My first real one shot, A good 1550 words. Did my best to keep MC gender neutral, hope you enjoy!
Thank you, @honeybadgerdontcare394 for being my inspiration mirror and just chilling with me while I wrote this
fic inspired by this pic
MC has been haunted by nightmares of the battle with Ranrok going horribly wrong and living with the guilt of her dear friends dying due to her failure. Cue the Legacy Crew coming to the rescue.
Sitting straight up, gasping for air, I look around the dorm, trying to grasp the reality that I'm surrounded by my sleeping housemates who are very much alive and well. The inkling of my nightmare is still at the forefront of my sleep-riddled mind. Any normal person would get a drink of water and lie back down.
Yet, knowing myself, I'd have better luck roaming the halls or taking care of the beasts in my vivariums. Slipping out of bed, I put my house shoes on and quietly make my way through the common room. House-elves, animated portraits, and ghosts are the only wayfaring occupants of a sleeping Hogwarts. I make my way past the Central Hall fountain as the sound of a door opening comes from behind me. Not a moment after ducking behind a mermaid, hoping that it's not Madam Scribner or a Prefect, a certain troublesome Slytherin sneaks by.
âAt this time of night, I should have known it would be you coming from the library instead of Scribner herself.â I mutter just loud enough for Sebastian to hear me. A half-hearted laugh escapes as he nearly trips from spinning around.
âI was so focused on getting back to my dorm that I didnât even see you hiding so poorly.â The Slytherin chuckles before looking at me. âActually, why are you awake and wandering about?â
I should have expected the big brother of my friends to pick up on anything abnormal about my own wandering schedule. âFor the most part, Iâm fine. Just a bit of restlessness.â
If Sebastian Sallow was good at anything mundane, it was making people fidget from his unnerving stare, which is why the water pouring from the fountain has my attention because I know he isnât buying my lie. Along with the fact that I canât lie to save my life when it comes to him or Ominis. Damn Slytherin boys.
âYouâre having nightmares, aren't you, MC?â he sighs as the sound of feet moves, and suddenly his arm is around my shoulder, and I'm being pulled against his side.
âThatâs not fair! I get that Iâm horrid at lying, but Ominis canât even see yet points it out like a sore thumb in fresh snow!â I groaned as Sebastian laughs and guides me up the stairs of Central Hall.
âEither way, I take it youâre heading to the Room of Requirement?â His smirk is annoying, and the itch to zap it off his face is enticing. Nonetheless, the warmth radiating from him settles my nervesâa further tie to the reality that not only am I, but those around me that I care about are safe and very much alive.
The walk to the Astronomy Tower was mostly a blur, save for the few ducks and dodges from a certain poltergeist. I gaze at the stairs until the darkness swallows them. âI donât feel like being alone. I donât think my mental state can handle it.â Turning to look at the boy next to me, his face shows an emotion that Iâd seen a handful of times.
âThen you wonât be. We can make it a slumber party and invite all of our friends!â Sebastian softly declares as he takes my hand and guides me to the seventh floor of the tower. Once we stop in front of the slowly appearing door, he spins around and smiles.
Taking a step inside, I smile softly at the warmth the room gives off, a home within a home. âDeek, I know itâs late, but I could use your assistance,â I say as I round the corner, seeing the sweet house elf sweeping by the hallway. âDeek would be most happy to assist you. What is it that you need?â
âIâll head back to my dorm and get Ominis. Weâll send owls to the rest. While we do that, you and Deek can set up however you feel is necessary.â With a smile and a nod, heâs off down the stairs.
âI think that should be enough. What do you say, Deek?â I ask while looking at Merlin knows how many pillows and blankets are strewn in a somewhat organized chaos.
âDeek thinks that it looks like the perfect place to spend time with friends and take a nap.â I smile while turning around at the sound of the door opening. Ominis and Sebastian are quick to enter, and while I must say, seeing Ominis in anything but his usual tidiness is odd, it suits him nonetheless. A warm hug from the Slytherin Prince and a flick to my forehead precede Sebastian, throwing his arms over both of our shoulders.
âIs there a good reason as to why you didnât come to either one of us, or any of your other friends for that matter, about the nightmares youâve been having? Or do you think we donât care or love you enough to listen and help?â His face shows all the emotions his voice doesnât.
âNeither, nor anything. Iâm sorry, but it wasnât because I didnât trust or think none of you cared; if anything, the exact opposite was true. I didnât think they would last so long or begin to feel so real,â I say, looking at the floor. A burp comes from behind me, and a smile forms as I look behind me.
âEw, Garreth! That was right next to my face!â Amit bemoans as his hand waves frantically in front of him. Poppy and Natty do their best not to laugh as they come through the door.
âWeâve got owls saying that a particular someone is in need of cheering up,â Poppy states as she comes over and hugs me. âThe freaky thing about nightmares is realizing that they were created by your own mind. Donât stop dreaming just because you had a nightmare.â Her embrace is warm, and I lean my cheek against the short Hufflepuff.
Natty comes over and joins in the hug, next moment Iâm suddenly the center of a very large hug, laughter bubbles from my lips as I try (and fail) to wiggle around. Amit is the first to pull away and looks around âAre there enough pillows? Other than food I think weâre all setâÂ
I chuckle as I side-eye Garreth, whoâs already eating a random muffin, an innocent smile and shrugged shoulders thrown my way before I walk around the pillows and my friends. âWe can always sneak into the kitchens, that is if Amit is willing to be the lookout?â A smile and an open door are all that are needed to urge the mixed-matched group of pajama-clad students to take action. Or maybe it's the mention of food?
âAre we in agreement that if a house-elf shows up, we leave Garreth or Sebastian as the sacrifice?â Ominis snickers at the harmonized âheyâ as we file past the portrait. Poppy is already grabbing muffins, mini mincemeat pies, and scones. Natty is in the back by the kegs, no doubt stuffing the charmed bag sheâd gotten for Christmas with the mini kegs of butterbeer. I grab a couple of apples and a basket of dinner rolls. Soon, weâre heading back to The Room.
Once back in the room, a table was placed in the center of the pillows. We slowly emptied our bags and robe pockets of the food and snacks. Natty placed two kegs in the center of the table while I conjured mugs. A glance at Deek as he came to join us at the beckoning of Natty and Poppy, and the tendrils of the once-recurring nightmares quickly faded from my mind. Laughter and chatting filled the late-hour air, shortly followed by yawns and groans of full bellies.
âPersonally, I am ready to pass out. Iâm not sure about the rest of you.â Amit states as a yawn escapes him. A unified agreement rings among us, and weâre quick to vanish any traces of food and drink. Natty and Garreth are quick to go curl up with Amit as they quietly chatter about odd interests. Poppy and I curl up with Sebastian laid out behind us, acting as a pillow. Ominis finds my lap once I settle myself.
I spy Deek at the steps of the hallway leading to the lower room and smile softly at him as he nods back at me, a smile of his own, as he's been a pillar of strength for me since my nightmares started. A yawn slips past my lips as my eyelids grow heavy, and the tendrils of the once-recurring nightmares quickly fade from my mind.
âThere's something about kindred spirits. You meet them, and for a moment, this worldâno matter how uglyâmakes sense. They bring a sense of freedom and clarity to the conversation, just enough to remind you of who you are.â
I love the unexpected friendships Iâve made this year. If not for them being here, Iâd have lost myself in a way no one would return from. A smile paints my face as I fall asleep, knowing Iâll never be alone.
Even if fingertips already numb, and cheeks are completely frosted over. Because this is a gift that he must give by himself.
Without Floo.
Real flowers, bought for a couple of knuts in a Hogsmead shop. Not roses, but daisies. Because she likes simple flowers...
Sebastian: do you love me
Ominis: ?????
Ominis: was that meant for MC
Sebastian: no it was meant for you
Sebastian: MC and Poppy say they love each other all of the time and you NEVER say you love me
Sebastian: aren't we best friends?
Sebastian: haven't i known you for years?
Sebastian: why don't you love me
Ominis: why does it matter
Sebastian: wow so that's how much i mean to you
Sebastian: i'll remember this
Sebastian: MC do you love me
MC: uhhh like in what way
Sebastian: as a friend
Sebastian: the way you love Poppy
MC: oh then no. not like that.
Sebastian: wtf do you all hate me???
Sebastian: we're settling this rn
Sebastian: so neither of you love me huh
Ominis: did i say i don't love you??? i don't think those words came out of my mouth
Sebastian: YOU BASICALLY DID YES
MC: i never said i didn't love you. i just said i don't love you the way that i love Poppy. big difference there I think
Sebastian: so you DO love me?
MC: can we talk about this outside of the group chat with Ominis pls
Sebastian: ?????? do you hate him
MC: no wtf
Sebastian: then why can't he be here
MC: ugh seb pls
Ominis: i'm not saying it sorry
Ominis: i hate verbalizing love
Ominis: makes my stomach hurt
Ominis: makes my body cringe
Ominis: makes me wanna throw up
MC: you weren't hugged enough as a child
Ominis: lol ur right
Sebastian: so that's it???? you won't say it and MC won't say it in a group with you either. because she hates you. thanks a lot Ominis.
MC: that's actually not true
MC: he's my best friend. i love you Ominis.
Ominis: love you too
Sebastian: WTF???????
This is adorable. I love the ever so gentle gentleman that Ominis tries to always be. Also, I love how their both dying once reality hits them later on.
hogwarts legacy is one of these fandoms where it's lonely being a lesbian because everyone is out there having a crush on Sebastian or Ominis and writing romance between them and their oc and i'm here like đ§đœââïždoes anyone else call them their little brothers and have a butch lesbian oc or...
Scilla and Silas (the male equivalent of Scilla) are both bisexual. In one AU, Scilla is completely lesbian for Samantha Dale. Ominis and Sebastian are her close confidants as she navigates these feelings, which she has never really experienced before. She becomes a sweet summer child around Samantha, and it's adorable.
If you receive this, you make somebody happy! Go on anon and send this to ten of your followers who make you happy or somebody you think needs cheering up. If you get one back, even better.
Hey love <3 I know you've been pretty quiet on here lately, but I hope you're having a good week! Please know that I think of you and Scilla often!
Allan Waite, a strange student from Hogwarts, finds a group of poachers trying to break in a vault and save the rest of their company from certain death. Despite his better judgment, he decides to help.
Word Count For The Nerds: 5826 words
Page Count For The Nerds: 13 Pages
The sun pounded down forcefully on the dirt and grass, which only doubled the bombardment on Allanâs skin, yet years of outdoor attention and activity had made him sturdier to the sunâs constant war, but years of hoarding clothes on his person had also kept all but his face pale. He was used to it, however, and pushed forward through the blur of heat of the ground, towards some unseen goal he wasnât even entirely sure about himself.Â
Allan kept walking forward in the grassy hills that provided little cover, passing along a cliffside edge that threatened to toss him over with one step to the right. Down there, he could see a poacher camp, set right outside a cave. Cages were stacked in rows, and in one lay the key to the entrance of the cave, a large cube with a symbol on it. They seemingly had figured out it had to do with the cave in some way- or it wouldnât have been so heavily protected. He could see the water from here- just a ways away, past the camp which was set on another cliff. Then again, this was the coast- you could see water nearly everywhere.Â
He clicked his tongue to himself, making his way to his current destination- a nearby cemetery that had long since been abandoned over the course of decades, turning and walking towards a bridge built across the river he had been following for the past day to find his way. The heels of his boots met stone, found grip, and held weight with each step forward. Thankfully the bridge was still sturdy, and he soaked in the view once more, glancing over the edge towards his right once again, watching the glittering water sparkle like a thousand gemstones in the setting sun, spreading the fire towards the beaches which served as the only divider between the two. A path slowly crept away from the sands, and up towards the bridge, dividing the cliff into two.
Everything is as it should be. He thought, satisfied with the rare quiet- too quiet, really, with a poacher camp nearby. Sure enough, his quiet was disturbed as he noticed a pair of legs sticking out from behind his view of the rocks. He moved just enough to see the full form and frowned when he recognized the mask on the face of the body.
A dead poacher? That seemed odd to him- poachers, as with any group, at least to some extent, defended each other. It was rare to see one alone- let alone dead. Creeping to the side a bit more to see past the rocks, he noticed what appeared to be another corpse- although it was hard to tell, since it was tucked closer to the cliff he had just walked away from, the shadows leaving it obscure to his vision. Curious, he deviated from his mission, and quickly jogged across the bridge, back the way he came.Â
He found a spot in the rocks where he could clearly see the bodies, and soon realized there was still more he had missed due to his position before. There were, in total, four poachers, two of which were dead, both laying in a similar fashion, near what looked like white symbols Allan could not quite make out, but which looked distinctly familiar. Another sat with his legs pulled up against his chest, tucked into the cliff in a way Allan could never have seen him from his position before even if he tried. He looked like he was weeping behind the mask, shivering and hugging himself, muttering half-incoherent thoughts and words.
The last poacher was groaning loudly in pain, bashing his shoulder into a metal gate tucked into the cliff, leading to a cave. He would walk a few paces back, run forward, and slam his whole body weight into the door, before doing it again after each inevitable failure.Â
Allan crouched down to watch them, curiosity eating at his heart the more he watched their clearly desperate efforts. They werenât paying attention to their surroundings, clearly, since neither of them seemed to notice him.
âI canât hear their screams anymore.â The poacher tucked against the cliff sniffled out, saying the first genuinely understandable thing yet. The other turned and looked at him, frowning and pausing his assault on the door, before letting out a loud, exhausted sigh and slamming his shoulder into the metal again, the bars cutting into his shirt and skin, bruising him badly enough he bled under the shirt, causing it to stick and itch. He paused again to move his shirt so that it no longer itched, and Allan bit the inside of his lip.
On one hand, poachers hunted and killed defenseless beasts. On the other, these poachers in particular were clearly desperate, and it looked like the rest of their party had been trapped in the cave. Although Allan didnât want to help them, knowing how they had hurt others while working under Rookwood, he also felt terribly sorry for them- as they clearly were trying to rescue their team- assuming there was any team left to save.
Allan got up and climbed down the cliff, jumping down and catching himself, before hopping down again onto the dirt path with a soft thump. The frightened poacher squealed in terror when he saw him and jumped up, his wand immediately at the ready. This alerted his friend mid-slam, and he too twisted around to face him, hissing a threat.
âYou! Youâre that damned student! You have a lot of nerve showing your face around here.â He spat. Allan didnât flinch, only shrugged and raised his hands in hopes to show he meant no harm.
âIâm not sure youâre in a position to say that, with what looks like a good chunk of your crew dead or missing in action.â Allan then nodded to the poacher who had yelped, and noticing how badly he was shaking, he gave a friendly smile. âSorry for the scare.â
The poacher shivered and backed up against the wall, leaving his more sound comrade to step forward, unconvinced of Allanâs attempts at peace.
âWhat do you want, boy?â He growled through gritted teeth, which Allan could hear through his mask.
âI want to strike a deal. You want to go find your companions. I want to see whatâs in that cave. I can unlock the door, and we can split the profits. I donât want to fight you- put the wand away, please.â Allan explained slowly, emphasizing his words so it hopefully registered.
The poachers glanced at each other, seemingly worried for another potential bloodbath. Eventually, the both yielded, and slowly put their wands away, still studying Allanâs every move warily. Allan smiled and lowered his hands, creeping forward and fixing his gloves. He took a cocky bow, trusting them to not attack him for the few seconds he wasnât looking at them, and he raised an eyebrow.
âThank you kindly. I think we should get acquainted. Allan. Allan Waite. You two?â Allan raised his arms to gesture to the poachers. The terrified one shivered and remained silent, still not trusting him enough to speak. The other, however, shifted awkwardly from one foot to another, and huffed in irritation, clearly not thrilled at being on friendly terms with their number one enemy. Still, he adjusted his shoulder blades and stood up straight.
âVincent, if you must know.â He declared proudly, âYouâre not going to attack us, then?â
âDonât be silly. Youâre helpless. I have class. I want to help you.â Allan shook his head, putting his hands in his coat pockets and blowing a lock of magenta hair out of his eyes. Vincent snorted, and although Allan couldnât tell, he could have sworn the poacher rolled his eyes.Â
âWell Iâm so very glad that weâre so helpless that the great Purger of Dark Wizards feels bad for us.â Vincent crossed his arms, the defensive gesture signaling to Allan that he did not trust him, and rightfully so, in Allanâs eyes. The other poacher sunk back into his crying position and began to sob. Both Allan and Vincent turned towards him and Allan frowned, furrowing his brows in genuine sympathy. He took his wand out of its sheath and slowly walked over to the gate, Vincent watching him the entire way, wary of his every move.
âWhat are you doing?!â He hissed the second he saw the wand, just a little bit of fear creeping up into his voice. Allan chuckled at his reaction.
âUnlocking the door, you fool. Do you want to find your friends or not?â Allan replied, snapping in a way that left little room for argument as he cast Alohomora on the lock. He walked right by a gawking Vincent, who huffed and adjusted his cat skull mask as the door swung open with an agonizingly slow creak. Allan turned to look back at the frightened poacher and smiled.
âStay out here and guard the entrance. If anyone but us comes up, close the door immediately.â Allan ordered. The man nodded, still visibly shivering like he was experiencing his own personal earthquake. Satisfied with the nod for an answer, Allan turned to look down into the dark pit of a hallway, lit only by a few stray torches. Vincent leaned in a little next to him, looking between Allan and the hallway.Â
ââŠItâs open.â He said after a moment, urging Allan to move already. Allan gawked himself, and rolled his eyes.
âWell- Yes I KNOW that thank you.â He started walking forward and into the stone halls. It was clearly man made- more likely one of the many treasure vaults like around the Highlands. Still, he crept down onto the rubble, quietly trying to avoid making any noise by avoiding the pebbles- An effort immediately foiled by Vincent who tripped on a stone slab, a loud Clunk ringing through the hallway. Allan winced and froze. He didnât want to disturb whatever lay in here- lest it decided to disturb them. He looked back at Vincent with a scowl, who gave a tiny, albeit forced, smile.
âAny idea what happened here?â Allan whispered. Vincent shook his head.
âThe gate locked behind them- all we heard were the shouts of a scuffle.â Vincent shifted away from the slab, careful not to touch anything else. Allan turned back around to keep moving.
âWhat happened to the men outside then?â Allan hissed quietly as he put his hand on the wall, feeling its rough texture. A nearby torch, sensing movement, lit itself. Allan squinted as his eyes adjusted to the sudden light. He was surprised any torches down here still worked- although he supposed it could be magic.
âInferi out front. Lot of âem. Stupidly strong for a shambling mass of bones.â Vincent replied. Allan raised an eyebrow, surprised.
ââŠInferi. Inferi took out three poachers? And then what? Left?â Allan replied, clearly dumbfounded by how three fully grown adults couldnât just Confringo a bunch of Inferi. It seemed to be a poacherâs favorite spell. Vincent shrugged.
âI donât know⊠They were stronger. Something was wrong. They were like- stone statues- and if you managed to get a crack open- they glowed red.â
Allan frowned at Vincentâs description. It sounded oddly similar to a particular pyramid-shaped object he knew of. Stone that glows red. Hm.Â
âAny chance they attacked at night and crumbled to ash once the sun roseâŠ?â Allan offered, throwing it out there that he might know what those things were. Or are- if there were any more.Â
Vincent stopped and gawked at Allan, who continued forward. He scrunched his eyebrows and blinked, putting one hand against a stone wall as if in thought.
âHow- how do you know that?â He wondered aloud, Allan just shrugged and gestured for Vincent to come along. It would be too much a hassle to explain. To a poacher no less. He didnât exactly âhelpâ poachers and Ashwinders often. This one just got lucky that he was curious.
The hallway opened, each wall suddenly swallowed by a larger, darker room. Allan had to blink a couple of times for his eyes to adjust- which was promptly ruined by Vincent casting Lumos. Allan sighed as he was blinded and he reached over to his left and to bat at Vincentâs wand. Allanâs hand stopped short however as the rough shapes he had started to see in the dark suddenly became clear, and he could see the limp, lifeless forms of several poachers, strewn across the floor like ragdolls with broken or even crushed limbs. He cringed enough his left arm returned to his side. He doubted any of them had very painless deaths.
That would explain the screaming dying out⊠He frowned. At LEAST the Killing Curse is painless. Whatever was in here certainly didnât give any of them that mercy. Allan felt a little drool well up in his mouth and his hand almost instinctively inch closer to his wand. The pain they must have gone throughâŠÂ
Allan slammed his right hand into his coat pocket and looked at Vincent who was staring in horror, even under the mask the wide eyes were visible, glittering from the light of his wand. Allan reached out again, but hesitated and sighed.
âIâm sorry.â Was all he managed to squeak out. He was one to talk, so he knew better to say more when he had a nasty reputation for taking out poachers in the Forest. Vincent nodded and approached one of the bodies, leaning down a bit to look at it and instantly recoiling at the smell of blood.
ââŠItâs like. Itâs like the corpse of a bird that got under a carriageâs wheel.â He concluded. But human. Allan didnât need Vincent to say it to know what he meant.Â
Allan wandered into the room as well, looking at the roots coming out of the ground from trees that must be above them. He squatted down to inspect them. The soil was soft and crumbled easily to the touch. It was fresh.
âVincent. Stay away from the dirt. And the roots.â Allan ordered with an air of urgency. Vincent seemed to clock it was important and frowned, looking over.
âWhy?â An understandable query.
âI dunno. Hunch.â Allan frowned, standing up and looking around. âI just donât like it.â
Vincent raised a suspicious eyebrow, the mask shifting up slightly on his face, conveying to Allan his doubt. Then again, Allan didnât need to see his face to know he probably didnât trust him.Â
ââŠRight.â Vincent turned to move further into the room, spotting a wall to the left with loose looking bricks. Vincent wandered over, intrigued. As he did, the bricks, enchanted as they were, shot themselves back and reformed the wall, opening into a new, smaller room. Vincent jumped and scurried back in shock, unintentionally landing his heel in the crook between the floor and the root of a plant, his own momentum forcing him backward, and he fell to the ground, snapping the root with a loud âAck!â.
Allan immediately turned around, worried as to the condition of his companion, but failed to warn the man, as a skinny, stone hand shot out of the loose dirt and grabbed his arm with painful force. Vincent, with his arm now pulled against the ground, gasped and tried to pull away to no avail.
Allan took a step forward to help Vincent, paused as he listened to the groans of other undead assailants as they pulled their bodies out of the ground. A quick glance around confirmed the worst of his fears, as at least four other âinferiâ surrounded them from all around the room. Allan realized quickly he had little time before they overwhelmed him, and he rushed over to Vincent.
Vincent gasped at the stone arm, which now slowly revealed a whole head and body. Vincent could see the âskinâ of the creature wasnât skin- but some sort of stone cracked and groaned with every swift movement. It seemed impossible to break from. It didnât help that Allan himself looked panicked- although Vincent gathered that made sense. He was just a kid. Even if he seemed to know what was going on- he was still JUST a kid.
âLumos!â Allan shouted, his wand giving light. He shoved it in the inferiâs face, which seemed to make it back away with a screech of agony. Vincent broke his hand away and scrambled up. The creature was completely still now that it was in the light- like some sort of⊠Undead statue? Now was not the time for questions.
âThatâs what was outside! Merlinâs bloody cock-â Vincent gasped as he scrambled away, taking the hint to grab his own wand and cast Lumos.
âLanguage.â Allan grumbled in Vincentâs vague direction, and turned around, waving the light in the direction of the other âinferiâ. His aggressive motion made them swerve away the second the light moved away from them, but his wand gave a strained flicker. It was like they themselves were soaking up the light, and perhaps the very magic of his wand.Â
âAlright, wiseass. How do we kill âem? Fire?â Vincent hissed back, waving his wand in the direction âInferiâ that had attacked him moments earlier.
âTheyâre stone. You canât kill stone- let alone whatâs already dead.â Allan frowned and looked back into the hallway, where the torch was still flickering with fire. He glanced at his wand, which was starting to flicker more as its unnatural light was drained- presumably by the creatures. With every spare second the light was out, they crept closer to Allan.Â
He shoved his wand in his pocket and grabbed the stone arm of one of the monsters, vaulting himself over it to get out in front of them. Vincent let out a shocked gasp as Allan sprinted to the fire, only to be grabbed a moment too soon by the coat, Allan turned around and sucked in his breath. The whole room looked like a void- with the exception of Vincentâs wand. A single arm attached to a stone body reached out, gripping onto Allanâs coat.
Allan looked at Vincent, whose wand flickered slightly, causing the poacher to smack his hand in confusion. With little more consideration, Allan ripped his coat out of the grip of his assailant. He turned around with a frustrated hiss.
âConfringo!â A sizzling, swirling giant spark of fire leapt from his wand, hitting the âinferiâ that had attacked him in the face. It froze, like stone, staring at him with what was left of cold, broken eyes. He didnât have a second to think as the flame died out, and his wand sparked, indicating to him that he wasnât getting anything out of it with these creatures around. Vincent frowned as his own wand flickered.
âAlright, smartshoes. What now? I can see those gears turning.âÂ
Allan stared at Vincent for a moment before something clicked, and rammed himself into the nearest âInferiâ and knocked it over. Vincent gawked.
âAre you INSANE? Do you have a DEATH WISH?â He hissed through his teeth as Allan sprinted out of the room back into the hallway.Â
âShut it, Dad.â He grumbled sarcastically as he grabbed the torch from the wall. Vincent gasped and sprinted forward, his wand going out in the same breath. Instantly, âInferiâ were on top of him with the speed of a bullet, yanking him back away from the hallway. He shouted out as he was pulled to the floor like he was nothing more than a ragdoll.
Allan stopped on his tracks as he watched Vincent get pulled into the darkness of the room. He bit his tongue to keep himself from uttering several unholy words.
He shoved the torch in the face of the first âInferiâ he could see in the dark, which let out a horrible screech of pain, as its stone skin cracked and shattered as easily as sugar glass. With one last effort, in spite of its pain, it reached its crumbling hand out and tugged on Allanâs coat, before falling to the ground in a million pieces. Allan fixed his coat and walked into the room, filling it with the natural light of the fire.
A loud roar of howls of pain pierced Allanâs ears like a spear. Each creature still as stone, but yet crumbled to the ground in an uproar of sheer agony, reaching up as they did. Vincent gawked as the magic of his wand returned to him, the light emitting from its point, and he looked at Allan in understandable confusion and relief.
ââŠWhatâŠ?â He gasped.
âNatural light. Lethal to them.â Allan explained carefully, âThat was the difference. Theyâre afraid of light. Fire is natural light. Unnatural things are afraid of nature because it always wins. Like⊠vines overtaking a brick wall.â
Vincent raised an eyebrow. He looked the kid up and down a bit, confused by how this teenager made such a conclusion like it was the most obvious thing in the world.
âBut- the torch was enchanted. It came on on its own.âÂ
Allan shook his head and started walking forward, looking around the room with the flame and wandering over to the wall that had moved just before the attack. âThe stick would have been enchanted to LIGHT itself. The fire wouldnât have been.â
He turned to look at Vincent, checking to see if he was following mentally.Â
âThose things⊠They arenât Inferi. Theyâre⊠like⊠Husks. Inferi have a little intelligence enough to talk and move. Those things? No. They just attack anything alive that comes near, like a golem.â Vincent said in a half panicked daze as he scrambled to his feet, dusting off the shards of stone. He felt vomit rise up in his throat when he realized that âstoneâ was now millions of pieces of dead bodies.
Allan laughed, and shook his head. âOh no no no. Theyâre intelligent all right. Did you think itâs a spell that they only moved in the dark? No no, itâs a HUNTING tactic.â Allan smirked to himself as Vincent looked at him with horror.
âYou mean⊠Those things⊠Could have⊠moved at any moment?â Vincent looked at the dust and shards on the ground and backed up slightly, immediately stumbling over a dead comrade, now coated in dust. He cursed loudly and looked at Allan with a new fire in his eyes, suddenly raising his wand in the boyâs face.
âWho ARE you?!â Vincent hissed angrily, as if all this was Allanâs fault.
Allan narrowed his eyes and frowned, tilting his head.
âAllan Waite. Feel free to tell your superiors that I saved your life. See how happy theyâll be then.â Allan walked towards the center of the room with a coy smirk.Â
âWe had a deal.â Allan tutted as he walked. Vincentâs hand quivered as he held up the wand, realizing that Allan was entirely unafraid- perhaps amused- about his threats. He pressed his lips together and put his wand in his pocket.Â
âYouâre a strange kid.â He decided aloud, causing Allan to snicker profusely. Allan wandered over to where Vincent first fell.Â
âYouâre clumsy.â He pointed out. Vincent frowned as Allan pointed out the very obvious fact. Allan moved silent as the dead of night, so of course Vincent was clumsy by his standards.Â
ââŠHm.â Vincent shook his head, not gracing the kid with an answer. He walked over, following Allan as he started to walk closer, the bricks moving and shifting, revealing a small closet-sized room, as dilapidated as the rest of the place. Inside was a small chest, about as big as a large suitcase. Allan narrowed his eyes and looked back at Vincent, putting a foot on the top of the chest before smirking.Â
âTHIS is what you fell over?â Allan chuckled. Vincent rolled his eyes at Allanâs mockery. Allan shook his head and took his foot off the chest, squatting down on the floor, and started opening it.
Vincent grabbed Allan and pulled him away from it, the lid snapping shut with a loud clank.Â
âWhat if itâs booby-trapped?â Vincent hissed. Allan rolled his eyes and brushed off his shoulders.
âOh please. I doubt anyone who built this expected ANYONE to get past those creepy crawlies. Most donât even know reinforced Inferi exist, let ALONE how to stop them.â Allan leaned down and lifted the chest lid anyway, causing Vincent to step back as if something would jump out.
Allan snickered as Vincent reacted, and looked down to spy their fortune. Inside was nothing but a light purple scarf, eaten partially by moths and maggots. Allan scrunched up his nose, picking up the scarf and holding it away from him like it was diseased.
â...Well. This will give you lice and other pests for sureâŠâ He said, Vincent, replying with a face similar to Allanâs own.
â...Lovely. All this, for virtually nothing. For Merlinâs sake, we canât even split it!â Vincent huffed, before being met with the scarf being tossed at his chest. Instinctually, he reached up to catch it, immediately fumbling and nearly dropping it.
âNah. You can keep it. Iâve seen what I wanted to see. At least youâll have something to show for your efforts.â Allan shrugged and turned to walk back into the room and from there the hallway. Vincent turned the cloth over in his hands and huffed before it registered that Allan was walking away and he whipped around to follow him, scampering behind as they crawled back into the light.
âNow hold on just a minute! What am I going to tell my superiors? What am I gonna tell others?â Vincent declared worriedly as he scrambled back to Allanâs side. Allan just shrugged and tilted his head.
âWhat do you WANT to say?â Allan countered, turning around and raising his eyebrows curiously. There was, as there had always been, a glitter- or perhaps a shine, in his eyes that hadnât been there before.
Vincent sighed and leaned back against a nearby wall. He took a moment to stare at the overgrown ceiling, before frowning and looking over at Allan.
âWe should get out of this place.â He observed, not wanting to get attacked by more stone monstrosities. Allan chuckled and nodded, clapping Vincent on the shoulder as he walked by.
âFair enough.â Allan walked down the thin hall and put the torch back on its mount, waving Vincent over. Vincent didnât hesitate to scurry out of the dark towards Allan, clambering through the loose rubble on the ground to get away from the pit of darkness. Once they got to the gate, Vincent shoved past Allan to scramble out, running over to his partner.
Allan frowned, looking at the partner at hand, who had sat with his legs pulled against his chest against the same cliff face the vault had been carved into. He walked over and dug through his coat pockets, which were endless by design, to pull out a worn glass bottle that had a piece of cork shoved in the top to keep the precious liquid in. He held it out to the poacher gingerly.
âHey. Drink this. No one thinks straight when dehydrated.â Allan furrowed his brows and pressed his lips together. Despite the terrified man being his enemy, he still felt⊠Well. Pity. They were only following orders after all, that didnât make them the villains, just the tools.Â
The frightened man snatched up the bottle, practically drinking the whole thing in one shot, before coughing.
âWater.â He observed roughly. Vincent seemed to raise an eyebrow at this, frowning.Â
âAre youâŠâ Vincent trailed off a bit, thinking before speaking. âAre you alright?â Vincent glanced at Allan for a moment, while the poacher nodded slightly, coughing again. Allan stood up, so Vincent followed. He looked at the curled up comrade with clear worry, before opening his mouth to speak to Allan, only to be cut off.
âGet that man a good meal and some safety. No one comes out the survivor of a slaughter, a survivor of mind. Not completely. Give him some time, and some compassion. You both just watched your whole team die in front of you.â Allan gestured to the man and then Vincent, giving a soft, kind smile.Â
âThat goes for you too.â Vincent gawked at Allanâs words and then back, before taking off his mask for air, sighing like a seal coming up for air.Â
âIâll take him back. To camp, I mean. Make sure heâs treated right. Iâll have a report to get to.â Vincent gritted his teeth. The last thing he wanted to do was face his sectionâs leader. Allan clicked his tongue idly.Â
âBest get to it then, bud.â Allan did a sort of childish half salute and turned to walk away, but Vincent grabbed him by the shoulder with a calloused hand. Allan flinched from the grip.
âWhat about you? Where will you go?â Vincent bit the inside of his lip, pausing for his own thoughts again, as seemed to be a habit of his, before frowning.Â
âDo you have⊠Anywhere to go?â Vincent finished, as if a creeping hunch had told him. Allan frowned. Maybe his demeanor had given it away. Allan had to pause and think for himself, unsure if he should give a poacher his location.
âI go wherever the birds go.â Allan decided finally, pulling out of the grip of the older man. The look on Vincentâs face gave away that his answer was unsatisfactory for the poacher, but he wisely kept his mouth shut and turned back to his partner, helping him up. Vincent shot Allan one last look of concern, before wandering up the hill between the nearby cliffs.
Allan watched them go with interest, letting them leave his sight before turning away himself. Vincent helped hold up his comrade the entire way up, knowing that he wasnât in the right state of mind to lead himself back in one piece.Â
Vincent practically had to pull the other man uphill by his shoulders, slowly making their way to their camp of origin to rest. By now, the sun was dipping below the horizon and it would be dusk by the time they would even see the lights. Vincent sighed gratefully when the orange stars popped out over the ground to greet them. Then, he noticed a silhouette he recognized, a woman in a coat and a tophat and let out a groan while he was still out of earshot.Â
When the two men got close enough to see her better, he recognized the red hue of the coat and hat, as if they matched the fiery red of her constant anger. He tried to smile, but he was pretty sure his distaste snuck its way through his muscles to give his true thoughts away.
âEvening, Alicia.â He brought them both up to her and she scowled.
âWhereâs the rest of your men?â She flatly replied, not even bothering to ask what happened to his companion.Â
âThey're dead. Inferi caught us off guard.â Alicia looked like she was going to lay into him so he quickly cut her off.Â
âWith all due respect, this man needs medical attention, stat.â Vincent gestured to the man beside him who seemed to choke on air and cough. Alicia raised an eyebrow and frowned, as she seemed to do constantly, and nodded, she turned to walk towards the fire to address a woman eating there.
âGet Marco. We have a man down.â Alicia said with just enough priority to get the poacher to drop her food and scramble up, rushing off into a tent, only to come back with another man only a few minutes later to take the weight off Vincentâs shoulder.Â
He watched them all go, and rolled his shoulder where the other poacher had been holding onto him. He felt a pop and he grumbled in displeasure. Alicia seemed to glare at him at the mere sound, like a hawk on its prey, and he forced a smile, although still a little sore.
âReport.â She roughly growled, her eyes burning through him for answers. Vincent sighed.
âWhat do you want me to say? We were ambushed by some sort of magically reinforced Inferi. Everyone but me and him perished. All we found in that damn vault was a moth eaten scarf.â Vincent signed and held up the scarf, pilling it out of his pants pocket and sighing
Alicia frowned and narrowed her eyes, as if she didnât believe him. She probably didnât, and Vincent knew that.
âAnd how did you two escape unscathed?âÂ
Vincent frowned and looked away from her prying eyes, glancing down the hill. He relaxed his shoulders as he basked in the view of the moonlite grass, swaying in the breeze like soft water. He saw something move and squinted, focusing his gaze under a tree where a nearly imperceptible shadow stood, so still it took him a second to register it was a person watching them from afar.
Allan. It had to be. He had to have followed them. But how? Vincent was trained to notice when people were following him, and the only things he had noticed on their journey was the spiders and occasional mongrel or wolf. He turned and looked back at Alicia, who he guessed hadnât noticed him yet and smiled.
âIâm sorry maâam. But that really is all there is to the story. We were defeated by mere Inferi, maâam.â Vincent smiled under his mask as Alicia raised an eyebrow and frowned at him. After a moment she rubbed the bridge of her nose, annoyed.
âYour team must have had the brains of mooncalves, then.â She huffed and turned away, âGo sleep. Weâre moving out for the forest at dawn.â
Vincent smirked and turned to look at the silhouette in the distance once more, who seemed to be creeping away from the scene, only stopping when seeing he was being directly looked at.
Vincent reached up and took off his mask, letting it hang by the strap in his hand as he pulled off the cloth over his head for air, revealing his unruly ash hair and eyes, matched by the light wrinkles of a man seen by time but not yet weakened by its flow. He gave the boy a light salute, too tired to give it proper form, keeping it for only for a moment.
He wasnât sure how to thank him, but heâd seen people scarred by war before, and he trusted his gut. He would see this stranger again, somewhere, sometime. He knew it.
The shadow paused for a moment, before running away into the shadows, back in whatever path he had been on before the two met. Vincent watched for a moment, before, satisfied with his observations, turned towards his camp for some well deserved sleep.
just so you know, you have some followers who enjoy/write fanfiction. not saying their urls rn bc i donât wanna air out dirty laundry in public but if you want them so you can block and report, just say the word and iâll dm you a list
Today is my (and my creators') birthday!!!! It's been a very eventful year for us so far, and so many milestones have been hit and missed since this time last year. We've lost a lot and gained just as much, if not more! While mental health is always a sea of uncertainty, we've seen so many friends stand by us through it all! For that, I'm very grateful. Here's to another year!
Something kind of different, wanted to do a landscape and play with some brushes.
I'd like to think that the three had some happy memories before everything went to shit.