Uh??? Babsies???????
Scarf.f harnesses ..
seen from United States
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seen from Martinique
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seen from Chile

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Uh??? Babsies???????
Scarf.f harnesses ..
"Creation and Destruction, the two balances of the multiverse."
[Ink belongs to Comyet/Myebi] [Error belongs to CrayonQueen/LoverofPiggies]
Cont
I think we know who the other father is.
This is like Week.. 5 of Weekly Inkpreg. Mental state is.. still something but hey, I'm still alive. How many weeks will it take for me to get therapy? Who knows.
Gradient sans from (UTMV/askcomboclub) has AVPD !!! :3
Gradient from the UTMV Fandom has Avoidant Personality Disorder!
AVPD, also known as Avoidant Personality Disorder, is a personality disorder defined by extreme social anxiety, fear of intimate and interpersonal relationships, struggle with self-worth, and self-isolation. While not all people with AVPD experience the disorder in the exact same way, it still prohibits someone from interacting properly with both the world and the people in it out of fear. Tilde is one of those people. Tilde has AVPD among other personality and anxiety disorders, and needs help funding treatment in order to try and lead a normal life. Try and help support them in their journey through mental health, if able!
(Gradient and art used by Askcomboclub)
Was gonna make this my pfp but I like mine :]
Error by loverofpiggies on Tumblr
A Cross x Blue raffle? Sign me up @overflowofcrows
If Errorberry is the best ship (In my opinion), Nightberry is the hottest ship (Again, opinion), then Crossberry is the most adorable ship there is (In my opinion). I added some background action for other ship simps too ow-
Undertale: Toby Fox Blue: Popcornpr1nce Ink: Comyet/Myebi Dream: Jokublog Nightmare: Jokublog Error: Crayonqueen Cross:Â Jakei95
MERRY CHRISTMAS ONE AND ALL
(I dunno why Dream's face is smeared)
two bleeding birds (ao3: x)
AU where Ink and Error are old gods and Dream and Nightmare Avians kidnapped from their nest at birth.
Their abductors lock them away from the outside world and bind their wings. They abductors focus on Nightmare, leaving Dream to pass the time alone with daydreams and wistful dying hopes.
They make an unwilling weapon out of Nightmare.
Though Nightmare was sent out on countless assassination missions, Dream has never seen the sky since the day they were abducted, and how he longs for it.
When Nightmare gets injured severely and is unable to take on the next mission, Dream gets a chance to see the outside world again. He crosses paths with Ink and Error, who notice his condition, and... do not take kindly to it. Word count: 5.8k.
(also, yes i know the footnote numbers are linked to ao3. I am not going through the formatting again just to remove every link. so. the text of the footnotes are at the bottom, if you want to read them sure, if not, it's fine. tw/cw: implicit abuse, neglect, implied past dissociation, past abduction, fires, injuries, conflicting animal instinct vs logic, imprinting) inspired by Flight Risk (or not) by @sircantus.
Dream had spent a minute just staring at the sky, hand outstretched, feeling the weight and warmth of the light on his fingers. Just feeling the light almost made him forget the weight of bound wings on his back.
He had not been meant for this mission, in truth. It had been Nightmareâs, but he had returned from his previous one with several broken bones and a head injury.
Dream had felt himself jolt before realising it was fine. This was normal. Nightmare always returned with injuries. That was why Dream was needed. Dream was their healer. It was why he was useful. It was good that he was useful.Â
He had been reminded of that several times over by them.
It was good to be useful. He had to be useful.Â
He never mentioned this to Nightmare, though. The few times he had, Nightmare had went silent immediately and started glowering at his half-empty cup of water. It made the little time they had together very sour, so he learnt to stop bringing it up.
So he healed Nightmareâs bone fractures in silence, the green healing magic mingling with his gold magic as the wounds mended themselves. Once that was done, he shifted him so his skull was in Dreamâs lap, and placed both hands on the injury and let the green mingle with the gold again.Â
A wince leaving Nightmare was his cue to check on the injury. He removed his hands to wipe away the blood and found there was still a little left to heal, though it was all done in a matter of seconds. Dream sat there and waited for him to regain consciousness.
There was a time outside, wasnât there? A time and place beyond this. A garden, flowers, grass and sky. Â
Did he have a mother? A father? Or did he and Nightmare sprout from the skies like falling stars and grew wings because of it? That sounded like a story heâd heard before.
The sky and stars. Beautiful, even in stories and even in dreams.
Dream liked to daydream. It made passing the time easier. There were no major settlements for miles, anyway. Just roads and towns here and there, and even fewer within radius of them now.Â
Nightmare begrudgingly confirmed it when he asked. Nightmare did not seem to like the world, so Dream did not ask much of it from him. Learning the world from books and stories was enough.
Speaking of.
It took a few minutes, but soon purple eyelights were blinking back at him.Â
Nightmare winced as he got up, a hand flying to his head, but his gaze found Dream soon enough and he let out quiet sighs into the still silence that had settled between them, though it was not an uncomfortable quiet at all.
Nightmare stretched his fingers, his knuckles cracking. He bit back a laugh, and the knowing warmth in Nightmareâs eyes did nothing to help Dream quell it.
The laugh died down in his throat once he realised Nightmare was still wincing as he got up. That wasnât good. Had Dream missed an injury? Had heâ
The door slammed open. Nightmareâs gaze lost what warmth it had had.Â
It was them. They stormed in, thundering against the wooden planks andâÂ
Dream hadnât realised heâd edged closer to Nightmare, but the latter didnât protest it.Â
It was two of them this time. Dream recognised the first, though not the second.1 The former had thin-rimmed glasses and white fur with black spots near their neck and legs. They were the one who told Nightmare his missions, so he had to have recognised them too.
Dream missed the gleam of dark delight in his brotherâs gaze.Â
âYou got your wings hurt?!â The voice of the one he did not recognise echoed through the room. âYouââ
âRelax, Azre.â The one he did recognised rolled their eyes. âHealerâll heal it.â They (both of them, both them and Azre apparently) found his gaze and Dream flinched. âWonât you?â The same person repeated. It wasnât a question, but Dream nodded. Of course he would. Even if they hadnât told him to, he wouldâve done it.Â
Wait. Nightmareâs wings were injured?
He hadnât noticed Nightmareâs cyan wings dragging against the floor.
He turned quicklyâ
âYou didnât tell me you knew how to heal wing injuries.â
Nightmare wasnât asking a question, and he wasnât asking it to Dream either. He was still looking at the pair in the doorway, speaking in monotone even as his own brother went stock still.Â
Dreamâs stomach had dropped. It was as if someone had punched a hole in it.
He didnât know how to heal wing injuries.Â
He hadnât even seen his own wings in years.Â
âYou donât?â Azre cut in.Â
Dream hesitated. Heâ he could learn. He could try. He could still be usefulâ
âNo.â The other cut in. âWing injuries are too risky. Heâs never healed any other wing before, and if he messes it upâŠâ He fought not to flinch when their cold gaze landed on him. âAssassin is worth more than Healer. Weâre not risking Assassinâs abilityââ
âDonât call me that,â Nightmare hissed.Â
âYou would rather us call you a nightmare? And Healer, believe me, youâre far from a dream.â They snorted, before turning back to Azre. âMy point stands. Itâs just too risky.â
The silence hung between them like a venomous tension.
âWhat a shame,â Nightmare sighed with sudden contriteness.2 âI guess wonât be able to complete the next mission⊠itâs in, what, two days?â
They bit a scowl back, but it showed for a split second. âTomorrow.â
Azre swore.
Nightmareâs defiant delight wasnât missed this time.
Oh. Nightmare had done it on purpose. When he caught his eye, he shrugged with exaggerated innocence and Dream had to choke back his laugh this time.
A snort left him in its place and it immediately drew Azreâs ire.Â
âYou think youâre safe, Healer? Locked up in your little birdcage? We could always take something back. A finger, perhaps? You donât need all ten to healââ
âWait.â The other interrupted their rant with no small note of annoyance. âHealer isnât entirely useless here. Couldnât we just send him?â
A startled noise fell from his mouth. Nightmareâs grip on his shoulder tightened.
âHim?â Azre echoed them with no small amount of incredulity. âHeâs neverââ
The light, the wind, the sun, the sky, freedom, flightâ
âHeâs still an Avian, like Assassin; his instincts shouldnât be underestimated. He knows enough magic to send a bone attack. Even then, it doesnât matter if he fails,â They said bluntly. âThey wonât have any guards, so itâs safe enough. Itâs not far, and itâs not like weâre being paid much for this mission. We could always demand more gold if Healer fails to get them this time.â
Dream felt a breath in his throat as if it was a stone.
âIf he fails, there wonât be a next time,â Azre muttered, but his resistance wasnât with much fire.Â
He foundâ
He found he didnât entirely hate the idea.
Nightmare moved forward. âIâm fine, I can goââ
âI want to go.â The words tumbled from his mouth before he could think it through.Â
Nightmare flinched. âI can go. My injury isnât very severeââ
An impatient sigh came from them as they strode in and tore what little cloth obscured the wing injury away with surprising speed.Â
The stone breath fell back into his throat in an instant.
The cyan was stark, so bright it was blinding. Or it wouldâve been, if it werenât for the tear in the cyan, ripping through the very root of the feathers and leaving a trail o withered feathers. it was a long tear. From just the look of it, it would take much, much more than a day to heal.
Nightmare swallowed his protest. âDream hasnât gone on any missions before, he might not be able to manageââ
âHeâs an Avian.â Their reply was curt. âHeâll be fine.â
âHeâll get hurt.â
âHeâs a healer, isnât he?â Azre responded cruelly, but Dream found it was a truth. He was a healer, wasnât he? He could heal himself if he got hurt on the mission. It wasnât an issue.
âHeâllâ heâllââ Nightmare looked to him for support but Dream had nothing to say.
Nightmare stared at him.
âflight, fall, freedom, light, life
Dream looked back.
light, sunlight, the clouds, the skyâ
âDo you want me to stay?â He hesitantly asked.
Nightmareâs face fell further.
âIââ
His gaze turned hollow.Â
âYou can go if you want to.â
A pang of guilt hit Dream, butâÂ
sun, flight, free, freeâÂ
No. He squashed it down. Not free. Never free.Â
(The thought of sky seemed to sing to him.)
âCome with us, Healer. Weâll brief you.â
He left Nightmare in the room alone, feeling oddly empty as he stepped over the threshold. ***
Dream had forgotten how the heat of the sunlight weighed. The weight on his back was hardly any weight at all as he stumbled along the dirt road with Azre. His breaths kept catching in his throat, as if unsure whether or not to breathe this new air.
âYou remember the plan?â
âYes.â Dream did. Heâd been running through it in his head all night.Â
âIâll go through it again.â He sighed irritated. âIâll drop you off along the road. Hide well, but make sure you have a good enough view to shoot. The target should pass you an hour or two in a carriage after I leave you.â
âOkay,â Dream said simply, hands shifting.Â
âWhat do you do if you succeed?â
âFollow the dirt road back.â
âWhat do you do if you fail?â
âHide and wait.â
Azre gave a stiff nod. âAnd weâll come bring you back if you fail.â He stopped and turned. âThis is a good spot. Hide and wait for them to come.â
Dream didnât look back as Azre left. He shifted into position and hid in the bushes like how heâd been taught before they had turned all their attention to Nightmare, though the sky was calling to him endlessly. His fingers kept twitching every time he caught sight of the sky above him, and every time he forced them to lay still he felt the wings on his back grow heavier.Â
What colour were his wings again? Were they gold? That would make sense, since his magic was gold.Â
Nightmareâs magic was purple, and his wings were cyan.
Perhaps his wings werenât gold. His fingers twitched.
Dream hadnât thought much about the target until he realised he would be sending a bone attack into their carriage in an hour or so..
It was fine. He didnât have to hurt them. He could send it into the door to minimise contact with them since the seats would be at the sides. He could just give them a nasty shock. They said it was okay to fail the mission, anyway.
He had an hour or so, so he had time to think, but all these thoughts were reminding him of the time he asked why Nightmare was allowed to have his wings out when he went on missions. I thought we werenât allowed to have our wings out, he had asked.Â
They hadnât laughed, but heâd seen the amusement bloom in their face.
Because heâd have to leave you behind to fly away, theyâd replied.
Dream had said nothing about it after.Â
The sky was a beautiful blue. The clouds were a beautiful mist, a pearly white. It really was beautiful. The weight of the sunlight clung on his fingertips like rings.
(How would the sun feel on his wings?) ***
The rumble of wheels on dirt caught his attention. He stilled. There was the carriage, wheels rolling on the road, getting closer and closer.
He noticed the strange air around them. That made sense. There was no coachman, so it was probably being manipulated by magic.
It was getting closer.
His fingers stiffened. He watched the turning wheels, then when it got too risky to stare out his gaze fell to the ground and watched the shadows instead. The carriage was getting closer. Closer.
Dream swallowed.
Golden light crackled between his fingers, a spark fell to the ground.
The bone tore through the door of the carriage.
The wheels stopped turning. Dream let out a breath.Â
The door tore open. The bone broke, one half stuck in the ground and the other embed in the broken door. Dream stopped breathing.Â
The door and half-bone was tossed to the ground and was promptly trampled upon by a glitched Monster barging out.Â
Dreamâs chest seized. Oh no.
âWho the fuck was it, huh?! When I get my hands on youââ
âCalm down.â A voice called out from the carriage. âYouâll encourage them to shoot again.â
A second Monster strode out behind him, giving a face to the second voice. He strode to the bone rising out of the ground. âInteresting.â He stuck two fingers out, trapping the bone attack between them. âGold like the sunlight. Itâs rather beautiful, actually.â âIs flattery your plan to subdue the assassin?â
âIâm holding hope that it wasnât an assassin. Hello! I know you can hear me. If youâre not an assassin and that was just an accident, I hope youâll show yourself now. For your own sake, friend.â
Dream didnât move. He didnât even breathe.
It wasnât that he was an assassin. No, that was Nightmareâs job. It was more of an instinct not to draw the ire or attention of either the man whoâs magic had torn through wood as if it were flesh in seconds, or that of the man who was able to subdue the former with mere words.
âAlright, then, probably an assassin,â They said, popping the âpâ. âFriend, if you come out right now, Iâll pay you triple what youâve been promised you for my head.âÂ
After a few seconds, he frowned at the clear lack of response.
âClever of them.â The glitched Monster turned to the other. âWe both know they wouldnât live if they came out anyway.â
âI was just trying to give them a chance.â He sighed and turned back.
Something quieter and smaller than an exhale escaped him. Yet the glitched Monsterâs gaze didnât leave the area, scanning over the foliage with no small amount of amusement.Â
Something was odd. Every fibre in his body screamed at him to stay still, to not even breath.
He kept very still. He had failed, so he was supposed to hide.
And they wouldnât leave just like that.
Dream kept veryâ
Something tugged at his feet.
Everything went silent.
His gaze was torn downwards. It was⊠a black mass? It shifted over the grass, reaching and twisting around his feetâ
âGotcha.â
Something in him snapped and he yanked his foot away. Dream broke into a run.Â
âHello, friend! You can call meââ Something tore at his neck. âInk.â He turned to catch a glimpse of the slit along his shoulder, around the edge of his neck. The cheerful smile of his pursuer made something in him shiver. âThough I suppose friendâs a little misleading, considering you just tried to kill me.â
It wasnât the glitched Monster, yetâ yet this was worse. A dull terror struck him as he realised he hadnât shaken all the black mass off and that it was pulling his feet to the ground with every step even as he fought to keep running away.Â
Strings tore into his bones and a tiny scream fell to the ground from between his teeth. They hurt. They hurt so badly. They felt like the little needles theyâd struck him with when heâd tried to run away that first night.Â
He tried to tear the strings away but that only made him hurt more.
He remembered that soft, unyielding oblivion as he was pulled under by the drugs.
No. No no noâ
Blue bones glitched into existence around him.
âThatâs the end of the chase, Iâm afraid.â
(The strings did not feel as bad as dull needles.)
The black mass lunged and pulled him to the ground.
What good was that? No amount of magic would get him out the ring with two obviously powerful Monsters waiting on him on high alert (except maybe teleportation, but he had never been taught that, they said it wouldâve let him leave too easily) so what good was that little comfort whenâ
âAhh. Thereâs our little assassin.â The other leaned over the ring of bones. He frowned. âYouâre small.â
âHypocrite.â The glitched monster spoke dryly, but Dream saw the glacial fury in their mismatched eyelights.Â
The fury was aimed at him.Â
Well, Dream thought. Fuck.
Huh. He hadnât thought fuck in years. Heâd only ever heard Nightmare say it once.
A hand landed on his shoulder. It wasnât the glitched Monster, it was the other. âYou must be surprised. I wasnât the one meant to make this delivery, you know.â His grip tightened on his shoulder and it felt nothing like Nightmare. âLast minute change. Favour for a friend.â
âOur friend,â The glitched Monster did not smile. âAnd they happen to be a very kind person. I have to wonder what sort of person would want CORE Frisk dead.â3
âA very foolish one,â The other continued. âBecause it wouldâve hurt CORE4, but not kill them. Yet the fool here can be killed. Iâm curious, little one.â The other gently tilted his chin back, but the dark curiosity in his eyes did not stop the wound in his shoulder/neck from aching. âHm, I caught you in the neck. What made you think you would succeed?â He didnât.
He thought he would.
He thought it didnât matter.
âProbably hubris. Wouldnât be the first.â Something (the strings, he acknowledged vaguely) tugged him away to the glitched Monster. âI have a better question. Who and what sent you?â
Dream shook his head. His skull slid to the side, desperately looking for somethingâ
âThat wonât do. You have to answer our questions, or Error here will just kill you off, right now.â The other nodded at the glitched MonsterâŠÂ Error, apparently. Fitting name. Whatever humour that was there was lost as Dream shuddered.Â
âWell?â The nameless one asked again. âAnswer.â
Answer. He had to answer.
But he didnât know the answer.Â
âI donât know,â He said truthfully. He really didnât.
A gasp left him as the strings around him tightened.Â
âYou donât know?â Error repeated incredulously. The nameless one held a hand up. âHe might be telling the truth. Heâs small, after all.â
The two exchanged looks.Â
The strings were loose, Dream tried picking them off his bonesâÂ
âDonât even think about it.â He bit back a sigh. The strings had tightened right back.
Then strings laxed. Errorâs eyebrows creased. âHow old are you?â
He swallowed the fear in his throat.Â
âIâ I donât knowââ5
That was the wrong thing to say, because it made Errorâs gaze turn from distantly curious to glacial. Dream froze.Â
âAh.â That was the extent of Errorâs response, because then the strings completely fell off him. He stared at the blue strands on the ground, uncomprehending.Â
âDo you know your name?â The other asked, more softly than before.Â
A spark of indignation sprouted in him at that. Of course he knew what his name was.
âOf course I do.â
Error snorted, but the other didnât back down. âWhatâs your name?âÂ
He didnât want to tell them his name. Inkâs gaze turned purple to blue, the mischievous glint fading to an aching coldness in a instant. Something in him lurched.
âHealer.â
Blue into green. âWell, I know thereâs a trend of roles becoming names, but I find it so off-putting. It feels wrong to refer to people by their purpose. No other name?â
Dream shook his head.Â
âHere, little one. Iâll give you my name in exchange, alright? Itâs Ink.â
âHe could just not have a name. Or maybe he does and forgot it. You wouldâve.â Ink broke eye contact to shoot Error an annoyed look. âMost people know me as the Destroyer, not as Error.âÂ
Something cold curdled in Dreamâs stomach.
âThatâs because most donât live long enough to learn your name.â Ink straightened up.Â
His name was Ink. He shivered. Wasnât that a familiar name?Â
The black mass, curling around his feet with the quiet promise of manacles if he tried to escape. Inkâs ink.Â
Ink.
A God that lived amongst the living. The sole survivor of bloody battles. The Justiciar. The Protector, but only of the wrongfully hurt and wrongfully broken. A fatalistic force of nature.Â
Of Creation.
Everyone knew him. Even Dream knew him, from the rare books of Myths and Legends he got to pass the time in those four walls.Â
âYouâre a God,â He breathed.Â
Ink blinked.
âOh, that was quick. But no, I wouldnât call myself a God.â He broke off with a laugh, but Dreamâs gaze was already onâŠÂ Error.
Those blue strings. The very trademark of the Destroyer.
He wanted to throw up.
Error. The Destroyer. The God that brought destruction to the living, the face of catastrophic wars and battles. Not the Justiciar, but the Punishment. The axe and executioner of the sinners and sinned.Â
Error seemed to have read his face. âYou donât need to be scared of me.â
Error, of Destruction.
And they were both peeking at him over the ring of blue bones.
Dream sank back into the ground face-first. He barely even registered the ink leaving his feet.Â
âDonât do that,â He vaguely heard one of them say. âYouâll get dirt on your face.âÂ
The strings reattached themselves, tangling with his waist and arms before pulling his torso back up. Dream tried tearing them off again, albeit half-hearted, but they yanked himâ
âwhite hot, searing.
He saw white.
pain painpainâ
He choked back blood (why was he tasting blood?) as he reached forâ what?â (something, someone, anyone, peace home safety freedoâ)6
His magic found him, blooming bright into a thousand golden sparksâ
And the sound of ripped fabric.
The tension bled out of him. Dream blinked the white out of his eyes, burning warmth spilling down his eyesockets like nothing at all.Â
ââ Healer!â
He blinked again and shook it off. âIâ I donâtââ
He was breathing. He was breathing differently. Something was different.Â
âInk.â 7
âCan you hear me?â He looked up to find Ink face to face with him. He flinchedâ
He didnât flinch.Â
(home, together, embrace, warmthâ)8
Huh?Â
âInk. You really have to see this.â
âHold on. Can you hear me, Healer?â
âDream.â The name slipped out before he could force it back. Huh?9 âMy real nameâs Dream.â
âOkay, Dream, breathe withââ
âInk!â
âI know,â Ink turned to hiss. â I did see his magic, but heâs in the midst of a panic attackââ
Dream pressed against his throat, confused why his voice had suddenly betrayed him and given his name.Â
âIt wasnât a panic attack.â Errorâs voice began with an exasperated growl, but it tapered off into just exasperation. âJustâ just look.â
âFineââ Ink went silent.Â
The silence made him look back up. Ink was staring at something behind him. A terribly cold fear hit him. What was it this time?
Almost unwittingly, Dream followed his line of sight. A horrible hollowness followed.
He first saw the taut strings, and realised they were propping him up. Beneath the blue, there was unmistakable white.
Oh. He breathed what seemed like his first breath in years and it was not a sweet breath. That explained the pain earlier. He mustâve overestimated Errorâs pull and launched himself backwards.
The strings had torn through his wing bindings.Â
The crumpled, mangled mass of feathers certainly did not seem able to hold his weight at all.
No wonder it hurt so much.
âOh.â Ink echoed his thought. âHeâs an Avian.â
Something dawned on him and made his chest seize again. A terrible glimmer of emotion blinked through the haze of cold numbness and it was of fear.Â
Fear, of them.Â
They would be furious if They learnt his wings had been unbound. They would be so angry. He wasnât allowed to have his wings unbound. He wasnât allowed. He had broken their rules.
He was going to get in trouble.
Dream was shuddering.
âDream.â His head whipped up. Error looked furious. âDid you bind your wings⊠yourself?"
No, of course he didnât. They did. But Error looked so angry. Would he get angrier if Dream said no?
He steadied himself. No, he shouldnât lie. Heâd get himself in even more trouble, so he shook his head.Â
âWho did?â Inkâs voice was so quiet he barely heard it. âWas it⊠was it the same people who sent you?â
He was suddenly grateful and he didnât know why. He nodded.
Ink cursed. It felt odd to hear such a quiet voice curse.Â
âHe has to come with us.â The voice was so quiet, Dream almost thought it was Ink speaking. âHe isnât going back to them.â Error spat out the last word like it was dirt. Dream did not hear Errorâs footsteps as he stepped behind him.
(Though he was glowering, Dream had the oddest feeling of being safe under it.)
âNo,â Ink replied, just as softly. âOf course not.âÂ
When Inkâs gaze hit him, Dream shrunk back.
âItâs alright, little one.â Ink said softly. âWeâre not going to hurt you.â
He shrunkâ
(safe, home, together)
âhuh?
He couldnât move. Ink reached for him; he was smiling but it was with teeth and it didnât match his eyes either.Â
All the fear drained out of Dream and left nothing but an aching tiredness.Â
Dream didnât take his hand, so Ink instead wiped the dirt from the ground off the formerâs face with the outstretched hand. The contact didnât even make Dream shudder. He was that exhausted, it seemed.
(Something in him made a happy little noise. It was the joyful chirp of a little fledgling.)
âDream?â He felt someone, probably Error, tap his shoulder. âThereâs still some cloth tangled with⊠your wings. Iâm going to remove what I can with my strings. Iâll be as gentle as I can.â
No. The word formed immediately, but just thinking it made him wince. Yet the dull fear that thudded through him seemed to grow sharper every passing second. He cast a look back. It was ugly; a mangled mess of feathers and cloth, but it was evidence of some struggle, at least.Â
He could get away with a few scratches if he said it had been removed against his will, but if he agreed now, heâd be complicit.Â
And that would make them even more angry.Â
He forced the no out, but it was soft, so soft that he didnât think they heard it.
âItâs for the best, little one.â Ink bent down and held his hands in his. He still shook his head. âAre you saying no because youâre scared itâll hurt?â
For some reason, when he made eye contact, his throat squeezed with the odd urge to cry. Then his head betrayed him by bringing up the image of Azreâs face and the terrible lump in his throat melted into something that tasted oddly like blood.
He shook his head again. No, he wasnât scared of his wings hurting. He wasnât scared of that hurt.
âYou think youâre safe, Healer? Locked up in your little birdcage? We could always take something back. A finger, perhaps? You donât need all ten to healââ
But Azre would hurt him if he let them take the cloth off. Maybe he wouldnât even take a finger. Maybe heâd take his wings. For good.10
âIs there another reason why youâre saying no?â Ink asked so gently.Â
Azre was furious when Nightmare had returned with injured wings. What ifâ
Dream went still.
(not safe, danger, help meâ)
Azre had called him useless. He wasnât useless, but Nightmare was certainly more useful to them. Healers were less rare than Avians. Dream wasnât irreplaceable to them.Â
So what ifâ
Heâd threatened to take a finger because Dream laughed.Â
What if this time, Azre tookâ
âTheyâll kill me,â He whispered. âIf you take my bindings off.â
âhis life?
The silence hung between them like the gap between life and death. Inkâs eyelights had disappeared completely.
(Something inside him whimpered.)
âError, take it off.â11
A gasp throttled through Dream as the sound of torn fabric echoed in his head. He felt arms around him, holding him still as the strings tore throughâ
(soft, embrace, home)
âDone. âÂ
Dream wanted to cry out as someone pulled at the torn feathers. The hand stopped and he was able to breathe again. He couldnât move in the firm embrace, but he was able to turn his head back ever so slightly.
He could see some yellow feathers in the white, now.
The strings had destroyed the cloth entirely. No scraps were left. None.
The Destroyerâs wrath is terrifying not for its bloodshed, but because it is utter destruction. It has no room for mercy. It refuses even the release of death.
Slowly, he made eye contact with Error.Â
âAll done, kid.âÂ
Ink released him, but Dream still felt as if he was being suffocated.
âDream, theyâre not going to leave even a finger on you. I swear it on my life.â
âYouâre immortal,â He muttered, but Ink still caught it and broke into a grin.Â
âThat I am! So you donât need to worry about them hurting you again. You will be safe with us.â
(Safe. The word echoed inside him.)
It weighed on his tongue and suddenly he didnât want to say anything at all.
Dream took a breath, another, and lost the thread of fear. He thought vaguely, I want to sleep now.
Ink caught his chin before it could fall.
And he was gone, out like a light. ***
âWell, that solves that problem.â
Ink sighed. He bent down and shifted Dream into a supporting embrace so he wouldnât wake up with a killer headache,Â
âStars.â He said it like a swear. âError, I think he might have imprinted on us.â
âStars?â He repeated, then paused. âAh. Crap.â
âYes, stars, heâs a châ fledgling. Iâm not swearing in front of him. And yes, âcrapâ is right.â
âItâs fine, heâs asleep, butâ isnât that good? That means he hasnât imprinted much on the fuckers that took him.â
âWellâ that, yes.â His gaze went cold, before melting into the warmth of concern. âBut that means heâll be dealing with his Avian instincts. You know what imprinting on someone means for them, right?â
Errorâs eyebrows scrunched together. âVaguely?â
He smiled bitterly.
âI have a hunch he doesnât what imprinting means. It doesnât seem like they bothered to educate him much on his own heritage.âÂ
Errorâs gaze grew dark. The strings around them twitched. Ink shook his head.Â
The strings went still again.Â
âIâm guessing heâs dealing with new instincts because he imprinted. Probably much more different than the instincts heâs used to. More⊠familial.â Ink shifted his grip so he wouldnât put much pressure on Dreamâs wings. Carefully, he stroked Dreamâs wings, stopping at a single yellow feather.Â
âItâs all atrophied, and look at this. He has so few yellow feathers. He hasnât used his magic in ages.â
Error hummed his agreement. âMagic use affects wing colours. Maybe he wasnât allowed to use magic much.âÂ
âYes,â Ink said softly. âHe mustâve been born with white. Maybe the yellow feathers here were just from that burst of magic earlier."
"Iâll check.â
A single blue string drifted into view, slowly and so much slower than the previous strings.. It looped around Dreamâs soul, gentle even then.
Then there was an odd pressure that made him stir slightly, and a golden light.
âCareful.âÂ
âI know.â The string wrapped around the gold glow. The quiet of contemplation weaved its way into their silent anticipation.Â
â....Thatâs peculiar.â
Ink turned. âWhat is?â
âHeâs⊠already imprinted on someone else.â
A coldness washed over him. âWho?â
Error was silent momentarily. Thenâ
âNightmare. Twin of Dream. Fellow Avian,â He read aloud. âAnd you and me, obviously.â
The two exchanged looks.Â
âHe has a twin?â Inkâs horror was quickly understood by Error. The sheer idea of another soul in the same hellhole made something in him want blood.Â
Especially someone like a fledgling Avian.
The two went silent.Â
The God of Creation held the sleeping Dream in his arms, and the God of Destruction watched them.Â
Dream did not know it, but he had never been safer. ***
Later, Dream would awake beneath blankets and dim lights that reminded him of stars. He would blink the tears of a nightmare away and watch as they soaked his pillow.Â
Nest, a part of him would coo.Â
There would come a time where he would not fight it.Â
Then, one day, Ink would ask him where they were.
There was only ever one âtheyâ.
Down the dirt road, he would say.Â
And Ink would understand.
Once they found Nightmare, wings splayed out and bitter tear tracks as if carved into his very cheeks, there was no mercy left to be found. Â
Nightmare was left outside, and he watched with the skies as the wrath of the Gods was realised. Soon the screams of those who took what never should have been theirs echoed into the skies, and the skies would not care for them for they had taken two of their own.
Nightmare watched their destruction with little reaction. One by one, the floors collapsed into dust and then nothing. He folded his wings as the screams gave out one by one.Â
He saw a tuff of white landing on a windowframe a floor above, fading into black at the corner.Â
Fur from a Monster who had had white fur spotted with black.12
He snapped his fingers and it burst into flames13. Mercy was sleeping in a pile of blankets and pillows.Â
And the wrath of the Gods left nothing but utter destruction in its wake.Â
Nightmare reached up and felt his cheek, felt the exhaustion, desperation and fear. He remembered the utter terror that had reached him when he realised something had gone wrong, and Dream would not return.
But Dream was safe, and Nightmare was finally going to leave this place.Â
He and Dream were free of it.Â
The fires cast shadows over him, and he closed his eyes.Â
It felt cleansing.
The God of Destruction serves not as the Justiciar, but as the final Punishment. His wrath is terrifying not for its bloodshed, but because it is utter destruction. It has no room for mercy. It refuses even the release of death.
Though the God of Creation is the Justicar, the Protector, he is feared as much as he is revered for the Protectorâs justice is not mere bloodshed either. It is worse. It is quiet, it is unyielding, and it is true punishment.
Far away, a little gold bird slept with preened wings, waiting for his brother to join him in his nest.
When a little cyan bird dipped into it, though his mind was muddled with sleep, some part of him heard him and cooed, family.
Then, quietly; home.
Footnotes:
the birbs. *nods approvingly* 1. Dream did not recognise Azre, which is why his inner monologue focused on the other Monster. 2. I believe it's obvious, but Nightmare did not find it a shame at all. 3. CORE Frisk had other matters to attend to, so unfortunately they couldn't make the delivery and asked their old friends Ink and Error to do it on their behalf. CORE Frisk was the target of the mission, not Ink and Error. 4. CORE Frisk happened to be immortal like Ink and Error, but not quite invincible. 5. Both Ink and Error had seen youthful souls capable of both foolishness and cruelty, so the Dream's young appearance did not seem cause for much concern, albeit perhaps a sign that Dream was merely acting on somebody, perhaps someone older,'s orders. However, learning Dream did not know his own age was cause for concern, because it was a possible indication of Dream's lack of autonomy over his own life. Dream, however, did not notice any of this, and only saw Error's physical reaction, not thought process.Â
6. Birb instinct. And repressed trauma. 7. Error had noticed something neither Ink nor Dream (well, consciously) had noticed. 8. I'm not SAYING this was when Dream imprinted on them. But. His birb brain does seem to be going a bit haywire, huh? (Expect most of the lowercase words in brackets to be birb brain too.) 9. Birb brain: family asks me something I know. trust them. must not lie. Dream: ?????? 10. Avian wings were nowhere as pricey as Avians themselves, but Dream knows he's nowhere as useful an Avian as Nightmare is to their abductors, so he's on much thinner ice; Avian wings are still very valuable in a normal context. Though he doesn't internally refer to them as abductors. That would mean antagonizing them, and he doesn't want to speed his death up. 11. Error and Ink had unanimously made a decision. 12. Sounds familiar? 13. For any confused readers, he was using magic.








