22:41 ST
Reply
[ACTIVITY] The Mycenaissance - Revitalized [CLOSED]
The Mycenaissance

Ever have a fantastic idea for a story or piece of art that you just never got around to writing or making? Have you ever started a sketch or scratched out a few sentences only to slap that WIP sign on it and never look at it again? It’s all too easy to let projects and ideas fall to the wayside when we get distracted or busy.

The objective of this activity is to continue to foster your creative productivity by providing monthly prompts that will help you create profiles, design art, and develop your characters. We offer an incentive system to provide you that little extra boost of motivation you may need to get things going. Sometimes all you need to finish a project is the drive to sit down and start it!

Each month, we will do our best to respond in some way to every submission. While we are unable to provide in-depth critiques for all of your work, we hope that our comments will assure you that your entries are both read and appreciated. There are so many players on Mycena Cave interested in character development and creativity—we love to see all the interesting things you come up with!

With the revitalization of the Mycenaissance, we will be introducing a different staff guest judge with each new prompt to help us go over entries and select a monthly spotlight winner. You will also notice some fun changes to the prize system!

Monthly Spotlight

With our goal of encouraging creativity, we wanted an opportunity to share your accomplishments with the community —  to show you off a little! Every month, our guest judge will be helping us select one submission that we feel really shines. The spotlight itself is fairly informal — there are no specific criteria that we are looking for beyond creativity and effort. In addition, being awarded the spotlight does not remove you from the monthly raffle drawing.

Prizes

The Mycenaissance will have three different types of prizes associated with it. These prizes will be given out on the first of every month, when the new month’s prompt is released.

  • Each entrant will receive a participation prize of 1 gem.
  • Four entries will be pulled in a raffle drawing. Each of these will be awarded a random Cave Capsule. If the total number of eligible entries exceeds 40, another ticket will be pulled for every 10 additional submissions. (For example, if we receive 50 submissions, 5 Cave Capsules will be given out.)
  • One entry will be selected by Crow, Dove and our guest staff judge to receive the spotlight prize of one current Out of the Shadows item.

The raffle will be pulled, the spotlight will be posted, and the prizes will be distributed for the previous month on the 1st of each new month. The new monthly prompt will also go up at this time.

Rules & Requirements

1. In order to have your entry counted toward the raffle and the spotlight, you must ensure that it is complete. Remember to read the prompt carefully and double check your work!

2. To be eligible for the raffle and participation prize, we do expect to see a reasonable amount of effort displayed. Ideally, we would like you to spend about 30 minutes on your entries. You do not need to be skilled at art, drawing, or crafting in order for your entry to be eligible.

  • Written entries should be approximately 3-4 paragraphs long (though you are always welcome to write more!)
  • Artwork should be at least at the level of a clean sketch.
  • Photo/image manipulations must be accompanied by at least a paragraph of writing relating to the piece.

3. Only one submission per player will be counted for entry into the raffle.

4. Submissions must be entirely new work. We will not be accepting old writing or art. If we find that you are circumventing this rule, you may be barred from entering the Mycenaissance again in the future.

5. Submissions (or links to them) must be posted in this thread. Your entry must be visible somewhere; whether plainly posted in this thread, tucked away in a musings thread, or displayed on a pet profile.

6. All submissions must have an on-site representation of the character used. It’s okay to write about a custom that you don’t have quite yet (as long as it is coming relatively soon), but you may not write about strictly off-site characters. Your characters do not have to fit into the Mycena Cave canon. Please be sure to clearly indicate which character it is you’re using to respond to the prompt.

7. Submissions must be received by 23:59 ST on 28th day of the month.

Current Prompt

Prompt Title: Worlds Apart
Guest Judge: N/A
Prompt Type Mixed Media
Howard and Henry have winged their way through many worlds during their time, rarely stopping; rarely resting. Now, finally, they are looking to take roost for a spell, and have been carefully considering their options.

Introduce us to one of your character’s worlds, or a prominent place in one. What sort of people and creatures inhabit it? What is society like? What are its physical features and unique aspects? You may use any type of media to portray your world, but be sure to clearly indicate which of your characters belong to it!

A fun spin on this may be to create something inspired by those old vintage travel posters!

Posted 01/06/16, edited 08/01/17
May Spotlight

This month’s spotlight is awarded to FlyingSquirrely! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

When you are a being of immense power and measure your lifespan in cosmic decades, rather than solar decades, you have the time to do a great many mortal things.

Faye has done a lot.

She was a microbe, once. It was incredibly boring, but at least it was over with quickly. A blip in the life of an ineki, not even a measurable quantity in the life of a fae. Being what would later be called dinosaurs was much more fun. She got to stomp around, and when she grinned little things fled from her fanged maw.

She played dinosaur many, many times.

And then that world exploded. (But not Faye. Made of magic and steeped in void, she watched the sky burn and dissipated to elsewhere, thinking that was that.)

She didn’t return until the age of sentients, on a whim, a slither of nostalgia sliding through a rare crack in the nothingness of otherwhere. And these ones, they asked questions, and suddenly living life after life wasn’t so simple anymore. There were names, and family trees keeping careful track of bloodlines, and paperwork.

Ugh. Paperwork.

Too many oddities and you attracted the wrong kind of attention, from cops to criminals, as Faye discovered (as Maurelle, as Oren, as Shayla). So for every birth and death, she went through the motions.

(What’s another child lost to the system? And after the age of stone, another carved free of stasis without record? The cave is kind, but here, too, there is a darkness lurking – another aside from Faye, of course.)

And here she is again. Faye Verity is beginning to age. Soon she’ll be unable to perform up to the fitness standards required to keep her qualification as a detective. Her joints are beginning to stiffen and she’s lost much of the flexibility that made her a force to be reckoned with in hand-to-hand. Her mind is as sharp as ever, but she has to squint to keep the letters on her requisition forms from going out of focus. (Glasses are for other people.)

It sucks.

This has been her favorite life to date. There was so much to it! She was a detective by day, the law in fur and fangs. She was a hero by night, the Dark Fae who ate away at the shadows until dawn poked through. And, oh, how she loved it, no breaks, always on, all the time. In all its vastness, the void could never compare.

And now Faye will have to die, because she can’t imagine going out in any way but with a fight. She’s not going to wait for old age (as Tania did – and that had been boring, once was enough). It’s fighting the good fight or nothing. Oh, she’s not going down easy. Faye wants to live as much as anyone, to eke out every scrap of existence that she can from this life, but she refuses to quit. Faye Verity will leave her mark as she lives: an anonymous police officer, meting out justice.

But she has something new, this time. The Dark Fae will not die.

She has created something, this life. She created things in past lives, too. Books of magic with an otherwhere flair. Little trinkets, with nothing more than a trickle of power, for luck. A myth of twin violet eyes in the dark, scaring monsters out from under children’s beds. But the Dark Fae, that is something that can last. The Dark Fae has no worldly bonds like Faye. She does not need to age, she does not need to pause and resume her existence every half a century.

She will not die until heat death, until the universe is ripping itself apart at the seams and there’s too much space between her sparks to hold herself separate from the imperturbable ocean of energy at the end of time.

The Dark Fae can last where the myths faded into obscurity; the twin violet eyes reborn, a warning that the dark is full of dangerous things, but not necessarily bad ones. She will continue to protect, where Faye cannot. She can be more than mortal, where Faye cannot. And the life after Faye Verity (Nyx, perhaps) will slip into the role as though she has never been anyone else.

So Faye Verity, in her house lit by candlelight, scribbles the last details into her will (…my collection of books to Sheen, my property to Riverstone Park…). She dips her paw into a trough of ink and gathers every last scrap of magic she can touch in her mortal form. With an exhale, she slams her paw onto the paper.

Something cold whispers under her paw, so she lifts it away with care, staring at the ink with a critical eye. Aha. Faye warms her paw over a candle and snickers to herself: she hopes no one examines her print too closely, she thinks she can see the emptiness of the void between the ridges of her pawprint, and the void is none-too-kind to the sanity of mortals.

Well, no one has ever accused her of being subtle.FlyingSquirrely



Previous Prompts & Spotlights
Prompt:

January prompt: A New Year’s Resolution
Guest judge: Myla
Prompt type: Mixed media
No matter how old or young, people are always a work in progress. No time of year is this fact shoved down our throats more aggressively than New Year’s. Between the gym memberships that will go unused in a month to the quickly abandoned diets and promises of “being a better person,” the desire to change and grow is definitely there, but the follow-through is not always.

Choose a character. What would they like to change or improve about themselves or their life? Do they have a plan to go about doing so? What sort of progress have they made, if any? You may use any media you wish to respond to this prompt.

BONUS: So far as your creative side goes, what do you hope to work on this year? Do you have any plans to achieve your goal?

Entries:

1. Mosh
2. Vysal
3. DelightfulDragon
4. Arintol
5. Robin
6. Zukana13731
7. Loon
8. Vely
9. Assassin
10. pigeon
11. Adrian
12. Raiona
13. raus
14. Dracogryph
15. Lady Hawkwing
16. azurrys
17. arcticfoxies
18. Condor
19. polygone
20. Jordii

Spotlight:

January’s Spotlight champion is Robin! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

He has been having thoughts lately. About Before. About who he used to be.

The dew has turned to frost and he can no longer sit underneath the tree in the garden. A bench would be nice, but he can’t build one and doesn’t want to bother his neighbors about it, so now he sticks to leaning against the wall while his birds are out exploring. One of them sits on a rotten branch and it falls to the ground. The crow lets out an indignant caw and takes flight again. Lunar looks at her, but doesn’t really pay attention to what she does.

The thing about thoughts, Lunar decides, is that once they’ve been thought, they don’t really leave again. It had crossed his mind, briefly, that even though he couldn’t remember it now, he probably had someone close to him before the Cave. There had been a single thought afterwards, as he had looked at the birds stretching their wings and flying towards the lake, that he was lonely.

It is nearly a week ago now, but still he feels the realization in his lungs, not as intense as at first, but rather like a dull, constant ache. The kind that becomes so much a part of him that he will eventually forget it is there, only to have it blow up again the next time the thought crosses his mind. Perhaps when he is buying food at the market and sees a couple with their tails intertwined. Perhaps when he walks to the lake and sees a group of youngsters play. There is only so much his crows can do.

There is a yell on the road in front of his house, and Lunar turns to look as a group of Ineki walks past him, headed to the town center, no doubt. It is a friendly little neighborhood he has ended up in. They seem like good people. They probably wouldn’t mind him all that much, should he decide to come out of his shell a little.

Once a thought has been thought, it doesn’t really leave again. Lunar thinks about what it would be like to have a friend and the idea excites him. Perhaps he should try. Finding his past self, that’s not so important. He does not want to know any more than he already does, it would just lead to restless nights and a constant anxiety for what might have happened to his loved ones, he has seen it in so many others already and decided long ago he was lucky to be without it. But he has been living in his own little world for so long already, has gotten accustomed to his own little routine. It is getting boring, finally.

The crow from before has come back, she flies back towards the tree and takes a sudden turn. She crashes into the windowsill and nearly loses her balance before regaining it just in time. She stares. Lunar looks back. “What do you think?” he asks. She cocks her head and stares some more. He smiles.

Perhaps. Perhaps it is time to break out of his shell. Meet people. Make connections. Friendships.

The crow caws sharply and Lunar stretches out a glove-clothed arm to slide a finger over her head. She blinks. Tomorrow. He’ll start tomorrow. He’ll visit the bakery on his way to the markets, and then he’ll take it from there; making his way into the community in the Cave, one small step at a time.Robin

Prompt:

February prompt: Love Letters
Guest Judge: Prose
Prompt type: Mixed media

February is the time of year for sweethearts and bitter loners; full of pastel hearts with little phrases on them and valentines gifts of all sorts. There is no more cliche time to tell someone how you feel about them — love is in the air, after all!

Does your character have a significant other? Perhaps a crush? Or maybe even a bitter rival? Using any media of your choice, create a valentine (or… anti-valentine) from your character to another.

Submissions:

1. Loon
2. vihuff
3. Lena
4. Vely
5. macaron
6. Nephele
7. Vysal
8. Titan
9. dessieh
10. radio
11. Dracogryph
12. Adrian
13. Knight
14. DelightfulDragon
15. Zukana13731
16. OregonCoast
17. Arintol
18. azurrys
19. arcticfoxies
20. Jordii
21. raus

Spotlight:
This month’s spotlight goes to Nephele for Ryan’s letter to Gabriel! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

Love Letters

Dearest Gabriel,

I probably won’t actually give this to you, everything I want to say seems like it would be better to tell you in person. But Lil seems to think it would be good for me to do something to distract myself before I piss Etsuo off to the point he feels the need to kill me get my thoughts in order. Apparently I’m a bit difficult to be around at the moment. As if Lil is a joy to live with during her nesting season, at least I haven’t tried to rip anyone’s face off.

I don’t know how to say this, though I guess that’s why Lil suggested I write it out. I’m in the process of adopting Sebastian’s little sister Maggie. I understand if that weirds you out and you don’t want anything to do with me. It has nothing to do with him, other than the fact that he’s a sociopathic jerk who should never be given custody of a child, it’s just that she needs someone to take care of her. Better someone she knows than a stranger right? Mama Grizzly says she’s too old to handle the problems that come with raising a visually impaired child, Susan and Matt are about to have a new baby of their own and they were worried that they wouldn’t be able to give her enough attention. Plus, Susan was worried about having a nearly blind hummingbird in the house when their little cat or fox hit the toddler stage… Iwas worried about Maggie being in the house with the pregnant cat but was afraid to say that to her.

Lil suggested that part of why I agreed to adopt Maggie was that I ‘need to be needed’ which is totally ridiculous might be partially true. But as long as Maggie gets everything she needs and we’re both happy does it really matter that much?

Don’t be mad but I got a tattoo.

I miss you. We miss you. Kyou told us you were safe, just in another time line. Hopefully that’s true and you’ll find your way back soon. We still need to take that cross country trip remember?

I do miss you. Come back soon please.
Ryan Crowe

P.S. If Lil or Etsuo either one say anything at all about me riding a motorcycle ninety down twisting road at midnight… They’re exaggerating. I was going eighty-seven, it was only eleven-fifty-three, and the road wasn’t all that twisty… And in any case it was deserted and I had a good reason! Maggie was sick and I had to go to the nearest twenty-four hour pharmacy to get fever medicine. I have no idea which one of them stole the keys to my motorcycle…Nephele

Prompt:

March Prompt: Short and Sweet
Guest Judge: Dash
Prompt type: Mixed media

Over the past few years, a genre known as the six-word story has been growing in popularity. The idea of a six-word story is to create as much emotional impact in as few words as possible. Art has the amazing ability to create vivid pictures with just one detail, one moment, or an appeal to the senses.

In this prompt, the goal is to create as complete of a story as possible by focusing on one detail. This could be, for example, drawing a picture centered on the color red to evoke feelings of passion and fury; it could be a poem that lists a series of sensory details to tell a story; it could be a photograph that uses composition to draw the eye to a particular object; it could be a story that takes place for only a minute in time.

Tell us as much as you can in as little as possible!

Submissions:
  1. Amaterasu
  2. Riaa
  3. Titan
  4. raus
  5. azurrys
  6. ddyyuu
  7. Loon
  8. teatree
  9. Malis
  10. Dracogryph
  11. DelightfulDragon
  12. Vysal
  13. BrightEyedBeast
  14. Espurr
  15. Condor
  16. Juneberry
  17. Zodiac
  18. Esque
  19. Watchdog
  20. Zukana13731
  21. -Sid
  22. diaveborn
  23. thewordeater
  24. Oregoncoast
  25. Courier
  26. Madara
  27. miirshroom
  28. Knight
  29. Vely
  30. Quwilly
  31. Gabriel
  32. Jordii
  33. Deddo
  34. BlackRabbit
  35. Arintol
  36. talicinx
Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight goes to esque’s submission! :) Esque, please let us know which of the March OotS items (Immortal Mask or Shining Glaive) you would like as your prize and we’ll have it sent over ASAP!

The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

Her touch summoned butterflies, even now.

Esque
Prompt:

April Prompt: Rain will make the flowers grow
Guest Judge: KeeperGreymuzzles
Prompt Type: Mixed media

It’s just one of those days.

You slept through your alarm this morning and are running late to the exam you stayed up all night studying for.

You’re walking to the bus stop and a car splashes a wave of muddy water all over your new dress.

You just finished perfecting your ultimate new spell, and now some bureaucrat from the board of mages is revoking your magician’s license for malpractice. Jerk.

Don’t feel alone — we’ve all been there.

Everyone has had one one of those days, when it seems like the whole world is working against you. Tell us about a bad day in the life of your character. Whether it’s the worst day they have ever experienced or just a string of little unfortunate events, detail for us what went wrong. And don’t fret too much over it — these things build character... or so we’ve been told.

Submissions:

1. Juneberry
2. Jordii
3. thewordeater
4. Condor
5. BrightEyedBeast
6. Vysal
7. OregonCoast
8. Zukana13731
9. diaveborn
10. DelightfulDragon
11. azurrys
12. Crow
13. Cien
14. Dracogryph

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to DelightfulDragon‘s submission! :D The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

For Kol: It was when nothing went right. When his words came a little slower, his brain not moving fast enough, quick enough for him to formulate his teasing, his threats. His remarks; his words that spouted hate (when he no longer does, not really). It was the sight of his beaten, pathetic form; unable to stop someone from injuring his hunter girl—his human, who said you could touch, she can’t leave him alone, not again, he never wants to be alone again—she’d been near death for days. Scorn of other demons, usually a mere irritation, burning into an inferno, bright enough to raze and scorch him. Strip him of all he had left.

Those were the days he curled up; tail and snout and his great big head for once lying upon his paws, unwilling to change into his human form because that meant talking. And he couldn’t do it, he couldn’t. These days everything seemed too much for him, and he longed for the days long since past. Where he was a King; worshiped by those weaker than him and he bit and scratched and killed all those who didn’t. They had been so much easier (but he’d grown so bored of it all, he’d hated it. He never wanted to go back).

He much preferred his Hunter Girl—but even she was too much on those days.

Everyone had slowly grown used to him, to reading his moods (and they were right, occasionally, but just as often wrong), but no one could mistake this. It didn’t happen all the time; the first time no one noticed Kol tormenting someone, hearing his mocking laugh, his voice full of threats and violence, they’d been worried of all things. Was he planning something? Had he run off, finally? Killed the girl? That’ was what always happened, you know. These things never ended well, someone always died.

And they’d gone and looked for her, all over the village. Not stopping until they found the body, because the thought had taken root now, no one expecting a happy ending. Not with this pair. And imagine their surprise when she stumbled back into the village, swearing and hissing and dirty, but alive.

——

Aaren was clearly alive—and didn’t know where he was either, to her own surprise. Since Kol had never left her side before, too busy tormenting her to give her any peace, and she was shocked at how weird it felt. Without him, some malicious remark here, his overbearing presence. It all felt so wrong (and she didn’t know what to think of that, that she’d grown so used to him that him not being there was treated as wrong. Not normal, something she couldn’t quite muster up the emotion to be thankful for, wasn’t this what she’d always wanted?)

And she’d gone looking for him, her annoyance at her confusing emotions clearly visible in her angry stride, wanting to shout at him. Since when, she’d say, have you been something that I would miss, that would make my day wrong just because you weren’t there? This is your fault, Kol. Like everything. She’d make sure he knew how she felt.

She rounded a corner; he was flopped over on his side, not even bothering to change or look at her. He was in front of her house and he wasn’t even bothering to acknowledge her and she was so angry she could scream.

She opened her mouth—-and hesitated. He looked wrong.

When had Kol ever not looked up at her, a smirk on his stupid face? Or a lazy stretch before he rolled over, silently telling her no, he wasn’t following today before inevitably popping up sometime on her outing, no matter how much he denied, how much he said he would not move an inch today.

He’d never looked so still before.

And this, this was something completely new, she didn’t even like Kol (she didn’t, she was sure of it. Regardless of the mess of silly, moronic things she was feeling). She should leave, smiling in satisfaction that Kol seemed so out of it. Surely she’d get a break from him now. A day of not having to spend time with Kol, it sounded like paradise.

Instead, she sat beside him, not saying a word. Pushing all thoughts away, gently laying her hand on his head, ignoring the start of surprise and stroked his ears. She’d never mention this, though Kol would definitely tease her about it, but leaving Kol now…

It wasn’t something she could do.

She didn’t know how long she stayed like that, just sitting next to Kol, when she felt him change. Hearing the sickening cracks as he morphed into his human form, she quickly jerked her hand away. It felt stranger, petting his hair when he looked human.

“And here I thought,” he said, his tone off, a forced mocking lilt to it. Desperately trying to appear normal. “That you didn’t care, Hunter Girl.”

She replied the only way she could. “Fuck off, Kol.”DelightfulDragon

Prompt:

May Prompt: May flowers
Guest Judge: Plasma
Prompt Type: Mixed Media

Growing plants is hard. Having a ‘green thumb’ simply means you’ve devoted the appropriate time, care, and effort to really make your flowers flourish, your bushes bloom, and your trees thrive. Any gardener worth their salt will tell you as much - the true secret to success is work.

In that sense, life is like a box of chocolates garden.

Tell us about one of your character’s greatest endeavors. What have they been willing to give it all for? Their time, their money, their very heart and soul have been contributed to a cause.

It may not have been flowers or a perfect garden, but share what grew as a result.

Submissions:

1. Juneberry
2. Vely
3. Titan
4. FailSafe
5. Dune
6. OregonCoast
7. Dracogryph
8. Garjansverd
9. Teatree
10. diaveborn
11. Jordii
12. Zukana13731
13. Mozzi
14. Sinnapine
15. Arintol
16. Cien

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Cien‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

“Hakan ... I know you are talented. I know that you are able to do the impossible, but as I told you - “

“Oh, shush, Ceto. It’ll be fine. I’m about to make history. Watch.”

Hakan grinned and leaned over the tome resting on the table in front of him, open to his neatly written research and magical formulas, ignoring Ceto. The sea witch pursed her lips and tossed her long, wavy black hair, but said nothing more. Years. He had poured years of his life into this project. He’d be damned if he was going to let some old, vague deities stop him.

Picking up the tome, Hakan turned to face the center of the room. The furniture was pushed to the edges of the room, and the rub rolled up and moved, leaving an empty space in the stone, circular room. A large magic circle was drawn on the floor, glowing golden and amber, with formulas and carefully drawn symbols crammed over almost every inch of stone within the circle. On top of his years of research, it had taken Hakan months to just draw the damned circle and write out the formulas. He knew that if even one symbol was out of place, or if he imbued a fraction too much magic in the ink, it would fail - and probably blow up his wing of the college, but honestly, Hakan was much more concerned that his experiment would fail.

A knock. “Hakan? Are you in there?”

Hakan turned to the door, glancing at Ceto. She inclined her head and waved her hand, a blue opal bracelet glowing on her wrist before her form shimmered and she disappeared. He knew that she was still there, but her magic was so well-woven in her enchanted items that she wouldn’t be in danger of being discovered, even in a mage college. “Yes,” he called after a moment, “come in.”

The wooden door opened slowly, the old metal hinges creaking as Hakan’s professor stepped inside. “I was wondering where you were - I hadn’t seen you in a while, and -” The woman stopped as soon as she glanced at the center of the room, her eyes narrowing and crossing her arms. “What is this? I’ve never seen such a complex magic circle.”

“Oh!” Hakan’s face lit up immediately and he gestured it it, juggling his research in one hand. “Right, well, you have perfect timing, professor. I wanted to show you how my thesis has been coming alo -”

“Your thesis?! Hakan’s professor’s expression darkened and she stepped forward urgently, her robes swishing at a frantic pace. Hakan!

Hakan flinched. “What? You said yourself that it was good work! You’re the one who signed off on my research, and -”

“Yes, Hakan, your research! Hakan’s professor stopped just short of the outermost marking and knelt down, careful not to touch the magic circle. She put a hand over it, frowning, and then sighed, closing her eyes. “Your research is extraordinary. Your theories and magical ability are exceptional. I have no doubt that you can do great things, but ... You can’t. Hakan ... there are just some things that you shouldn’t do. Things that humans weren’t meant to.”

Hakan took a deep inhale and closed the tome in his hand, staring hard at the magic circle. He knew someone was going to bring it up - besides Ceto. And those ... gods. But no matter. “I’m sorry,” he said, not looking at his professor’s eyes, but not sounding particularly apologetic. “But I can’t just ... I can’t just let it go. Professor, I know that it’s dangerous, but I know I can do it. You know I can do it. I -”

No. No, Hakan. I’m sorry. I really am, but I’m going to have to stop you.”

What? No. No. As soon as Hakan saw his professor’s hand reach out towards the magic circle, he flung his arm out. Black tendrils of magic grew out of his professor’s shadow and grabbed her hand, solidifying with Hakan’s magic. The black and gold strip of fabric around Hakan’s robe identifying him as a high ranking dark mage wasn’t just for show. He swung his arm back, sending his professor across the room and out the door. “I’m sorry,” he whispered.

“Hakan! Hakan, please -”

He could see his professor’s stunned and hurt expression as the door swung closed.

Ceto reappeared beside him, and he ran a hand through his hair. “You’re serious about this,” she murmured.

“Yes,” he breathed.

“Well ... best of luck, then.” Ceto pressed a hand lightly against his arm, lingering for a moment. “Please ... know what you are doing ... my friend.”

“Thank you, Ceto. For everything.”

The sea witch nodded, and then dissolved into sea foam, transporting herself back to her underwater palace, surely. Hakan took a deep breath. His professor would come back soon, and probably bring the spellsword guard to stop him. Even with all his magical power, he couldn’t fend off so many highly trained anti-mage swordsmen. So he did want he really wanted to - he put down his tome and raised both his hands. Dark magic gathered in one, and bright fire magic gathered in the other. He began chanting, just like he’d practiced, and then pressed the two together before pushing the combined magic into the glowing magic circle.

He could feel the magic energy in the air. It was almost solid, growing, expanding, and he grinned, feeling his blood race. He was going to do it. He was going to be the first mage to create artificial life.

The magic circled pulsed like a beating heart, glowing and contracting, and a shadowy figure began to form in the center. Hakan pushed all of his magic into it, and it beat faster, the shape stretched and began to tremble, the magic in the air grew and grew and -

When Hakan opened his eyes, he was laying amidst the rubble of what used to be the wing of the college he lived in. He groaned, shaking his head and hoping to get rid of the terrible ringing. Faintly, he could hear screams - no. No, no, no, oh no.

The big, hulking, distorted black form smashed a building nearby, fire racing along its skin and glowing from the inside. No.

That wasn’t - no, no way, that wasn’t his creation -

He looked to the side. A familiar ring on a slender hand - no, no, no -

His professor. She wasn’t moving.

Maybe she had been right. Maybe Ceto was right. Maybe he ... maybe he ... was wrong.Cien

Prompt:

June prompt: I’m a survivor, I’m not gon’ give up
Guest judge: King
Prompt type: Mixed media
Tell us about a situation where your character had the odds stacked high against them. Do or die, back against a wall. How did your character react? What did they do? How did they pull through?

Submissions:

1. Garjansverd
2. Failsafe
3. thewordeater
4. Condor
5. Titan
6. ErsatzLace
7. radio
8. diaveborn
9. Espurr
10. Nouvella
11. Cien
12. Arintol
13. Knight
14. Vely
15. Zukana13731
16. Schefflera
17. Witch Doctor

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Schefflera‘s submission! Schefflera, please let us know which of June’s OotS items (Aphid Friends or Diaphanous Wings) you would like for your prize!

The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

Mycennaissance Entry, June 2016: Survivor

Before

Sometimes Signa was sure she’d been born into the wrong time.

She didn’t have any illusions about being the only one who felt that way. Possibly everybody alive these days really had been born into the wrong time, with the changes in the climate. Deeper winters. Cooler summers. The growing season ever shorter, with the ground thawing late in the spring and freezing before the harvest was in — what there was of it, under the sluggish sun. It felt as if the weather was huddling in on itself. It wasn’t doing much good.

Waking with a yawn to the soft bell in the middle of the night, worming her way out of the warm center of the sleeping pile. Fur fluffing out against the chill air to trap a little of the heat. Pawing the ones taking the first shift on the edges until they woke enough to shuffle in toward the heart.

Her heart freezing-stuttering-thudding when someone was hard to wake.

“Ino. Ino. Ino!”

Nose to too-cold nose.

“Ino, wake up!”

Still breathing. This time still breathing. Nipping his ear hard enough to bleed and clamping a paw over his mouth as he yelped.

Pulse slowing, slowing as he stumbled deeper.

Settling down in the almost-warm spot he left and lying awake in the dark.

Within living memory, there had been real summers, ones where you could see the unobscured sun for hours, several days in a row. (Well, even acclimated to that sort of thing, you wouldn’t have wanted to look straight at it. But it had been possible.) The oldest Ineki insisted that there had been times it was uncomfortably hot outdoors, without a fire anywhere nearby. It was hard to imagine. In her early adolescence, coming to terms with subjectivity and trying out cynicism, Signa had entertained the idea that it was all imagination: maybe childhood looked sunnier literally and figuratively in retrospect; maybe old bones felt the cold more.

But even in her own memory, things had been different. She’d started writing down dates and temperatures and sun sightings, last and first frosts, when she could drive a shovel into the ground before and after casting spells for strength and heat. That last one was the most worrying. She was getting stronger physically and magically, which should skew the data… but the time she could work the ground was still shrinking.

Glimpsing the Sorceress — there were many sorceresses but only one Sorceress — when she came out of the Mountain, conjuring fire, conjuring food.

Saving the seeds out of magic vegetables and debating whether to try them in the best bit of the garden, to maximize their potential, or the worst in case they would grow nothing or bounty regardless of condition.

Wishing she could have asked her. Wishing she could have thanked her.

Thinking, she looked awfully tired.

And there were the books.

Those were the real reason Signa longed for happier climes. Not the evidence in histories and the assumptions of everyday stories about warm weather, or the dangers of winters that sounded like early autumn. Not just what seemed from current perspectives like an incredible bounty of food, ripe and free and going to waste in the wilds. Not all these glories glimpsed in stolen moments—

“Do you really have time for that, Signa?”

Closing the book guiltily. “They aren’t shelved to match the card catalog, but I finally found one that talks about how to protect plants to extend the growing season.” Still thinking about the advice on how to keep plants from withering in the heat.

But time. It was always stolen moments, always glimpses. Signa wouldn’t let herself take too much. There was work to do, if she wanted to live. If she wanted her kin and friends to live. Her paws were needed to dig the earth, the spells she’d studied to coax crops to bear under the clouded sky. She wouldn’t stop.

Digging. Practicing. Studying.

Biting her tongue to end an argument. Wishing she’d bitten it earlier. Skirting the next disagreement and leaving someone better suited to play peacemaker.

Hoping she’d never have to fight.

Not stopping until the stone took her.

But Sun and Sky, she wanted time—! Schefflera

Prompt:

July prompt: Thanksgiving in July
Guest judge: Eluii
Prompt type: Mixed media
Thanksgiving is a holiday of reflection, when people come together and take some time to consider all the good things about their life. For many it’s a cathartic experience, helping to bring a sense of peace and gratitude. Why wait until November to celebrate in such a way? Sometimes, all we need to get through a stressful time is to step back and count our proverbial blessings. Tell us about what your character is grateful for, or a time when they’ve shown someone or something their appreciation. We want to give a shout-out to all the positive things and people that have helped us get where we are!

Submissions:

1. thewordeater
2. failsafe
3. Loon
4. Dracogryph
5. Garjansverd
6. Vysal
7. Espurr
8. Arintol
9. Watchdog
10. Miremel
11. diaveborn
12. Jordii
13. Schefflera
14. Cien
15. Nouvella

Spotlight:
This month’s spotlight is awarded to Miremel‘s submisson! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

The pale moon hung high in the sky, the orb reflected in the dark brown eyes watching it’s slow arc…. It was time. Vesna stood up from her cross-legged position, her legs shaking slightly. She had to do this. It was the only way to thank him properly, after she hadn’t even been able to say goodbye. The demon started through the woods at a slow pace, methodically sweeping her gaze across the ground as she looked for a good marker. It had to be perfect. Her friend deserved nothing less. She rejected stone after stone. Too dark. Too small. Too jagged, that wasn’t like him at all.

Finally, she found it. A granite stone a little larger than her head. It was almost perfectly round, and it’s surface was smooth and speckled with darker grey flecks. Just like his eyes, Vesna remembered. She bent down and picked up the rock as easily as if it was a feather. Then she kept walking, walking to their place. A small clearing in the center of the woods, a grassy circle dotted with colorful wildflowers. The moonlight shone down brightly upon the clearing, bleaching the long grass silver.

Vesna reached the center of the clearing and put down the stone, ever so gently, as if it was a child. She brushed a bit of dirt from it’s surface and then took a deep breath and knelt in front of it. She sat in silence for a long minute before breaking into a pained whisper.

“I- I hope this is okay. I know it’s not much. It’s not a proper grave, I know that much. B- but they wouldn’t have left any… remains to bury. Bones, maybe. But I can’t get them now. I’m not one of my flock anymore. They probably think I’m dead, after what they did to me.” Vesna’s hand reached up to gently touch a long scar across her left eye, then she dropped it, realizing she had turned the subject to herself. That wasn’t right.

“... sorry. I didn’t come to talk to you to complain. I came, well… to say thank you. Thank you for everything. For teaching me to read and write your lovely language. For showing me how to cook, even though I still think vegetables are kind of gross. For sharing sunsets and sunrises and embraces and kindness.” Tears started trickling down her pale cheeks. “I’m sorry I couldn’t save you. I’m sorry I was too late. I’m sorry for so, so many things. I tried… I tried so hard to do better after I met you.”

By now, the demon was sobbing. She continued her wordless crying for near an hour, before her tears finally started to slow, and she wiped her eyes with the heel of her hand. She sat in silence for an even longer time before she spoke again, her whisper filled with a million emotions. Pain, joy, regret, and sorrow, all overlaid with a deep gratitude.

Thank you for being my friend.Miremel

Prompt:

August Prompt: Back to School
Guest Judge: Myla
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
The importance of education cannot be understated. From the day we’re born to the day we die, we are constantly learning; constantly working to better ourselves, even if much of our daily lessons are subtle. Tell us about a time your character learned something new — be it a skill, a language, or a behavior. How did they learn it? Was it intentional? Who or what taught it to them?

Submissions:

1. thewordeater
2. OregonCoast
3. Kitsumi Mahon
4. Gabriel
5. Losty
6. Pyrrha
7. diaveborn
8. Hyasynthetic
9. Jordii
10. KeeperGreymuzzles
11. Vysal
12. raus
13. Dakota Riley
14. Zukana13731
15. Arintol

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to raus’s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you can also read it in its original post here.

Patience and a Steady Paw

also contains an amateur take on a condition vaguely similar to parts of the autism spectrum and synesthesia perhaps so please don’t kill me, I mean for this to be fantasy enough to fit within the MC canon.

I mean for Melia to actually have a magic-based disorder where she perceives different things than “normal” people. She experiences a kind of sensory overload brought on by a sort of synesthesia-esque condition and is deaf. She is also unused to people, which I may expand on later but this is written from just the info Leonora can gain at this time. Spoiler is Melia was lost or abandoned, she doesn’t know, and where she was in the Cave, lost and alone, made her very disoriented for a long time and really worsened her condition. Certain people really stand out to her and bother her because of her different perception experience, be it auras they have or latent magical stores/abilities etc. Movements disturb the magic around her and she acts to minimize pain/overload to herself. She also is not socialized and acts like a wild child, so that adds to her inability to communicate.

Leonora had never encountered a student like her, in all honesty. She was quiet, yet at times more than a tad reserved, and quite unlike the majority of her small class of students. Sure, Caius had always trumped Leonora herself in introverted plaintiveness, yet this diminutive rose pink pup was altogether not a bit like Leonora’s adopted son. Caius would often hole himself up with a book for hours or hover around the younger children while Leonora taught a lesson to the older ones, but this girl was a child unlike Caius even when he had entered his most stubborn phase of avoidance.

Her name was Melia, perhaps short for Amelia, and she was brash at times and yet more often tittered about in frowns and jerks, shunning contact as much as she would shrink behind larger ineki upon entering a room. The young green and brown drasilis boy, son of the head carpenter, would terrify her and anger her intermittently, sending him into a surly mood fraught with what Leonora surmised was insecurity. Caius bothered Melia the most, which positively baffled and distraught Leonora, since she was bound to keep an eye on Melia every possible moment she could. Should Caius even attempt to hand her the afternoon snack, Melia would shriek at him and utter a fierce distress growl, grabbing the tail of her nearest classmate in order to create a diversion. For one so intent on escaping confrontation of any kind, Melia was incredibly fixated on keeping herself within arms’ reach of others and would rather remain distressed than be placed or left in a room by herself.

Of course, Leonora had read plenty of methods and theories on child care and development. Her years of experience served her well in most cases, and Caius’ perceptive eye was invaluable in finding out what problems ailed the children’s tiny society. All this and outside help was still insufficient, and this frustrated Leonora beyond her own belief. How could one child be so helpless and yet eschew such attempted loving care?

The third day after she had been placed in Leonora’s class, outside help had been offered and accepted in the form of Shelton, the rather gruff but sweet and attentive drifter who had brought the lone girl to their settlement. Shelton had hoped that, in placing Melia with not only a dedicated care-taker but also a small group of friendly peers, Melia would adjust to social life eventually. Three days of grief and disruption of all workings of the library were enough for the parents of several of the children to demand his help. Shelton had come, yet his appearance had only set Melia into a rage. Caius had remarked to Leonora after the day had ended that perhaps Melia’s fear that Shelton had come to take her back to a place without other faces was what had set her off. Shelton’s help was still needed regardless, and it had taken the three of them three more days to calm her enough to let her stay in the classroom with the other children during the school day.

Nothing was working much better, four weeks after Shelton and Melia’s appearance. Leonora was terribly upset. Stress had never been kind to her, especially when it raged and stormed like a huntress on the prowl for—well who could know what? Leonora could never find it in herself to simply give up on a child, but until Melia had been placed in her care, she never had been this unable to reach into a child’s mind and figure out how to approach them. Melia was illiterate, unmindful of language, and ignorant of any other sort of communication Leonora had tried. Dejected, by the end of the fourth week, she had been entertaining the thought of bringing Shelton back into the classroom once more to start over when a timid young man had placed a plain brown book on her front desk with a timid paw.
With Caius watching the class for the afternoon before each parent retrieved each child, Leonora had parked herself at her desk in the main library room for the rest of the day before the library was to close. The days of running both library and school out of her own home were long gone, and now Leonora had a prime vantage point from which to see the majority of the main large room, yet she had been so preoccupied with her dismal thoughts that the young ineki had startled her terribly.

“Sorry! Sorry Miss Leonora. I didn’t mean to scare you.”

The brown speckled feline smiled sheepishly, his green eyes full of genuine guilt. Leonora knew him as one of the newest immigrants to the town, the father (or was it elder brother?) of the young cream and yellow feline Reece. Arden… Alben… Landon…

“Allen!” Leonora sighed in relief as the name slid back into her mind. The guilt she felt over nearly forgetting the man’s name was assuaged by the thought of the man’s son, who was one of her brightest pupils yet. “It’s perfectly fine, I was simply thinking. What may I do for you Allen?”

Allen’s smile turned into a pure gesture of delight as he bounced twice to the tips of his paws and down. Leaning downward against the desk, he slid the book toward Leonora as she straightened herself to si straight in the chair.

“Miss Leonora, I have this for you. It might help, a bit, maybe,” he offered, giving no other explanation as his excitement rose.

Intrigued that he should phrase his offer in that way, Leonora chuckled and lowered her gaze down to the book. Old, or perhaps only travel-worn, the book was bound in a tight brown cloth which had been rubbed in a large stripe across the front cover. The Mute Answer the Cave Gave to Me: A Spiritual Discussion of the Sensitive and Their Speeches was the name of the book, though what that overly scholarly-sounding title meant was escaping Leonora at the moment. She looked back up to Allen and gave a pleasant smile, aware that her eyes showed question enough.

“Ah! Oh, um,” Allen stumbled, then, finding his footing again, placed a paw purposefully onto the center of the book. “It’ll help with her. The girl. The mute girl. The prob-proble—the uh, the troubled girl. The, uh—“

“Allen!” Leonora cut him off with a raised paw, then nodded solemnly, “I understand who you are talking about. Everyone would know who you’re talking about. I must ask you how so, however. I am quite busy and truly I have no time to read these days, sadly.”

Allen nodded enthusiastically, unperturbed by her cutting him off. His stumbling grew less apparent now. Leonora noted that he must have a stutter.

“I know—I see—I mean. ‘She’s mute,’ that’s what everyone says. She’s wild. This says it—well they—they are different. Sensitive. Magic and uh, the Cave uh, and uh, well sometimes there are those born who experience different things differently and uh…”

Trailing off, he had seemed to notice Leonora’s lack of understanding, so he paused and took a breath to collect his thoughts. Frowning, he chose his words slowly and carefully. “Some children are born with different amounts of senses and sensitivities to the magic that are a lot more than most. These children are always born in the cave and are not carved or Lost. They are born too close to lots of magic, and it makes it hard for them to talk and whatnot because normal interaction hurts their senses too much.”

Leonora caught on to what he was referring to and gave a short intake of breath. “Sensory overload? That just may be what she is experiencing! If it involves other forms of perception—magic—then maybe that is why her reactions hadn’t really seemed to make sense to us so far! Thank you, Allen! I shall indeed read this carefully and see if I cannot find some solution to our troubled girl.”

Leonora took the book from his paws, flipped the front cover open and hastily glanced over the author and publishing information, then looked back up to Allen’s eyes.

“Would you tell me why you brought this here to me? What made you think of this kind of sensory overload?”

Allen shrugged and nodded toward the far end of the library. Leonora realized he was indicating his usual spot near the adult non-fiction.

“She acts kinda like my aunt. She’s deaf—my aunt is. She got injured in a cave in and can’t touch others, something about her sense of touch gets messed up when she does. Textures bother her. Something about her brain—but she acts a little different, has to pay attention to her surroundings in case someone says something to her or comes close to touching her. The girl reminds me of her.”

Leonora thanked him once more, then returned to looking at the title page. Allen’s son, Reece, came bounding over then and tugged on Allen’s tails from behind.

“I should. Ah, home. Reece will be wanting supper soon. I have another book, the one that I used to learn to sign to Aunt Leah and that I used to teach Reece for visits to her. I can bring it, tomorrow.”

“Yes, please,” Leonora said, smiling broadly and waving politely to young Reece. She definitely wanted to begin unraveling Melia’s world as soon as she could.

_____________________________________


Reece and his father had been meeting with her every day for two weeks by the time she had felt able enough to approach Melia. Clumsy paws and uncertain movements had turned ever so slowly into sure motions and deft paw signs. Leonora knew she would have months yet before she would feel comfortable in her way of signing, but her meager survival vocabulary was enough now for her to feel confident in attempting to teach Melia. Knowing she must at least appear sure of herself and confident in Melia’s ability to communicate, Leonora had decided she would teach Melia as best she could instead of letting Allen stumble through in his way or Reece awkwardly forge too far ahead too fast. This way, both Leonora and Melia would be learning and teaching each other, at least if Melia took to the signing.

When Leonora sat Melia down in the quiet study room behind the classroom, she saw the girl was agitated as usual being apart from the commotion. Whatever experiences she had endured being alone in the caves before Shelton had found her, she was a averse to solitary moments as always and had yet to grow accustomed to being left alone. At least now, Leonora mused, she and Shelton could take her on her own as long as the both of them were here.

“You’re sure this will work, this signing?” Shelton asked, his eyes trained on Leonora’s paws as she laid out the objects she would be using in front of her. “It’ll get through to her?”

Leonora shook her head, her paw pausing over a small loaf of bread she was sliding to the front of her array of objects. “I’m not sure, but it can be tried just as anything else can be. I’ve been studying her for a while now and I think as long as we all learn together, she will take to it at least some. She adores you now, Shelton, and I know if we both ‘learn’ from each other, she will take notice.”

“Huh. She always was curious when we talk together. I know she understands we both have her best interests in mind.”

Leonora hummed quietly and placed the last object on the table, a cup of water. They both looked toward Melia, who was sitting across from them and wrapping her paws tight around her shoulders with a tail tucked between both paw from around her arms. She often tugged her own tails when she was focusing, so Leonora knew at least she was trying to watch them. Small grunts and hums issued from the pup’s snout, but these were all normal enough for her, so Leonora felt she was comfortable enough to watch.

“Melia,” Leonora began slowly, mouthing the words explicitly in the exaggerated way she had taken to when addressing the girl. “Today we’re going to learn how to talk. Talk. How we talk.”

As Leonora spoke the last word, she brought her paw up to her snout and motioned fluidly and slowly, eyes trained on Melia’s own and watching for any distress or failure to maintain attention.

Talk,” Shelton repeated, gaining Melia’s attention for a few seconds as he mimicked Leonora’s hand gesture. “Leonora and I are talking.”

“Yes, we are talking to each other. We talk.”

Leonora then picked up the bread and mimed biting into and tearing a hunk off of it before she comically swallowed the imaginary bite.

“This is eating, I eat.”

She set the bread down and repeated, this time signing the word for ‘eat.’

“Miss Leonora is eating. She eats. She eats food.”

Melia watched them, for once rapt. Her eyes were wide and her paws were pulling hard on her tails. Over and over Leonora and Shelton took turns using one sign, then another. They patiently moved through the small collection of bare necessities, generalizing as best they could, then repeated the ones they had already covered. Each time they moved onto another, Melia would watch first Leonora and then Shelton, her grunts quieting as they began to sign to each other for basic things and answer with the word and the thing being requested. Melia miraculously kept watching, her eyes following their paws at times and others their mouths. If at all she had ever made any sign of progress, this was it.

At the end of their session, Melia had waved and gestured for them to repeat signs, which to Leonora was the greatest feat they had yet accomplished with the pup. Since she had been spending the past two weeks both watching and studying Melia’s movements and temperament changes, she felt maybe she would have a chance at unraveling Melia’s world within soon. As she had exhausted her small repertoire of signs and movements in the first session, Leonora knew from the second teaching session onward, she and Shelton and Melia would all have to learn from scratch, but perhaps soon they would be able to all understand each other and Melia could give them a glimpse into her mind. Only the Sorceress knew how much Leonora had tried so far to understand the girl.

In the month and a half that Leonora had known this girl, she had frustrated and worried Leonora beyond her ability to stand it. Stressed and at her wit’s end, she had expected to have to wave Shelton and his ward onward, to leave this settlement for another in the hopes that the next or the next might have someone with the ability to communicate with the pup, yet now she was able to sit down with her and draw some sort of acknowledgement from Melia. A start, though rocky, was still a start. Leonora had never had to learn as painstakingly as she had in these past couple of weeks and though she was mentally exhausted from studying both about Melia’s condition and ways to deal with her, she was exhilarated at the idea of helping this girl and her guardian simply talk.

At least in holding her attention, Leonora had reached that very first slippery step. Sorceress willing, next session she was going to get Melia to sign back at her.

raus
WHOOPS we lost the prompt - pending!
The Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Jacq’s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you can also read it in its original post here.

My story is about Laika

Space was much louder than Laika thought. Under the rattling and banging and gutteral roar of the engines, there was something else – a constant noise that had nothing to do with the earthly sounds of her ship, her pounding heart, her ragged panting. There was a hissing, as if space itself was whispering its secrets to her. She strained to listen, but things were getting hot, so hot…

There were no windows in her ship, but she saw pinpricks of light, twinkling like the stars without. Darkness threatened the edges of her vision, forming a starscape that pulsed in and out of focus. The vision of space behind her eyes warred with the metal and machines in front of them.

listen… the whispers said. hang on. let go. listen…

The starscape pulsed in time with her heart, and the inside of her ship was replaced with snatches of memory. The vaguest sense of warmth, milk, brothers and sisters and safety… She saw the street she used to live on, the garbage she ate and puddles she drank from. She saw the lab she was taken to one winter morning, asked to do incomprehensible things but warm again at last. She saw the machines and the needles and the people, so many people, all patting her and touching her and sometimes hurting her but never meaning it.

Finally, the most painful memory of them all - She saw the children she had played with the day before launch. For Laika, people were mostly hands and smells and gestures, either kind or gruff or mean, but always lumbering and powerful. Children, though, children were all faces and laughter and light to her, kindness and joy and endless love. The memory-children blazed like the sun, like laboratory spotlights, like stars. They opened their mouths but only the hissing of space came out, louder now, drowning out the clunks and rumbles of her failing ship.

Listen… Do you hear it? It’s almost here…

She tried to lean forward but the straps held her tight. Her ears swiveled this way and that, trying to locate a sound that was all around her. She closed her eyes but it made no difference – the starscape was inside her head and outside the ship, with everything between useless and invisible. Her heart pounded in one last furious burst of speed, and then began to slow. Her head became heavy, too heavy to lift, and she relaxed, slumping against the too-tight straps.
listenhangonletgolistenhangonlistnletgolisten

“I can’t believe she’s gonna make it!”
“She won’t, if you don’t concentrate and help me get these tubes out of her!”
“What kind of monster straps an innocent being into a tin can and flings them into space without an air conditioner?”
“You know what kind. You know what system we’re in.”
“oh… right…”
“Poor thing. We’ll get her patched up good as new, with a TranslationMod so she can tell us where she wants to go next. It’s the least we can do.”

Laika’s eyes were gummy and hard to open, her body ached deeply and felt like stone. She was laid on a table, cool but not cold, firm but not hard. The voices were somewhere above her, and she felt herself being unhooked and detached. She was being separated, from the web of machinery that linked her to her ship, linked her to earth, linked her to the lumbering men of science that had strapped her in so far away and not so long ago.

Those voices… They sounded like the children she remembered, all sunlight and laughter and starscapes. One of them patted her head gently, and the tender love in the caress burst in her head like music. Laika listened, and her tail began to thump gently against the table.

Jacq
Prompt:

Prompt: Campfire Tails
Guest Judge: Meru
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
The ritual of sharing scary stories is one practiced the world over, whether around a cozy campfire, whispered by flashlight during a sleepover, or exchanged in the deepest night to break the echoing silence. Many of these stories transcend generations, the details changing over time, but the terrifying core of their substance immortal. For October’s prompt, create a scary story, shared from your character’s perspective.

Submissions:

1. jenny151618
2. thewordeater
3. OregonCoast
4. Hyasynthetic
5. Nyhkan
6. Losty
7. Vely
8. Unspoken
9. azurrys

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to azurrys’ submission. The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

“To this day, I still don’t understand why humans like ghost stories.”

Sen’s tone was amused, as it always was when he spoke of humans. Amatsuki laughed, sidling a little closer to lay his hand over Sen’s. The campfire crackled merrily at their feet, scattering bright embers across the night. Whatever Sen said, it was the perfect night for a ghost story. “It’s the thrill,” Amatsuki answered. “The fear of the unknown. Humans don’t know anything about ghosts—or if they exist—and that’s what make ghost stories so fun. At least, that’s how it was for me.”

“That doesn’t make sense, Amatsuki. You know ghosts exist now; we’ve met a few. Where’s the element of the unknown for you, hmm?”

Amatsuki poked Sen lightly. “Quiet. You promised. Now tell me your ghost story. You’re a demon—you must have better ghost stories than humans.”

Sen sighed exaggeratedly, but from the deep breath he drew afterwards, he was ready to begin. Amatsuki sat up a little straighter, focusing his full attention on him. “This story is an old one. You may have said that demons have better stories, but I actually first heard this from a human, though a demon gave me a much more detailed account later on.” Sen glanced over, as though to make sure Amatsuki was still listening. “It starts in a mountain temple, far from civilisation. There was only one village nearby at the base of the mountain, and after a temple was built within the village proper, the mountain temple barely ever saw a visitor. The temple was tended by a lone monk who dedicated his life and soul to its upkeep. Some say he was the most pious of all; that no other monk in the region, or maybe even the country, could hold a candle to his devotion.

“But eventually, the man’s faith was defeated by time. And with his passing, the temple fell to ruin.”

Sen was now staring steadily ahead, his gaze fixed on the campfire. With the bright glow picking out the colours in Sen’s inhumanly pale features, he almost looked human himself. Amatsuki could barely bear to take his eyes off him. “It was then that the rumours started. While the temple itself was no longer a place of worship, travellers through the mountain range often took shelter beneath its roof. Not all was well, however, for these travellers emerged with strange and fantastic tales of their experience.”

Sen paused, seemingly lost in memory. Amatsuki gave him a moment or two before his curiosity got the better of him. “What did they say?” he asked.

“Most of the stories had common elements. The first was that travellers didn’t realise it was abandoned until later. Some said that when they came across the temple, they saw lit candles within. The altars were tended to, with fresh fruit and burning incense laid out as offerings. Nobody appeared to greet them, of course, but they simply assumed that the monk had stepped out.

“As for where the stories differed, that would depend on the traveller. Some would bed down in the temple without disturbing the altars, and though the candles were burnt out the next morning, everything was always otherwise undisturbed when they went on their way. Those travellers never had good stories to share, beyond being mildly unnerved that the temple had appeared occupied when it was, in fact, abandoned. It was when travellers were disrespectful that the stories became interesting.”

Sen stopped again, infuriatingly. Amatsuki realised that he must have drawn closer somewhere along the way; Sen’s hand now rested on the small of his back, and their thighs were almost touching. “And then?” Amatsuki pressed, sure that Sen was waiting on all the dramatic moments just to frustrate him. From the faint smirk that Sen gave him, he was right.

“Well, where do I start? Let’s give a hypothetical name to this pair I’ll be talking about… let’s say the Chang brothers. They were hiking across the mountains together for sport, and like so many others, they decided to spend the night at the temple.

“Unfortunately, they were also woefully uncivilised. Upon realising that the monk was out, they decided to help themselves to what little the temple had to provide. The first thing they did was pick out the best fruits from the offering dishes for their meal. The fruits looked much more appetising than their dried rations, after all. When they had eaten their fill, they began to lay out their bedding for the night, but the younger brother noted that the temple floor was dirty—dusty, scuffed, and with the evidence of numerous animal visits upon it. To that end, the brother suggested they make their beds on a much cleaner place: the altars.”

“…You can’t be serious. Did they believe in another religion?” Amatsuki paused, frowned and shook his head. “Never mind. Even if they did, that was just rude.”

Sen laughed, reaching up to ruffle his hair. Amatsuki was about to launch a protest when Sen picked up the story again, and the words lodged in his mouth. “Well, whether or not they were believers, the Chang brothers agreed this was a wonderful idea. They removed the idols, dusted the altars off, and settled in for a good night’s sleep… or so they hoped.”

Sen glanced over at Amatsuki, and he must have been satisfied with what he saw, since he began again without a delay. “No human truly knows what went down that night. The next day, a villager hiking up the mountain met them halfway along the path—but they were barely recognisable. According to this man, the brothers were stark, raving mad. They scrambled down the mountain path as though demons were on their tail, screaming unintelligibly and shoving at each other as if the other was but an obstacle to escape. The villager barely got out of the way in time, and watched in disbelief as they simply stampeded past him, completely heedless of his calls. It was as though they no longer heard or understood human words.

Several paces down the path was a narrow pass, just barely the width of one person. Travellers knew to traverse the pass with caution, for a single wrong move could cause one to plummet down the cliffside to certain death. The villager called out a warning to the brothers, but it was again unheeded. He watched in horror as the two brothers’ desperate struggle reached its peak—and together, they both tumbled down the sheer cliff face, never to be seen again.”

Sen fell silent after that, and Amatsuki let out a breath that he hadn’t realised he was holding. For a long moment, the only break in the silence was the sound of the crackling fire. It almost came as a shock to Amatsuki when Sen spoke again, his voice quiet. “The villager was greatly shaken by what he had witnessed, but he nevertheless decided to press on to the temple to gather his nerves before returning to the village. It was there that he saw what the Chang brothers had done to the temple, and he began to put the pieces together. He had lived in the village for many years, since before the monk of the mountain temple had passed on and the temple fell to ruin. What, then, could it be but the dedicated monk continuing his life’s work even after his death and punishing those who dared to be wantonly disrespectful?

“The man carefully set the temple to rights again. He removed the Chang brothers’ bedding, replaced the idols, and from his own store he set out fresh offerings of fruit. After lighting the incense, the man left the temple to return to the village, eager to share his tale.

“The stories spread far and wide from there. Soon, the haunted temple and the would-be ghost of the monk that resided there became famous. The village saw more and more travellers passing through, all eager to see the temple for themselves. Before long, though, some villagers began to grow concerned. While most of the travellers returned unscathed, several were never heard from again. Once, two travellers set off together and only one came back, stammering out a terrified account about how his friend had accidentally knocked over an offering bowl and the ghost had visited his wrath upon them. The villagers feared that eventually, the old monk’s ghost would start to harm innocents.”

Sen cast another sidelong glance at Amatsuki, a faint smile teasing at his lips. “And that’s where I come in. Like I said, I first heard the story from a human: one of the villagers. I was still actively working as an exorcist then, and they were quite relieved when I happened to visit the village. They begged me to visit the temple and set the monk’s spirit to rest, so that all travellers would be safe. I had actually lodged at the temple myself on several previous occasions, so the tale concerned me personally. Of course I agreed, and set out to check on the temple the next day…”

Amatsuki could see the hint of a smirk at Sen’s lips. It had him wondering what manner of creature was behind the story, to put that expression on his face. Sen was right—the ghost stories had been more fun when he was an unknowing human, and the creatures had been far more fantastical. They’d been out of reach and all the more terrifying for that.

Now that he was with Sen and the spirit world had opened itself up to him, there was a different kind of thrill to it. It had changed from mystique to merely mystery. But well… that wasn’t all bad.

“And? What did you find?” he asked.

Sen shrugged, leaning back and bracing himself on the log. “Nothing.”

Amatsuki stared at him disbelievingly, but Sen didn’t bother meeting his gaze. When another beat went by, he leaned over to glare straight at him, their noses almost brushing. “Sen! Stop playing with me. Tell me what you found.”

Sen laughed, hooking Amatsuki a little closer. “I’m not joking. There was absolutely nothing, and that’s what I told the villagers. But do you remember that I said that a demon gave me a more complete account?”

“Yes. Please tell me that account has more of a climax.”

“Oh, well… that depends on how you look at it. But I’d say it does.” Sen was still smirking a little when he settled back to continue his story. Amatsuki was half-inclined to poke his cheek to make him stop. “I didn’t dismiss the temple as having nothing immediately. What the villagers had told me did indicate that there was a demon or spirit of some sort living there. When nothing presented itself, I thought to ask another demon—one who lived in the mountain—to come and spend the night there with me…”

“Wait, let me get this straight,” Amatsuki interrupted. “When you say ‘spend the night’, do you mean that you ‘spent the night’ with that demon… investigating?”

Sen’s laugh sounded a little too amused. “We investigated. That’s all I’ll say. Why, are you jealous?”

Amatsuki rolled his eyes, jabbing Sen in the chest. “I would have no time left to do anything else if I worried about your past conquests. You’ve slept with gods. I asked because I was trying to figure out if you were being deliberately disrespectful to lure out the spirit.”

“For the record, he was a guardian spirit. But really, you see right through me.” Sen’s tone was affectionate. “Yes, that was the intention, but we actually never got around to the deed. You see, the demon enlightened me as to the true nature of the spirit before we did.”

Amatsuki sat up straight at that. “Really? So what was it?”

“Be patient. You’re the one that wanted a good story.” Sen reached over to tweak his nose, making Amatsuki wrinkle it. “Anyway, you recall that I’d visited the temple and stayed there before?”

“Yes, and?”

“Nothing out of the ordinary happened on most of those visits, except one. I usually slept in the rafters when I visited, as the floor wasn’t much to sleep on. On this visit I speak of, I was half-asleep when two travellers came in—brothers.”

Sen had absently started stroking Amatsuki’s hair while he told the tale. He barely seemed to notice he was doing it, and Amatsuki couldn’t exactly say he minded. “I left them alone at first. They weren’t bothering me, so I wasn’t going to bother them. I dozed a little until their banging and clanging woke me up, and that was when I looked down and realised what they’d done. They were removing the idols from the altars—”

“Okay, wait.” Amatsuki knew he probably shouldn’t be interrupting at this point, but he was starting to get an inkling of what Sen was building up to. “This is all sounding eerily familiar.”

“Just listen, dearest.” Sen grunted when Amatsuki jabbed him hard in retaliation at the pet name, but continued anyway. “Anyway, the brothers removed the idols and spread their bedding out on the altars. I realised that they’d also helped themselves to the offerings—which, by the way, I had set out. I decided I wasn’t going to let that slide, so I determined to teach them a lesson…”

“By driving them mad until they fell off a mountain path?” Amatsuki finished dryly.

“Please, no. I just, ah… well, let’s just say that most humans are very sensitive to invisible touches. All I did was hide my presence and drop some feathers on them from the rafters.” Sen shrugged. “They were both cowards. I got them all worked up, and before I knew it they were blaming each other for going along with the plan to sleep on the altars. The next thing I knew they were grappling, so I just gave them a little extra push with a few ominous noises that humans think are ghost-like, and finished off by toppling a loose beam from the rafters. Then they shrieked like babies and scurried out of the temple, and I settled back in to finish off my night’s sleep while congratulating myself on a job well-done. I thought to set the temple to rights when I awoke, but by the time I did, someone else had already done so.” Finallly noticing Amatsuki’s pointed gaze, Sen protested, “Hey, how was I supposed to know that they would fall off the path?”

“Oh, god.” Amatsuki dropped his head against Sen’s chest. “No, Sen. This is not a fitting climax. I wanted a ghost, not—not you.”

“You asked me for the story. This was the best I could come up with, and I’m a demon. You can’t say the supernatural wasn’t involved.”

“Fine… but wait. So did you light the candles all those other times?”

“Ah, yes. About that.” Sen smiled. “It was actually Aiyu that did that—I mean the demon that lives in the mountain. The one I asked to spend the night with me. She knew that I visited the temple sometimes, so if she heard someone coming up the mountain, she would light the candles and burn incense so I would know she was there. But it so happens that after she started the habit, the next time I visited was at the behest of the villagers. I hid my presence the first night to make sure no spirits would notice me, and the next night I asked her for her help before I went, which was when she explained everything to me. That was when I made the connection between the brothers I’d scared off and the apparently-mad duo as well.”

“What about the traveller who accidentally knocked over the offering dish?”

Sen raised his hands in surrender. “I have no idea about that. My best guess is that they knocked over the dish, panicked, and fell to their death while trying to make their way back to the village. A tragic accident, but nothing to do with me.”

Amatsuki made a face into Sen’s robes. “I have a feeling you told me this story just to prove to me how uninteresting ghost stories are now that I’m no longer the innocent human.”

“Are you calling me a bad storyteller?” Sen teased. “You seemed intrigued for most of it. I would say that I delivered on my promise.”

Amatsuki lifted his head at that, regarding Sen thoughtfully. Eventually, he breathed out a sigh, unable to fully stop the smile tugging at his lips. “Alright, you win. No more ghost stories. The explanations feel so much more mundane now that I know that the terrifying crane demon behind all of this is actually just an overdramatic, ridiculous, silly—”

“Alright, you don’t need to say it all.”

“—idiot that I love.”

Sen was clearly caught off-guard by the finish, and Amatsuki smiled in satisfaction. Sen had spent all that time setting up his plot twist, but he was still so easy to catch unawares. “I’ll count your promise as delivered… on one condition.”

“Which is?” Sen asked in interest.

“That you’ll show me what kind of ‘investigating’ you intended to do with Aiyu that night.”

A slow smirk suffused Sen’s face. “I can certainly do that.”

Ghost stories were the last thing on Amatsuki’s mind after that.

azurrys
Was a contest, no spotlight!
Prompt:

Prompt Title: A Rich History
Guest Judge: Myla
Prompt Type: Mixed Media

Beyond one’s personal history lies generations upon generations of family history. This history can be embraced, rebelled against, or forgotten by the current generation, but may still hang like a shadow over one’s head. Tell us about a character who is influenced in some major way by their family’s history. How does it affect them? Are they proud of it, or is it something that they go to great lengths to hide?

Submissions:

1. Hyasynthetic
2. Malis
3. Losty
4. Dakota Riley
5. Vysal
6. Cien
7. SocialBookWorm

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Losty‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

The porch swing creaked quietly as Delilah stood up. She’d been meaning to ask her grandmother about the brewing of one particular charm and she could hear her slow, shuffling footsteps moving about the kitchen. Leaving the heavy spellbook outside on the swing— it would always come home unharmed— she headed indoors. The wind was starting to blow over the cornfields anyway, and she was beginning to get a little chilled. On her way back, she picked up the little bowl near the bottom of the porch steps; it was running low on milk and she wanted to refill it. The field mice always brought her news and occasionally supplies when they were bribed.

The kitchen fan whirred quietly overhead as Delilah walked into the kitchen. Outside the window, in the gathering dusk, she could see the very edges of the fields and the arrow-straight stretch of road that bordered them. Just at the corner of the window, almost completely hidden behind the rather gnarled oak tree, was one of the signs ubiquitous to this part of the country, reminding them all that “Hell is Real.” Having seen it all her life, learning to spell out the words from her great-aunt Eulalie’s lap, there was something strangely comforting in it. The women of her family had lived in this sprawling, somewhat ramshackle old house for longer than anyone cared to remember, their wards buried in the earth surrounding the four points of its foundation. Of course boy-children are sometimes born to them, and they’re loved just as much as the girls, but they never seem to stay past adulthood, heading off to the coasts and the cities as though the wind has blown them away like chaff. They send postcards and rare ingredients and they’ve all inherited the gift in their own way just as much as the girls have, but they’re not tied to the land. Delilah doesn’t envy them their rootlessness, especially not with the safety and sense of community that was to be found at home. Here, she knew, there was always someone to turn to.

The room was warm and richly scented. Pork roasting, probably pork that had been bartered to the family from one of the surrounding neighbors. The kitchen was very often a focal point in the house, where people tended to converge. The proverbial heart of the home was indeed their modern version of the hearth; there were reasons for some of what was said of witches, Delilah supposed. Taking in a deep breath, she stepped around the heavy carved table. Her grandmother was enscounced in the big armchair tucked into one corner of the kitchen, out of the way but well-positioned to see everything that was happening in the big room, doing something complicated with lace-weight yarn. Delilah watches for a moment or two, curious and eager, always, to learn. But she knows that the potion in question needs to be brewed during the waning moon, so it needed to get done.

Still, it takes time to coax her grandmother into heaving herself out of the chair. Grandma, who moves with the speed of a rattlesnake strike when riled, frets and grumbles about her old bones and refuses to be budged until Delilah starts making noises about asking Great-Aunt Eulalie to help her instead. At that point, Grandma’s out of the chair like a shot. She stomps to the stove, still muttering under her breath, then stops beside it, one ham-hock-sized hand resting on her hip.

“You have the makings?”

“Yes, Gran,” Delilah says, and goes to get them. Bringing them back quickly, she laid them out, along with everything she’d need to combine them. This particular potion was particularly tricky in that it needed to be put together cold, and heated up after. Quickly grinding together the dry ingredients in her mortar and pestle, pouring them into the black bowl she’d laid out to hold it all, she held her breath as she poured in the liquid to distill it all and just as carefully stirred, her grandmother’s work-roughened fingers at her elbow.

Leaning back a little, she watched it carefully it a second or two. If it was gonna explode, she didn’t want to get a face-full. When it seemed to stay inert and safe, she carefully transfered it into the little pot, putting it on the stove to heat. There was a pot of dumplings on another burner, cheerfully bubbling away, but she ignored that. She needed to focus. The charm was kind of an ominous color, a deep dark red. She turned the heat up a little, needing it to reduce for it to be effective. But she was still worried that it would all somehow go sideways. Her grandmother nudged her gently, reminding her that sometimes, in moments like these, potions-work was almost indestinguishable from cooking and Delilah was proficient enough at that, stop fretting. For all that her words were harsh, her hands as they made minute adjustments, remained gentle. The potion remained stubborn and unchanging for a while, but she knew sometimes it just took patience.

As they both stood over the stove, waiting for the potion to start to cook down, occasionally giving it a gentle stir, they chatted idly. Other family members drifted in and out of the room, some pausing to look over their shoulder, her aunt coming by specifically to check on the dumplings and announcing they’d soon be done. It was nice, Delilah thought, to be surrounded by so much family, and most of the time they even got along. There was so much magical talent in this family, nurtured and cultivated and passed back and forth like recipes and hand-me-down clothes. She was almost never at a loss for any length of time, since there was always someone willing to help. And being able to get a hug any time she wanted was pretty great, she wasn’t gonna lie.

The next time she stirred her charm, making sure nothing stuck to the bottom, it suddenly and visibly reacted. A little puff of smoke rose like a miniature mushroom cloud, and it began to get darker and thicker, coagulating a little like blood. Delilah grinned and continued to stir it gently, though she switched her movements to stir it widdershins. It had reduced considerably in a short amount of time. Even the foam looked different, changing then melting into the body of the liquid.

When Grandmother touched her shoulder, she pulled it quickly off the heat and poured it into the little vial she’d had standing by. It was a little bit of a struggle to stopper it and seal it up without burning her fingers, but it had to be done while it was hot or the charm would lose all effectiveness. Still, when it was all finished, she fished an oven mit out of the drawer and held it up to the light. It was perfect. Now she had everything she needed for her ritual. She leaned down, pressing a heartfelt kiss to her grandmother’s cheek.

“Thank you, Gran.”


Prompt:

Prompt Title: The Things We Don’t Say (by Tsaiah)
Guest Judge: Tsaiah
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
Everyone has had those private, innermost thoughts, those things they won’t say out loud,  never to be shared with others — or held back for a long, long time.

What is it your characters don’t say? Do they have unexpressed feelings about another character? Do they hide their real ideas about the world they live in, or about themselves, from others around them? Perhaps they wear a mask that disguises their true self. Or maybe, they just have that one major thought, or feeling, or idea, that they feel like they can’t share. Will they ever express these thoughts, or never?

Choose a character or characters, and show us those private things they don’t say… and why.

Submissions:

1. Loon
2. MasterShortpants
3. KaceyCat
4. thewordeater
5. OregonCoast
6. Vysal
7. ____
8. Chicken
9. Espurr
10. raus
11. Crow
12. KeeperGreymuzzles
13. WolfSpirit
14. polygone
15. Condor
16. Dove
17. Hyasynthetic
18. Cien
19. Losty
20. Dakota Riley
21. Hawk
22. Tracer
23. jenny151618

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Jacq‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

“There are things in the dark,” Mrgl said, waving her spiderlegs at the sprouts gathered around her. Their eyes were wide with attention and a little bit of fear. “More things than you can even imagine. Some are dangerous and some are fearsome, but some are small and timid and as afraid of the light as you are of the night. But if you listen carefully,” She put a paw to her lips, making the universal “shh” gesture, “If you learn to listen, to hear their mind and heart and allow your own to be heard in turn, you might find a friend!”

Shifting from foot to foot to foot to foot to foot to foot, Mrgl danced lightly around the sprouts, leading them through the village and singing her teaching songs of darkness and night. The songs named the mushrooms and creatures and smells of the darkness, full of clever mnemonics for wayfinding and reminders of which things were dangerous and which were good to eat or talk to.

A huge, grand old kelph covered in foliage and glittering forest magic slithered from the village pond to watch the procession. With a laugh of greeting, Mrgl skittered up their branches, using her webbing to swing from ivy to antler to branch and back again, before sliding down the old kelph’s tail, followed by the very bravest sprouts while the others watched in awe. “Thank you, esteemed forest spirit,” Mrgl began solemnly, her eyes glittering with laughter even if her words rung with serious ceremony, “I am indebted to your eternal wisdom, and am ever grateful for your invitation to orate. What songs of wisdom I may deliver unto our youth are paltry, but they are given with a happy heart.”

“Indeed.” The kelph nodded to Mrgl, voice equally formal and eyes equally glad, “We are thankful for your unique teachings and gift of eloquence, for no formal education can be complete without knowledge of the night. Go well, princess of spiders.”

Mrgl bowed once more to the ancient kelph, then continued her dance through the village. Her tail held high, the red hourglass on its underside glittering in the torchlight like a beacon, she hopped and skipped from house to house. She was greeted everywhere with warm smiles and laughter. Many parents and other ineki and drasilis came out and clapped in time to her songs, singing along at the choruses. She greeted and bowed to each one in turn, delivering the children home from their lessons, accepting small gifts and packages of food from the grateful parents.

Something in the caves high above shifted with a distant rumble, diverting an underground stream and causing the slow water to find a new path of least resistance. That path happened to culminate in a tiny crack on the ceiling of a cavern. The water beaded, growing slowly until it became a big fat droplet, its own weight finally causing it to drop onto a small furry head with a splat.

Mrgl startled awake, blinking blearily into the darkness. She was still trying to find the thing that woke her when another fat drop landed wetly on her muzzle. She shook her head and danced away, pawing at her face. “Oh bother this damp,” she said, “it’s ruined a perfectly good dream!”

At least, that’s what she said in her mind. What came out was a grumbling moan that sounded a bit like “grrrrshhh drrrmp” and a low hiss.

She ran her too-big tongue over her too-big fangs. She opened her mouth to yawn, the pedipalps nesting inside her cheeks uncurling to wave and taste the air. She sighed, and the cavern echoed emptily with even that small noise. A damp draft blew through, ruffling her fur and making her shiver all over.

With the ghost of the dream’s thrall in her still, she took a few small steps towards a corridor, almost invisible at the edge of the cavern. Unused since she came through it years ago, it was the tunnel that led back to the village where she was born. She could almost see herself returning, almost see the warm smiles and hear the laughter… But the sound of one wet drop hitting the floor behind her brought reality flooding back. Torches, flickering and bright, hurting all six of her eyes and casting too many shadows for her to make any sense of the world of light. The voices, talking as if she couldn’t understand them, as if she were deaf instead of mute, saying horrible things to her parents in the house kept dark just for her, nasty threats and lies that they wouldn’t dare whisper in the light of day. And, worst of all, the looks of pity, of resignation, like she couldn’t help but be the monster they assumed she was.

Mrgl turned away from the dusty hole, and climbed a short way up the cavern’s wall to a small hammock made of webbing, one end attached messily to the wall and the other by a single glittering strand to the ceiling high above. She curled up, tail covering her nose, closed four of her six eyes, and willed herself not to cry. Quietly, she hummed her teaching songs, the unspoken words dancing in her head like sprouts while she waited for sleep to come again.
Prompt:

Prompt Title: One is the Loneliest Number
Guest Judge: Myla
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
It can be said that each person is the main character in their own story, but just because someone is the main character doesn’t mean that they’re the only character. This month, we’d like to get to know some of the peripheral figures in your character’s life. Friends, family, mentors, bitter rivals; tell us about some of the other people in your character’s world and the influence they’ve had on your character.

Submissions:

1. Chicken
2. Wolfspirit
3. Silent
4. Hyasynthetic
5. Malis
6. Espurr
7. Songbird
8. Miremel
9. Condor
10. polygone
11. Gabriel
12. Dakota Riley
13. Cien
14. raus
15. Vysal
16. Losty

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Chicken‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

When Xix was young, very very young, her parents thought something to be wrong with her. A bad egg, they whispered. Contaminated by foreign blood, though no one could say how foreign blood might enter the mix. Xix was nearly entirely white though, a glittering creature of glowing crystal, and what stone she bore was rare and thin, so that her inner light leaked through still. It was unnatural.

But there were not so many young that they could reject one, no matter how odd, so Xix remained. Still she was strange, and though her parents loved her, her peers found her frightful or unpleasant or at least unattractive as a prospect for friendship. Anth was the one to decide this was very silly, approaching Xix without any fear.

Anth was nearly the opposite of Xix, nearly entirely stone, with so little crystal to her that what bits did glow stood out like lanterns in the dark. She was considered remarkably beautiful, an example of perfection. Anth had never let that go to her head though, mostly because she spent so much time admiring crystals that she hardly ever noticed anything living.

So perhaps her admiration of Xix was not so surprising, for Xix looked the part of the most magnificent crystal, and Anth lusted for her in every way. She followed Xix wherever she could, and Xix was beautiful, and found the admiration of the beautiful Anth to be quite pleasing.

When they began a relationship, they could neither of them say they expected it to go far. Each looked at the other with shallow gazes full of lust, and it could not be said they loved each other. Time passed though, and they became fond, and fondness grew to encompass the pair, and they were very good friends, and steadily it became apparent that this was very much a relationship of the lasting variety.

They took a long time still to seek an egg, and were quite pleased with the daughter that came about. They named her Iriala, and called her their static baby, for she nipped with more than teeth. One such nip rattled Xix down to her gut, to the tips of her toes and tail. Anth had to go out of her way to experience Iriala’s shock though, for stone was not a very good conductor, and even when Iriala managed to get some sensitive part of her, it was barely more than a tickle.

Iriala seemed to grow so fast as to be alarming, and it didn’t seem like much time had passed at all before they were seeking out another egg. Their second daughter was Dercrex, although they always called her Crex or Crexa. She was nothing any of the family had expected, for the three of them had always been cold and distant. And Crexa was not.

She was not fond of strangers, no. She was a shy baby though, whereas Iriala had been unfond of strangers out of dislike she was prone to showing with nips and hissing. Crexa hid from strangers, burrowing into one of her mothers, or beneath her sister’s belly. Crexa looked odd, soft and delicate, almost like Xix, though not so glowing. Only her eyes glowed, and they were wide and glittering and magnificent. Crexa looked from the day she hatched as if she could see past the thickest stone, as if she might gaze into an unsuspecting soul.

And with her huge, soul-seeking eyes, Crexa followed Iriala wherever she went, as faithfully as any babe, and such was her sweetness that when she tired, for a babe’s stamina was very little next to a nearly grown drasillis, Iriala would pick her up to ride at the base of her next, balanced between her shoulderblades. She would sit at the edge of the ice and wait for Iriala to come up from her dive. And the whole time Iriala was underwater, Crexa would try to hold her breath.

When came the day Crexa could keep up with Iriala, she could as well hold her breath far longer than Iriala could, holding it through when Iriala would come up for a gasp of air, and holding still through every subsequent gasp, until she was still comfortably holding her breath even when Iriala had her fill and came out to dry off and roll in the dust. So when her body did not tire so easily, she began to hound Iriala, whom she saw more clearly than their mothers. It was rightly a lesson from her parents, her first dive, but Crexa had eyes only for her big sister, and there was little Xix or Anth could say in protest, for the sisters were closer to each other than they had ever been with their parents, for all that parents and young alike were greatly beloved by each other.

So Iriala took Crexa to the ice, and told her how to tilt her head to hit the ice with her horns and her forepaws, how to crush it with her powerful body. But Crexa was very small, which Iriala never seemed to notice, but Crexa became very aware of when she struck the ice and came away dizzy. It was not her age, for she was the appropriate age to begin diving. It was that Crexa was small, was different as Xix had been, though Xix had not had trouble breaking the ice, and indeed it was said she could dive deeper than any other.

Had it been her mothers who took her diving, they would have known this meant that Crexa was not yet intended to dive, and Crexa would have to wait until she was big enough to break the ice. But Iriala was young yet, and so she had her sister stand aside, and with her magnificent horns and powerful forepaws, she struck the ice, breaking through it, making a great big hole so Crexa would not gaff trouble finding it.

So Crexa dove, and dove, deeper and deeper, and she found that her lungs never strained, even if she accidentally let out some breath when she opened her mouth, and the pressure of the deep water felt only like a pleasant coolness and press. She swam through the water like its inhabitants, sliding through the faint current eagerly and easily.

She took a very long time to come back to the hope Iriala had made, so long that Iriala had taken to anxiously pacing, unable even to see her sister, who did not even glow and was so very small anyway. When Crexa emerged, she found herself gripped by the nape and hauled out.

“That was wonderful!” Crexa exclaimed, sitting on her sister’s ribs, and Iriala laughed. So whenever Crexa wished to dive, Iriala would break the ice, and take up Crexa’s role of sitting patiently by the ice, though Iriala never held her breath.

Crexa did grow, though her growth was slow, and she was still quite small.

Iriala always thought Crexa would be magnificent when see was grown. Even if she was small still, Iriala promised to always break the ice for her, so Crexa need never worry about being small and could instead enjoy it.

So Crexa enjoyed that she could still slide beneath her sister’s belly, and hide within her parents’ curving bodies, and slip into the small crevices to explore caves no one else could, for babies were not allowed to try.

And then darkness descended. Iriala never knew what happened, but Crexa knew, for she was there. She was there when the crystals dimmed, when the shade grew claws, and she knew finally what it was to have her lungs burn. She found out as with her last breath she tried to scream for her big sister, and could only let out a whisper.

Xix fell onto the ice, and though she was said to be wrong, she was never said to be small, and the ice shattered under her massive weight. Xix sunk like a stone, powerless even in the one place she had always been most comfortable. Anth was terribly cold, and she could not even uncurl from her sleeping pose, even frantically afraid for her mate and young. The darkness wrapped around her like a cloak, and the bits that once shone so brilliantly dulled to nothingness, and she was nothing but stone.

Crexa lay down by her stone mother, weeping silently, regretting that in her love for her sister, she had so rarely shown her love for her mothers. And the light faded from her eyes, and the cave was dark as it had never been before. Iriala swore to her sister that she would find vengeance, somehow, though she didn’t know if anyone had done this or if it had been something. There was no one to hear her anyway.Chicken

Prompt:
Current Prompt

Prompt Title: Colors of the Heart (by Hawkins)
Guest Judge: Hawkins
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
Some people associate colors with flavors, smells, people, words, etc.  Some people associate colors with memories or feelings.  Sometimes we are simply drawn to a color for reasons we aren’t sure of!  Describe a color that is very significant to your character’s life and why and/or how.

Submissions:

1. Nyfeaena
2. raus
3. Condor
4. Malis
5. Rowyn
6. Chicken
7. Hyasynthetic
8. SocialBookWorm
9. Vysal
10. DelightfulDragon
11. Espurr
12. Hawk

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to DelightfulDragon‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

Orange, the colour of his first love. Picture this: a book held in tiny hands, eyes wide as the boy’s breath catches; awe and love twisting inside him so much he feels as though he’ll never have enough air. A sudden force that consumes him, painting his heart in hues of orange and beautiful reds, a single word seeming to brand itself into his mind, never to release him.

Phoenix.

It is the love of one who would never know that pushes him. A reverent sigh upon his lips as he studies and learns, never stopping in his determination to bridge the gap between himself and of one he would never meet. Comparing his own dull feathers to bright orange - finding them lacking, the orange not bright enough, the red too pink; too many blues and greens. But that’s alright, it’s okay. How is anyone supposed to compare to a Phoenix, after all?

Red, the colour of his victory. Holding proof of his one-sided love, the last feather of a near-mythical figure; a young boy’s fixation. A title of import passed on to the now young man almost as desired as the ornate lantern, the cage of a bright orange and red feather.

He loves to watch how it dances in flames, to see how it burns itself up only to rise from the ashes anew. A piece that is still alive, for all that the one it belonged to might not be.

He’d done it. That’s all that goes through his mind those days, a rare smile never leaving his face. The most he’d smiled in so long. His parents are both proud and worried in equal measures, his peers jealous yet strangely encouraging. He feels like nothing can stop him, a fire in his eyes and hope in his heart. A secret dream of meeting birds made of fire, a new hope lighting in his chest. Perhaps, perhaps, if he could have this near impossible dream come true…

So could that one?

Blue is his disappointment. One should never meet their idols, it seems. Dissatisfaction is the only thing felt upon what should have been a momentous occasion. The pedestal is torn down and the figure brought to the forefront, not as an idol without flaws, but as someone with many.

A wise and noble image forever shattered, replaced by one full of bitterness and arrogance. However deserved the first is, the second rankles. It cracks a carefully made facade until all that Orel wants is to go back to a time where he could love his hero freely, without said hero ruining it all.

But, slowly, so slowly, Blue changes to become the colour of an uneasy alliance. A heart pulled one way, attached to a long-held love, and another way: one of hard truth; no one should ever be put to such a height as to seem indestructible. No one should ever be held to such a high esteem that they are thought of as faultless.

And no one should really be at fault for not meeting such ridiculous expectations, especially of one that has never even met them.

His blue soon lightens. It becomes the colour of beginnings, the reluctant alliance slowly softening. People do tend to grow closer when travelling together, it seems. Even more so when a goal is shared between them, helped when one doesn’t hold the other to an impossible standard anymore. When one takes the time to discover the truth instead of clinging to safer, easier, yet baseless lies.

Friendship comes easily, against all odds, something he had thought impossible before. Orel has the knack for disproving what was thought of as an impossibility. He slowly comes to the realisation that, perhaps, he labels things as impossible far too quickly.

It is a thought that makes him smile, small and hopeful. One that opens more possibilities previously thought closed. He keeps his oranges and reds and blues held close to him—the colours of his failures and his hopes—to never forget.DelightfulDragon

Prompt:

Prompt Title: Stylin’, Wildin’
Guest Judge: priz
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
This month we want to read about your character’s style - from the clothing they may wear to the music they listen to or current state of their bedroom. How does the way they present themselves, to others and in private, reflect their character? Are they naturally neat and inclined to tidiness or disorganized and impulsive? How important is the perception of others to them? Write or draw a piece that somehow captures a part of your character’s personal style!

Submissions:

1. Hyasynthetic
2. ErsatzLace
3. DelightfulDragon
4. SocialBookWorm
5. Arintol
6. azurrys
7. Vysal
8. Cien
9. raus
10. Losty

Congratulations to Vysal, Losty, Ersatz, and SocialBookWorm! Each of you will be receiving a random Cave Capsule shortly, and all participants will receive their 1 gem participation prize. :D

The Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to Azurrys‘s submission! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.


Sen and Amatsuki


After damn near two hours without a customer so much as peeping in, Jonas was this close to giving in to the need for a smoke break. Sure, his boss hated it—or as she put it, “I don’t hire you so you can kill my customers with second-hand smoke!”

But the street was empty and Mellie wasn’t around to yell his ear off anyway. One cigarette wouldn’t hurt.

Jonas was literal seconds away from lighting up when the sudden chime made him jump, and he dropped his lighter with a clatter and a bitten-off curse. Damn it, he could have sworn the street had been empty! Why were there suddenly customers? Shoving the cigarettes back into his pocket, Jonas straightened up and pasted on his working smile.

Just as well that he did, since it managed to keep his jaw from dropping.

After two summers working here, Jonas was pretty much used to the same crowd. A small town was a small town was a small town. New residents were big news and tourists never stopped here. So sue him for being surprised when a white-haired dude wearing what looked like whacked out samurai era shit walked in. Because what the fuck?

(Sure, the guy next to said white-haired dude was dressed in a jeans and T-shirt, but that wasn’t the point.)

As if sensing his shock through his stage smile, the man turned to face him, distracting Jonas briefly when he noticed that the man’s hair practically reached his ass. It was that long. “Hello,” the man greeted, voice smooth and with an accent that Jonas couldn’t quite place. It sounded like textbook nothing. “Do you have Doritos?”

Wait, what? Some dude in ancient Japanese clothes walked in and he was asking for Doritos?

Jonas was frozen for a moment until a muffled cough broke the silence, and he was suddenly reminded of the presence of Regular McNormal next to weirdo over there. “Um. Second shelf from the left,” he finally answered, pointing towards the shelf.

The man nodded to him, leaning down to murmur something in his companion’s ear as they drifted over to the snack shelf. Jonas’s eyes were drawn to the man’s shoes when they clacked on the tiled floor—no, not shoes, sandals. Even his footwear was weird. Or should Jonas call it authentic? Sandals with socks. Jonas was sure there was some Japanese name for it, but for the life of god he couldn’t remember this shit.

Jonas tried his best not to stare. He really did. But it wasn’t every day that he got customers dressed in… whatever the hell this guy was wearing. Why was he wearing it, anyway?

Oh, wait! Maybe there was some kind of… event? A convention or something? Yeah, that had to be it. Jonas hadn’t heard of anything going on (which he supposed just meant the event wasn’t local, and local events were pipe dreams anyway) but that had to be the reason.

“Excuse me.”

Blinking, Jonas started slightly when he looked up and inadvertently met the man’s eyes. Oh, shit, when had they walked over? Had he zoned out that badly? “Uh, sorry.” Shaking his head, Jonas started scanning the Doritos, focusing much more on the task than he usually would. “So, uh. Nice costume. Are you cosplaying or something?”

There was a beat of silence, and Jonas wondered for a split second if he had to explain how he knew the word ‘cosplaying’ (ex-girlfriend, cross-dressing, memories he didn’t really want to bring up) before the man broke the silence. “Cosplaying?” The reply sounded horrified. Jonas blinked, wondering what he’d said wrong, just before the man leaned over the counter—so close that Jonas went cross-eyed for a moment before he reoriented himself. “This isn’t just a costume. It’s my job. It’s my life! It’s very important to me. You can’t just call it a costume!”

“W-what?” Jonas stammered. The man looked dead serious. What the fuck? The hell was wrong with him? Thankfully, the man drew back a little at that, making a sweeping gesture across his clothes before crossing his arms.

“My clothes are important,” the man repeated. “This outfit is completely authentic. It’s been blessed by five different Shinto priests, all heads of their temples. I flew around Japan just so I could visit all of them in the correct order, and I had to do it in a day. It’s very important that the blessings are granted on the fifteenth day of the month, you know.”

….What?

Jonas’s hand was frozen mid-scan. He couldn’t help it. What exactly was the guy even going on about? “It’s the full moon,” the man continued, nodding sagely. “The balance of the elements is very sensitive to the lunar cycle. Full moons are excellent nights for blessings.” While the man spoke, Jonas couldn’t help but the notice that behind him, his friend’s smile was getting steadily more strained. “Anyway, the point is that you can’t find clothes like mine anywhere else. They’re one of a kind. Wholly unique. An excellent safeguard against nastier spells. You should try to get your clothes blessed sometime.”

O… kay. Jonas stared down at the six packs of Doritos on the counter, then to his ratty T-shirt and cargo pants, and then back up at the man. The dude nattering on about full moons and Shinto blessings was buying six packs of Doritos and telling him to bless his I-didn’t-do-laundry clothes. “Uh… I’m sorry,” he tried. “It’s just, you know. We don’t really see clothes like yours around these parts, and then there’s your hair too, and—”

“And now my hair as well?” the man cut in, sounding offended. “Is there no end to your rudeness? I’m very old. My hair is white. It’s quite easy to understand, isn’t it? And certainly you don’t have to point it out like that.”

Jonas opened his mouth again at that, but no words came out. He snapped it shut, opened it again, then took a deep breath and said, “I’m sorry, sir. That’ll be seventeen-twenty, please.”

The man let out an almighty huff that could probably be heard all the way in China, but to Jonas’s relief he forked over the money without complaint. He’d been half-expecting the guy to start ranting about the evils of the money system and offer him a chicken or something. Jonas was starting to suspect that his head wasn’t screwed on quite right. “Your change, sir. Thank you for shopping with Mellie’s, have a nice day.”

“It’s the new moon tonight,” the man began ominously, but before he could say anything else his companion cut him off.

“Thank you, have a nice day too,” he said hastily, snatching up the bags. “Sen, come on, let’s go.”

The man—Sen?—gave Jonas a last, grave nod before turning around to follow his companion. Jonas was just about to let out a sigh of relief when Sen spun around, making him jerk back in shock. “Don’t underestimate the power of the blessings! And if you would like to have your clothes blessed, remember that you must start from Kyoto, even though some recommend going from north to south. But the potency—”

Sen!” the sane one hissed, hooking Sen’s arm. This time, Sen was forcibly dragged out of the shop and Jonas couldn’t really say that he felt particularly sorry.

The door swung shut behind them with another merry chime, leaving Jonas to stare as they started down the street, six packs of Doritos between them. “God, what a weirdo,” he said aloud. Leaning down, he finally picked up his poor, abandoned lighter, wiping it off on his shirt.

He glanced out at the street, wondering if he could catch a last glimpse of the couple, but they’d totally disappeared. Huh. They walked fast.

Shaking his head, Jonas flicked his lighter open, digging in his pocket for his cigarettes. He’d deal with Mellie when or if she caught him. Because after that encounter, now he really needed a smoke.


“Sen, why do you always have to mess with the shop clerks?”

“The looks on their faces whenever I walk in are too priceless. And he practically invited me to with that line of his about cosplaying! You can’t say he wasn’t asking for it.”

“No, he really wasn’t. Sen, we’ve gone over this. You shouldn’t do it.”

“Why not?”

“Well… I don’t know…”

“There. I knew you wouldn’t have a reason. Amatsuki, give me one good reason why I shouldn’t mess with the shop clerks and I’ll stop. I swear it.”

“How about it’s a waste of your time?”

“It most certainly is not. His face when I told him to bless his clothes? I live for moments like that, dear. Have a chip?”

“…I give up. Give me that bag and open one of your nacho cheese. The taco is mine.”

“I knew you would see it my way.”

Prompt:

Prompt Title: Your Will (by Celestine)
Guest Judge: Celestine
Prompt Type: Mixed Media
There comes a time in every person’s life when they are forced to consider the question, “What do I want to leave behind, when I’m gone?” Maybe it’s their dreams for the next generation, maybe it’s a history that future scholars will study. What does your character want to leave as their legacy?

Submissions:

1. Chicken
2. FlyingSquirrely
3. Malis
4. Vysal
5. Tsuzemi
6. SocialBookWorm
7. dessieh
8. Hyasynthetic
9. Lala
10. raus
11. Arintol

Spotlight:

This month’s spotlight is awarded to FlyingSquirrely! The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

When you are a being of immense power and measure your lifespan in cosmic decades, rather than solar decades, you have the time to do a great many mortal things.

Faye has done a lot.

She was a microbe, once. It was incredibly boring, but at least it was over with quickly. A blip in the life of an ineki, not even a measurable quantity in the life of a fae. Being what would later be called dinosaurs was much more fun. She got to stomp around, and when she grinned little things fled from her fanged maw.

She played dinosaur many, many times.

And then that world exploded. (But not Faye. Made of magic and steeped in void, she watched the sky burn and dissipated to elsewhere, thinking that was that.)

She didn’t return until the age of sentients, on a whim, a slither of nostalgia sliding through a rare crack in the nothingness of otherwhere. And these ones, they asked questions, and suddenly living life after life wasn’t so simple anymore. There were names, and family trees keeping careful track of bloodlines, and paperwork.

Ugh. Paperwork.

Too many oddities and you attracted the wrong kind of attention, from cops to criminals, as Faye discovered (as Maurelle, as Oren, as Shayla). So for every birth and death, she went through the motions.

(What’s another child lost to the system? And after the age of stone, another carved free of stasis without record? The cave is kind, but here, too, there is a darkness lurking – another aside from Faye, of course.)

And here she is again. Faye Verity is beginning to age. Soon she’ll be unable to perform up to the fitness standards required to keep her qualification as a detective. Her joints are beginning to stiffen and she’s lost much of the flexibility that made her a force to be reckoned with in hand-to-hand. Her mind is as sharp as ever, but she has to squint to keep the letters on her requisition forms from going out of focus. (Glasses are for other people.)

It sucks.

This has been her favorite life to date. There was so much to it! She was a detective by day, the law in fur and fangs. She was a hero by night, the Dark Fae who ate away at the shadows until dawn poked through. And, oh, how she loved it, no breaks, always on, all the time. In all its vastness, the void could never compare.

And now Faye will have to die, because she can’t imagine going out in any way but with a fight. She’s not going to wait for old age (as Tania did – and that had been boring, once was enough). It’s fighting the good fight or nothing. Oh, she’s not going down easy. Faye wants to live as much as anyone, to eke out every scrap of existence that she can from this life, but she refuses to quit. Faye Verity will leave her mark as she lives: an anonymous police officer, meting out justice.

But she has something new, this time. The Dark Fae will not die.

She has created something, this life. She created things in past lives, too. Books of magic with an otherwhere flair. Little trinkets, with nothing more than a trickle of power, for luck. A myth of twin violet eyes in the dark, scaring monsters out from under children’s beds. But the Dark Fae, that is something that can last. The Dark Fae has no worldly bonds like Faye. She does not need to age, she does not need to pause and resume her existence every half a century.

She will not die until heat death, until the universe is ripping itself apart at the seams and there’s too much space between her sparks to hold herself separate from the imperturbable ocean of energy at the end of time.

The Dark Fae can last where the myths faded into obscurity; the twin violet eyes reborn, a warning that the dark is full of dangerous things, but not necessarily bad ones. She will continue to protect, where Faye cannot. She can be more than mortal, where Faye cannot. And the life after Faye Verity (Nyx, perhaps) will slip into the role as though she has never been anyone else.

So Faye Verity, in her house lit by candlelight, scribbles the last details into her will (…my collection of books to Sheen, my property to Riverstone Park…). She dips her paw into a trough of ink and gathers every last scrap of magic she can touch in her mortal form. With an exhale, she slams her paw onto the paper.

Something cold whispers under her paw, so she lifts it away with care, staring at the ink with a critical eye. Aha. Faye warms her paw over a candle and snickers to herself: she hopes no one examines her print too closely, she thinks she can see the emptiness of the void between the ridges of her pawprint, and the void is none-too-kind to the sanity of mortals.

Well, no one has ever accused her of being subtle.

Posted 01/06/16, edited 06/01/17
Ooh, interesting =D I will be sure to write more now that this is here!
Posted 01/07/16

When specifically will the entries need to be in to be counted- exactly on the last day of the month? Or is there a concrete deadline that doesn’t change?

Edit: And do we post them here, or will there be a special forum like other events that need player threads/posts?

Posted 01/09/16, edited 01/09/16

Roan
Whoops, yes! By 23:59 ST on the last day of the month. I’ll be sure to add that into the post today.

And yes, you can post your submissions (or a link to them) in this thread. If we end up needing a submission thread or anything down the line, we’ll be sure to let everyone know.

Posted 01/09/16
Here is my January entry~
Posted 01/12/16
My January entry is the last post here!
Posted 01/12/16

Kol had never, if he was honest with himself, expected to live this long. His kind rarely did, with the hunters becoming far more aggressive, stronger and intelligent. Well, as intelligent as a human could be, Kol snickered. Even his Hunter girl, now older and wiser, though still wonderfully cruel and wicked. Not that she would ever admit to it; no one wanted to be a demon, perish the thought. As if mortals didn’t have their own lovely darkness. But, ah, he’d gotten off point, hadn’t he?

Shaking his huge head, Kol yawned, exposing large, sharp teeth. Spending time as a canine; well, he’d missed it. And it gave him time to think, like ponder that strange question Hunter had asked him. A stupid, silly little tradition, humans wanting to ‘better themselves’ at the start of a year. A new beginning, and Kol sneered. What did he have to change?  He was perfect, superior. Stronger, better and smarter. Powerful. But the question wouldn’t leave him alone, Hunter badgering him with it (and when did she get so bold, and she ignored his insults occasionally. No longer getting as upset so quickly. Pity. Time had changed her so, Kol didn’t know whether he liked it or not just yet) until he, in a fit of annoyance, changed so she no longer could. Rather hard to get answers out of a dog, after all.

But now he was bored, and the only thing to entertain him a silly human question. What would he like to do at the start of a year, change himself? Well, no. Kol rather liked himself, thank you. Perhaps get rid of the incessant pain; it would be nice to have a day of not being held back. But, ah, he would never let on to that little bit of information. He would never hear the end of it. Now what else? Happiness, health. Bah, human concerns. He was in peak physical condition, in his prime. Perfect. Happiness, Kol grinned. Well, Hunter was kind enough to give him so many reasons to smile and laugh, such an entertaining human and so very easy to rile if you knew just what to say. Even with her, Kol snorted, attempts at being mature and a role-model to those brats she teaches.

Kol hummed, closing his eyes. He would sleep soon enough, after he answered this annoying query of hers. What would he wish for, what would he like to happen, on a new year? Well, he would like to go on more hunts, Kol supposed. Hunter was growing lax in that regard, teaching her priority. Or, maybe, another mystery. Yes, that was it, Kol thought. He just wanted something more, something less boring. He wanted to see and know; he wanted this boredom to leave. He wanted—Kol got up—another of her pathetic adventures where she got into so many hilarious and oh-so tragic dangers and messes. And, even if he had to drag Hunter off kicking and screaming, he’d have one.

Posted 01/12/16

I actually wrote a thing this time! :D

Alice Telire scribbled a list on her tent wall. Her Dad had told her that if she wanted to grow this year, she’d need to write a list of goals for herself to get done. At the end of the year, Newton Yearty would check her list, and depending on whether she’d completed it, he would allow her to grow or not.
    Of course when Alice had asked her Mom what kinds of things Mr. Yearty liked sprouts to do, her mom had acted confused and said no such ineki existed. She said that Alice’s dad was just playing a prank on her. But Alice knew. She knew that her mother was just pretending he didn’t exist so she wouldn’t grow. After all, Alice was always being told she was growing up too fast.
    Alice took a step back and eyed her handy work. She was rather good at spelling for her age since she came out of her flower mute. When she wanted to communicate she had to write or draw what she wanted to convey. Still, a few mistakes had been made. The list read:

Alice’s Goals For Newton Yearty:
  1. Be able to bring a drawing to life for mor than 5 ticks.
  2. Beet me dad in a race.
  3. Finaly make me first friend.
Alice Telire

She nodded to herself. A good list. Things she felt sure could accomplish in a year. She tucked her wand behind her ear and ran out to go find her dad and tell him about her list. He would be so proud of her, and then he’d tell Mr. Yearty every time she accomplished something off the list.
    Alice found the ineki she was looking for running straight up a section of the cave wall. She watched him as his magically induced momentum finally ran out a few hundred feet* up the wall. He cocked his wings out and glided back to the ground gracefully. She pranced around in a circle as he approached.
    “Hey Princess, what’s up?” He asked with a smile.
    Alice grabbed his forepaw and pulled towards her tent. He followed her with a chuckle. Once they were there, she pulled back the flap to reveal the list and beamed up at her dad. 
    “Oh, so you finished it then! Nice job, Princess.”
    Alice wagged her tail.
    “It looks like you’ve got your work cut out for you. Why don’t you start by practicing your drawing animation? Try getting a frog to hop three times, that should be a good five seconds. And after you’ve done that, I’ll give you a race.” He winked and sat down in the grass of the little hill they were camped on to watch her.
  She nodded vigorously, shaking the fresh flower her mother had tucked in her hair that morning. The little sprout grabbed her wand and drew a frog, trying to get it to hop. The little drawing only got halfway through the arch before it’s lines fell to the grass in a lifeless heap. Her brow furrowed in concentration as she tried again.
    For the next week, every spare moment Alice got, she would practice trying to make a frog hop three times. She got it to complete a hop two days after her first attempt. Her parents had rewarded her by promising to buy her a piece of candy in the next town they visited.
  Finally, two weeks after she has started, when Alice was practicing in front of a crowd at one of her parent’s street shows, she got the frog to hop three times. Her body shook with excitement and she started to draw exclamation points in the air to emphasize her achievement. She decided the crowd was equally awed with her skill, because they gave her parents more nuggets than usual. A few of them ever gave the nuggets to her instead of her parents.
    After the show, her mom straightened the flower in her hair and gave her a kiss on the forehead. “You did beautifully!”
    Alice’s dad picked her up. “Thank you for coming everyone! I hope you enjoyed the show. Unfortunately it’s getting late, and our little doodle princess needs her beauty sleep.”
    Alice wanted to stay longer, but she knew her parents wouldn’t have it. She waved goodbye to the crowd over her dad’s shoulder as he carried her out of the town to their campsite. By the time they got back, she was sleeping soundly in her father’s arms.
    The next morning, Alice bolted out of bed bright and early. She reasoned that if she could make a frog drawing hop three times, she’d be able to beat her dad in a race no problem. She dashed over to her parents tent and jumped on her dad’s sleeping figure. However, the figure turned out to be an illusion, because he evaporated as she touched him. She landed in on the tent floor, nose scrunched in confusion and frustration. Her mom’s illusion magic got her every time. She didn’t have long to mope about being fooling before she grabbed from behind and hoisted into the air by her mother.
    “No you don’t.” Her mom said, catching lightly her. “No racing until you’re presentable.”
    Alice squirmed, fidgeted, and pouted as her hair was combed and the customary flower was placed in her hair. She didn’t have time for this. She needed to go race her dad and get one step closer to showing Mr. Yearty she deserved to grow.
    When the daily pampering was over, Alice scurried over to her father who was waiting for her patiently next to a starting line.
    “Ready?” he asked.
    Alice nodded calmly, trying to play it cool. If she was gonna grow up, she needed to act like an adult. She stepped over to the starting line, trying to balance on her two paws. She dropped onto all fours next to her dad and braced herself to start running.
    Her mother eyed them both. “Okay you two, it’s a race to the cave wall. First one to get there wins. Ready? Go!”
    The two racers leapt forward. Alice panted heavily after a minute or so of running. Somehow, her dad was keeping up with her. She put on another burst of speed as the wall drew nearer. At the last moment, when she was beginning to lose hope of winning, her father started to lose momentum and dropped back behind her a bit. She reached the wall moments before he did. She jumped in circles. She had won.
    “Wow, you’re really fast, Princess!”
    She panted happily and laid down on the grass to wait for her mother was was making her way towards them.
    “So, who won?” Alice’s mom asked once she had caught up.
    “The Princess.”
    Her parents exchanged something of a knowing glance. Like they had some secret just between the two of them. She paid it no mind though, they were always doing that after she had just shown them up.
    Alice grinned and rolled onto her back, stretching her legs towards the cave ceiling. That was two goals on her grow up list completed. Now she just needed to make a friend. For some reason, she had a feeling that task was going to be harder than the first two, but she was sure she could succeed.
(*A few hundred feet is 91.4 meters for metric users.)

(Quick Background for those who don’t know: Alice is a sprout who uses doodle magic. Her mom uses illusion magic, and her dad uses speed magic. They’re a traveling act together.)

Posted 01/13/16, edited 01/13/16
Posted my entry here! :)
Posted 01/13/16
I posted my entry here ^_^
Posted 01/19/16
My entry is here!
Posted 01/22/16

My entry is on Lily’s page. Combined writing + art.

Lily’s dreams of returning to the world outside of the cave were dashed all too soon, leaving her lost, worried, and depressed. After all, caves are limited, aren’t they? Finite. There is always an end somewhere.

Others that she met all seemed to have the same slump, but they would always find something. They would start baking, teach children, or even go exploring, the last of which made her wonder; after all, why do something that will inevitably end? What would they do next, when they found that their passion could not last forever?

For many more months than her friends she stayed like this. Eventually her thoughts turned productive: Find a way out of the cave.

That didn’t work out as well as she’d hoped.

Fur limp and unkempt, Lily retreated into herself and away from society. She slunk further into the cave, seeking something—anything—to give her a purpose.

It may have been the cave itself. It may have been something in the cave, something mysterious and unknown. It may have been Lily’s own self.

Sitting in the dark and looking about in frustration, she flicked her tails—and on flickered a light.

More tail flicking—more light flickering.

If there was one thing down here without limits, it was magic, and she was ready to explore it.

I started drawing May 2015 and somehow I’ve kept with it. One of my goals for this year is to just keep on improving and not giving up no matter how hard it gets. I’m still at a point where just drawing whatever ends up with me learning new things and improving at a fair pace.

Posted 01/25/16, edited 01/30/16

Thanks for the submissions so far, guys! :DD
I would just like to remind everyone who is still considering entering this month that we’re (a little less than) a week out from January’s deadline!

Posted 01/25/16

It had been so long ago, though I will never forget that retched day for as long as I live. It was the end of my normal life. But…it was the beginning of..of my story. For that, is my purpose for living.

A young boy sits, curled up in the corner of a beautiful garden, tears streaming down his face. A woman, his mother, stands at the huge window, curtains pulled back. She is quite beautiful and unmarred by old age. A lone tear trickles down her face. She wipes it away with a corner of the crips white dress she is wearing. She calls a servant over. The servant, mute in tounge, bows and waits for his commands.

“Bring me my son.” The woman orders, composing herself. The servant nods, and goes out into the garden, to retrieve the boy. The servant taps the boy on the shoulder. The boy sobs harder.

“G-g-go a-aw-away!!” The servant looks back at his mistress, who motions for him to pick up the boy. The servant complies, lifting the boy into his strong arms. Ebony muscles ripple across the servant’s arms and shoulders. He places the boy in front of his mother. “Thank you.” The woman dismisses the servant.

“Look at me, my son.” The boy’s mother lifts her son’s face with two polished fingers. The boy looks at his mother with distressed eyes the color of the ocean. A mix of blood and tears streams across his face. “...oh, Cosmos…” The boy’s mother’s eyes fill with tears. She lets them fall.

The boy-Cosmos’- face is marred by a trio of jagged wounds, which are streaming blood to no end. “H-he d-did this to m-me.” Cosmos sobs, white shirt stained a bright red. “F-father said I must learn, one way or another.”

“We must all obey your father, Cosmos.” The woman hugs her son’s face to her bosom. “He owns us all.” Cosmos pushes away from his mother, blood in his white-blonde hair. “I-I don’t want to b-be ruled by F-father anymore.” Cosmos’ eyes now hold a steely look, like broken seaglass.

“Hush, child!” Mother scolds Cosmos, fear present in her voice. “He might hear you!”

A menacing laugh fills the large room. “I already have.” A voice as old and rich as time itself comes from nowhere. “Do you really feel that way, boy?”

Cosmos stands shakily to his feet. “Y-yes, I do.” Cosmos wipes his face with his sleeve, staining it with even more blood. “I-I vow to kill you, demon or not!”

*Caution-slight gore!

Posted 01/25/16
*wobbles and debates before nervously dropping this here*
Posted 01/25/16
Finally finished my entry! Art + a small story; here!
Posted 01/29/16

ha.. ha….... I apologize in advance for the length of this. I got… carried away. A lot.

I also wrote a legend version of these characters’ backstory as well as the actual backstory, all during and for this event. I would recommend reading the legend version before the actual entry (the one titled The Legend of Blood and Bloom), but reading the full backstory probably isn’t necessary.

 

The distant clink of metal on stone prickled around the edge of Alannah’s consciousness. She was drifting through a fog, struggling to remember how she had gotten here. The clink paused and a voice filtered through, as if from a great distance away.

“They look ... scared. Am I doing this right?”
“Listen to the stone, it will tell you.”
“I am .. I think this one’s almost done.”
“I’ll get some food.”

The voices faded and the clinking resumed - and there was a warmth now too, starting at her center and growing outward. As it reached the tips of her tails the clinking abruptly stopped.

“Oh! It’s happening!” the first voice was back, but much louder now, much closer.

Alannah struggled to open her eyes as feeling returned to her limbs. She was in a crouched position, leaning forward as if looking at something … Lilura! The memories flooded back and panic swelled in her chest, but her mind raced with confusion. What had happened? The mage must have done something, the charm had failed in the end.

She struggled against what she perceived to be magical bonds, finally forcing her eyes open and taking a few wobbling steps. Everything was so blurry, and her legs felt so heavy. She stumbled and fell to her belly, panting and staring wide-eyed.

“Easy, easy …” one of the voices she’d heard came from her side and she looked, blinking rapidly while things shifted back into focus.

Before her was a slight ineki with large glasses perched on his nose. He was holding a hammer and a chisel, and Alannah recalled the clinking noise. She looked down and around her and saw bits of stone scattered across the floor. Her head spun. She met the ineki’s eyes again.

“It’s alright - here, eat, you must be hungry,” he said, setting down his tools and passing her a wooden bowl and spoon.

She sat up on her haunches and accepted the bowl, staring into it in disbelief. It was full near to the brim with soup, a thick hearty soup with big chunks of vegetables. It was more food than she’d seen in one place for a long time, and it smelled like a thousand distant memories of better times.

Her reverie was broken by a violent growl from her stomach and she started eating - the soup was so good and so warm, she almost missed the other ineki start talking. But what he had to say captured her attention.

He began to explain. He started gently, saying she’d been unconscious for a while, that things had changed - the Winter was over.

And then he explained the Freeze - the sorceress that turned them all to stone, the caves, the bone monster. He explained the carving. “You’re my first,” he said with a laugh as an older ineki entered the room. “Look, master! This is … uh…” he trailed off, realizing he hadn’t asked.

“Alannah.” she said. It was the first thing she’d said since awakening.

The elder nodded, smiling. “Well, welcome, Alannah. You were an odd find! sitting at the edge of some pit … “

Alannah’s stomach lurched. Lilura. “Did you find anyone else there?” she asked, voice shaking, “in the pit?

The ineki shook their heads, looking concerned. “No, but we didn’t look,” the younger said, “was there someone there?”

Alannah nodded, putting the now-empty bowl down and getting to her feet. “I’m sorry - thank you for uh, carving me. But I have to go. Where’s the pit from here?”

It would take a day, maybe more, to reach that end of the caves and they were concerned she wasn’t strong enough yet - but she insisted. The directions were complicated and they drew her a map and tucked it in a bag full of supplies. And then she was off, their smiling faces fading into the darkness behind her.

Alannah’s head spun. So many years had passed, everyone was gone. Her village was gone, she would never return. Even exile hadn’t hurt like this, she could still see the grey smudge of the settlement in the distance in her mind’s eye - dreaming of returning some day a hero. And where were the villagers now? Had they been carved yet, or were they waiting somewhere in the dark and deep places of the caves?

She put those thoughts away for now. She had a long way to go.

—-

In the end it took her three days to find the pit again, but the journey was not hard. She came across a few little settlements, full of very kind denizens who were only to happy to refill her supplies and waved off her promises to repay them when she was settled. “Things are different now, dearie,” an old woman told her with a smile. “We have more than enough, take what you need and go find your friend.”

“She’s not really … my friend,” Alannah stammered and the ineki’s face crinkled into a grin.
“Ahh, I see,” she said, touching a paw to the side of her nose and winking.

Alannah was confused by the reaction, but she didn’t realize until she was back on the trail what she must have assumed. Alannah’s cheeks flushed with embarrassment - to think! Someone thought Lilura was, what, her girlfirend? Her mate? No. They were bitter enemies and nothing would change that. She just … needed to find her.

The obvious question of why still hung unanswered, but she ignored it and pressed on.

The pit was far different than she’d left it. Mushrooms and moss grew thick in patches along the cavern walls and the branches she’d brought in so long ago were crumbling in decay.

She crept to the edge and peered over. Wood and stone debris carpeted the pit floor and mushrooms grew thickly. The sheer dirt walls she had dug so carefully were crumbled now and climbing into the pit was simple.

She began nosing through the mess, searching for a stone like the one the carvers had described - smooth, and warm. It didn’t take long - it was still relatively where she’d last seen Lilura, but it had fallen over and was coated in moss and dirt. She pawed the moss off it carefully and righted it - feeling an intense wash of emotions.

Relief was there, certainly. And trepidation, fear, nervousness. Delight. She let each sensation wash over her, tasting each feeling, chewing it over. Now that she had found her, what was there to be done?

She could bury the stone, and let Lilura remain frozen forever. That was her first instinct, and the most enticing option. The blood mage was dangerous, and she didn’t want to let her loose on the cave … but it wasn’t right. Things were different now. Maybe she could change.

Alannah sighed and dropped the pack from her shoulder, bending down to root through it. The apprentice stonecarver had given her a hammer and chisel and she picked these up now, eyeing them warily. The stone will speak to you, he’d said. And it did. As she put the chisel to the stone, she heard it sing.

It took a further two days to carve the stone, and Alannah was grateful all over again to the generous Mycenians she’d met already, who had filled her bag with supplies. The food was simple, and much of it was mushrooms, but it was food, and it kept her going all through the hard work of carving.

It was slow going at first, and Alannah was terrified she would mess something up. But the glowing warmth of the stone guided her hands, and soon she could see Lilura’s form taking shape. Vaguely at first, then the details emerged, and then Alannah suddenly found that what was beneath her paws was no longer stone at all.

She gasped and stepped back, watching a ripple pass over the figure, bringing color and life back to the ineki.

Lilura took a sharp breath and coughed, took a step and collapsed, panting, blinking rapidly, looking utterly terrified. Alannah wondered if that was how she looked in the stonecarvers’ workshop, and she remembered their gentle words an steadying paws.

“Shh, it’s okay,” she whispered and reached forward, placing her paw on her shoulder tentatively. Lilura recoiled from the touch, hissing at the sound of Alannah’s voice, staring with pure aggression as her sight returned to her.

“You!” she shrilled, stepping backward with an awkward hop, “what did you do to me?!” Her head swung back and forth as she tried to get her bearings, looking at all the debris and the moss and fungus - how different his world must look, Alannah thought, than where she’d been what felt like only moments ago.

“It’s complicated,” Alannah said, reaching behind her for her bag and rummaging for a moment. She found what she was looking for - a strip of dried meat and a handful of mushrooms - and offered these to Lilura. “I swear I’ll explain everything, but you need to calm down.”

Lilura snarled and hopped back again, and Alannah realized she was hurt. Her left foot was twisted at an odd angle, and Alannah felt a pang of guilt. It must have been broken when she fell into the pit. “I’m sorry,” she said, “Lilura, I’m so sorry for everything.”

She set the food down and took a few steps back, “I won’t come any closer - you can eat the food. There’s tons now. Just please listen to me.”

Lilura still looked like she’d rather tear Alannah’s throat out than spend another moment looking at her, but the food had her attention. She limped forward carefully and sniffed it suspiciously. “Fine,” she said, “tell your story.”

And so Alannah did, as well as she could remember. She told the story of the sorceress, of the freeze, and the carving. She told her about the stonecutters she’d met, and the settlements she’d been to. The story continued long after Lilura had finished eating, but the blood mage listened raptly.

“I know it’s hard to believe …” Alannah said, coming to the end of her story, but Lilura snorted.
“Well it sure explains some things,” she said, looking around the changed cavern. “But not why you came back for me.”

Alannah’s heart lurched. There it was. The question that had been hanging over her since leaving the stonecutters. Why?

“I-I don’t know,” she stammered, “it’s not important, look, things are different now and if you’re going to behave then come with me - we’ll get that foot looked at.”

“And what if I don’t behave?” Lilura asked derisively. “Are you going to drop me down another hole? Why should I come with someone who tried to kill me?”

“I didn’t try to kill you!” Alannah protested. “You were the one killing people, I just … tried to stop you is all. But they’re all gone now so it doesn’t matter, come on.”

“Ooooh, is that what this is?” Lilural smirked - getting to her feet and limping forward, “you’re just lonely?”

“That’s ridiculous,” Alannah said but Lilura answered only with a laugh and Alannah had no choice but to follow - watching the enchanted charm swinging from the mage’s tail.

They traveled slowly and had to take breaks often for Lilura’s foot, but at last they reached the closest settlement. The old woman Alannah had seen before bustled out to meet them and Alannah blushed deeply. “Oh, you found her!” the woman clapped, then tutted as she looked Lilura over.

“Is there a healer here?” Alannah asked and the woman nodded, turning to lead them into the settlement - which was alive with music and voices. Alannah and Lilura both looked about carefully as they walked and the old woman called over her shoulder, “It’s New Year’s Eve! You will stay for the celebrations, won’t you?”

—-

Hours later found Alannah and Lilura seated together at the edge of a courtyard, watching the villagers dance. Lilura’s foot was set and bound in thick bandages and their bellies were full of warm food and drink. They were leaning on each other, laughing like friends. It was so surreal.

The old woman came over late in the evening and sat with them a bit. “So, what are you two lassies’ New Year’s Resolutions?” she asked.

Alannah and Lilura looked at each other, confused. “Resolutions?” Alannah asked. The woman laughed.
“Sure, a resolution! What you want to do this year! It’s a tradition to make one on New Year’s Eve. Go on, it doesn’t have to be big. “

They sat in comfortable silence for a bit while the pair pondered the question. Lilura spoke first, startling Alannah. “I want … I want to be kind.”

The woman chuckled, and Lilura’s face flushed with embarrassment. “That’s a good resolution,” she said, “are you not usually very kind?”

Lilura shook her head, and it actually looked like she might cry. “I’ve … done some bad things. But this is a chance to start over, right? A new year, a new life.”

The woman nodded, her old eyes full of understanding. Alannah was speechless. Was she hearing right, or was the drink going to her head? Lilura could be lying of course, she’d done worse - but she sounded so sincere.

“And what about you, Alannah?” the woman asked, and Alannah frowned.

“I don’t know,” she thought a bit longer, and the feeling of carving the warm glowing stone came unbidden to her mind. It had felt so right. “I think, I want to help people. I want to find those that haven’t been carved yet. I want to help … make things right.” She met Lilura’s eyes at the end, and an unspoken understanding passed between them. The old woman nodded, satisfied. She stood then and moved away to rejoin the celebrations, leaving them to their thoughts.

And as the bells tolled midnight they leaned toward each other. Their eyes drifted closed and their lips met - softly, hesitantly at first, and then passionately. Stars exploded in Alannah’s belly and she smiled into the kiss. Maybe things were going to be okay after all.


My personal goals are just to Do More Creating. And goodness considering I wrote ... nearly 6,000 words altogether this month for this prompt I think I’m off to a good start!

Posted 01/30/16

Aaahh well that was a doozy. I had it in mind to do something simple and it just…. grew. I am so, so sorry. It was amazingly fun though.

I wrote a one-shot for Naos explaining her realization that got her to want to open up and just have contact with more people instead of staying secluded with only the Professor for company. It’s actually the first real writing I’ve done for Naos and it’s really gotten me thinking about her characterization. *u*

are to write more on all my characters, more often, because this was a wild ride as the words typed themselves for me and I am so in love with who my lady-under-the-stars has become. I want to write more. That’s it.
Posted 01/30/16

I had made a resolution to try to write more and do things like this (after planning to enter this like five times last year and not ending up doing so)...and at that I almost missed the deadline again anyhow. I’m doing good, oh dear.

But I did make it in time and that’s what counts, right?

Posted 01/31/16

Mixed media! OUO I drew and wrote something! Big step for me hahhnnn…

Anywhoodles, here it is in all its sappy splendor. Dedication for these two beach bunnies.

Posted 01/31/16
I’ve once again managed to procrastinate until just before the deadline, but I’ve finished my entry :D Clicky link!
Posted 01/31/16

So here’s the thing I drew

To actually practice art things. I’m impressed I managed to finish this so I figure I’m off to a decent start
Posted 01/31/16

I found enough time/energy to do one this month! Here it is!

I hope to improve on the depth of all of my characters this year. Especially in my bios :|

Posted 01/31/16

Almost late oops! I finished my entry for the month though, so huzzah! Shall hopefully finish next month’s in a more timely manner. xD

https://www.mycenacave.com/forums/musings/7504/make-me-feel-alive
~~~~~
As far as my personal resolution, it’s to not make any other resolution, same as every year. And so far, I’ve been accomplishing all my new year resolutions! So yay!

Posted 01/31/16, edited 01/31/16

I started on this probably a week ago, and finally got around to finishing. I forgot I hadn’t posted yet, so here it is about half an hour before the deadline. Go me!

As another year passes, so do the rejection letters that came with it. For Delilah, 2015 was filled with rejection letter after rejection letter for all of her writing submissions. Her goal was to slowly get her pieces out there and eventually make a living off her writing. However, in this respect 2015 turned out to be a complete disappointment.

Delilah was determined to change this for 2016; she did not want this to be a repeat of her terrible year. So she sat down and brainstormed how she could improve her writings. Sifting through her current pieces and her rejection letters, she noted down critiques others have given her, and critiques of her own.

By the end of the night, there was one glaring critique that repeated itself; Delilah had been unable to connect to her readers. Though her pieces were interesting, her inability to connect to the reader made it hard to get anything published. This inability stemmed from her lack of understanding of people; something she had never wanted, but now desperately needed.

The next day she had off work, Delilah set out into the city to improve her people skills, and her ability to make her characters realistic. First she started off at the library. Surely people there would have an insight into what readers like. After all, they are the people that Delilah aims her stories at. Unfortunately, she didn’t think the plan through fully. Libraries are not a good place for talking.

Still not defeated, she set out to the coffee shop she works at. She had often seen people sit down with a book and a coffee, and most seemed like they would be interesting to talk to. She grabbed a coffee, and sat down next to another lone person in the coffee shop. They had a book face down on the table and appeared to be staring out the window.

Delilah started off making small talk. She was nervous and she just hoped it didn’t show. As the conversation went on, they delved into deeper topics and she really got to know the person. Her name was Noelle, and she had plenty of interesting things to say about herself and how she viewed the world.

When Delilah returned home that night, she documented everything she could remember in her diary. She also vowed to continue this practice in her spare time. She could already feel herself developing characters in her head, so it was definitely helping. This is her new years resolution to herself, and this is how she plans to break her stream of rejection letters, and eventually become a published artist.

And my resolution is to not leave things until last minute with my writing and reading. I always leave things until last minute, as can be seen. As can also be seen is that I am not doing so well at not leaving things until last minute so far, woops. Hopefully I can finish earlier on the next prompt and go more in depth with my characters.

Posted 01/31/16, edited 01/31/16
January’s prompt is now closed!

Thank you to everyone who entered! We had an awesome time reading through all of your submissions. :D We really enjoyed learning more about your characters and their motivations!

Myla’s comments:
Vysal - Norh has set some important goals for himself, and I like how the entry hints at a deeper storyline with his mother giving him magic (this makes me want to know more about him)! 
DelightfulDragon - It was fun to read an entry about a character who would normally never entertain the idea of trying to better oneself, and seeing the conclusions Kol reached!
Arintol - Your entry made my heart melt — Alice is so cute, and I like how determined and single-minded she is.  The race where she “won” against her dad was a nice detail!
Robin - Beautifully written, and I can empathize with the pain Lunar feels with his bubbling thoughts.  I love reading about Mycenians dealing with “Before.”
Zukana - I enjoyed reading about a Mycenian with the desire to leave the Cave, and thought the medallion was a very clever detail.  I hope that Fell finds happiness outside of the Cave. :)
Loon - This was exciting to read, and I could feel the fire in Katya’s soul.  I wonder what happened to make her that way, to make her want to be untouchably strong — I’d love to know more!

Dove’s comments:
Vely - The search for a purpose and passion is something I think a lot of people can really empathize with - I know I’ve struggled with it myself! Lily’s very fortunate to have discovered something like magic to spark her curiosity and enthusiasm. I hope she finds what she’s looking for!
[@zodiac] - Poor Cosmos! It sounds like he’s had an unbelievably hard upbringing, and no child should be put in a position where they have to make a choice like that. :( Since it sounds like this was a reflection of a point in the past, I’m very curious to see how he’s developed since then. I hope his life has become maybe just a little easier!
Pigeon - Ahh - it’s Wolfdad! I really enjoyed reading the interactions between Alice and Roman, and it definitely made me really curious about the dynamics of their relationship and history. Quitting smoking is rough - good luck Alice!
Adrian - What an adorably comfortable picture! Raphael looks so relaxed; I’m jealous! :) Self care and appreciation are so important - I’m glad Raphael is taking some time to really enjoy and savor life. Great entry!
Raiona - Wow - I really loved your entry Raiona! The description of being carved in particular was really cool, you make me excited about canon stories! I’m a big fan of redemption arcs in stories, and I really hope that Alannah and Lilura use this opportunity at starting over for the best… especially now that they have each other.
raus - Raus this was fantastically written! You have a gift for characterization, and I felt very connected with Naos throughout her experience. You left me — pardon the pun — starstruck. I hope that Naos carries that newfound strength and continues to seek out the stars and new social connections and interaction. Wow!

Crow’s comments:
mosh - Gareth seems like an interesting character. :D I really enjoy watching characters pull themselves out of the pits of despair, and it’s really cute that he has such a deep trust for his brother! I’m not sure what his story is like, but I hope he manages to succeed in his quest of rediscovery!
Dracogryph - I get the sense that Nanashi and Magnolia have a very interesting history! I really enjoy their dynamic and their contrasting views on life in general, haha.
[@lady hawkwing] - First of all, great art, Hawk. :D I reallly dig the transparency effect. It also makes me super happy to see that Sol has found, and is willing to pursue happiness, even if it puts him in unfamiliar moral territory. ;; Cute.
Azurrys - I really dig your writing style; really enjoyed the sort of melancholy tone, too. Also, Landen and Orion seem like an interesting pair! I may have to do some profile snooping to learn more about them and their situation.
arcticfoxies - I feel you, Mira. :| I also have a brown thumb. Practice makes perfect! Also, she is a cutie. :D I love the purple tinges in her hair! Good luck practicing your art this year — I hope you’ll post some up to show us!
Condor - Aww, poor Tillie. ;; I hope that she manages to find happiness! Going from ‘evil’ to good can’t be easy, but I hope it at least gives her many adventures!
polygone - It must be lonely being a ghost. I’m glad that Tamsi has found some entertainment, haha. I’m interested to learn more about this cavern and this snake fellow that’s mentioned. :D
Jordii - Aww, Delilah. Getting out there and connecting with people is hard; I hope that all that work pays off for her! (And good luck to you, too, Jordii! I’m a terrible procrastinator as well; it’s a hard habit to break!)

The raffle:

We had 20 entries this month, which means that we will be drawing our standard number of four winners. :) Each winner will receive a random Cave Capsule.

1. Mosh
2. Vysal
3. DelightfulDragon
4. Arintol
5. Robin
6. Zukana13731
7. Loon
8. Vely
9. Assassin
10. pigeon
11. Adrian
12. Raiona
13. raus
14. Dracogryph
15. Lady Hawkwing
16. azurrys
17. arcticfoxies
18. Condor
19. polygone
20. Jordii


Please note that Dove is silly and forgot what month it was. :D This is January’s raffle.

Congratulations, Arintol, Adrian, Azurrys, and Jordii! A random Cave Capsule will be coming your way soon. :D In addition, everyone will soon be receiving their 1 gem participation prize.

The spotlight:

This month’s spotlight goes to Robin! We really enjoyed reading your entry! :) Please let us know which of the current month’s Out of the Shadows items you would like as your prize and we’ll get that out to you ASAP.

The full submission is quoted below, but you may also read it in its original post here.

He has been having thoughts lately. About Before. About who he used to be.

The dew has turned to frost and he can no longer sit underneath the tree in the garden. A bench would be nice, but he can’t build one and doesn’t want to bother his neighbors about it, so now he sticks to leaning against the wall while his birds are out exploring. One of them sits on a rotten branch and it falls to the ground. The crow lets out an indignant caw and takes flight again. Lunar looks at her, but doesn’t really pay attention to what she does.

The thing about thoughts, Lunar decides, is that once they’ve been thought, they don’t really leave again. It had crossed his mind, briefly, that even though he couldn’t remember it now, he probably had someone close to him before the Cave. There had been a single thought afterwards, as he had looked at the birds stretching their wings and flying towards the lake, that he was lonely.

It is nearly a week ago now, but still he feels the realization in his lungs, not as intense as at first, but rather like a dull, constant ache. The kind that becomes so much a part of him that he will eventually forget it is there, only to have it blow up again the next time the thought crosses his mind. Perhaps when he is buying food at the market and sees a couple with their tails intertwined. Perhaps when he walks to the lake and sees a group of youngsters play. There is only so much his crows can do.

There is a yell on the road in front of his house, and Lunar turns to look as a group of Ineki walks past him, headed to the town center, no doubt. It is a friendly little neighborhood he has ended up in. They seem like good people. They probably wouldn’t mind him all that much, should he decide to come out of his shell a little.

Once a thought has been thought, it doesn’t really leave again. Lunar thinks about what it would be like to have a friend and the idea excites him. Perhaps he should try. Finding his past self, that’s not so important. He does not want to know any more than he already does, it would just lead to restless nights and a constant anxiety for what might have happened to his loved ones, he has seen it in so many others already and decided long ago he was lucky to be without it. But he has been living in his own little world for so long already, has gotten accustomed to his own little routine. It is getting boring, finally.

The crow from before has come back, she flies back towards the tree and takes a sudden turn. She crashes into the windowsill and nearly loses her balance before regaining it just in time. She stares. Lunar looks back. “What do you think?” he asks. She cocks her head and stares some more. He smiles.

Perhaps. Perhaps it is time to break out of his shell. Meet people. Make connections. Friendships.

The crow caws sharply and Lunar stretches out a glove-clothed arm to slide a finger over her head. She blinks. Tomorrow. He’ll start tomorrow. He’ll visit the bakery on his way to the markets, and then he’ll take it from there; making his way into the community in the Cave, one small step at a time.Robin

And now, for February!

February prompt: Love Letters
Guest Judge: Prose
Prompt type: Mixed media

February is the time of year for sweethearts and bitter loners; full of pastel hearts with little phrases on them and valentines gifts of all sorts. There is no more cliche time to tell someone how you feel about them — love is in the air, after all!

Does your character have a significant other? Perhaps a crush? Or maybe even a bitter rival? Using any media of your choice, create a valentine (or… anti-valentine) from your character to another.

Posted 02/01/16, edited 02/02/16
I won a thing? :o YAY! Thank you so much for hosting this! ^~^
Posted 02/01/16

Thank you all for going to such lengths to read and comment on everyone’s entries, it’s really very encouraging! And Dove wow you made me so emotional seeing your comment on my piece like… wow. I’m so happy omg. Just.. thank you so much. T.T

so many people entered, it’s so cool seeing this many entries!!

Posted 02/01/16

Ohhh my god :O I did not expect that! Thank you so much!

Do I echo someone about the prize or do I just post it here?

Posted 02/02/16
Reply