After several months of typesetting, slowly gathering materials, and actually getting to bind it, Volume I of the How to Raise Your Dragons Slayers typeset is finally done!!!
I cannot begin to describe how much fun it was creating this. There were so many moments where I would see it start to come together and the excitement I would feel in those moments would be next level. Knowing I would soon be holding a physical copy of this wonderful series (even if it's just a small portion of it) kept me going even in moments I did feel like giving up. And now it's complete!!! It turned out so much better than I thought it would and I'm so happy to have this forever.
@pencilofawesomeness Thank you so much for allowing me to create this. It was an honor getting to turn your amazing work into something physical. I did my best to reflect the love and care you've put into this wonderful series. â¤ď¸â¤ď¸â¤ď¸
Under the cut I've attached a few more pictures as well as the Google Drive where the typeset for Volume I exists in document form and pdf form. Anyone is welcome to use the typeset to create their own copy. I only ask that you tag Pencil and myself in it if you decide to post the end result on tumblr. I'd love to see it and I'm sure she would too!
I've been wanting to draw this scene from Growing Pains for a long time now and finally got around to it.
Imagine waking up from 3 months of winter-time sleepy and your snake-daughter went from a normal big snake to a massive snake with no preamble or explanation. Acno is running the math to no avail, and as per usual, the kids are providing no helpful commentary.
I'm on a roll with my old geezer friendship rep for htryds and I'm not stopping now. In other news, Casual Porlyusica was really fun to draw. (They're talking about plants and gardening btw. Behind the grumpy medic is, in fact, a nerd.)
For @ft-platonicweek day 6: unlikely pair. Congrats to them for winning "unlikeliest" according to the peeps I polled lol. (Poll under the cut for the curious.)
A lot of my favorite dynamics in htryds are conventionally "unlikely", especially compared to canon, so it was fun to vote on this right after the prompts were decided.
I actually drew this for the Guild Awards server a while back but thought, why not?, and decided to post it.
Alzack collected an absurd amount of weapons in the simulation game we were watching unfold and accidentally nurtured my headcanon that he's a Weapon's Guy in general, beyond just guns. And then I drew him for the first time.
He's a sweetheart but he's got that deadpan RBF real bad. As a treat. To me <3
because I'm using @ft-platonicweek as an excuse to post htryds stuff, here's another microshot~ (nevermind that it's 2k. it's just a random scene promise)
For Day 5's Prompt: Poison
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Early X784
Jellal sat at the bar and tried not to noticeably grimace every time he became aware of the layer of sticky grime on the surface. Not everywhere, but there was a spot near his arm that he kept hitting by accident. He vaguely wondered if it would help or hinder his goal to ask the barkeep for a wet cloth to clean it.Â
He decided against it. Instead, he nasally sighed into his drink and nearly finished the last of it, much to his chagrin. One glass and not much progress to show for his presence hereâand Jellal really didnât want to have a second. He didnât care for the taste but he didnât mind it either; the potential effects, however⌠Well. Jellal had, as his therapist would put it, âan understandable discomfort with activities that lower his mental awareness,â so he made it a point never to drink to the point of getting drunk.Â
If only the Black Rose guild wasnât so entrenched in this town and equally difficult to find. They scared off easily, as they discovered, and not even Erik had much success in rooting them out. The best lead they got was that travelers who stopped at this tavern had a chance of going missing, and concerned locals blamed the dark guild. But, since they were an awfully careful lot, they decided to be as subtle as possible. Which meant partially splitting up.Â
Partially. Jellal could rest assured that both Erik and Erza were nearby. Erik initially offered to take point at the bar and be more exposed, since he could drink literally anything, but they all agreed he would catch more if he lurked on the outskirts of the establishment, in order to hear a wider scope. That left him and Erza to act normal inside the tavern, like normal patrons. Either to lure out any of the members or to get any information at all without scaring these poor townsfolk away. They were jumpy enough, and for good reason. The rumors of this guildâs victims were⌠unpleasant, to understate it.Â
Erza didnât mind drinking but she, somehow, was a lightweight. And not a quiet drunk. So she reluctantly agreed to hang out around the billiards table instead, among the more social locals and travelers. Jellal, then, would haunt the bar and glean information from the barkeep himself. At least Jellalâs magic and constitution, for some reason, burned through alcohol like it did caffeine and calories. Theoretically. Acnologia surmised that it was because of the high energy cost, and the way it interacted with his body not entirely unlike a dragon slayerâs. Too bad it didnât literally give him magic lungs or a magic stomach like them. That might be convenient.Â
He finished the last of the ale. He didnât feel too different, which was nice, but he asked for a lighter brew on purpose. If Jellal thought it wouldnât be suspicious, he would have gone pure seltzer, but the barkeep already lightly scoffed when he specified blond ale over the standard stuff. The most Jellal got out of him was that he made no effort to be friendly and he never used anyoneâs name, but some people came up to the bar and he handed them an order without a word. There were regulars here and Jellal kept note of their facesâand who stayed, who left quickly and quietly, who came alone, and who only came in groups. The groups of people were not the ones with memorized orders, and they didnât hang close to the bar.Â
Jellal watched a woman with long, dark green hair and pale skin slink into a seat near him, with one empty in-between. She looked down the whole time, and when the barkeep ambled over, he slid her something clearâgin?âand she slid money across the countertop. A local who planned on staying, but only long enough for one drink. She had that general air of nervousness about her that many of the locals had, but she wasnât altogether unwilling to exist in public. Maybe Jellal should try asking something casual, just to gently check the overall atmosphere.Â
âRefill?â came the vaguely impatient voice of the barkeep. Jellal looked up to see him gesturing to Jellalâs empty mug with his chin.Â
Jellal pushed it forward with a nod, and the barkeep took it without another word. It was the easiest way to stay here unbothered long enough to ask what he wanted.Â
He couldnât parse much of anything through the generic din of the tavern, not like Erik could, but a burst of Erzaâs triumphant laugh cut through the noise. He glanced to the side to see she was playing some guy with a decorative shoulder tattoo at pool and clearly not holding back. She had that groupâs attention, and Jellal fought down a fond chuckle. That could either be a good thing or a bad thing, but Jellal settled for good, because nobody looked close to a fight.Â
The barkeep brought his glass back from the tap. As expected, it was the same thing Jellal had ordered before. Not that it should be surprising. If Mirajane and Chico had taught him anything, it was that all barkeeps and baristas had impeccable memories.Â
âThank you,â Jellal offered.Â
The barkeep rolled his eyes with a huff as he moved on to the next customer.Â
To his fortune (how pleasantly rare), the lady next to him spoke first. âTraveler?â she guessed.Â
Jellal nodded. âYeah, passing through to get back home,â he lied vaguely. âHowâd you figure?â
âAside having never seen you beforeâand youâre quite the standoutâno local ever thanks that grump. I think it gives him hives.â
âAh, my mistake, then,â Jellal chuckled good-naturedly, but he took careful note of it. âYou come here often?â
âSure. Itâs the only damn place to get some decent booze âround here.â She knocked back the rest of her drink. âThough Iâm sure a traveler such as yourself has seen better.â
He didnât need to be Erik to hear the unspoken warning. Like most people, she was careful not to say anything blatantly. The walls surely had ears, or at least the locals believed it so. Another thing to take note of. âProbably,â he replied, to answer the question at face value, âalthough I canât say Iâm a connoisseur in the slightest.â
âYeah? Well I suppose you look too young to be, unless youâre some fancy capital brat.â
Jellal chuckled with some real amusement. âOh, definitely not.â He did, however, add this to the mental tally of how many times someone wondered if he had noble blood in him, despite Jellal very emphatically not. He and Mystogan kept score. (Mystogan, a born prince, delighted in losing, although Jellal thought that was a foregone conclusion when Mystogan rarely engaged with the greater public except to be stand-offish, usually on purpose; not many people would ever know that he knew what all twenty variations of silverware was for.)Â
âIs that so? Shame,â she said without heat, but maybe, arguably, disappointment. Before he could parse what they might mean, the woman knocked back the rest of her drink and pushed it away. The noise caused the barkeep to glance over at the both of them, but he didnât move yet.Â
It reminded him that he should probably touch his refill. A few sips in and it shouldnât be strange for him to ask for water to go with it, right? With everyone so on edge, he didnât want to do anything to look out of place or suspicious. His identity as an outsider was already obvious, apparently. However, no sooner than he picked up his glass again, a presence over his shoulder interrupted him.Â
Erik appeared out of nowhere, with that careful flat look on his face that betrayed how pissed he was to anybody who knew him well enough.Â
âUh, can I help you?â Jellal asked to keep up the facade of being strangers, while loudly thinking, âWhat happened? What do you need me to do?â in case Erik had a way to indicate what was going on.Â
He made no move to answer either question. Instead, Erik reached over and plucked Jellalâs glass straight out of his hand and took a large drink of it, pausing only to swish it around his mouth with a scowl. Â
He slammed it back on the counter. âDonât drink that.â
Ah. Well, shit. Okay then. That was⌠very disconcerting. Of all the ways people have tried to kill him before, nobody had ever attempted to poison him. That he was aware of, at least. âThanks.â
Erza must have spotted Erik emerging from his hiding and she abandoned her game immediately to stalk over to them, frowning and with her cue stick still in tow. âWhat happened?â she asked, a little too loudly and obviously for his taste. They still had a narrow window to be subtle with.Â
âRohypnol,â Erik growled, dragon-style, deep in his chest.Â
âŚThat was worse than Jellal imagined. Fantastic. Heâll unpack that later.Â
Erza looked positively murderous. âWho?â she demanded lowly, almost dragon-like herself. He hoped Erik knew how to de-escalate her, because Jellal knew he didnât have a chance when he had been in the line of fire. Erza was much too protective.
And Erik was too, so maybe Jellal should have seen this coming.
âThe pair in the back left corner,â Erik started, likely knowing full well what was bound to happen next.
No sooner after he responded, Erza hefted the cue stick like a javelin and threw it straight at the aforementioned pair, who looked no different from the other patrons. The cue stick jammed into the wall by one guyâs head, who predictably jerked away with wide eyes. The tavern jolted along with the pair, but there was still a (small) chance at stopping an all out brawl and dismissing the crazy show of prowess as drunken behavior. Maybe. (Jellal was kidding himself, he knew this.)Â
âGuys,â he pleaded.
âBarkeep actually did it,â Erik continued, ignoring Jellalâs attempt at not making a big deal out of it. âSwitch.âÂ
Erza didnât need to be told twice. In a flash of light, she wrapped herself in armor and leaped over the countertop to swiftly grab the barkeep by the back of the shirt. He cussed loudly as she slammed him face first into the counter.Â
Now, the brawl was inevitable. At breaking the unspoken rule of not aiming for the barkeep, they gained all of the patrons attention. Some looked ready to come to the barkeepâs aid and someâlike the green-haired womanâstarted to run. Jellal sighed; there had been an attempt.
âThis was your idea,â he said, somewhat petulantly, even if Jellal wasnât really that upset over it. Erik would know what he meant.
âIâm flexible,â Erik quipped back. âThe asshole in the purple shirt is mine, by the way.âÂ
Erik jumped into the fray, catching the two Erza had aimed at before they left and slamming his promised quarry against the wall with a flash of dark red magic Jellal knew meant to hurt. Jellal, in turn, did not (for the sake of his sanity) consider what Erik heard to make him this upset. Instead, Jellal simply took comfort in the fact that nothing would come to fruition with both Erik and Erza like this. The only thing Jellal had to worry about now was making sure nobody got caught in the crossfire, and maybe ensuring they had someone to question that wouldnât be concussed, but he would take what he could get. Regardless, Jellal had no doubt that Erik and Erza would accomplish what they set out to do. Which⌠he would be lying if he said he didnât appreciate it. A lot.
A glass flew by Jellalâs head. He dodged it easily and shot a star arrow at a man trying to bludgeon a fleeing younger man with a broken bottle, and then swung it back around to blast a woman trying to approach Erik from behind. In turn, Jellal heard the schling of flying metal and a shout of pain from Jellalâs blindspot.
The chaos of jobs was always made safer by having friends by your side, after all.