@nerfedbylife gave me this idea, thank you so much
Bat shifter Soap intentionally runs into your window to be rehabilitated by you, a pretty human he's become infatuated with. Kinda had a different idea for this hope. It's still good (Barn Owl Shifter Simon. Going to make Kyle a red tailed hawk shifter and Price a brown bear shifter)
Johnny spotted you first. Maybe that's why he'd hatched this, in Simon's opinion, half assed plan to get your attention. They were at a base to gather Intel, taking track of the trucks that came in and out of the facility and occasionally sneaking in shifted form to see what they were bringing in. They were only supposed to be there for a week, but in that time, Johnny had discovered your farm.
"We're going to be extracted tomorrow, Tavish." Simon grumbles, standing underneath the tree Johnny and Kyle were perched in.
"I don't care, Ghost! If you would just come up here and seem em, you'd understand. They were talking to the bumblebees yesterday!" Johnny sighs wistfully as he looks down at him. "You think they'd take me in if I fly into their window?"
"Don't you dare." Simon warns, knowing damn well Johnny wasn't just asking. "Johnny, I swear -" He was already gone, Kyle looking down at Simon with a mildly guilt expression. "Did you know about this plan?"
"Maybe?"
"Then you can tell Price when he gets here."
You'd just settled down with a hot cup of tea and your half finished library book when you heard it. A hard thump on your window, and faint squeaks of distress. You set your mug aside, heading to your back porch and flipping on your porch light. Maybe a bird had hit your window?
You grab a towel to protect your hands if you need it and open up the sliding glass door. The sun was almost set, which made the night feel cool and relaxing. You slowly toe your way onto the porch, catching a little lump of black fur underneath your window sill.
"Oh no! Oh, you poor thing." You whisper, carefully dropping to your knees beside the small bat. The small brown black creature shrieks and cries the whole time, only settling down when you wrap it up in your towel. "Hi there, little batty! How did you get so turned around, huh?"
You carry the small bundle inside, realizing this was definitely an adult bat, but they looked so tiny in your hands. "Well, let's check out these wings... If you're busted up, I'll have to call the wildlife center." You mutter, getting a few squeaks in response to your words. "Oh, you don't wanna go, huh? Well, be very good and let me see these wings.." You carefully unwrapped the bats' little body.
You could easily stretch out the beautiful leathery wings, tenderly rubbing your fingers over them to check for any sprains of breaks. "You're so lucky. Nothing is hurt! No bumps, no breaks... Just an unfortunate run-in with the window, huh?" You coo lovingly as you bundle the bat back up gently.
You started wondering what to do with the bat. It didn't seem injured, so you could easily release it back into the wild. Part of you wanted to keep ahold of it for one more day for observation, but you knew better than that. "Okay, little bat. You have a clean bill of health, I think. And you were very well behaved. It's time for you to go back outside. You coo, setting the bundle down for a second to open your back door.
"Kicking me out so soon, Bonnie?"
Price heard your scream mid way through Kyle's half-hearted explonation of Johnny's plan. "Oh, Jesus." Price sighs heavily, peaking through the heavy brush to see your house. You were on the porch, pointing wildly towards the woods while Johnny stood at the open door.
"Get out of my house! Where the fuck did you come from!?" You shriek, watching the man in your house raise his hands defensively. He steps outside a little and gives you a cheeky smile.
"Hey, you're the one that brought me inside!" He insists, watching your face twist in confusion.
"I brought a bat inside... YOU'RE A BAT SHIFTER! YOU SNEAKY LITTLE FUCK!" You all but pounced on Johnny, practically latching to his back and making him stumble off the porch. "I was worried about you!! And you were lying to me! You sneaky, tricky, bastard!!
"Ah! Hey, get off of me!" Johnny squawks indignantly, getting a good grip on you and hauling you off his back. "Just a second ago, you were saying how good I was! What happened?" He asks, now holding you suspended in the air.
"A second ago, you were a cute little bat! Now you're some random man!" You swing your leg and land a firm kick in his chest. It backfires on you a little since he drops you straight on your ass, but at least he let you go. "And I don't like being lied to!"
Johnny was groaning softly, rolling on the ground as he tried to recover from you knocking the wind out of him.
"How do you know about shifters?" You shot to your feet and spinning around to face a tall man not far behind you. There were two more men standing at the tree line, watching the scene unfold curiously. Shifters weren't exactly common knowledge. You knew about them if you worked with them in the military or if you were one.
"I'm a hummingbird shifter. Someone has to pollinate the garden and greenhouse in the winter." You admit quietly as you take in the bearded man's military gear and take a small step back. "Your soldier found his way into my house."
"I'll handle that later. That's Soap. I'm Price." He offers you a hand, noticing that he had claws at the end of his fingertips. A bear hybrid, most likely. You give his hand a shake and clear your throat.
"Y/N. Since I've kicked him in the chest, scared all the birds out of the woods, and let my tea go cold, would it be stupid to invite you all inside?" You ask, trying to figure out where the hell these four men came from. Sure, they were shifters, but they were all dressed for a deployment. Had they just finished one?
"You just kicked me out!!" Johnny squawks indignantly as he stagers to his feet.
"I'll leave you out here if you don't shut up!" You bite back, still sore about being tricked. Johnny pouts at you, which made your heart melt just slightly.
"We have an extraction point to be at. We'll see you sometime soon, Y/N." Price assures, placing a heavy hand on the back of Johnny's neck. "Sorry about your tea. We'll be on our way." With that, he walks towards the woods with a reluctant bat shifter in hand. You watch as the four men disappeared into the woods, heading back towards your house.
You shut and lock your back door, grabbing the towel you used to wrap Johnny up with. Out fluttered a small slip of paper, his name and number scrawled messily across it. You huff fondly and roll your eyes, setting the paper on your side table and grabbing your tea.
You'd text him once you got over him ruining your evening routine.
being honest, I WAS CRAVING for a new Ambessa's ff, and since the one I was obsessed with ended (cries in The Wolf's Bride fan) I felt that I needed to write one. So, this one is HEAVILY inspired by The Wolf's Bride.
https://share.google/IqLhPjyAD3xQIenn8 ☆ go read it.
thanks @e1e4n0r5 for providing us with your godly writing.
observation: I didn't give Y/N-reader a name, but while writing I kinda of based her in myself so she is black woman, I kept the Targaryen thing [im kinda of obsessed with GOT too], but like, just the white hair. And kept the Got inspiring and used the Houses thing to create some conflict.
TW: Slightly mentions of e.d., misogyny(?)
: ・꣑୧・┈・┈・꣑୧・┈・┈・꣑୧・: ・꣑୧・┈・┈・꣑୧・┈・┈ :
— Piltover was meant to be neutral ground.
A city of glass, diplomacy, and fragile peace.
You arrived as a princess — raised to be flawless, obedient, untouched. A living jewel from a kingdom carved out of stone and tradition.
You left as something else entirely.
As Noxus burns its way through alliances and borders, you find yourself caught between crowns and conquest, desire and domination. Taken not because you are weak — but because you are valuable.
This is a story about power. About obsession disguised as protection.
About a woman who conquers empires — and the princess she decides to keep.
From a distance, the city appears unreal — a constellation pinned to stone, its towers slicing through cloudbanks as if the sky itself were negotiable. Light fractures against glass bridges suspended in impossible arcs, refracted through hex-crystals embedded into marble spines. Everything gleams. Everything reflects. Everything watches.
You have seen great cities before. Capitals crowned with banners and history. Strongholds carved from mountains. Courts built to intimidate gods.
Piltover does something worse.
It convinces you that it is inevitable.
Your transport glides into the airspace with ceremonial slowness, escorted by sleek Piltover craft whose hulls shine too cleanly to be honest. The hum of their engines vibrates through your bones, low and constant, a reminder that even arrival here is choreographed.
You stand at the observation window, hands folded properly at your waist, fingers hidden within long white sleeves embroidered with silver thread. The fabric is light, chosen deliberately — not for warmth, but for symbolism. Pale. Untainted. Valuable.
A princess does not press her face to the glass.
A princess does not marvel.
A princess does not reveal unease.
Still, your breath catches when the city finally fills your vision.
Behind you, the room breathes quietly with controlled life. Servants move like trained shadows, adjusting hems, checking fastenings, whispering updates in soft, efficient tones. The air smells faintly of incense and metal — Piltover’s idea of refinement.
Your mother sits near the window, her posture flawless despite the journey. She wears her crown even in private, a circlet of dark metal set with a single stone taken from the deepest mine of your homeland. It is not ostentatious. It does not need to be.
Your father stands beside a low table scattered with documents and sigils, already in quiet discussion with Piltover envoys. Numbers pass between them like knives beneath silk. Trade quantities. Extraction limits. “Mutual benefit.”
You know the language.
You were raised in it.
Your kingdom does not trade in grain or steel.
It trades in the bones of the earth.
Jewels born under pressure so immense that the stone remembers it forever. Crystals that drink light and fracture it into obedient color. Gems Piltover uses in its technologies, its ornaments, its illusions of progress.
Your house grew rich by knowing where to dig.
You grew important by being born where you were.
A living extension of the mines.
A symbol polished until nothing of the child beneath remained.
You feel Piltover before you hear it — a pressure behind the eyes, a subtle awareness that this city is not merely a place but a system. It categorizes. It assigns value. It remembers.
Your mother’s voice breaks the silence, low and measured.
“Piltover is a mouth,” she says, eyes still fixed on the skyline. “It smiles while it decides how best to swallow.”
Your father hums softly in agreement, fingers resting on a document stamped with your family’s seal.
They did not bring you here for spectacle.
They brought you here because the map has begun to bleed.
Noxus presses outward like a blade dragged slowly across silk. Borders collapse not in fire, but in quiet concessions. Trade routes go silent. Cities wake beneath banners they never agreed to host.
And at the center of that expansion stands a woman whose name is spoken carefully, even in rooms with locked doors.
Ambessa Medarda.
You have heard the stories. Everyone has. Not the embellished songs — the practical ones. The way her campaigns end before they begin. The way cities open their gates without siege, because resistance has already been calculated and found inefficient.
She does not conquer in chaos.
She conquers with certainty.
You shift your weight slightly, then still yourself.
Your mother notices everything.
She rises and approaches you, her expression softening only once the servants are far enough not to hear. She adjusts the fall of your sleeve, fingers lingering longer than necessary at your wrist.
“You are not prey,” she whispers.
But her hands tremble — just barely.
Servants return moments later to announce the evening’s schedule. A diplomatic reception. A procession. A ball held in honor of “unity and cooperation.” The words taste false even before they are spoken aloud.
You allow yourself to be guided toward the dressing chamber.
White silk is replaced with something heavier. Still pale, but threaded now with deeper silver, patterns winding along your ribs and spine like veins of ore beneath stone. Tiny gems are braided into your hair — not for beauty, but for statement. Proof of origin. Proof of worth.
Your throat remains bare.
Vulnerability disguised as tradition.
As they dress you, you think of your kingdom — of halls carved from black rock, of heat and darkness and pressure. Of rules older than any empire. Of expectations that wrapped around your spine long before you could walk.
You were raised to endure.
To be quiet when needed.
Sharp when required.
Still when watched.
The mirror reflects a woman composed of obedience and value, crown light upon her head and heavy in meaning.
Somewhere beyond Piltover’s walls, banners are moving.
Somewhere, decisions have already been made.
And tonight, you will step into a room full of people who believe they are choosing their future — unaware that it has already chosen them.
𓂃۶ৎ
You descend the main staircase slowly, as you were taught.
Your father’s hand holds yours on one side, steady and warm, while your mother’s rests on your other arm — light, precise, guiding without ever appearing to guide. The staircase itself is an act of intimidation: white stone carved into soft, impossible curves, crystals embedded along the banister catching light and scattering it over the assembled guests below.
Hundreds of eyes lift at once.
You do not look down at them.
You keep your gaze forward, chin level, shoulders back, every movement rehearsed since childhood. Grace is not something you have. It is something demanded of you — relentlessly, unforgivingly.
Your reflection follows you in the polished stone: tall, pale, almost ethereal beneath the lights. Your skin is untouched by sun or labor, kept that way by design. Your face is sharp in the way of old bloodlines — Your hair, white as ash or snow, falls in careful waves down your back, braided only at the temples with fine silver thread.
A legacy born of conflict.
Your ancestors earned their coloring through war and fire and marriages arranged at swordpoint. You inherited the aesthetic without the freedom that once accompanied it.
You are beautiful because you must be.
Your body is another matter.
You feel it before you see it — the way some gazes linger too long, measuring softness, angles, imagined imperfections. Your gown is cut to flatter and conceal in equal measure, fabric flowing over your hips and waist, corseted gently enough to breathe but firmly enough to remind you that excess is unacceptable.
You hate the way your body feels tonight.
Too solid. Too present.
Your mother’s grip tightens, just barely, as if she senses the spiral beginning.
“Breathe,” your father murmurs, leaning closer as the orchestra swells. His voice is low, meant only for you. “This is only a night. Nothing more.”
You nod once.
Only a night.
Only hundreds of eyes.
Only your future weighed and judged in silence.
As you reach the base of the stairs, conversation resumes — softer now, respectful, careful. Nobles bow. Ambassadors incline their heads. A duchess in emerald silk smiles too brightly, eyes already cataloging you like inventory.
“Your Highness,” she says, voice dripping honey. “You are even more exquisite than the reports suggested.”
You return the smile effortlessly.
“Piltover flatters all its guests,” you reply, tone light, controlled. Perfect.
Nearby, a general from a southern coalition laughs into his glass. “With stones like yours, who wouldn’t?” His gaze flickers briefly to your waist, then away. “Your kingdom must eat well.”
The comment lands like a bruise.
Your throat tightens.
You feel heat rise — shame, anger, the old familiar urge to disappear or overcompensate. Your relationship with food has never been simple. Stress coils your appetite into knots or floods it without warning. Tonight, the tables are heavy with delicacies you know you will barely touch — not because you don’t want them, but because wanting is dangerous.
You swallow.
You smile.
“My people are generous,” you say evenly. “We believe abundance should be shared.”
Your father squeezes your hand, proud and apologetic all at once.
As the evening unfolds, you move as expected — greeting royalty, speaking softly of trade routes and gemstone yields, listening more than you speak. Wine flows. Music hums. Laughter rises and falls like a practiced tide.
You feel strangely detached from it all, as though the room exists behind glass.
There is a sensation you cannot name — not fear, not anticipation, but something closer to imbalance. As if the ground beneath Piltover has already shifted, and everyone else is simply too distracted to notice.
You catch fragments of conversation as you pass.
“…Noxus has been unusually quiet—”
“…Medarda influence is spreading faster than expected—”
“…surely Piltover wouldn’t allow—”
Your mother’s expression tightens whenever the name is spoken.
Later, as you pause near a pillar to steady yourself, your father leans in again.
“We’ll find her,” he says softly. “Mel Medarda. If anyone can temper Noxian aggression, it will be her. We’ll speak privately before the night ends.”
You nod, grateful for the promise even as doubt curls in your chest.
Hope feels fragile tonight.
The ball continues. Glasses clink. Dresses swirl. Power performs itself beautifully.
And then—
A sound cuts through the music.
Low. Distant. Wrong.
The orchestra falters.
Another sound follows — sharper now, unmistakable.
Sirens.
Hextech alarms ignite along the walls, bathing the hall in flashing red and gold. Conversations collapse into screams. Glass shatters somewhere above.
A voice booms through the chamber:
“THIS IS NOT A DRILL.”
Your father’s hand tightens painfully around yours.
Your mother turns pale.
And as Piltover’s defenses scream their warning to the sky, one truth crashes through the illusion of safety: