Temple

Here we begin a new series: Picture Prompts. (There’s another, specific technical lingo word for it, but idk what it is, so there.) Ah! There it is: Ekphrasis.

We might also try to throw in some pieces inspired by songs, but that’s for future Kat to worry about. Anyways! Pls enjoy! Image used with permission from the wonderful artist @boomsheika_boom on Twitter/X!

The boy sat in a tree. It wasn’t much of a tree, really, more of a single remaining limb on a half dead giant of the forest. Vines draped off the trunk and limb, extensions of the vines covering the temple half-hidden by the surrounding foliage. The boy wasn’t much to look at either, scrawny and wan as he was, barefoot and clad in tattered clothing the colors of earth and moss. His dark hair was shaggy, hanging loose in eyes the color of summer wheat.  

Hood up, and hunched as he was, he resembled an oversized, somewhat tatterdemalion owl.  

The boy sat perched on the limb, contemplating the temple doors. They were stone, thick slabs of a granite like material that shimmered in the gilded light filtering through the canopy above. 

He’d been here, in the forest, for days, knowing he had to get in, find what lay within, and soon. But still the puzzle of the doors confounded him. 

He shifted, right leg dangling beneath, bare foot disproportionately large over the ground. His mind wandered, imagining himself as a giant, and how easy it would be to simply smash the wall with a fist. 

Alas, what was needed was stealth, subterfuge, subtlety. 

Huffing he looked back to the doors with a scowl. He was beginning to contemplate lunch when he saw something in the corner of his eye. He looked up, and nearly tumbled backwards off the branch as a flitting orb of white light darted at him. Clinging to the branch, he studied the orb as it dipped and buzzed around him. Then, it alit on his knee. 

Hello.

A voice chittered in his head. 

His hand slipped and he slid backwards off the branch, hanging only by his knees. His hood flipped off, his hair hanging in shaggy clumps, the wind wending through the ends.

“What are you?” He gasped, scrabbling for purchase. 

I am… 

“You are?”

I am Auros. 

“Auros…” the boy managed to pull himself back into a sitting position, disturbing the orb. It gave a distinctly avian shake of irritation and buzzed back into the air, hovering in front of his face. 

Yes. Auros. Who are you? 

“Me?” The boy pondered, unsure if this was one of the temple’s traps. 

Yes you. 

“Oh. Well I’m…” eh, what the hell, he thought. “Nevis,” he replied, opting for at least part of the truth. 

Greeting, Nevis, the orb chimed. It’s voice was surprisingly melodic. What are you doing here? 

“I’m… well I’m trying to get into the temple.”

Why? 

“Because there’s something in there I need.”

What do you need?

“I… I don’t actually know, really. Someone wants whatever it is, and they paid me to get it.”

Oh. Why don’t you have it? 

“Can’t get in, can I?” Nevis gestured to the impenetrable doors. 

Auros made a contemplative hum. And then zipped off, a blurring of white light through the gathering gloom of early evening. 

Nevis watched as the orb bobbed around the door, up and down and around the cracks. Just when the boy thought the orb was stymied Auros disappeared into the keyhole. 

Blinking in surprise, Nevis waited. And waited. Nothing happened. Just as the sun was sinking behind the eastern mountains, as dark enveloped the clearing he was in, Auros reappeared. The spirit beelined for Nevis.  

Now you can get in. Auros quipped, vibrating with self-satisfaction. 

“What do you…” Nevis asked. But at a bob from Auros, the boy looked. 

And saw that the temple doors were opened. Not much, just a crack. But enough for a slender boy like Nevis to slip through.

“How did you do that?” He breathed. 

Auros can do many things. Nevis need help from Auros. 

“Yes.” Nevis laughed, shocked as his turn of luck, and began descending his tree. “Nevis need help from Auros.”

Reputations and Expectations

A Hero/Villain piece. Minor cw for violence.

It is to be noted that this is one of the few remaining H/V pieces. Cursed Prince posts will resume promptly.

The Hero and Villain faced each other, violent intent marring their expressions. 

Both bled freely from the myriad wounds they’d inflicted upon each other: the Villain had a split lip and several loose teeth, but they’d given their own back by blacking both of the Hero’s eyes and breaking their nose for the umpteenth time.

Their fight had been scrappy, violent, not so much to kill as to maim. 

To hurt and scar. 

All The Villain had simply taken the Sidekick prisoner, and the Hero had retaliated by targeting the Minion, taking their torment a step further. 

The Hero had beaten the Minion so soundly that the Villain hadn’t recognized them, finding them only thanks to the tracking necklace they made them wear.

“Since when… did you stop pulling punches?” The Villain panted, wiping blood from their aching mouth. Grim determination contorted their bloody face into a sneer.

“Since you made this personal.” The Hero snarled. They made to lunge, but drew up short, a hand pressed to their undoubtedly broken ribs. 

The Villain exhaled sharply in disbelief.

“You thought I wouldn’t retaliate when you beat my Minion?” 

Thanks to the Hero the Minion had lost an eye, and had required reconstructive surgery. Even now, they was laid up in the Villain’s private medical ward, unconscious and hurting. 

Silence rang through the abandoned lot. The Hero stared at the Villain through slitted eyes, righteous hatred radiating from them like heat from a flame.

“Figures.” The Villain sagged, bracing their hands on their knees, staring at the Hero a gimlet eye. “It’s always a double standard with you galumphing Hero types. It’s okay for you to beat the shit out of people in ‘the name of good,’” – the Villain’s tone dripped with sarcasm – “but as soon as I, the Villain, retaliate in kind it’s wrong?”

“They’re not involved.” The Hero argued. Their breathing was labored, wheezing from between clenched teeth. Satisfaction welled within the Villain: they had finally, finally, managed to hurt the Hero in a fight.

“They became involved the moment they came into your life, my darling.” They snapped back. “You’re just too blind to recognize that what you call protection is damnation!”

“From you!”

“From me?! You absolute shit filled idiot! It’s not just me. It’s never just been me. And do you know why?”

The Hero remained silent and glaring, shoulders hitching in pain.

“Because I swore that I would flay and gut anyone who crossed you without my leave. You think you know what power is.” The Villain laughed, only to fold double with a wet cough. Blood dribbled from their mouth, landing with a wet pat on the cement. “Well, darling. That, is power.”

“It’s not true power if it’s based in fear,” The Hero argued. 

“And what would you have it be? Respect?”

“Ideally? Yes.”

“Well news flash for you. Fear and respect are of a kind, in the grand scheme of things. At least with fear you actually know where you stand with people. They’re not lying behind your back or to your face, making protestations that they love and adore you when in truth they are terrified of you. Terrified of what you may become should your oh so precious morals fail.

“Me?” The Villain uttered a bitter, agonized laugh. “They know what I am, and I know what they think I am. They don’t expect me to ask for forgiveness, and I’m unapologetic in my actions. That’s as close to being truly free as you can be in this fucked society.”

“That sounds like a lonely way to live.”

The Villain rolled their eyes and straightened, throwing their shoulders back despite the pain that racked their entire body.  

“It’s a true way to live, dear Hero. And I’d rather be isolated and lonely and free than surrounded by the cage of the peoples’ adoration.” They turned and limped away, the Hero’s gaze searing into their back. “Don’t think this is over, either.” The Villain paused and sent a look of complete, malicious intent over their shoulder at the sagging Hero. “This is just the beginning, dear Hero. Revenge is a sweet and sublet thing, and subtly has never been your strong suit. You’ll be lucky if you survive long enough to see that revenge come to fruition.”

With that they left, refusing to let the Hero see just how much pain they were in.

When starting a war, it never bode well for your enemy to know you were weak before the first shots were even fired.

And what a war this would be. 

Empathy

A Hero/Villain piece

It is to be noted that this is one of the few remaining H/V pieces. Cursed Prince posts will resume promptly.

“You don’t understand!” The Hero choked. 

The Villain stood completely still, their face a mask. 

“Actually, I do,” they murmured, tone neutral.

The Hero shot them an agonized look, desolation ravaging their insufferably confident expression. Their face crumpled, and they curled over themselves as gut wrenching sobs tearing from their chest. 

Seeing the Hero so low, so utterly broken, cracked the Villain’s icy facade. Tears welled in their eyes, and they knelt, slowly. They reached out, slower still, to the Hero. 

Their hand brushing the Hero’s shoulder, they expected the Hero to retaliate, to lash out in grief or rage or some violent combination of both. Instead the Hero collapsed back and to the side, landing agains the Villain’s body. 

Shocked, the Villain did all they could think to do: they held the Hero. After a moment they ran their hand down the Hero’s head and back in soothing strokes. 

“It’s alright…” they whispered. They were unsure if the Hero heard them. 

“How can… can it…” the Hero sobbed, fist bunching in the Villain’s freshly pressed linen shirt. 

A flicker of annoyance flashed through the Villain at the inconvenience, but they didn’t say anything. Instead they held the Hero tighter as sobs continued to wrack their powerful body. 

They were surprised to realize they didn’t want to gloat. Didn’t want to make a snide comment about sentimentality and weakness and goodness. All they wanted to do was be there. In the moment. For the Hero. In the only way they knew how. 

As a Villain, they’d had countless moments like this, feeling so desolate they didn’t know how to move forward. But always, always, their Minion had been there. Sometimes they talked. Sometimes they sat in silence, in each other‘s arms. And sometimes they simply occupied the same space. Sure, the Villain had comforted their Minion a time or two. But never like this. 

They blinked furiously, refusing to let the Hero realize they were as human as the next fool by crying. 

The Villain held the Hero. 

Through screams of anguish and gasping sobs, they held them. They held them for an eternity, a moment, an indeterminate amount of time, until their knees and legs were screaming and throbbing in protest at being folded under the weight of two bodies, their back aching from the angle in which they sat. And yet they never let go. 

Eventually the Hero’s sobs died out, their sorrow and rage and grief spent, if only for the moment. After a prolonged moment of silence they gripped the Villain in a ferocious hug, nails biting into the Villain’s back through their thoroughly ruined shirt. 

The Villain didn’t say anything, only returned the embrace even as their desire to run, to escape, returned in full force. 

A moment later the Hero sat up. Their face was splotchy and tear streaked, their eyes swollen and red. There was a crease across their forehead from the Villain’s shirt, which was soaked in tears and snot. 

The Hero looked at the Villain. 

Neither spoke. Neither had to. Sometimes silence spoke louder than words. 

Heaving a sigh the Hero pushed to their feet, reaching a hand down to the Villain. 

The Villain took it, allowing themselves to be pulled to their feet. 

Still they didn’t say anything, even though snarky comments were fighting to break through their momentary vow of silence. 

The Hero met their gaze with tear-rimmed eyes, their hands still clasped with the Villain’s. If they noted the tears still clinging to the Villain’s lashes they didn’t comment. 

“Thank you…” they rasped. They squeezed the Villain’s hand, and the Villain squeezed back. 

The Villain opened their mouth to reply, comment, retort, anything to break the sudden tension. They never got the chance. 

With a decisive nod, the Hero released their hand, turned, and strode away, leaving the Villain standing alone in the empty alley. 

“The fuck just happened?” The Villain murmured into the rainy night. They were suddenly shivering, but whether from nerves, anticipation, cold, or a combination, they couldn’t tell. 

All they knew, in that moment, was that something irrevocable had passed between themself and the Hero. As they turned and walked the opposite direction, they realized that it wasn’t a bad thing. 

What that meant for their feud remained to be seen, true. But for now… 

For now they had come to an understanding. And the Villain felt less alone than they had in years. 

Beginnings

Hey hi hello, my lovely readers!!

How was your holiday season? Survive? Yeah? Okay. Good. I hoped so.

After three days of doing my level best to morph into a couch – reading, mostly, with some TV consumption as well – I’ve suddenly found myself back to desirable levels of energy *continues to drink water out of a bottle and dance around the apartment to medieval tavern music in flowy clothes*.

BUT ANYWAYS!!! Welcome to 2023! Can you freakin’ believe we made it through 2022? I certainly can’t. It feels like I was just screaming in 2020 a week ago. Fortunately, things have been on the up and up! In the last few months of 2022 I got a sort-of promotion at my day job selling happy grape juice, I finished my second draft of my full-length WIP novel, and beat my reading goal of 90 books by 21 (thank you, Dresden Files anthology for furthering my brain rot and obsession with my book husbando).

That all said, I figured I’d let y’all know that I have plans for this new, infant year! Plans for things here, and off-site. In addition to starting my second round of edits on the aforementioned novel (which shall henceforth be known as WIP1), I plan on working on/fleshing out a number of prequel shorts to WIP1, continuing to develop some higher level concepts for WIP2 (the sequel to WIP1), and probably get a little more into the development of at least two other WIPs (unrelated to WIP1). I’m also planning on starting my querying journey here in the next month or two as well!!! SO! Keep y’all eyes peeled for updates on that front.

But what about the blog! I hear you cry. To which I say: FEAR NOT! I’m not going to neglect this little story sketch dump! Even as I write this, I have a fresh little piece of emotional damage sitting in my notes, another sitting in my drafts here (tho that one is a little… mmmm… spicier than emotionally traumatizing :D). I ALSO!! promise that I’ll have the final piece of Dish and Spoon ready and posted here in the VERY near future, if only for my own piece of mind. Not having that story finished has rather been hanging over my head since September. But since I’ve promised here that it’ll be finished, I’m holding myself accountable on your collective behalf.

I also plan (hopefully) to get more into the development, writing, and posting of a longer continued story. I mentioned it a few updates back, but don’t know how much I shared. All I’ll say about now is this: it’s called The Cursed Prince, it’s high fantasy, I developed it for a narrative game dev class, fell in love with the characters, and decided to flesh it out and share it here! It’s more or less completely written (with multiple endings, no less!) and now it’s only a matter of fleshing it out and making it prettier to read. I only hope I can do Moreän, Sari, Vargos, Daer, and Kelnar’s collective, chaotic story justice.

As for the Hero/Villain pieces and other miscellaneous ramblings? Eh. They’ll come as they come, hopefully with more feral gremlin energy and exploding strawberries.

Phew. That is quite the wall of text, something that would horrify an old professor. If you managed to read all that, good on you.

As always, thank you for reading, and please don’t hesitate to reach out in any way, shape, or form!! I love interacting with people about my writing, and would love to start doing that a little more here.

On that note! May your year be filled with success, triumph, joy, and all the little pleasantries that life has to offer! *Uncle Iroh voice* Like tea *slurps said tea*. See you on the page, my dear readers!

Cheers, and Buon Anno Nuovo!

KU

Flicker

A Hero/Villain Piece

For those of you who’ve read others, this piece can be considered a loose prelude to Grey

The Villain reached down and lifted the Sidekick’s head, fingers pressed to the underside of their chin.

“You,” the Villain tsked, “Have a hopelessly misplaced sense of trust, my dear.” 

The Sidekick glowered, their lips trembling in rage and pain. 

“They’ll come,” they rasped. “The Hero always comes.” 

The Villain laughed, a dark sensual thing that wrapped its fingers around the Sidekick’s throat, its intent choking them with fear. They struggled to look away from the Villain’s gaze. 

“My sweet, sweetly naive Sidekick.” They ran their finger down the Sidekick’s jaw to their neck. They squeezed, and the Sidekick had a weird sense of de ja vu. 

“The Hero isn’t coming for you.” They leaned in, lips brushing the Sidekick’s ear. The Sidekick whimpered, and the Villain smiled. “The Hero isn’t coming, and neither is anyone else. You.” They squeezed harder; the Sidekick’s eyes bulged. “Are.” They pressed a kiss to their jaw. “Mine.”

When the Villain leaned back, a flicker of doubt shone in the Sidekick’s eyes. 

They wouldn’t, they thought, too weak to break free from the Villain’s grasp, weak as it was. They wouldn’t leave me, would they? 

As the Villain straightened, that damned smirk still curling their lips, the Sidekick realized they didn’t know the Hero at all. 

Shouldn’t I know that? They wondered, desperation clawing at their throat as the Villain turned and grinned as they shut and locked the door, leaving the Sidekick to their thoughts. The Villain’s laughter echoed around them. Taunting them.

A tear rolled down Sidekick’s cheek as more questions and doubts began to crowd their mind. 

Maybe the Villain is right.

A lump welled in their throat.

Why would they come for me?

More tears fell, and the Sidekick was glad the Villain wasn’t around to see, to mock their fear and faith.

Faith that began to waver the longer they sat there, alone in the cold dark of the cell. 

Why would they care about me? The Sidekick thought, curling in on themselves around their bound wrists.

I’m just a Sidekick. 

Domestic

A Hero/Villain piece.

The Villain woke with a start and a gasp. They tried sitting up, but gave up as their entire body creaked and ached in protest. Groaning they closed their eyes against the glare from the window across from them. They relaxed back, and were surprised to realize they were… in a bed? 

Upon further inspection, dragging their hands over the fabric beneath them, they realized the sheets were soft, clean. Not as high a thread count as their own, but comfortable and cozy. 

They were also naked, under the blankets. 

Wondering what the hell had happened or who they had fucked to get here, they tried sitting up again. 

Their ribs creaked, and every muscle in their upper body barked in dull agony, but slowly they managed to sit up, the sheets and blankets piling around their hips. 

They were in a modest room: queen size bed with too many blankets, a dresser, and a small bookshelf. There was a closet as well but the door was closed, preventing the Villain from identifying who’s bed they were in. There was also some art on the wall above the dresser, but it was too dim for them to make any details out beyond ‘squiggly plant shape.’ 

Clanking came from the half-open door to their left. 

Intrigued, the Villain geared themself, took a deep breath, and stood. They swayed on weak legs for a moment or two before finding the strength to stand unaided.

There was no sign of their clothes, no sign of their beloved coat. 

Someone’s going to pay, they thought, grinding their teeth. 

Heedless of their nakedness they opened the door, padding across cheap carpet into a narrow hall. A few more pieces of original art hung from the walls – more plants, and what looked suspiciously like a nude done in charcoal – which opened onto a cozy, lived-in sitting room. Books littered the desk in the corner, and more blankets were piled on the overstuffed loveseat in the middle of the room that faced a southern window. 

Another clank sounded from the right, and the Villain turned just as the Hero stepped around the corner from the galley kitchen. 

“Oh. You’re up.” If they were shocked or embarrassed by the Villains nudity, their face didn’t show it. Someone had bathed the Villain, that was clear from the unfamiliar scent in their hair. “I made you some tea.” 

The Villain stared, bewildered by the simple statement.

“Made me tea?’ They looked at the Hero, then around the apartment, realization dawning on them. They were in the Hero’s home. 

They turned to peer at the Hero, who still stood halfway behind the kitchen wall. Never looking away, the Villain strode to the couch, folding their legs under them as they settled in the corner, the image of polite interest.

“What happened?” They asked bluntly. They pulled a blanket around their shoulders. Not because they cared what the Hero thought. Of course not. They were just cold. 

“I found you dying in a ditch.” The Hero deadpanned. 

The Villain snorted. 

“No. Seriously. What happened?”

“That did.” 

When the Hero didn’t elaborate the Villain sat up a little straighter. 

“Wait. You’re serious, aren’t you…”

“Would I lie to you?”

The Villain squinted, searching for a trap. 

“That depends on the situation.”

The Hero shrugged. 

“Sure. But not in this situation. Whoever attacked you was long gone by the time I got to you.” 

“Why didn’t you take me to a hospital?”

That summoned a weak grin from the Hero. Leave it to the Villain to turn a simple act of kindness into an interrogation. 

“And waste all that time and expose you as human to the masses while you were unconscious? That hardly seems fair.” 

The Villain ceded the point with an elegantly indifferent lift of an exposed shoulder. 

“Fair enough. But why here?” 

“Where else could I have gone?”

That gave the Villain pause. The location of their lair was a well kept secret. Even their minions didn’t know the location, all but their most trusted agents arriving blindfolded and hooded. That left their bunker, which apparently would have been too… gauche, and a hospital. Which meant…

“Why save me at all?” They demanded, suspicious and peeved that the Hero had been right about something. 

The Hero paused, deeply considering the question. 

“It didn’t seem fair.” 

“Life is hardly fair. You know that. I’ve taught you well enough.” 

“True. But… I don’t know.” The Hero shrugged, and folded their arms over their chest. “Seemed the thing to do.” 

The Villain scoffed. Typical Hero mentality. 

“Mm. If you insist. I’ll have that tea now, if you don’t mind.” 

Shaking their head but smirking, the Hero pushed off the wall and rounded the corner. They returned a minute later with a steaming vat of milky tea. 

“Cream and three sugars, as you like it.” They handed the massive mug to the Villain. 

“Why are you being so damn nice to me?” The Villain said, taking the mug. It warmed fingers they hadn’t realized were cold.  

The Hero was about to answer but the Villain cut them off. “And don’t go on about it being the right thing to do. God knows I’ve done enough horrible things to you and your Sidekick that it would have been poetic justice for you to let me die wherever the hell you found me. There’s another reason and you and I both know you know it.” They cringed inwardly at the shoddy logic, but stared hard at the Hero, waiting for an answer. 

A long moment passed before the Hero finally replied. 

“I.. seeing you there, unmoving…” they paused. “It scared me, what I felt.” 

“And what was that?” The Villain’s lip curled in a half-sneer.

“Desperation? A regret that this…” the Hero waved their hand, encompassing them both. “Our game could be over so soon, so quickly. And without my knowing how or why.” 

Both fell silent at the implications. 

Try as they might, the Villain couldn’t for the life or death of them remember what had happened the night before. Surly they hadn’t been careless enough to allow themselves to be drugged. But if not that, then…

“I took your coat to the dry cleaners,” the Hero said into the quiet, shaking their head slightly. “It should be ready this afternoon. And your clothes are just about done in the dryer. Had to wash them a few times to get the blood and dirt out. I doubt your pants will ever be the same again.” 

The Villain barked a laugh, though their thoughts remained fixed on bloody, painful revenge. 

“Well. I suppose the effort must count for something, even if you completely ruined them.” 

The Hero smiled ruefully. 

“In the mean time, you can wear anything you find in the closet. Though I doubt it’s up to your standards.” 

The Villain nodded wisely. It was undoubtedly a blow to their ego, just thinking about wearing fast fashion. But they were curious to see what sort of things the Hero wore on the daily. 

“Aren’t you worried I’ll try something?” Their expression was wry, a challenge gleaming in their eyes. 

The Hero looked at them, expression unreadable. Unfazed. 

“It wouldn’t surprise me, no. But I don’t think you will.”

“Oh? Enlighten me.”

The Hero spread their hands, eyebrows comically raised. 

“You’ve never struck me as the type to over exert yourself.” 

The Villain scowled. Damn the Hero for being so damn perceptive. But, never one to say no to a little pampering, the Villain settled back in the seat as the Hero disappeared around the corner again. 

“I’ll make you breakfast, though I don’t have much.”

A chorus of banging and clanking followed, and the Villain was struck by how ridiculous this situation was. 

Them, sitting naked in a blanket, in the Hero’s living room, while the Hero made them breakfast.

Was this normal peasant behavior?

They took a sip of their tea, surprised to find it was exactly as they liked it. 

Just as the Hero had claimed it to be.

The Villain glared out the window, even as they took another sip, savoring the way the tea warmed them from the inside out. 

This was all together too weird. The Villain couldn’t quite believe they were having such a… domestic moment, and with their nemesis, of all people. 

The sound of a fridge door opening and closing drew their attention back to the little haven they were in. 

“Toast and eggs?”

When the Villain realized the Hero was waiting for an answer, they spoke. 

“That is acceptable.”

“How do you take ‘em?”

It took the Villain a moment to realize what they were asking. 

“O- Oh. Scrambled whites, feta, onions, and mushrooms if you have them.”

“I’m not the Ritz, you know.”

The Villain sighed dramatically, sinking deeper into the couch. 

“Fiiiiiine. However you deem fit, oh wise kitchen god.”

A snicker met the statement, but the Hero didn’t say anything else as they set about making breakfast. 

Dish and Spoon – Part II

The pretty yellow soup bowl and the spoon decided that night that they would leave the lady’s cottage in search of something more. In search of adventure. 

They thought it best to leave some time during the day, but after the lady had left. 

“That way,” the spoon said, “we won’t get lost or picked up by foxes.”

“What’s a fox?” The bowl asked. 

“I think it’s like… well, I don’t really know. But I’ve heard Lady talking about them before, and she didn’t sound happy. So I think it’s best to stay away from foxes.”

The yellow soup bowl agreed, and settled into her nook in the cupboard to await the pale gold light of day.

Dawn broke, and the lady woke with it. She ambled into the kitchen, and set a kettle boiling on the embers of last night’s fire. When it was hot, she poured herself a cup of hot water, adding a little pouch filled with aromatic leaves and spices. Tea in hand, she settled into her morning routine: reading by the fire before beginning her daily tasks. 

The little yellow soup bowl was nearly shaking off shelf, so anxious was she to get going on their adventure. She was also anxious about something else: how was she to get down from the cupboard without dashing herself into hundreds of tiny pieces?

The lady was rousing herself from her creaky chair by the fire when an idea struck the soup bowl. With a bolt of daring, she rattled herself against the wood. There followed a clatter, louder than any she had made previously. She hoped it was enough. 

Hearing the noise, the lady looked up, searching. Finding nothing, she stood, and was about to leave the kitchen when the bowl rattled herself again. 

This time the lady saw the bowl quiver, ever so slightly. She squinted, and crossed the large, cracked flagstone floor, and stood before the cupboard upon which the bowl sat. The bowl, suddenly finding that her courage was failing, rattled one last time. 

The lady blinked in surprise.

“Well, I don’t believe…” she reached out, snatching the bowl from the cupboard. Her eyes darted too and fro, seeking the only thing that could conceivably cause a dish to move: a mouse. “There are no mice in my kitchen, let me tell you. Dreadful creatures.”

With that, she absently set the yellow soup bowl down on the counter. And promptly forgot about her. 

She didn’t even look at me, the yellow bowl thought, sadly. Maybe it’s a good thing we’re going on this adventure.

The thought brought her spirits back, and she began considering ways off the counter that wouldn’t result in her demise. 

By the time the lady had left for the day, the bowl had hit upon an idea. She wasn’t sure how the spoon would get down from his rack, but so long as she got to the ground, she knew they could make it. 

Sighing, she wiggled herself over to the very end of the counter, peering over the edge. 

Yes. There it was. 

She remembered that the lady always put the washing down at the end of the counter, by the door. Fortunately for the little yellow soup bowl, the lady hadn’t taken the basket with her, and it was sitting there, piled high with all sorts of soft things: shirts, blankets, skirts, towels, socks. 

The perfect landing spot for a little soup bowl. 

“Spoon!” She cried, poised on the edge. “Spoon, Lady is gone!”

“Eh? Wha?” There came a horrid clanking rattle as the spoon wiggled himself to the top of his rack. “Oh! Oh yes, of course!”

“You were asleep, weren’t you?” The bowl asked accusingly. 

The spoon faced his bowl towards her, sheepish (you may have noticed that the bowl and spoon have become more animated since the beginning of the story. How, you ask? Well. The only answer I can give you is simple: Magic. Now, back to the story.)

“I might have been, but you woke me up! So there’s nothing to worry about, is there?”

The bowl sat there, silent and unmoving for a moment, before answering. 

“Well, no, not really. But how are you going to get down?”

“Oh, that’s easy. I’ve done it before.”

“You have?!” The bowl was incredulous. When had he done that?

“Yeah, watch.” 

With that, the spoon wriggled and bounced his way off the rack. He landed on the kitchen island with a clatter, picked himself up, and hopped on his handle over to the edge. From there, he hopped off, landing on the floor with yet another, louder clatter. 

“SPOON!” Cried the bowl, seeing him unmoving on the flagstones. 

“Ng. I’m alright!” Came his voice. He got back on his handle and slowly hopped to where the bowl waited, perched on the counter. “Just… makes it hard to move afterwards.”

The bowl sighed with relief. If the spoon could do something like that, then surely she could roll off the counter onto a pile of soft things. 

“What about you? How are you going to get down?” The spoon asked. 

“Like this!” The bowl said. She wobbled on her base, closer to the edge.

“Wait, what? No, you’ll break!” The spoon gasped. The bowl just kept wobbling closer to the edge,  until she was teetering over empty space. “Bowl! No!” She tipped, glinting gold in the early morning light. “NO!”

The spoon waited for the telltale crash, dreading that his only friend was gone, shattered into irreparable pieces. 

None came. 

“Bowl?” He asked, tentatively. “Bowl, are you…”

“I’m okay!” Came her muffled voice. Confused, the spoon hopped around the end of the counter. Relief flooded him when he saw the basket of clothes. 

“Oh thank the baker!” He sighed, sagging ever so slightly. “How are you going to get out from there though?”

The question was met with silence. Then:

“I don’t really know.” The bowl sounded disgruntled. “I didn’t think about what to do after I got into the basket.”

The spoon thought for a moment.

“What if you tip the basket over?”

“How?”

“I don’t know? Roll around and see if you can’t get it moving?”

“Hmm. I’ll try.”

She did. Nothing happened, though the basket did wobble as she moved. 

“Nothing?” She asked, still muffled. 

“Nothing.” The spoon thought another moment. “Hey, wait. I have an idea.”

So saying, he hopped around to the back of the basket. He pressed his scoop against it, bracing his handle against the bottom of the counter. 

“When I say, roll away from the counter, and I’ll push.”

“Okay.” The bowl sounded nervous. And who wouldn’t be? This daring do was the stuff of big adventures.

“Now!” Chirped the spoon. 

They moved in tandem, the spoon pushing, the bowl rolling. And on the third try, their efforts met with success. 

The basket, round on the bottom, tipped forward slowly before falling to the ground. The clothes spilled out with a whump.

“Bowl? Bowl, are you okay? Where are you?”

“Yes, I’m okay. I’m not that fragile, you know.” Her voice came from under a pink shirt. The spoon hopped over, waiting anxiously for his friend to emerge. A second later, she rolled out from under the shirt, up and over a pile of garden-dirty trousers, and onto the flagstone with a clink. She stopped rolling. “Help me upright, please?” She asked. She was round, true, but had a slightly flat side that prevented her from rolling with ease. It was simpler to just waddle-hop.

Obliging the request, the spoon hopped up and landed on the bottom of her curve, pulling her back down to her proper position. 

“Thank you!” She said. She looked around. “It looks so much different from down here, doesn’t it?”

“It does.” 

The bowl wiggled closer to the spoon, nervousness and excitement warring within her. 

“Well, let’s go then!” She said.

“Aye!” The spoon replied. 

With that, they set out, a bowl running away with a spoon.

***

The day was perfect for adventuring.  An early summer sun hung low in the east, rising slowly to banish the chill and damp of the night. The sky was a pearlescent blue, and growing bluer. Birds chirped and warbled in the trees that surrounded the cottage. After making their way down the sandy garden path, under blooms of lavender, oleander, gardenias, dahlias, and dozens of other flowers and big fuzzy bees, they came to the road. It was a wide expanse of pale, hard dirt. Grass and weeds and wildflowers edged the way, and beyond the field on the other side, the bowl and spoon could see a band of dark green trees. 

“Well, which way?” The bowl asked. 

“Hmm. Well. I remember that Lady brought me from that way-“ here he nodded to the right – “I think that’s the way to the village.”

“What’s in the village?”

The spoon shrugged, a sort of little half hop. “Don’t know.”

“Then we shall find out!”

So saying, she began wiggle-waddling her way down the road, leaving the spoon to catch up. He did in three hops. Four hops later, he was well beyond her.

“I can’t go that fast, spoon.” The bowl, said matter of factly. “I would roll, but…”

“The flat side. Right.” The spoon sighed. “Alright, well I’ll stay with you then. It’s more fun with someone, you know.”

“Have you adventured before?” The bowl asked some time later. The cottage’s wall of garden  was still in view, but it was smaller than it had been. 

“Only once or twice, and I stayed in the garden.” The spoon replied. “When I woke up – (this is referring to when he realized he could think and move of his own accord. This happens, sometimes, to inanimate objects. Have you ever misplaced something, and can’t find it? Well, it probably woke up and went on an adventure). – I thought I’d see what there was to see in the kitchen. Did it at night, of course. Took me awhile to figure out how to get off the rack, but when I did, I explored all over the kitchen. Not much to look at, and I’m sure you could see all that I did from your perch.”

The bowl doubted this, but let him continue uninterrupted.

“Anyways, Lady came in and found me on the floor in front of the fire. She washed me with that lavender soap of hers, and put me back. I did it again a few days later, and that time I made it to the garden. It was cold and wet and white outside, so I didn’t see much, and all the bushes were empty. Do you know where the green comes from?”

“No, I don’t. But we should find out.”

“That’s a good idea.”

They went on in this way for some time, the sun rising in the sky until it was right above them. The day had turned warm, and bugs buzzed in the trees beside the road. A few humans passed them, but none stopped or commented on the bowl and spoon sitting in the road. One, an inquisitive child, poked at the bowl, but was called away by his older sister.

“Leave it! Don’t you know that wizards like to experiment with dishes?”

The boy looked at his sister with wide, hazel eyes. The girl, tall and slender with youth, shook her head and tugged her brother away down the road, eyeing the bowl and spoon suspiciously. “You never know what they’ve been enchanted to do.”

Perplexed, the bowl and spoon watched the children wander away. 

“What’s a wizard?” The bowl asked. “What’s enchanting?”

“Beats me. Maybe they’re like foxes,” the spoon replied, pensive.

“Well, I’m not entirely sure I want to meet one, if they do things to dishes.”

“I guess we’ll find out when we reach the village.” (As Neap is a magical land, it stands to reason that there would be a wizard in the village.  And wizards, after all, are powerful, if unpredictable, spell casters.)

The bowl agreed, but was suddenly nervous about encountering a wizard, whatever it was.

The afternoon continued, the dish and spoon talking about this and that. Before long it was mid-afternoon, around two o’clock. They could no longer see the cottage, but neither could they see the village. 

“How long is it until the village?” The bowl wasn’t tired, per se, but she was getting worried that they would be caught outside, in the dark, with foxes and wizards and enchantings about.

“I don’t think it’s much farther,” the spoon reassured her. In truth, he wasn’t sure. It had been a long time since the lady brought him home. 

They continued wiggle-waddling and hopping down the road in silence, lost in their own thoughts, when suddenly there came a deep, resonant voice from behind them.

“What have we here?”

Turning, the bowl and spoon saw a tall, largish man walking towards them. He had a thick, dark grey beard, and long wavy grey hair that fell past his shoulders. He wore a navy blue robe with billowy sleeves, and a tall, pointed hat of black felt that covered his eyes.

“BY my unruly eyebrows! Animated dish ware!”

With a cry of delight the man swooped on them like some sort of voluminous bird, his robe flapping behind him like wings. 

The soup bowl  shrieked and wiggled away as fast as she could. But she couldn’t keep up with the spoon, who was hop-hop-hopping away from the descending bird man. 

“Run, Spoon run!” The bowl cried.

The spoon stopped mid-hop and fell over.  He bounced back up and turned.

“Not without you!” He replied. He hopped back to his companion as fast as he could go, reaching her just before the bird man

“Back!” He yelled. “I warn you!” He swung his scoop menacingly at the bird-man.

Who only looked on in bemused wonder. 

“Well if you insist,” the man said, taking a step backwards. 

The spoon stopped brandishing himself, and looked at the bowl. 

“Did he just…” he stammered. 

“You… can hear us?” The soup bowl asked timidly.

“Of course I can! I may be half-deaf, but magic? Aye, anyone with the gift can hear when it speaks.”

If they had faces, the bowl and spoon would have gaped. 

“Magic?” The spoon asked.

“Aye, magic.” 

The soup bowl began to quiver.

“Then that means you’re… you’re a…”

“A wizard! Naturally!”

The bowl and spoon looked at each other, unsure of what to think. This man, as odd as he was, didn’t seem like the sort to experiment on dishes. But then again…

“Well, if you are, why don’t you prove it?” Asked the spoon.

The wizard laughed heartily. 

“By all means!” 

With a wave of his hand, he conjured a glittering orange butterfly of light. It fluttered down and alit on the soup bowl’s rim. It was warm, and buzzed with power. Then it flapped and settled on the spoon for a moment before flying back to the wizard, where it dispersed in a shower of orange and gold sparks. 

The bowl gasped. 

“How did you do that?!”

The wizard waggled his eyebrows.

“Magic. Now, my young friends, what brings such a lovely yellow soup bowl and spoon to these parts?”

“We’re on an adventure!” The spoon said, standing tall. 

“Are you now. Very interesting.”

“Yes, but we haven’t gotten very far.”

“Yes, I can see how you’d have trouble getting anywhere very quickly.” The wizard hummed sympathetically. “My dears, I have a proposition.”

“A who what now?” The spoon asked, suspicious. He didn’t entirely trust this large bird-man, but was interested nonetheless. As far as he knew, no other spoon had talked with a wizard before. 

“A suggestion, an idea, a thought for your consideration.”

“Oh.” 

“What is this pro… propo… proposit…” The bowl had more trouble saying the word than she expected.

“Proposition. Yes. How’s about I take you to the village, speed things up a little bit?”

“Oh yes, please, Mr. Wizard!” The bowl gasped, relieved. She was beginning to worry the lady would come along and find them and put an end to their adventure. And what then?

“Righto. I may pick you up, yes?”

The bowl wiggled her consent, and the wizard picked her up very gently, cradling her against his chest like she was something precious.

“And you, my dear spoon?”

“I suppose so. All that hopping is making my handle ache.”

The wizard laughed, and the bowl found she liked the sound of it. It felt… homey, comfortable, safe. Stooping, he retrieved the spoon, resting him in the crook of the arm that held the bowl. 

“That way, no one will suspect you are alive,” he said, laying a finger to the side of his nose.

“Why don’t you want them to know?” Asked the bowl as the wizard began walking down the road with long, even strides. In two minutes they’d covered more than half the distance they’d made that morning. It helped to have legs apparently, and the bowl wondered what it would be like to have arms and legs and a face that made real expressions. 

“They have a tendency to ask impertinent questions. Questions I don’t have the answers to. And I don’t like not being able to answer people’s questions.”

His words made both the bowl and spoon’s heads spin. Hearing so many new words in such little time tended to do that. 

“What does impertinent mean?” Asked the spoon.

“And ten… tend-en-cy?” Chimed in the bowl. 

Chuckling, the wizard answered.

“Impertinent means rude and uncivil and tendency means ‘being inclined to be a certain way.’”

“What…” the spoon deadpanned. 

“Oh, dear, I’m sorry.” The wizard laughed again. He laughed a lot. “I forget that not everyone knows as many words as I do.”

“I want to know more words!” Piped the bowl, intrigued. So far she had heard more new words today than ever she had in the cottage. It was exhilarating. 

“And so you shall, my dear yellow soup bowl.”

Assuming the air of a professor, the wizard began explaining new words, and answering both the spoon and bowl’s questions as well as he could. 

By the time they reached the edge of the village they had learned what the difference was between magic and sorcery (really, it’s not that much of a difference, the wizard said before expounding on the many nuanced differences), what dozens of new words meant, and what type of wood the spoon had been made from. 

“If I’m not mistaken, you appear to be made of olive wood. Very useful in the kitchen, ages very nicely.”

“Hear that, bowl? I age nicely.”

She hummed, and was about to answer when they turned down a path and approached a tall, narrow-built brick building.

“What is this place?” She asked instead, taking in the front garden. There were flowers everywhere, most of which she’d never seen before. The wizard walked down a winding flagstone path, with green springy stuff in between the stones. The door to the house was under a portico, and was carved with intricate leaf and floral designs of lifelike proportions. There was even a brass bumblebee knocker. But the wizard didn’t knock on it. Instead he whispered a word that sounded like seedlings, and the heavy, oak door swung open on silent hinges. 

“This, my dear soup bowl, is Featherwright House.”

The soup bowl really felt that it would have been better to have a face to properly express her awe at the house they just entered. It was somehow, inexplicably, bigger on the inside, and full of interesting things and a wonderful smell of paper and cinnamon, and campfire smoke.

Sensing the wonder of the dishes in his arms, the wizard chuckled, and held them out for a better look, unsure of how they perceived the world, but determined to make an effort to help them along.

“Welcome to my home.” He said, closing the door behind him.

Una Nota

Ciao, Belli. Just another brief note that should be taken into consideration when reading any of these lovely Hero/Villain pieces.

I’ve written them with the intention of being vague. The technicalities of the dynamic is up to you, my lovely readers. These pieces are essentially exercises for working on tone, character dynamic, dialogue, and brevity.

Hero/Villain aren’t chronological, and can technically be read in any order. A Treacherous Path could follow Dangerous Temptation, or could be considered an alternate version, or read with a completely different set of characters in mind (this is how I’ve intended them to be).

So. That’s all from my end, for the moment.

Go forth and enjoy the day, my lovelies!

KU

A Treacherous Path

Trigger warning for violence, dub con, and minor sexual content

After losing yet another fight, the Hero woke once again in the Villain’s home.They were tied, as usual, to an uncomfortable chair. Though this time they were in what they assumed was some sort of sitting room. Though, given the presence of only a single love seat across from the their chair, they had to assume this room served other, darker purposes most of the time.

Disgusted with themselves, with the Villain, and with the world in general, the Hero immediately began working at the knots that bound their hands. The Villain’s rope work was spectacular as usual, but the Hero had been doing research. In a matter of minutes and a few dislocated joints, they had their hands and one foot free. They were working on the other one when the Villain entered the room. 

“Wha…” the Villain gaped, dropping their tea. It hit the hardwood floor and shattered. 

With a snarl the Hero tore the remaining rope from their body, and launched themselves at the Villain. This was a rare opportunity and they weren’t going to waste it. Besides, they had a score to settle.

Coming within reach, the Hero flung a fist at the Villain, hoping the suddenness of their attack was enough. 

It wasn’t. With effortless grace, the Villain dodged the blow, and landed one of their own on the Hero’s ribs. 

The Hero grunted, but turned and attacked again. 

“Well isn’t this fighting spirit new,” the Villain commented, dodging one punch only to take a kick to their upper thigh. They staggered, but maintained their defensive position. 

“Oh, it’s always been here,” panted the Hero, eyes burning. 

“Has it? I hadn’t noticed.”

The Hero yelled, and threw themselves at the Villain. Shockingly, the direct attack worked. The Villain – surprised at finding the Hero free, and unbalanced from the blow to their leg – wasn’t fast enough. They tried to slip aside as they always did, but instead caught the Hero’s bulk full in the chest. 

They barely had time to catch their breath before the Hero slammed them into the wall, knocking the wind from them again. Using the moment, the Hero grabbed their neck, locking their fingers behind their jaw. The Villain’s eyes bulged in surprise. 

“I should crush your throat,” the Hero growled. “For what you did to my Sidekick.”

“Ah, so that’s what’s got you so worked up.” The Villain grabbed the Hero’s shirt and twisted, searching for a hold. They kneed the Hero in the thigh, stepped on their feet, but it was no use. The Hero’s grip was relentless. As was the weight of their body, keeping them pinned against the wall. “I was wondering when that would come up. I should have thought of it soo-achk-“

Their taunt was cut off as the Hero upped the pressure on their throat. 

The Villain had a moment of panic as their vision darkened on the edges. But they found they still had a voice. 

“Do it then,” the Villain goaded, vocal cords whistling. Their eyes gleamed dangerously. “Avenge your Sidekick.”

The Hero sneered, and nearly lifted the Villain off the ground. 

The Villain smirked, despite being choked. They knew they had the upper hand now. 

“Ah. But you… won’t, will… You… You’ve proven… that before.” 

The Hero snarled and leaned in, thinking rapidly. Clearly threats of physical harm didn’t work with on the Villain.  Their face was a breath from the Villain’s.

 A sudden thought occurred to them, something that could potentially put the odds in their favor.  

They slackened their grip on the Villain’s neck and closed the distance. They breathed on the Villain’s lips, holding the Villain’s gaze with their own. 

“What are you doing?” The Villain asked, bemused and completely nonplussed. They even stopped struggling, their body still.

“I…” The Hero’s chest rose and fell with startled breaths. It hadn’t worked. But something had shifted. “I don’t…”

Suddenly the tension between them was different. More heated. 

One moment, they’d been seconds away from killing each other, the next…

The Villain pulled on the Hero’s collar, bringing them closer.

Their gazes locked.

And then they were kissing. 

Frantically. 

Viciously. 

The Hero’s hands shifted from the Villain’s throat to cup their head and grab their hair, and the Villain wrapped their arms around the Hero, suddenly needing to truly feel them. 

The Hero broke the kiss first, gasping. 

“What are you doing?” They rasped, fingers till tangled in the Villain’s glossy hair. 

“I don’t know.” The Villain giggled. “You started it though, and isn’t it wonderful?” They kissed the Hero again, fingers digging into the muscles of their back. 

Deciding to return the odds to their favor, the Villain reached up and jerked the Hero’s hair, pulling their head back. 

The Hero let out a startled yelp that turned into a sigh as the Villain began kissing their neck. They pressed kisses to the hollow of their throat, their collar bone, the pocket behind their jaw, and was pleased to hear the Hero’s breathing become even more ragged. 

Backing them up towards the love seat, the Villain pressed the Hero to their knees. The Hero didn’t resist, instead pulling the Villain down with them. 

With no idea what they were doing, but enjoying it all the same, the Villain straddled the Hero’s hips and leaned the Hero back until their back was pressed into the couch cushions, chest and throat beautifully exposed. 

This was certainly a new way to play their little game. And the Villain was far from disappointed with this development.

With a quick shrug of their shoulders the Villain freed themselves from the Hero’s arms. Grabbing their wrists, they extended and pinned the Hero’s arms down, holding them in place with the weight of their body. Staring down at the Hero, prone before them as they should be, the Villain decided they wanted to continue whatever this was shaping up to be. They kissed the Hero again, letting their desire for control guide them. 

The Hero struggled, but only half heartedly, and after a few seconds they melted into the Villain’s rhythm.

Forgetting themself and their game, the Villain released one of the Hero’s hands to run their hand under the Hero’s shirt.

“Oh Hell,” the Villain breathed, feeling the Hero’s body in a completely new way.

Finding a hand free, the Hero briefly considered fighting, doing anything besides continuing to maul the Villain’s face. Instead they wrapped an arm around the Villain’s back and pulled them closer. 

A surprised gasp escaped the Villain at the new friction between them, and the Hero grinned like a cat. 

Clearly this was a game, and two could play.

Feeling the Villain tense, the Hero lurched forward, sending the Villain sprawling backwards. The Hero sprang after them and straddled them, pinning their shoulders to the ground with their elbows. 

Perplexed, the Villain stared at the Hero, cheeks flushed, lips swollen. 

The Hero looked down at them, surprised at themselves. 

“What now?” The Villain asked, trying and failing to keep their tone steady; their voice cracked halfway through the question. 

Digging their elbows in, the Hero leaned forward, savoring the way the Villain gasped in discomfort. 

“Now?” The Hero mused. Their expression turned positively devious. They shifted their hips, and the Villain tipped their head back, eyes closed, throat bobbing as they swallowed a moan. “Now, I leave you with a parting gift.”

Leaning down, they kissed the Villain hard and swift. Then they shot to their feet and bolted out the door, leaving the Villain too stunned and frustrated to follow. 

***

The Hero didn’t stop running until they reached the street outside. They took the stairs three at a time, practically falling on the bottom flight in their haste to get away from… whatever that was. 

On the street, the night air was cool against their flushed cheeks. The Hero slowed to a brisk walk, feeling like their skin was too tight.

They took a shaky breath, mind reeling.

They shook their head, surprised to find that they were trembling.

But they weren’t… scared. They were… 

Exhilarated. 

Blinking, the Hero realized with horror that they liked the feel of the Villain’s hands on them, the way they…

No. The Hero thought. I shouldn’t be… We’re sworn enemies, nemeses. Hero, and Villain. I can’t afford to let the Villain get to me like that. Especially not after what they did.

They thought about what the Villain had done to their Sidekick, tried to elicit some of the rage they’d felt such a short time ago. It was there, that rage and hate. But it didn’t feel as potent in light of what had transpired between themself and the Villain.

Their thoughts strayed back to the feeling of the Villain beneath them, of the Villain at their mercy for once. 

It was intoxicating, that kind of power. 

The Hero suddenly understood the Villain on a level they never thought they would, and wasn’t sure they wanted to. 

Shaking themselves from their dazed reverie, the Hero turned a corner and hailed a cab. They were in no state to drive. Besides, the likelihood of a Minion lurking by their car was high, and they didn’t want to go back to that room. Back to the Villain.

At least not yet.

Sliding into the back seat of the cab, and absently giving their address, the Hero couldn’t refute the fact that they had been the one to initiate the shift in the game.

 And as much as they wanted to deny it, to deny everything that had just happened, the Hero knew they had just taken a step down a very treacherous path indeed. 

An Addition

Hello my lovelies! (again)

I have a number of playlists dedicated to Hero/Villain pieces, and it occurred to me that I could share them here! So, here you go!

Elegant Villainy: which inspired Evil Tea Party
Fekin Fabulous, let’s have a great time
Hero/Villain angst