.
Your gaze passed over the expanse of tattooed skin, four arms, and a face that belonged to a bygone era—to settle on Uraume's decidedly meeker form.
"Sorcerers, I presume?"
Said as flatly as asking about the weather.
Sukuna's mouth opened, a cutting retort about perceptiveness of insects forming—
"I wasn't talkin' to ya."
Your gaze unshifting. It remained cold, locked on Uraume.
A moth's wing flicker of something sharper sat behind the amusement in his eyes.
You had just looked at the King of Curses and decided he wasn't worthy of addressing first.
Uraume's spine went rigid. Their chin lifted a fraction, pink eyes darkening as the insolence registered.
"Mind your tongue when you are speaking to Master Sukuna."
The words came out clipped, each syllable carved from the very ice they wield.
Your eyebrow raised, and a faint smirk settled into place.
"That name supposed to mean somethin' to me?"
Uraume's composure cracked as your insolent words sat in the air like campfire smoke.
Their jaw tightened, pink eyes narrowing to razor-thin slits as frost crept along their fingers.
"How. Dare. You."
The seething words came out low, each one forced through clenched teeth.
"He could kill you and that entire dingy hole you people call a village without breaking stride."
Your hand came up.
Turned over.
Fingers flexing once, examining them as if Uraume's death threat had been a comment about dinner plans.
A small, flat sound escaped your nose.
"Mhm."
Your voice carried no urgency, just the bone-deep certainty of someone who had been surrounded by worse. You slid one nail under another, scraping out a thin line of dried blood from the deer.
"So could just about anything nowadays."
Uraume's lips parted, breath hitching as they opened their mouth to snap back—
A laugh cut through the space.
The sound came from both of Sukuna's mouths. The one throwing it out in a bark, the maw on his stomach echoing it with a guttural, unholy harmony.
"I'll give you this."
Sukuna's lower eyes half-lidded, the upper pair bright with genuine amusement.
"You're at least entertaining."
He stepped forward until his frame blocked your view of Uraume.
The heat rolling off his body punched through the winter air and hit you like you'd opened an oven door.
Four broad shoulders nearly consumed the doorway.
One upper hand braced against the wood above your head.
He lowered himself until you were forced to finally acknowledge him.
His upper eyes held yours, looking at you like you were an amusing stray cat.
The lower set tracked everything else—
The tension that barely hunched your shoulders.
The position of your hands under your biceps.
The way your weight sat, seemingly, relaxed against the wall but leaning forward a little too far.
Every involuntary micro-movement your body betrayed told him one thing.
You know why he is here.
"Gojo."
His voice dropped, stripped of any pretense of performance.
"He was here. I can feel his presence all over this little hovel of yours. Where is he?"
Something shifted behind your eyes.
Not fear or recognition of his authority, but a flicker of rapid calculations.
"Maybe I know where he is."
You tilted your head a degree.
"Maybe I got an awful memory."
You shrugged with one shoulder.
"Or maybe I want to hear what I'm gettin' for that info."
Behind him, Uraume's breaths shortened.
Their hands, hidden within their sleeves, curled into fists.
The sheer audacity of this vainglorious woman, standing in a shed that smelled of blood and moldering wood. Haggling with Sukuna as if he were a simple merchant in the marketplace.
Sukuna's expression didn't change, but something behind his eyes recalibrated.
The smirk stayed in place, but his eyes went flat and cold. The stray cat was no longer amusing and he was going to drown it, just to watch the ripples.
The wood of the doorframe cracked faintly under his grip.
His body leaning into the space, close enough that the individual striations in his irises were visible and the way crimson bled into darker rings at the edges.
"I'll make your death mercifully faster than you deserve."
The words came out conversational, but the promise behind them was absolute.
Still you didn't flinch.
Not when his face was a finger's breadth from yours.
Not when his warm, suspiciously metallic, breath stirred the strands that had escaped your braids.
Not when the sheer size of him blocked out the gray morning light and replaced it with his shadowed silhouette.
Your lips twitched upward.
"Anyone ever tell ya that ya ain't a very good negotiator?"
Both sets of his lips curled back, showing canines sharper than any human should possess.
"You misunderstand your position."
The words wrapped around you tight like a silken noose.
His lower left hand released the frame and gestured—
At the shed.
At you who had backed themselves into a corner.
At the fact that there was nowhere to run.
"This was never a negotiation."
Behind you, the blood had slowed to a drip. The contents surface dark and reflective, the smell of iron dense enough to coat the back of your throat.
The seconds ticked by as you silently held his gaze.
Then your shoulder left the frame—your body pivoting back toward the interior of the shed.
"Mm."
Dismissive, the kind of noise you might make at a dog that had barked too many times on the street to be threatening.
"Well, as lovely as y'all have been."
Slowly pulling your sleeves up over your elbows, revealing old burns and pale jagged lines, criss-crossing the skin in varying sizes and depths.
"That deer's dry 'nough."
Without a backward glance you walked toward the carcass.
Heavy boots tracking through the blood-darkened patches on the wooden floor, leaving prints that would never be fully scrubbed out.
You crouched, balancing on the balls of your feet, and settled your steady gaze on the bucket of blood.
As if the most dangerous thing to have ever existed wasn't standing six feet behind you, now seething.
A snarl ripped through Sukuna's teeth, low and grinding like tectonic plates shifting against each other.
She needs to learn.
He thought as he stepped forward into the doorframe—
And stopped.
His foot, mid-stride, met the threshold and found it occupied by something that was not wood or air.
It pressed against his chest.
Not solid.
Or visible.
But there.
A resistance that met his forward momentum and pushed him back.
The air inside the shed shimmered faintly, a barely perceptible distortion, like the haze of heat rising off blacktop.
His eyes snapped to the workbench.
Sneaky rat.
Still embedded point-first in the wood, handle upright. The knife's position—not thrown or dropped—placed, precisely and deliberately. And where the metal met the grain, a faint trace of something that pulsed with a heartbeat rhythm.
A conditional barrier with activation triggers after placement.
The realization settled cold and clear.
Ready to react to—
His eyes narrowed.
Malediction.
He pressed a hand against it, feeling the texture of the construct woven into the very architecture of the shed.
Elegant in its design, the veil had sat dormant for years, yet it remained perfectly stable.
No cursed energy leak, no visible or tangible tells.
It was work that required not just power, but considerable skill.
Gojo's presence was all over this place, clinging to the walls like mold, but he didn't create this.
Not with this level of subtlety.
A low chuckle slipped from you as you turned your head slightly, just enough for him to see the curve of your cheek and the edge of a grin that didn't need to be as wide as it was to be infuriating.
Sukuna's eyes cut toward the sound.
"Oh, yous were gonna try your luck killin' me, weren't ya?" Your voice shifting to a mocking lilt.
Uraume stepped forward, hand outstretched, palm flat against the invisible wall.
The barrier responded to them differently.
The shimmer intensified, brightened, and then pulsed outward.
Uraume's arm was flung back as if struck, their body stumbling a full step before they caught themselves.
Sukuna brought his hand to the barrier and flexed his fingers against the shimmer.
A bolt arced across the veil as his arm was thrown back, skin singeing to black before he healed it just as quick.
The barrier increases its reaction to each action against it.
The distinction was maddening and fascinating in equal measure.
Clever.
A short, derisive laugh bubbled up from you as you turned your head back to the bucket.
"Ya know," you said, conversationally, "he said people'd come lookin' for him."
You stuck your arm into the bucket. Blood sloshed, wet and heavy, coating your forearm to the elbow.
"Said they'd be dangerous."
When your arm pulled free, crimson ran in thick, slow rivulets to the floor.
You balanced your forearms on your thighs, blood staining the fabric of your pants, dripping from your fingertips onto the stained floor.
Your back still to them.
Still to him.
The laughing quality of your voice was a violence all its own.
"Said I'd needa go with him and Roland if I wanted to survive."
Sukuna's patience thinned.
Not the theatrical kind he wore like armor. The real kind, one that had been eroding for years across oceans and dead cities and empty sorcerers who couldn't tell him what he needed to know.
His breath came sharp through his nose, nostrils flaring.
You turned your head, looking over your shoulder.
The movement was slow, deliberate, and carried the weight of someone who found this deliciously fun.
"Looked pretty shocked when I told him to shove his protection up his ass."
Sukuna's lower left hand came up. Two fingers extended, cursed energy coiling at the tips, the familiar tension of a dismantle loading the air like a breath before a scream.
"If I cared about dyin'," you said, your voice cutting through the gathering energy, "I woulda gone with the jackasses."
The words landed in the silence like a stone in water.
A deep chuckle rumbled from your soon-to-be assaliant and as his mouth opened—
Your hand slammed to the ground.
The motion was fast. Your palm struck the wooden floor with a metallic crack, and when you pulled it away, something remained.
A stake.
Iron, wrapped in blood-stained talisman paper. The characters inscribed on its surface were not Japanese nor English, but something else entirely.
You had driven it into a pre-drilled hole in the floor with enough force to seat it deep, the wood around it splitting in hairline fractures that radiated outward like a spiderweb.
The air changed.
A pressure shift that hit Sukuna's skin like he'd fallen straight through the atmosphere.
A second barrier formed visibly. It didn't creep or build. It erupted, pouring outward in a wave that raced past the shed, past the blood-soaked drag path of the deer, past the rusted outbuilding and the reeking shed, until it encompassed the entire property in a dome of shimmering distortion that caught the weak morning light and turned it prismatic for half a beat before settling into black.
The forest beyond went quiet.
Not the held-breath quiet of his arrival, but a sealed one.
Like a bell jar had been dropped over this tiny section of the forest.
The barrier humming at a frequency that made Uraume's teeth ache and Sukuna's skin prickle with the recognition of craftsmanship he had never seen in his lifetime.
His eyes burned into yours.
Not with the bored half-lidded contempt he had offered the sorcerer in the office tower.
Not with the flat dismissal he had given the sorcerers who offered no information.
Not how he had looked at you mere minutes ago.
Not with the predatory amusement born from the fascination that he reserved for Gojo, Mahoraga, or Megumi.
This was something rawer.
With a grin on your face you stood and walked to a rag hanging from a nail by the door.
Something took a seat behind those four crimson irises—rage, yes, but threaded through with something deathly close to being impressed.
"Now."
Your voice was clean, steady, and carried the unmistakable weight of someone who had just changed the hierarchy of the present company.
You began wiping the blood from your arm, the towel darkening.
"Let's discuss my terms for that info ya want."
The deer's swaying from the barrier eruption stilled. Blood dripped from its nose onto the floor in a rhythm that might have been a clock, if clocks still worked in this timeline.
Tap…
Tap…
Tap…
"Terms."
He repeated.
The blood dripped behind you, like sand in an hourglass. Each drop a measure of something slipping through his fingers.
Time…
Patience…
And through it all, you waited.
And for the first time in longer than he cared to admit—
Sukuna had absolutely no idea what would happen next.
Dividers:
@kodaswrld
@cafekitsune
Photos:
Background - myself
Don’t go in the woods - I can’t reliably figure out who to credit it too but the oldest is a movie Bloodsprayer
Sukuna - @aiiana_0 on instagram
A/N: Chapters 1 and 2 have been updated because I was half asleep when I posted them.
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Scourge Masterlist
Chapter 1
Collapse
Chapter 2
Collision
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
TBA
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Chapter 3 should be dropping next Wednesday! I was just really unhappy with the way that it was going and decided to rewrite it in its entirety 🤷🏻♀️ but big shout out to @scatteredwitch420 for helping me realize I can just post this when I feel happy with what I’ve got 💚
Scourge Masterlist
Chapter 1
Collapse
Chapter 2
Collision
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
TBA
Taglist:
@thatonepixie @oversightnecessary @scatteredwitch420
Scourge
TW: Gore, minor character death
WC: 6.2K
Chapter 2
Collision
Previous chapter • m.list • next chapter • AO3
Scourge
Chapter 2.
Collision
Ui Ui's technique surged as he wrapped his cloth around the three of them, cursed energy splitting the seams of reality.
The abandoned office warped, collapsing in on itself. Glass sheets bending without shattering, dust motes forming eddies toward the chasm centered around the child in Sukuna's grip.
The room's stale stench was suddenly cut through by a rush of late-winter air tinged with pine resin and damp earth.
Their bodies lurched through the tunnel, the world blurring into streaks of color as they rocketed across oceans and continents in a heartbeat.
They dropped hard, slamming into the new environment. Snow bursting outward on impact.
Towering pines loomed above, branches heavy with frost, shaking brittle needles loose that pattered to the ground like rain.
Sukuna landed, flattening the ferns beneath his bare feet. The crushed stems giving off the odd aroma of freshly cut hay.
Uraume fared less gracefully. Their body pitching forward onto a thick pad of moss that squelched under their weight.
The bright mid-afternoon sun broke through the thick canopy to reveal a cloudless cerulean sky.
His eyes fixed on that small sliver of sky with a smirk.
As blue as the eyes I'm going to rip out.
Ui Ui stumbled as Sukuna dropped him. His knees buckling under exhaustion from the long space jump, muscles quivering as sweat trickled down his temples.
The hum of the forest—crickets, beetles, and spring peepers—filled the air around the trio for a fleeting moment.
Then silence enveloped them, as if the forest itself recoiled from the presence of an apex predator.
Wings froze and folded in on themselves. The peepers' whistles stopped half-completed.
The space hung heavy with an unnatural hollowness that twisted Ui Ui's stomachs with its watchful stillness.
But it only served to invigorate the King of Curses.
A fresh canvas.
Devoid of the monotony Japan had offered.
Eager to escape his temporary captors, the boy regained his footing and immediately went to rewrap himself with fumbling fingers. Wide eyes darting between Sukuna and Uraume.
"This is the outskirts of Tiona."
He snapped, voice cracking from fatigue but refusing to let go of its defiant bite.
"I've taken you as far as I need to."
The boy's cursed energy surged to life again as relief warred with weariness. His breath coming in sharp, crystallizing puffs.
"Eager little runt, aren't you."
He murmured, the words slithering out low, laced with a chuckle like stones grinding in a pit.
"I suppose I should hold up my end too."
The binding vow coiled tight around Sukuna's cursed energy alone. An invisible noose hung irritably around his neck, its restrictive pulse a fleeting annoyance he allowed for the amusement of watching the little sorcerer squirm one last time.
Uraume rose smoothly from the moss pad. Their pink eyes locked onto Ui Ui.
"Uraume. Let the boy leave."
Sukuna commanded, dripping mockery as thick as the tree sap that tinged the air.
"We did make a vow, right?"
"No."
Uraume's expression as cold as ice.
"The vow states you will let them return. I have no such intention."
Ui Ui frantically activated his technique as Uraume's cursed energy gathered in a frigid pulse.
For the first time, they disobey a command—a fracture in their eternal loyalty.
The tear ripped open again. Ui Ui's feet lifted from the ground, body half gone when Uraume struck.
Frost erupted from their palm in a razor-thin lance, honed to surgical lethality. It sliced through the fissure's edges, unimpeded, needling through Ui Ui's neck with a sickening schlick.
The boy's flesh giving way as the frozen point shattered vertebrae.
His eyes widened in shock. Mouth opening in a silent gasp beneath the cloth.
The lance expanded, ripping his head from his shoulders.
The portal snapped shut with a thunderous clap, severing the boy's body mid-transport.
Somewhere in Japan, Ui Ui's torso and head rolled across the ground in a skid of blood and frost. Eyes glassy and staring up at a screaming Mei Mei.
The body left behind slumped, twitching once, before going as still as the forest.
The vow fulfilled to the cruelest letter. Sukuna and Uraume delivered. And Sukuna never raised a finger to stop him.
The poetry of betrayal sealed without his hand.
Uraume lowered their hand. The frost dissipating in wisps that melted into the snow, leaving only a faint crystalline residue on their skin.
They dropped into a deep bow.
"Forgive my disobedience, Master Sukuna."
Both sets of lips curled back. The one on his face rumbled with a deep laugh, the maw on his stomach echoing with guttural glee.
"Don't go making a habit of it, Uraume."
The forest's silence broken only by the whisper of wind through branches.
Gojo's trail ends here.
Irritation flickered beneath the amusement as the hunt renewed, sharper now. Years of sifting through vermin for a trace of the sorcerer, and this forsaken wood would be the stage.
He shifted his weight, throwing his black haori over his shoulders. Striding forward toward the pressure gathering deeper in the trees.
One of his upper hand gestured lazily toward the deeper woods where the terrain rose into hills shrouded in mist.
"Come. I've wasted enough time already,”
Scourge
TW: gore
WC: 7.2K
Chapter 1.
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Next chapter • AO3
Scourge
Chapter 1.
Collapse
After so many years of searching—all that effort, all that time wasted sifting through this world's rot— this is how he finds out?!
A faint twitch of disappointment pulled at his mouth.
Sukuna had barely touched the floor, crashing through the sixth story window of the long-abandoned office tower, before the sorcerer dropped to the ground and began spilling his guts before Sukuna could do it for him.
The fool curled in on himself like a kicked dog.
Fingers gouging his scalp.
Arms covering his head in an attempt to shield himself from the danger standing in front of him.
Sukuna inhaled with deep exaggeration.
The smell of stale rot from moldering, long forgotten files, the sour ammonia of fear-sweat, and the new coppery tang of piss.
All swirling in his sinuses.
His crimson eyes drifted downward until they settled on the heap of a man trembling at his feet.
The upper pair remained half-lidded and utterly bored, while the lower eyes narrowed to slits. The right side tracked the tremors that wracked the man's shoulders. The larger left one counted the frantic fluttering beneath the thin skin of his throat.
His head tilted a fraction, much like a spider observing a fly stuck in its web.
The maw on his stomach twisted into a sneer with a low growl.
The coward's pulse echoed in the King of Curses' ears.
Tch. This worm holds no thrill at all.
He shifted his weight, one massive foot nudging the sorcerer's side with his toe, drawing a whimper from the man.
"P-please! I've already told you every—everything I know!"
His confession hitching in wet, ugly gasps. His shoulders shook violently enough to disturb the thick layers of dust beneath him, forcing it up into the air where it coated the maw's tongue with its bitter grit.
"H-he said he was in America!"
A restrained sound vibrated low in Sukuna's chest before it escaped as a deep sigh.
His jaw tightening, the tendons of his neck standing out sharply beneath tattooed skin. The lower right hand flexed once at his side, nails digging lightly into his palm as if testing how much patience he had left in him.
The chilled wind picked up again, carrying distant moans and shrieks from the streets far below.
One of his upper hand wrapped around the man's nape, lifting him up to eye level. Under his thumb the sorcerers pulse accelerated to an unruly staccato. The muscles tightening as he swallowed slowly.
Sukuna's eyes bore through the man.
Up close, the sweat gleamed on his forehead. Beading and trickling into his eyes, forcing frantic blinks that in turn forced tears to cut paths down his grime-streaked cheeks.
"I've been aware he's in that cesspool."
His voice was level in a way that could only spell danger.
His upper eyes narrowed further. The others flicked to the man's throat again.
"Give me specifics."
Violet just saved my readers from a tragedy 😂
reblog if you would never let ai write fanfics for you
Scourge
cw: implied non-con, isolation, depression
Author note: it’s been like…15 years since I last wrote anything, but Sukuna has me in a chokehold right now. So here we are 😭 this is very much self indulgent, I won’t lie. A lot of this is how I grew up and actual plans that my family has in case of a apocalypse or any type of world ending situation as well as genuine conversation, I have had with my family.
Banner’s up, but mdni! This gets pretty dark and deals with some heavier themes. I’ll include content warnings at the start of each part, and I’ll also link the ao3 version whenever i post an update.
But please enjoy!
•————————• preview •————————•
In only a matter of weeks the world ended.
People got sick, and then they didn't stay human. They turned quick, and by the time anyone could understand, there wasn’t anything left to contain. Countries fell, systems failed, and the dead stopped lying in the ground.
Grandma and Grandpa taught you to recognize the signs of a societal fracture and what would happen from there. Family is the only safe option. You managed to make it back to your family's land before everything finished collapsing. Your boyfriend came with you but when you arrive no one is there. Weeks pass and they don't show up. You have to accept they're likely gone…
Rewrote a whole bunch of scenes in chapter 1 today. Deleted something like 3k words then added 4k back. Can't wait to do more with chapter 2 tomorrow... not
Scourge
cw: implied non-con, isolation, depression
Author note: it’s been like…15 years since I last wrote anything, but Sukuna has me in a chokehold right now. So here we are 😭 this is very much self indulgent, I won’t lie. A lot of this is how I grew up and actual plans that my family has in case of a apocalypse or any type of world ending situation as well as genuine conversation, I have had with my family.
Banner’s up, but mdni! This gets pretty dark and deals with some heavier themes. I’ll include content warnings at the start of each part, and I’ll also link the ao3 version whenever i post an update.
But please enjoy!
•————————• preview •————————•
In only a matter of weeks the world ended.
People got sick, and then they didn't stay human. They turned quick, and by the time anyone could understand, there wasn’t anything left to contain. Countries fell, systems failed, and the dead stopped lying in the ground.
Grandma and Grandpa taught you to recognize the signs of a societal fracture and what would happen from there. Family is the only safe option. You managed to make it back to your family's land before everything finished collapsing. Your boyfriend came with you but when you arrive no one is there. Weeks pass and they don't show up. You have to accept they're likely gone…
Hiiii! could I potentially have some forest themed dividers plz?
hiii ~ 🫶🏼
“sukuna… are you awake?”
your voice is barely above a whisper, thin as mist in the quiet of your shared chamber.
there’s no answer—only the faint rustle of silk and the distant hum of the night. you wait a moment longer, listening for the familiar rumble of his voice, but it never comes.
assuming he’s fallen asleep, you push yourself up on your elbows, careful—painfully careful—not to disturb him. the moonlight seeps in through the paper screens, bathing his form in silver.
he looks… beautiful.
it’s strange, almost laughable, how peaceful he seems like this. his hair spills loosely over the pillow, his breathing steady, chest rising and falling in a rhythm you could almost time your heart to. you wonder how the same man the world calls a demon could ever look so serene. so human.
you study him a moment longer, eyes tracing the lines of his face, the faint scar that marks his mouth, the soft curve of his lashes against his cheek. there’s a warmth in your chest—quiet, dangerous warmth—and you think maybe you could stay like this forever.
you don’t notice the shift until it’s too late.
one blink, and you’re no longer hovering above him—you’re pressed flush against his chest, strong arms caging you in with effortless strength. his heartbeat thuds against your ear, deep and slow.
“did i wake you? i’m sorry—”
he cuts you off before you can finish, voice smooth and low. “no need to be sorry.”
his words rumble through you, calm but commanding, and your breath catches.
while part of you mourns losing that perfect view of him—that rare softness only sleep grants— it’s hard to complain when he holds you like this. his skin radiates heat like a living hearth, the scent of his robes mingling with your own.
you relax against him, feeling small, safe, and impossibly loved in a way he’d never admit aloud.
“i thought you were asleep,” you murmur.
a low hum vibrates against your temple. “i was,” he replies, the edge of amusement curling at the end of his words. “until my wife decided to stare holes into me.”
your cheeks burn. “i wasn’t—”
he huffs a quiet laugh, fingers tracing lazy circles at the small of your back. “you were.”
you can hear the smile in his voice even if you can’t see it. his hand stills, then pulls you closer until you’re tucked completely beneath his chin.
“go back to sleep,” he says, softer now.
wrapped in his arms, you drift off to the steady sound of his heartbeat, thinking that even if the world called him a monster, he would always be your warmth in the dark.