yayy my ocs my ocs

#dc comics#dc#batman#bruce wayne#dick grayson#tim drake#batfamily#batfam#dc fanart



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yayy my ocs my ocs
Florent - photo by Vision Factory Photography
Chimeran Legends - Friendships
BEHOLD!!! The butch polycule
scopOphilic_documentary_110 - scopOphilic1997 presents a new micro-messaging series: small, subtle, and often unintentional messages we send and receive verbally and non-verbally.
Memories of places in the past (former gay-lgbtq+ bars/clubs/restaurant) (L-R, T-B): Florent (Gansevoort Street - Meat Packing District), Stonewall (original location/entrance - Christopher Street - West Village), The Monster (Grove Street - West Village), & The Roxy/10-18 (West 18th Street - Chelsea)
I'm thinking about writing my first fic in awhile and i'm looking for suggestions and feed back on my concept.
the story is a meta story taking place in the human domestication guide universe
The basic premise is that the entire fic is a book written by a concerned affini on things that terrans do and say that concern her.
I plan for the story to operate on a slight black comedy angle.
Working title: I am concerned about the terrans
names for chapters
chapter 1: "at least i'm not dead", and other concerning terran phrases.
chapter 2: dark souls and pain games. they are literally torturing themselves for fun.
chapter 3: A energy drink and a protean bar is not a meal. the concerning dietary habits of several terrans.
looking for any and all feedback as well as suggestions for chapter names and concepts.
Florent Delivers
Prompt #5: Stamp
The ruin had been a church once, not so very long ago. Silvaineaux had just seen his thirtieth summer and he remembered when it had held pride of place in the small village, tall and intact and gleaming with bright-hued glass. It had not compared to Ishgardâs cathedral even then, of course, but it had been beautiful when he was a boy.
It was certainly not beautiful now. The gleaming tiles of the roof were scattered under the snow and the windows gaped like empty eye sockets in the broken remnants of the walls. He swung down from Joyeux almost reluctantly, the crunch of his boots meeting the snow loud in the emptiness that once had been a street. âWait here, mon fidèle ami.â
Joyeux whistled a low response, quietly, as if the silence oppressed him too.
Silvaineaux reached up to scratch at his cheek. âIâll be back in a moment.â He said, and left the reins draped over the pommel.
He crossed to what had been the door of the church in determined strides. No door hung in that empty and half broken frame, and the space within had been open to the sky for years. He could not see the flooring under the snow, nor the blood. Yet the dragonâs fire had left its mark on what remained of the walls. Its skull too remained, empty of eyes and teeth alike.
Silvaineaux spared it one long look, but then turned away. He had not come here for the dragon. Nor only for the memories he had left in this place, though they crowded around him thick and fast until he could almost feel again the heat of the fire that had seared the altar and smell the reek of dragon and blood. Â
He closed his eyes as though that might shut them out. The air was cold. He smelled neither blood nor scales even if the faint scent of charring lingered even now. Silvaineaux thought of the page in the book that had brought him here on this foolâs errand, imagining the old picture, counting the pillars, then he opened eyes and turned. He counted the pillars, found the stretch of wall he wanted.Â
It still stood even if it was burned black. He tugged off his glove to run his bare fingers across it. It was cold enough to burn and his fingers came away dark with soot, but he could feel the ridges of the carving he had expected beneath. It was the work of a few moments to tug out the paper heâd brought, to run the edge of a pencil over it until the marks beneath appeared on the sheet. The hawk with its rosary, beneath that the words. âIn memory of Baron Aristide de Rosaire who gave his life in this place.â Â
He had not noticed it on the day he almost lost his own life in this place. No one would notice it now, hidden as it was beneath the char on a ruined wall. Yet his forebear had left his stamp on this place, his blood in this land.Â
Silvaineaux reached out again to set his own hand over the shape of the hawk on the wall and finally turned to look at the place nearer the door where the far fresher blood should have been. His breath left him in a sigh that was equal parts relief and grief. There was only snow, the blood hidden away beneath all the intervening years of it. The thing he had half feared was not there either.Â
No youthful spirit lingered to rebuke him.
Rolling his paper he tucked it into his jacket and crossed to kneel in the snow there as he had knelt on that spot once before. The last time it had been to take something up. This time he had brought something to leave. He tugged a small metal plate from the pouch at his belt to tuck in against the stone of the wall. It had no familyâs crest to ornament it, no embellishment, only a few carefully chosen words.
âIn memory of Florent Gagnon who gave his life in this place.â