I haven't watched tdac (yet) but I've been getting so much funnybunny art on my feed and it's SOOO cute. I feel like if I watched the show they wouldn't be a couple I'd actually ship but the art is cute and they look cute together
Alyse accidentally drinks something that wasn't her's.
CW: Assume The Worst
Part 6: Thirst Of Greed
The library was steeped in the deep, golden silence of late afternoon. Valerius was engrossed in a tome of ancient treaties, his long fingers tracing lines of faded script. Alyse was at her usual place, a plush cushion on the floor near his chair, ostensibly mending a torn seam in a napkin. In truth, her head was nodding, lulled by the warmth of the fire and the rhythmic sound of him turning pages.
On the small, ornate table by his elbow sat a single, crystal-cut goblet. It was half-full of a liquid so deep, rich purple it was almost black, catching the firelight like a buried gem. Alyse had seen him drink from it earlier—a single, contemplative sip. She paid it little mind. His drinks were as mysterious and off-limits as the rest of his world.
Her throat felt parched from the fire’s dry heat. Her own little cup of water, always kept full for her, was empty. She glanced up at him; he was utterly absorbed, his silver brows drawn in concentration. The servant who usually refilled her water was nowhere to be seen.
Her gaze drifted to the beautiful goblet. It was so close. And it was still half-full. Master hadn’t touched it in ages. Perhaps he was finished? He often left things barely touched. It would be wasteful to let it sit. And she was so thirsty.
It wasn’t defiance. It wasn’t even curiosity. It was a simple, thirsty creature seeing a solution to a minor discomfort. With the quiet, unobtrusive movement of a mouse, she rose to her knees, reached out, and carefully pulled the heavy goblet towards the edge of the table. She glanced at Valerius. He didn’t stir.
Holding the cool crystal in both hands, she lifted it and took a deep, grateful gulp.
The taste was nothing like water. It was sweet, intensely so, like crushed berries and dark honey, but with a sharp, thrilling tang underneath that burned pleasantly on her tongue. It was the most delicious thing she’d ever tasted. Without a second thought—thirst and delight overriding all sense—she tipped the goblet back and drained it.
She set the empty glass back on the table with a soft clink. She wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, a satisfied little sigh escaping her. The thirst was gone, replaced by a spreading warmth in her belly.
For a moment, nothing happened. She picked up her mending again, the thread feeling oddly slippery between her fingers.
Then, the warmth began to travel. It slid up her spine, unfurling in her chest like a flower. The firelight seemed to grow brighter, each flame dancing with intricate, fascinating patterns. The heavy tapestry on the wall seemed to breathe.
A giggle bubbled up out of nowhere. She slapped a hand over her mouth, her eyes darting to Valerius. He was still reading. The giggle escaped anyway, a soft, hiccupping sound.
He turned a page. The sound was enormously funny. The crisp, decisive rustle struck her as the height of comedy. Another giggle escaped, louder this time.
Valerius’s eyes lifted from the page, fixing on her. His gaze was sharp, questioning.
“Master,” she said, and her own voice sounded far away and delightfully echoey. “Your book is very… rustly.”
He said nothing, just stared. His face, usually so stern and defined, seemed to be doing a funny, slow melt around the edges. She giggled again, unable to stop.
“Are you unwell?” His voice was flat, but there was a new note in it—suspicion.
“I’m very well!” she announced, her words slightly slurred. She tried to stand up to prove it, but the cushion seemed to cling to her. She swayed, catching herself on the arm of his chair. “Whoops. The floor is… wobbly today.”
His eyes flickered from her flushed face to the empty goblet on the table beside him. Understanding dawned, cold and immediate. He closed his book with a definitive snap.
“Alyse. Did you drink from this glass?”
She followed his gaze, blinking slowly. “The purple water? Yes! I was thirsty. It was delicious. Like sweet, angry berries.” She beamed at him, all traces of fear or submission vaporized by the warm, purple fog in her mind. “You should have more, master. But there isn’t any left. I drank it all.” She announced this last part with a sense of grand accomplishment.
Valerius stood up. To her swimming vision, he seemed to unfold to an impossible, magnificent height. “That was not ‘purple water,’ you foolish creature. That was a 200-year-old Isgaran fortified wine.”
“Wine,” she repeated, tasting the word. It felt nice in her mouth. “Wine, wine, wine. It’s friendly.” She reached out, not for him, but for the fascinating shimmer of the embroidery on his sleeve. “Your shirt is very shiny. Are you shiny, master?”
He caught her wandering hand before it could make contact. Her skin was fever-warm. Her pupils were dilated, her lamb-like ears twitching with erratic curiosity. She was profoundly, helplessly intoxicated.
A slow, incredulous breath escaped him. This was not a flaw born of fear or instinct. This was an absurd, idiotic accident.
“Come here,” he said, his voice taut with a mixture of annoyance and something else—fascination.
Instead of obeying with her usual timid scuttle, she practically fell into him, her legs uncooperative. He caught her against his chest. She immediately burrowed her face into his waistcoat. “Mmm. You smell like old paper and… and…” she sniffed dramatically, “...grumpy stars.”
He looked down at the top of her head, his carefully ordered evening now derailed by a thimbleful of stolen wine in a thirty-pound body. “You are intoxicated.”
“I am delighted,” she corrected him cheerfully, her words muffled by his clothing. She tilted her head back, her smile wide and unfocused. “The room is spinning. It’s a very nice spin. Like a merry-go-round for the walls.”
The golden haze of the wine was a warm, woolly blanket wrapped around Alyse’s mind. All the sharp edges of the world—his rules, her fears, the cold weight of her collar—were blissfully muffled. All that existed was the pleasant spin of the room and the fascinating textures of her master’s waistcoat. Grumpy stars, indeed.
Valerius held her upright, his hands firm on her upper arms. A lecture was forming on his tongue, cold and precise, about theft and consequences and the unforgivable stupidity of consuming unknown substances.
But before a single syllable could leave his lips, she squirmed.
It wasn’t a struggle to get away. It was a wriggle of pure, unthinking comfort. She pushed against his chest, not to escape, but to reposition herself. Her hands, clumsy and bold, pushed at his shoulders.
“Sit,” she commanded, the word a soft, slurred puff against his chin.
He was so stunned by the directive that his body obeyed the slight pressure before his mind could countermand it. He sank back into his wingchair.
This was all the invitation she needed.
With a happy, sighing sound, she climbed. Not with the tentative, testing motion from before, but with the single-minded determination of a kitten ascending a favorite perch. Her knees pressed into the cushion on either side of his hips, her weight settling heavily, familiarly, in his lap. She completely straddled him, her thin dress offering no barrier, her body molding to his with an intimacy that was both unconscious and absolute.
He froze. The lecture evaporated. Every thought was incinerated by the sheer, staggering presence of her.
“Alyse,” he warned, his voice a low, dangerous vibration in his chest—a chest she was now using as a pillow.
“Shhh,” she murmured, patting his shoulder. “Master is talking. But the spin is nicer.” She laid her head down, her cheek pressed just over his heart. One of her hands came up and began to idly play with the silver fastening at his collar. Her fingers traced the intricate metal, then slipped beneath the fabric, touching the skin of his throat.
It was a liberty so profound it stole the air from his lungs.
He was a fortress, and she, in her drunken stupor, had simply wandered through the gates, across the bailey, and into the inner keep, treating it all as her own cozy cottage. She was ignoring boundaries that were not just spoken but carved into the very architecture of their existence.
Her other hand joined the first, both now exploring the column of his throat, the line of his jaw, with a tactile curiosity that was utterly devoid of fear or subservience. She was mapping him, as a child might map a new toy.
“You’re very… here,” she announced, her words slurred with wonder. Her thumb brushed the pulse hammering at the base of his throat. “Bumpy.”
His hands, which had remained at his sides, clenched into fists so tight his knuckles ached. The beast within him, the one he kept starved and chained in a deep, dark pit, threw itself against its bars. The scent of her—sweet wine and warm lamb and innocent sweat—was a torment. The feel of her, soft and pliant and everywhere, was an exquisite agony.
She was a feast laid out on his own table, using his own cutlery, and she had no idea she was even eating.
“You need to get down,” he gritted out, the strain in his voice palpable.
“No,” she sighed, nuzzling deeper. “Comfy. You’re warm. And you have my purple water inside you. I can feel it.” As if to prove her point, she slid her hands down, over the hard plane of his chest, her touch proprietary, exploring.
That was it. The final, unbearable liberty.
With a sound that was nearly a growl, his control shattered. Not into the cold fury of before, but into something hotter, more immediate. His hands shot up and locked around her waist. In one brutal, seamless motion, he flipped her.
The world upended for Alyse again. The cozy warmth of his lap was gone. A sharp cry was forced from her lungs as she was spun and pressed down, her stomach meeting the hard, carved wood of the chair’s arm. He bent her over it, his body a heavy, unyielding weight against her back, pinning her in place. The pleasant spin of the room became a sickening lurch.
“You dare,” his voice hissed in her ear, no longer flat but scalding with a rage so intense it felt like a physical burn. “You drink what is mine. You climb where you are not invited. You touch what belongs to me with your ignorant, thieving little hands.”
One of his hands fisted in her hair, not to hurt, but to utterly dominate, forcing her head to the side so her wide, terrified, wine-clouded eyes could see nothing but the firelit rug below. The other hand slid from her waist, down over the curve of her hip, and gripped the back of her thigh with a possessiveness that was a promise and a threat.
“Is this what you wanted?” he snarled, his breath hot and ragged against her neck. “This closeness? This liberty? You have it now. Every inch of you is exactly where I have placed you. You are a thing bent to my will. Is it comfy now, you stupid, drunken lamb?”
She whimpered, the sound thin and broken, the purple haze now pierced by the sharp, cold reality of his wrath. She had taken liberties with her master’s person, and in return, he had taken every last shred of her autonomy. He held her there, suspended in the agony of her own mistake, a living lesson in the catastrophic cost of ignoring the boundaries that kept her safe from the very monster she had just, so carelessly, tried to pet.
The consequence was not a locked door or a silent treatment. It was this: the crushing understanding that his restraint was the only thing that made his lap a place she could survive. And she had just made him cast it aside.
The heavy, carved wood of the chair arm pressed into Alyse’s ribs, stealing her breath more effectively than the weight of him ever could. The world was no longer a gentle, spinning dance. It was a fixed, terrifying axis: the crush of his body against her back, the unyielding grip in her hair, the searing brand of his hand on her thigh. The purple warmth of the wine curdled in her veins, turning to ice-water fear.
“I—I didn’t—” she tried to gasp, but the words were smothered against the polished wood.
“You didn’t think,” he finished for her, his voice a low, furious rasp against the shell of her ear. It vibrated through her skull. “That is the root of every transgression. You see something you want—water, warmth, touch—and you take it. You treat my boundaries as suggestions. My possessions as communal.”
His hand on her thigh tightened, fingers digging into the soft muscle with a possessiveness that was a violence all its own. He shifted his weight, and the hard line of his body against hers became an inescapable, intimate truth. There was no mistaking his anger, nor the other, darker thing that rode alongside it—a predatory, fully awakened hunger that her drunken liberties had poured fuel upon.
“You wanted to be close?” he whispered, the menace softening into something more terrifyingly deliberate. “Let us be close, then. Let me show you the consequence of climbing into a wolf’s lap and treating him as a pillow.”
He released her hair. For a second, there was relief, until his newly freed hand joined the other. Both now gripped her hips, holding her pinned over the chair arm, her body arched and utterly vulnerable. He leaned down, and she felt the brush of his lips against the nape of her neck, just below her hairline. It wasn’t a kiss. It was a claim.
“The wine was mine,” he murmured, the words a hot, dark caress on her skin. “This body is mine. This obedience is mine. You borrowed them all tonight without permission. There is a tax for that, little thief.”
One hand slid from her hip, around her waist, and came to rest flat against her lower stomach, pulling her back even more firmly against him. A raw, terrified sound escaped her. This was beyond punishment. This was a reclamation.
“Master, please—” she sobbed, the last of the wine’s courage dissolving into pure, animal fear.
“Please what?” he asked, his voice chillingly calm now, the eye of his hurricane. “Please stop? But you didn’t stop. You drank. You climbed. You touched.” His hand splayed on her stomach, a searing point of contact. “You made your choices. Now you live in the world they created.”
He held her there, bent over the chair, for a small eternity. Not moving, not hurting her further, just… occupying. Making her feel the full, suffocating weight of his displeasure and his power. Making her understand that every liberty she had taken was now a debt to be paid, and he was the sole collector.
Finally, with a sigh that seemed to drain the immediate, violent tension from the room, he straightened. His hands left her body. The physical pressure vanished, leaving her cold and trembling.
“Get up,” he said, his voice once more the flat, dispassionate instrument she knew.
She couldn’t. Her legs were water, her mind a shattered mosaic. She slid from the chair arm to her knees on the rug, a crumpled heap of silk and shame, unable to look at him.
He stood over her, a dark column of tailored fury. “Look at me.”
She forced her head up. His expression was unreadable, but his eyes held the aftermath of the storm—a cold, gleaming certainty.
“You will go to your room. You will not have water for the rest of the night. Let your thirst remind you of the cost of taking what is not yours. You will kneel beside your bed until morning, and you will contemplate the difference between being granted a privilege and seizing a liberty.” He paused, letting the sentence hang. “The next time you put your hands on me without my express invitation, I will not simply correct your position. I will break the fingers that dared. Do you understand?”
She understood. She understood with a clarity that cut through the last of the wine’s haze. She had not just broken a rule. She had violated a sacred space—his person—and had felt the tectonic plates of his control shift in response.
“Yes, master,” she whispered, the words ash in her mouth.
“Go.”
She scrambled to her feet, her body aching with the memory of his grip, and fled the library without a backward glance.
Valerius did not watch her go. He turned and stared at the empty goblet, its crystal facets winking mockingly in the firelight. He picked it up, his knuckles white. The ghost of her warmth was still on his clothes, the scent of her in his lungs. The beast within paced, unsatisfied, the taste of her fear and her shocking audacity still on its tongue.
He had shown her the cliff’s edge. He had let her feel the dizzying drop. And he had pulled her back. This time.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 10/11
Fandom: Community (TV)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Annie Edison/Jeff Winger, Annie Edison/surprise guest, The study group - Relationship
Characters: Jeff Winger, Annie Edison, Shirley Bennett, Britta Perry, Troy Barnes, Abed Nadir, Ian Duncan
Additional Tags: Post S6, pandemic year 2020, Pining, The Princess Bride References
Summary:
“Why are you here, Peter? What are you hoping to get from marriage counseling?”
Peter shrugs then, looks at MJ all shy, then looks away.
“I miss her,” he says quietly. The admission makes her stomach flutter.
“What about you, Michelle?”
“I miss him, too.”
She looks down at their joined hands, her wedding ring glinting in the light. He squeezes her hand and it feels like he’s squeezing her heart, like he’s saying I’m here, I hear you.
For all that it’s crossed her mind to leave, she’s never been able to give up on Peter Parker. She isn’t about to start now."
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 37/?
Fandom: Assassin's Creed - All Media Types, Assassin's Creed Odyssey
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence
Relationships: Kassandra/Kyra (Assassin's Creed)
Characters: Kassandra (Assassin's Creed), Barnabas (Assassin's Creed), Kyra (Assassin's Creed), OC Nike, Myrrine (Assassin's Creed), Phoibe, Chrysis (Assassin's Creed), Deimos (Assassin's Creed)
Additional Tags: Cult of Kosmos (Assassin's Creed), Canon Divergence, Phoibe is alive, angst with an eventual happy ending, Tags May Change, Angst, Action, NSFW, greece is gay, Sexual Themes, Violence, Child Cruelty
Summary:
With the Cult all but wiped out Kassandra should be happy surely? But she finds herself haunted by ghosts from her past and the memories of bad decisions. And now someone decidedly unghost-like is on her tail.
Just when she thought the biggest challenge of her life was behind her, it seems as though another, even greater, is about to loom before her.