
Dedicated bibliophile African-American 21 She/Her Bisexual Chillin' in Wonderland I'll talk to y'all, just don't be weird pls
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Sana Just Gave Elle Woods During The Part Of The Conversation Regarding Dale's True Nature And I Loved
Sana just gave Elle Woods during the part of the conversation regarding Dale's true nature and I loved itđ

Like, "what else is new?" đđđ
Beautiful work!!!! @moonshine-nightlight
Nothing's Wrong with Dale - Part Thirty
Itâs been a week, but youâre fairly certain your fiancĂ© accidentally got himself replaced by an eldritch being from the Depths. Deciding  that heâs certainly not worse than your original fiancĂ©, you endeavor to keep the engagement and his new non-human state to yourself.
However, this might prove harder than you originally thought.
Fantasy, arranged marriage, malemonsterxfemalereader, M/F
AO3: Nothingâs Wrong with Dale Chapter 30
[Part One][Part Two] [Part Three] [Part Four] [Part Five] [Part Six] [Part Seven] [Part Seven.5][Part Eight] [Part Nine] [Part Ten]Â [Part Eleven] [Part Twelve]Â [Part Thirteen] [Part Fourteen] [Part Fifteen] [Part Sixteen] [Part Seventeen] [Part Eighteen] [Part Nineteen] [Part Twenty] [Part Twenty-One] [Part Twenty-Two][Part Twenty-Three] [Part Twenty-Four][Part Twenty-Five] [Part Twenty-Six] [Part Twenty-Seven] [Part Twenty-Eight] [Part Twenty-Nine] Part Thirty
You blink at the woman for a few long seconds, trying to comprehend her words. âExcuse me? Did you just say Lord Dale has called off the wedding? Our wedding?â
âIâŠâ The maid is at a loss for words in the face of your incredulity. She swallows. âYes, my lady.â
Thereâs a rushing sound in your ears, like wind roaring. You stay perfectly still, your face blank as you try to think. That is not possible. Itâs not. How could he do something like that? Why would he? Youâd dealt with so many surprises, jumped over every obstacle, and handled every challenge. Why instead did you feel as though you had survived a trip at sea only to find your ship crashing into the pier while within sight of home? You feel numb.
Perhaps you are making some sort of expression because the woman grows paler. âIâm sure it is simply pre-wedding jitters, my lady,â she hurries to reassure you. âLord Archibald will have him seeing sense before you can blink.â
âBest to continue getting you ready,â Ms Dearden says as she lays out your corded underskirts. You appreciate her practiced dismissal even if you fear thereâs more at play here than sheâs aware of. âYoung men these days always get cold feet. Heâll be over it soon enough.â
âYes, of course.â Your own voice seems distant to your ears, but your words are enough for Callalilyâs maid to resume work on your hair. At some point she finishes and youâre helped into your underskirts. Your mind stays blank as you try to conceive of reasons for him to do such a thing beyond tiring of you and this whole facade. Distant imaginings of what your life would be like without the wedding crumble to fog.Â
Youâve been so committed and focused on today that the news feels nonsensical more than alarming. How could the wedding not be happening? Did you just speak with your sisters? Has every moment of the last few weeks been in service of it? Are you not now suddenly dressed in your lovely yellow wedding gown? The person in the hand mirror looks as though they are marrying today.
The door flings open and Steward Bilmont hurries in despite the reproach from the women in the room at both his presence and the dramatics of his entrance.Â
You only need to look at his face to understand that the situation with Dale has not improved since the first maid broke it to you. He opens his mouth to speak, but something about your countenance, or perhaps your lack of reaction, must inform him that you know something of the situation.
âI donât know whatâs gotten into him, my lady,â Bilmont says, wringing his hands. âHeâs not been this unreasonable in weeks. Lord Archibald has refused to put a stop to anything, but Lord Dale refuses to see reason. Heâs barred the door to his chambers after Lord Archibald wouldnât accept his words.â
âI see.â With careful fingers you put down the small hand mirror and begin to stand, adjusting your skirts as you do so.
Itâs Miss Adir who asks, her voice filled with trepidation, âMy lady?âÂ
âExcuse me,â you say, an undeniable calm spreading through your veins, as you cross the room towards the door.Â
âWhere are you going?â Steward Bilmont asks as you brush by him.
You realize your decision as you reply, âTo speak with my betrothed. Please continue preparations without me.â
The maid who brought the news is the one who speaks up, as your hand closes around the door knob. âMy lady, I donât thinkââ
âContinue without me,â you cut her off, eyes snapping, because finally some emotion has made itself known to you and it is anger. Youâve worked so hard and been through so much. Dale thinks he can just put an end to it all mere hours before youâre to be wed? No.
âMy ladyâŠâ Bilmont tries, his hand settling gently on your arm. Heâs almost wincing, the look in his eyes resigned. As though he thought everything had been going too well and this was the inevitable shoe that dropped.Â
You shake his hand off. âIf Lord Dale wishes to call off our wedding,â some of that anger finally bleeds into your voice and you see the surprise in Bilmontâs eyes, âhe shall tell me so to my face. Get out of my way.â
He obligingly steps back, hands hanging back at his sides. You donât bother to observe the others' reactions, opening the door quickly, and letting it shut heavily behind you.
You walk briskly down the hall and towards the Northridge family bedrooms. No one else, servant or noble alike, crosses your path as you head that way. Not until youâre closer. You hear shouting and decide to peek around the corner, wanting to get the scope of the situation youâre walking into.Â
ââutter foolishness!â Grandfather is shouting at Daleâs closed door with two guards flanking him. He bangs his fist on the door for good measure. âDo you wish for me to find your Grandmother? Iâve kindly not informed her of your idiocy, but I shall have to if you persist!â
Thereâs no reply from the other side of the door, not even a sound. Grandfather rattles the door knob to no avail, but doesnât try anything further with the solid wood door.
He groans in frustration and turns to the guards. âI want to know the instant he leaves this room and if he does not within the hour, I shall have to inform Lady Deidre as promised.â
âYes, my lord,â the guards chorus looked properly cowed by the threat, even if it wasn't aimed at them.
Grandfather turns dramatically enough you see more of the original Dale in him than you thought possible and storms off. The guards take up posts on either side of the door, not baring it, but still present enough that you stay where you are. Youâve no desire to speak to them or to shout at Dale with them nearby.
You frown, unsure why but something doesnât sit right with you the longer you look down the silent corridor. It seemsâŠ.empty, or perhaps still, in a manner that makes you feel as if you are not where you should be. Not that your presence is unwanted, but as if you are lost.Â
You study the scene more closely and find your eyes drifting towards the bright sunlight streaming through the windows and the faint light coming from under Daleâs bedroom door. After a second, you realize what is wrong with the light and shadowâboth are completely still. Before, the maid had said both of them were shouting and youâve never heard this Dale raise his voice except in a physical fight. If he were truly upset, or at least strongly emotional, there should be some evidence in the shadows, some unnatural movement.
You chance another glance down the corridor, but it looks utterly ordinary. As your gaze sweeps from further down where Grandfather disappears around a corner and then back closer to yourself they snag on the stairway down towards the studies and other meeting rooms. Thereâs no movement, but the shadows are deep and dark. There are no windows there, that stairway is more utilitarian than for show like the grand staircases in other places throughout the house, so thatâs plenty of reason for the darkness, butâŠ
You move as quietly and fluidly as you can towards that staircase, hoping not to attract the guards notice. You donât want to talk to anyone except Dale. You donât know what Grandfather would try to say to you given he is clearly trying to keep this news contained. He stopped attempting to prove anything with you since the attack, but youâre still not completely sure of what he thinks of you. Keeping your skirts just high enough off the floor and grateful your house slippers are soft and quiet, you make it to the stairs without the guards' notice.
Your footsteps are nearly silent as you hastily make your way down the flight of stairs. Youâve never given much thought to the amount of light that fills it, but surely it wasnât this dark in previous mornings. Or is that simply your imagination? Is it just your hope that it means you can find Dale and talk some sense into him?
You peek out at the bottom, looking for anyone in this area of the house who might question one of the couple getting married wandering about alone. No one is present. An eerie silence permeates the corridor and like the staircase, it seems darker than it should be. You step out, eyes on the window that lets light in, but seems outnumbered by shadows.
Daleâs personal study is off a smaller side corridor from this hallway, in its own small tower. You think the upper floor might connect to his bedroom. Then there is the underground room, the real reason you believe the original Dale had requested his current quarters and this study.
Thereâs an oppressive aura that thickens the air as soon as you turn the corner and it builds the closer you get to his studyâs door. You imagine that's partially responsible for the lack of others in this area, which in some ways youâre grateful for. You also manage to draw on its presence as fuel for your anger at such obvious overflow from his nature. The shadows under the door ripple, as if it were night and a lighted candle was guttering in the breeze, unremarkable except for the fact that it's closer to noon.
Cautiously, you reach out for the door knob. Grasping it firmly in your hand, you find that it's not locked as you had feared. The knob turns without effort and the door swings inside to reveal Daleâs study. The flickering shadows solidify as you step inside, eyes searching for Dale.Â
You find him quickly enough, a trunk half packed of books next to him. Somehow you donât think they are being gathered for your wedding trip. Heâs by the window, back to you, but you can see tension in every line of his body. All the breath desserts you at the sight of him. All the words you could say dry up in your mouth. The door shuts with an audible click behind you.
âWOULDââ Dale whirls, his frustrated voice cuts off the second his eyes land on you. Abruptly all the anger in his face leaves him. Instead he practically deflates, merely gaping at you. To your surprise, he spins away from you. âWhat are you doing here?â he asks, voice pitched higher than usual. âI thought we were not to see each other untilââ He doesnât finish his sentence, his shoulders slumping.
You take another few steps into the room and clear your throat. âYes, well, Iâm fairly certain that the betrotheds laying eyes on one the morning of the wedding is of no consequence if there isnât to be a wedding, hm?â Youâre grateful that youâve rediscovered some of your anger and your frustration to draw on for the strength to weather this conversation.
âIâŠâ Dale canât seem to think of an adequate response even as he refuses to turn around.Â
Your heart constricts in your chest at this confirmation. âSo itâs true?â You hadnât realized how much you were hoping despite all the evidence to the contrary that once you found Dale heâd explain how it was all one big misunderstanding. âYouâve called off our wedding.â
He leans his head against the wall and says nothing.
âDammit, Dale!â The words jump out of you, louder than youâve ever spoken to Dale. âLook at me,â you say, your voice breaking. âIf youâre going to do this, youâre going to look at me as you do so.â
Slowly, like a man condemned, he turns. Dale swallows, looking profoundly guilty. He murmurs your name, but you refuse to let his soft voice sway you and merely stare straight back at him. âWhy? Why are you doing this?â
âMy reasons are complex, but unchangeable.â His words are rote and his voice wooden. You imagine he said something like this to Grandfather. âI apologize.â
âI donât understand,â you say as plainly as you can, tired of talking around topics and pretending to be sure when you arenât. âComplex? How complex can they be that you wonât even enumerate them for me now. Please explain, justify, anything.â Dale just stands there and that anger surges through your blood. You take another step forward, your voice as stern as you can make it, âYou owe it to me. Tell me why you are calling off our future.â
âIâŠâ Dale starts before his blue eyes meet yours squarely for the first time since you arrived and he appears to shrink in on himself. He sighs a deep sigh, looking weary. âI could say any number of reasons, but youâre correct. Theyâre just excuses.â He pulls himself back up and braces himself. âIn truth, I simply cannot bear to deceive you any longer.â
âDeceive me? About what? What can you not have told me that would cause our wedding to be canceled?â Panicked, wild scenarios begin to fly through your mind. âDid you marry someone else on your travels and theyâve arrived today? Have you been caught smuggling? Are you a wanted man? Did something happen this morning?â
Dale looks taken aback. He blinks at you. âWha-? No, noânone of that.â
You feel some exasperation mixing with your frustration as he continues to talk around whatever heâs worried about. Youâve done this dance every day for weeks now and you are so, so tired of it. âThen what? I thought,â you swallow, hating how small your voice has gotten. You clear your throat and try again. âI thought you wanted thisâwanted our marriage.â
âI do!â The words burst out of him, surprising you. How can he say so when heâs the one who is ruining it. He continues more quietly, as if the volume was what shocked you, âI do, but you donât knowâŠâ He trails off again, looking away.
âThen tell me,â you plead, taking another step closer. Only another step or two and you could touch him. You could try in vain to keep him from leaving you.Â
âI,â he starts, looking at you and away again. âA few weeks ago, there was a⊠I mean to say that I,â he begins again, obviously having difficulty getting the words out. At least you can see heâs truly making the attempt this time. âWell, not me, but heâŠâ Is this something the original Dale had done that was coming back to ruin everything? That was what you hoped for, in a strange way, because at least it would mean that this Dale still might want you. That whatever prompted this was out of his control. That maybe you could fix whatever it was. âI care about you,â he finally says, his eyes bright, bright blue as they meet yours squarely once more and your breath catches at the genuine sentiment in his voice, âmore than I ever thought I would, but Iâm not who you think I am.â He takes another deep breath and says bluntly, âDale of Northridge died weeks ago and then I possessed his body.â
Everything seems to screech to a halt as he stares at you, his eyes pleading with you to understand. Aside from the relief at finally hearing him say it out loud, you donât. Understand, that is. âYesâŠâ you say slowly, nodding. âAndâŠ?â Youâre still waiting for him to complete the thought. To tell you what heâs been building to. Prompting him seemed to help before. âDid you eat someone a few weeks ago and have just now been discovered? Did something you forgot come back to cause problems now?â
âWhat?â Now Dale looks nearly as confused as you feel. It makes you want to scream in frustration because heâs the one doing thisâhe has to be the one that knows what is going on. âNo, I donât think you understand.â He talks more slowly, like youâre not hearing his words right. âIâm not human, Iâm a demon.â He once again appears to brace himself for your reaction, but you still donât get it.
Maybe you arenât hearing him right, but thatâs never happened before. Is this some new demonic power or collateral influence? âYes, I know,â you reply just as deliberately. You enunciate as you ask, âBut what did you do that means we can not be wed?â
âYou must not be comprehending my words.â He seems to be aware of the issue, getting frustrated himself. He runs his fingers through his long dark hair before he takes on a consoling tone, âI know it is a great shock to find out your fiance is now a demonââ
âWhat?â You stare at him because is that what he thinks you are getting caught on? You put your hands on your hips and canât say anything except, âOf course, I know youâre a demon.â
âWhat?â He leans back, eyes wide. âNo.â Dale shakes his head. âHow could you know that?â
âDid you think youâve been doing an exemplary job of hiding it?â The response bursts out of you before you can help it. Because no, this cannot be the conversation youâre having. It canât be. âHow about we begin with how the human Dale was obviously interested in demonology and black market dealing. How excited he was the night before this,â you gesture to Daleâs entire body, âhappened. How sick you were after and your memory issues. The fact that you occasionally have more eyes than is proper and your influence on shadows and the claws. Youâve had a tail at times, for starsâ sake!â
âOh.â Daleâs voice is small and his eyes big as he stares down at you, clearly at a loss for words.
Youâve seemingly found a well of words with which to rebuke him. âDo you know how many times Iâve had to conceal your nature?â You take a step forward, unable to contain your ire and incredulity. He takes one back. âIt is not as easy as you must believe to distract people from wriggling shadows and additional eyes and all the strange things you say. Did you really believe I didnât know? That you were hiding it that well?â
âWell, I donât know.â Dale sounds more flustered than youâve ever heard him. âHumans are so oblivious most of the time!â
âNot that oblivious!â
Dale throws his hands up. âWell, no oneâs instigated a purge, have they? And Grandfather and Grandmother donât know, do they?â
Your heart rate is slowly returning to normal and you grudgingly admit, âNo. Although Grandfather did think Iâd cursed you for a couple weeks.â
âHe thought you cursed me?âÂ
âYes!â you reply, exasperated that he didnât even know. âAfter the hunt, where you did light knows what with the boar, he became convinced that I had cursed you or ensnared you with my âpotionsâ. Perhaps while you were still recovering from your supposed illness. As a supposed practitioner of dark ritual or maybe even a summoner, he kept trying to exorcise me, which I had to make sure didnât accidentally affect you.â When Dale just looks at you, obviously hearing this or putting the pieces together for the first time you canât help, but feel as if you might be the one who has lost their mind. âYou must remember when he practically threw a glass of holy water on us?â
Daleâs brow furrows. ââŠI did think that was a bit odd.â
You snort. âYes, I would wager so.â Slowly, you realize you're laughing. You put a hand to your mouth but all it does is muffle the sound. Dale looks newly worried but you canât stop. âI canât believe you didnât know that I knew.â Collapsing into a chair, you cover your face in your hands as you try to regain your composure.Â
How is this happening? How had you managed to get so far along without realizing he didnât know that you knew? Who does that say more about him or you?
After a moment or two, you sense him near you and he asks, âAre you alright?â He sounds so concerned, like heâs still worried the knowledge of what he is, even if it isnât new to you, might be capable of breaking your mind or whatever he feared would happen.
âYes, yes,â you finally sit back up, blinking in the light as you attempt to reassure him. âI will be. I simply need a moment.â Dale hesitates from where heâs leaning over you before turning to fetch a cup of water. Haltingly, he holds out to you. âThank you,â you say as you wipe away the tears that had gathered in the corners of your eyes while laughing.
You sip it carefully as you pull the tattered remains of your composure around yourself once more. Dale watches you take the first couple of sips before he begins to pace in obvious agitation. Heâs clearly waiting for you to finish the glass before saying whatever is so clearly on his mind. Youâre content to take your time and make him wait after everything heâs put you through, seemingly without even realizing what you were doing.
After a minute, you set the glass down deliberately and Dale comes to a stop in front of you. âI donâtâŠâ he starts to say before changing his mind. âIf you know, then why are you doing this?â
âDoing what?â you ask. Heâs the one constantly doing incomprehensible things.
âMarrying me!â he says, rather emphatically, as though it should be obvious. He runs his hands through his hair. âGoing through with this wedding! I donât understand.â He sounds desperate to understand.
You feel of heat gather high on your cheeks, not having expected to have a light shown on your own actions so directly. âWhat do you mean? Weâre betrothed. Getting married is the expected course of action.â
He gives you a flat look that says youâre not fooling him. âTry once more. I admit there were certain times where I did think youâŠâ He looks at you, a distant look in his eyes as he remembers whatever particular instance. âWhere I did think that you knew. Half a dozen times, I was sure you knew,â he continues, eyes intent once more, âbut you didnât do anything about it! You never revealed me or tried to exorcise me or even demand any sort of recompense for keeping it secret. You merely continued on as we had. You were still there, at my side.â He sighs and he looks so tired again. âAnd so I thought I must be wrong, that you couldnât know.â
You're not sure what to say in the face of his conviction that you knowing what he is and you continuing to associate with him were so unlikely heâd discounted it out of hand. He made it sound like tolerating or using him was the most heâd expected. âIâŠâ
âAnd youâre afraid of demons!â The words burst out of him. âSo why wouldâ?â
âIâm not afraid of you,â you reply because thatâs certainly true. If the manner in which the shadows behind Dale are writhing in distress are any indication, the reassurance canât hurt. Youâre worried about how his nature makes life more complicated and what other people might do, but youâre long past the point of fearing heâd physically injure you on purpose.
âI heard you and Grandfather talking about Two,â Dale replies, as if that proves something. âHow you feared them because of what they were. That night, when I remembered what Iâd heard, I changed my mind again about what you knew.â
You stare at him before saying slowly, âDale, I was afraid of Two because they were trying to kidnap and murder us. Their being a demon made them more dangerous, so yes, that made me fear them more than the others. You were who knows where fighting them on your own and I was worried about you.â If you thought Dale looked confused before, he looks downright confounded now. You keep talking, relishing in the opportunity to finally speak honestly about the attack, âHowever, you being a demon makes you stronger, which reassured me. I couldnât say anything else because of Grandfatherâs attitude, but I did not grow up in Northridge. I may not have met a demon before, but I didnât live anywhere with the rigorous, studied suspicion and fear that Northridge cultivates.â
âThe rest of the world is not Northridge,â Dale acknowledges having composed himself, âbut it is not charitable in its view either. And it is not wrong in that opinion. Iâve been on the Surface before. No one has ever treated me in the manner you have after learning what I am. It was impossible to reconcile the person I got to know with someone who would want what humans understand demons to be.â
Itâs not as though you canât follow where heâs coming from. You havenât told anyone else about what he is for a reason beyond just what Grandfather and Grandmother. Youâd never even seriously considered telling any of your siblings because you know they wouldnât understand. You want to ask further about the personal experience heâs alluding to but that isnât what matters at this moment. âIâŠâ You take a breath and finally say the obvious truth that youâve never been able to say directly, even if you alluded to the sentiment right after the attack. âI do want to marry you.â Dale looks thunder-stuck. âFar more than I ever wanted to marry Dale before you took his place.â
âYou do?â Youâve never seen Dale look so completely bewildered. âWhy?â
âBecause he was a selfish, mean, entitled prick.â The plain, honest words slip out without thought and Daleâs eyes widen. âBecause youâre not. I like you.â You swallow and continue, âI think we get along well. I would have tolerated marrying him. You make me look forward to marriage.âÂ
It's a weight lifted to finally say those words, but they inevitably bring up your own confusion, your own lack of understanding of this Daleâs motivations and you canât pass up the opportunity to ask. âBut this is not just about why I have stuck to this facade. Why have you?â You still have no notion of what a demon might want. Youâd only barely convinced yourself that Dale wanted this partnership since he was going along with it. He isnât now. So perhaps you donât know anything at all. âYou could have stolen all you could from Dale and then disappeared to live your own life about a week after being here. You donât have to be, to be,â you search for the words to define whatâs heâs been doing, especially knowing heâs not been working toward the same end goal as you, âtaking part in all these events, and playing dutiful grandson with Grandfather, Grandmother, or all the others.â You take a deep breath and add, with only a small shake to your voice, âOr being with me. Why are you still here?â
Dale opens his mouth, but no sound comes out as he stares at you.
Your shoulders slump in the face of his inability to give any reason, let alone a compelling one. âAlthough, I suppose there is no more wedding, is there? Youâve called it off, for all you havenât left or told me why.â The prospect of the fall-out to come leaves you exhausted and hurt already. âI assume that leaving will be your next move.â
âNo, no,â Dale starts to protest, âIâŠâ Something changes in his expression as he searches for the words to say and this time, they come out steady, âOriginally, I stayed because it was easy. I thought the best stroke of luck Iâd had in my existence was when that imbecile broke himself opening an unguarded portal and Iâd won the fight for his body.â
âOh.â It had never even occurred to you that there might have been such an event. No matter what he does next, youâre grateful this demon is the one who won too.
âItâd been so long since Iâd been up on the Surface,â Dale says wistfully. âI didnât have a plan beyond getting here. I suppose, at first, I had considered taking what I could and leaving to make my own life. ExceptâŠâ Your breath, your future hangs on that âexcept.â âI enjoy it here. Northridge, I mean, not just being out of the Depths. Itâs somewhat impossible to know how much is experience and how much is borrowed memory, but I care for Grandfather and Grandmother. And for you. What is here in Northridge is more than Iâd hoped for. A safe den, a loyal clan, a bountiful territory, an exemplary mate. Why would I go searching for better when it seemed Iâd already found all I could want?â
âTruly?â
âYes.â
Dale seems so sincere but that only brings your mind back to what prompted this conversation. âThen why are you trying to stop the wedding?â
âBecause I thought you didnât know!â he protests. âI told myself that since Iâd never out-right lied to you, that was good enough.â He sighs. âBut I realized if my only reason for not telling you who you were even marrying was because you might make a choice I didnât want, that it was rather despicable.â
You canât help, but ask the obvious. âThen why didnât you simply tell me instead of calling the wedding off?â
âBecause Iâm selfish too,â Dale says, âand I couldnât bear for you to know the truth and look at me likeâ.â He breaks off, shaking his head.
Heâs returned to not meeting your eyes. Tension has crawled back up his spine to settle in his shoulders. His arms are crossed and he still seems one wrong word away from running. As if Daleâs still waiting for you to reject him. Perhaps you need to make up for all the times you didnât speak up before. It seems like a fair condescension if the hope blooming in your chest is proven true.Â
You stand up from your chair, crossing the remaining distance between you and Dale. You place gentle hands on his forearms and they loosen under your touch. Carefully you push those crossed arms down until they hang by his sides where you can entwine your fingers with his. You take advantage of the height he has on you to look up into his eyes, not even surprised to find more than just two. âWell, I do know.â Those glowing blue eyes stare back down at you with the same hope reflected in them. âAnd I still want to marry you. If you do.â
Daleâs answer is immediate and earnest, âI do. I want that. I want the life we spoke of building more than anything else Iâve ever thought to want.â
You nod, a smile breaking out across your face.âGood. Go-â He cuts you off with a kiss, which starts out light but grows in pressure when you kiss him back. He tries to lift a hand to your face, but instead the back of your own hand still held in his touches your cheek instead. You pull back to see the pout he makes as he stares at his hand, obviously unsure of whether to let yours go or to keep holding on.Â
The sound of a door opening above you followed by disgruntled voices pops the bubble of privacy youâd been enclosed in. You sigh. âWhile we still need to have a full conversation, I think it can wait for tonight at the least, yes?â Dale nods eagerly. âThen I must return to getting ready.â
âAnd I must assure Grandfather my âbout of childish insanityâ is indeed over. Iâve never seen him so furious.â At the look of surprise on your face, Dale smiles. âRegardless of what he thought before, Grandfather certainly thinks well of you now. He repeatedly told me that this would be the worst decision I ever made if I went through with it. Heâs refused to even tell Grandmother, more out of fear for me than for her.â
High on emotion and relief, you giggle, too pleased that Grandfather spoke so strongly in your favor. âDid he?â
âYes,â Dales says as he leads you to the study door. âAnd it's not as though I could provide a solid defense when I knew he was right.â He pulls you into a solid embrace before letting you go with a final kiss pressed to your forehead.Â
You pull the door open without looking away from him, not able to resist asking for one last reassurance, âYour word that you will be there at the other end of the aisle?â
Dale smiles. âYes, sana, I give you my word that I will let nothing stand in the way of our wedding, not even myself.â
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More Posts from Puppykitt
I've never been happier to engage with a slow burn series đđ€§ kinda wish Sana woulda kicked a little more ass though but it's okay though cuz she still fought
Another great story part Moonshine!
Nothing's Wrong with Dale - Part Twenty-Three
Itâs been a week, but youâre fairly certain your fiancĂ© accidentally got himself replaced by an eldritch being from the Depths. Deciding  that heâs certainly not worse than your original fiancĂ©, you endeavor to keep the engagement and his new non-human state to yourself.
However, this might prove harder than you originally thought.
Fantasy, arranged marriage, malemonsterxfemalereader, M/F
AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/41189829/chapters/118476739
Warnings: Violence and Death (nothing too graphic, but its prevalent enough I wanted to mention it)
[Part One][Part Two] [Part Three] [Part Four] [Part Five] [Part Six] [Part Seven] [Part Seven.5] [Part Eight] [Part Nine][Part Ten] [Part Eleven] [Part Twelve]Â [Part Thirteen] [Part Fourteen] [Part Fifteen] [Part Sixteen] [Part Seventeen] [Part Eighteen] [Part Nineteen][Part Twenty] [Part Twenty-One] [Part Twenty-Two] Part Twenty-Three
But time is slipping through your fingers. You make your decision and pray itâs the right choice.Â
âDale!â
Thereâs a second of silence before muffled confusion is evident from the hallway on the other side of the door followed quickly by pounding footsteps. Vi spares you a glare, but Clen seems unconcerned, merely readying his crossbow.
The door bursts open before anything else can happen and you canât help but flinch as it hits the wall.
Framed in the doorway is an alert and worried Dale, his mouth in a hard frown and his hand already on the hilt of his sword. You watch as his eyes land on the four strangers arrayed in front of him. He draws his sword before he unerringly finds you and the unconscious Grandmother. Thatâs when fury ignites in his eyes.
âWhat is happening here?â Dale asks, his voice outraged as he takes stock of the situation.Â
âNorthridges simply enjoy asking after the obvious, do they not?â Clen asks Lasky before looking back to Dale. He lifts his crossbow and aims directly at you. Instantly you tense, ready to drop to your knees and out of range behind the heavy wooden desk. You freeze where you are because that would leave Grandmother a free target. âThis is a kidnapping, your lordship. If you donât cooperate with us, your fiance and grandmother are forfeit. Surrender now. Prove yourself more intelligent than the rest of your ilk.âÂ
Keeping your dagger in your strong hand, you grope blindly on the desk for something to use as a shield, cursing yourself for not thinking of grabbing such a thing earlier. As your fingers close around the ink mat, a sturdy leather mat to absorb any ink that might seep through when writing, your eyes meet Daleâs. You can almost see a cold certainty enter them before they slide back to Clen.
âNo. You may surrender or run,â Dale retorts. âIâll not go with you nor will I allow you to continue to threaten my kin.â
âOh, lordling,â Lasky coos, âYouâve barely begun to hear threats. Wait until you learn of my plans for your wife-to-be. Not that you will continue to live for much longer, but I doubt youâd still wish to marry after Iâm through with her.âÂ
You swallow down bile and hope Dale hurts him.
Dale growls, a dark, rolling sound that fills the room. You shiver, feeling it resonate through you, and quickly check to see that Grandmother has not yet awoken. The mixture of concern and relief that fills you at that fact doesnât help any of your nerves settle, not that you expect them to for several daysâprovided you live that long.
âDo notââ Clean warns before cutting himself off with a curse as Dale charges. He manages a single shot in your direction before heâs forced to meet Daleâs sword with his own. The shot is still good enough that it hits your makeshift shield of an ink mat. The arrowhead pierces through the leather to scrape your arm and knock it back, but it doesnât make it any further than that through the mat.
The clatter of the crossbow hitting the floor is nearly masked by the shouts and grunts as Clen, Vi, and Lasky begin fighting with Dale. Your eyes find Two, but heâs watching the fight, not you. Dale has managed to get his back to a wall, limiting his opponents ability to surround him. Theyâre appearing to have trouble ganging up on him without hitting each other, limiting their approach.Â
With no better opportunity, you place your dagger down on the desk and open the closet door. You grasp the back of the chair Grandmother is on and begin tugging it is in towards the closet. You choose to keep your eyes forward towards the fight instead of putting yourself between Grandmother and the action. Hopefully if you see anything coming your way, you can intercept it before she gets further hurt.Â
The chair is heavy, but youâre terrified, especially since you no longer have even your thin dagger in hand. The adrenaline seems to help as you drag the chair across the rug, grateful at least thereâs no sound to alert the others to what youâre doing. The three assassins currently trying to fight Dale seem to have fallen into a pattern, with Clen engaging Daleâs sword and Vi trying to get at him with her spear from the side, herding him towards the opening in the wall to another side room. Lasky waits in that room, a seemingly endless supply of knives in his hands.
True to your suspicions, both Clen and Lasky seem to have some sort of demonic enhancement to themselves or their weapons, although they remain clearly unpossessed. Clen has a strength to his movements that matches Daleâs own while Laskyâs daggers seem to come back to his sheaths when they miss. You eye the knife lodged in Daleâs leg and wonder if it's a good thing they donât pull out to return when stuck.
You cross the threshold into the closet and have to focus on maneuvering in the much tighter space. It seems to primarily hold cabinets for files which you realize once you back into an ornate handle. Itâs at a perfect height to jab painfully into your neck and prevent you from pulling the chair the final few inches into the closet.
You side-shuffle out from between the cabinet and the chair, mind racing as you check if the chair even will fit. The top of it is just under the height of the handle so you think you can manage it. You scoot around in front of the chair, a nervous glance over your shoulder to see the fight still raging, a confusing knot of bodies and weapons that you canât make heads or tails of except that Dale is still holding his own.Â
Kneeling down, you lift the front legs of the chair off the ground so they can get over the higher board marking the entrance to the closet and heave. After a few seconds of straining which feel like an eternity, the chair finally moves those last few inches, thudding into the back cabinet and fully crossing over the threshold into the closet. You set the chair down, trying not to dwell on how itâs likely a bad sign that Grandmother hasnât woken up for any of this movement.
You get to your feet, glad youâd pushed the chair towards the middle of the closet even before youâd realized how shallow it is. That leaves room on either side for you to fit in. Unfortunately it means that itâll take too long to turn the chair around and try to wedge it against the door. Or maybe thatâs a good thing because your hands are shaking and your palms sting where the wood of the back and legs had dug into your palms. You half close the closet door as you turn around. You're even more nervous now, after having your eyes off the fight for so long. You need to see if thereâs anything nearby that might work as a wedge instead and check on the fight.
Dale seems to have gotten more room to breathe, the others all pushed back, but heâs in that doorway, with little at his back to guard it. Lasky takes advantage of that space before Dale can, sending a series of knives flying at him. Dale deflects two and dodges the other two. Unfortunately, with Lasky on the other side of Dale from you, you realize with a jolt of terror that sends the dodged knives in your direction.
One lodges into the desk, but the other flies just over it. You try to move out of the way and you manageâmostly. The knife lodges solidly in the closet door and through your skirts, pinning them in place.Â
âDarkest damnââ You canât help but let a minced oath out as you frantically begin pulling on your skirts, trying to get free. How the knife was sharp enough to pierce the fabric of your skirts but not enough to rip them now is proving nearly as frustrating as it is terrifying.Â
You glance back at the fight and your eyes meet Laskyâs. Desperately, you reach for the knife hilt instead while your other hand fumbles to pick your own dagger up again. You swallow when you notice Lasky is indeed circling the fight, heading for you. You grip the hilts of both daggers so hard the little imperfections on then dig into your palms.
You point your own in the direction of Laskyâs approach while continuing to tug futilely on the dagger pinning you in place. Nothing you do seems to budge it and your hand keeps slipping off given how much you're sweating. You give up on pulling and start to simply shove at the hilt with the palm of your hand.Â
âDid I pin a pretty little butterfly?â Lasky asks. Heâs got another dagger in his hand, but he comes to a stop a few feet from you.
You keep your eyes on him, but donât answer, giving the hilt of the dagger another strike with your palm. You feel it wiggle and wrap your fingers around it. If you can move, you donât want him to know in case the element of surprise will help.Â
At the same time, where can you go? Or rather, can you afford to leave grandmother? Sheâs hidden now, but if one of these assassins decides they need her or just wants revenge when the inevitable becomes clear. Dale is the only one here who you know will walk away from this fight. Whether everyone else, including yourself and Grandmother, will is still to be determined.Â
âDid I nick your tongue too?â he taunts. âDo not pretend to misunderstand what your role is. Your little lord is proving more of a challenge than we expected, especially since Two isnât helping.âÂ
You think he grimaces at that, but itâs hard to tell with his mouth covered. Still, for all his taunts, heâs clearly strung a lot tighter than he had been before. Good.Â
âSo you are going to help bring him to heel, as intended.â He flips the dagger in his hand in a deliberate move to show off. You chance a glance behind him to see Dale finally pushed into the side room and out of your line of sight. Youâre certain the idea that you did manage to make eye contact with him is just false hope. You have to figure out how to get out of this yourself. And right now, running isnât an option.
âYou are not going to win this,â you reply, your voice a little rough, but still intelligible and not obviously full of fear, hopefully. âYou should leave.â
He takes a step closer instead. âJust because he didnât immediately fold, doesnât mean he will triumph,â Lasky corrects, some anger coloring his voice. âHeâs outnumbered and once Two remembers why theyâre here, heâll be outclassed.â
âThen should you not be aiding your companions?â you ask, trying to tug on the dagger with as little obvious movement of your arm as possible. Anything to keep from drawing Laskyâs attention to what youâre doing.
The lines by his eyes crinkle, he must be smiling under that mask. You feel more dread pool in your stomach. âDo you not see? That is what Iâm doing. For all your threats, youâre no real match for me and while I still do not have any rope, Iâm just as capable as taking out an eye as you are, if not more so. You need to remember who you are dealing with and surrender.â
A noise from behindâsomething heavy crashing into the wall and possibly a bookcase given the cacophony that followsâdraws both your attention. Unfortunately, Lasky refocuses just as quickly as you do and so youâre still in a stalemate, both holding daggers, but truly, there isnât a contest here. There is no question who will this fight, just what the collateral damage could be.
You hate this. You hate everything about this situation, from the fighting and Grandmotherâs condition, to Dale in a fight against multiple opponents. Most of all you hate this man in front of you. But what can you do?
Another smash and thud sounds from behind Lasky, but he doesnât bother turning to look this time, just takes another step closer. He steps to the side, blocking your sight-line to the rest of the fight although not before you see a figure thrown across the room. You canât even hope to identify who.
With another step, you give up on the pretense and give a final pull. This time the dagger is freed from the wall and you take a stumbling step downalong it, away from Lasky. You hastily bring that knife up to bare as well, holding one in each hand. Youâve had no training in the use of two daggers or even much training at all with your non-dominant hand.Â
Itâs clear Lasky knows that too, his confidence is obvious. The secondary reason for that becomes evident when the knife in your hand that belongs to him starts to tug. Youâd thought if you were holding it, it wouldnât try to return to him, like when it had been stuck in the wall, but apparently thatâs not true. It fights your grip, attempting to go to Lasky and into its sheath on his arm like the others had.
You hold on tight, not wanting him to be further armed even if you donât know how to wield it well yourself. He takes another step forward and you take another to the side. You notice that heâs steering you away from the relative safety the desk might have afforded you. The only good thing is that he seems to have completely forgotten about the fight going on behind him. Unfortunately, whenever you move to compensate, he blocks your own view.Â
Finally he breaks the stalemate youâve been locked in and rushes forward. You hastily stumble backwards along the wall, unwilling to give up the, perhaps false, feeling of safety it gives you. He slashes at you with his greater reach and you try to dodge, but you can feel his strike connected. Luckily, between the fabric of your dress and the manner in which the corset is boned youâre not pierced or cut by the blade. However, on his pull back, he catches your arm, slicing it and leaving a hot line of pain on your underarm that makes you cry out.
Your mind spins as the attack throws off your balance. You try to ignore the drip of blood down your arm, the sting of the cut, and the satisfaction in his eyes. Your palms are sweatier than ever and you have to focus on not trembling. The pull from his own dagger has only gotten stronger. With half an idea in your head about that, you kick out, slashing with your dagger more in the hopes of gaining back even a foot of space.Â
It works, you catch some part of him, and he curses as he takes a step backward. âWould you simply stayââ
You lower your center mass and just as he raises his arm for a stab from above, attempting to use his height to get at your throat or chest, you release your grip on his dagger. In such close quarters, it doesnât have time to turn or aim effectively. Given the strength it had been pulling at, itâs out of your hand like it was shot from a slingshot. Between your attempt at aiming and Laskyâs own speed, it misses its sheath entirely. The blade sinks into his armpit instead and he screams in pain.
Laskyâs fingers release the dagger held in that arm as his other hand clutches at the knife now embedded in him. You donât waste any time standing there, immediately retreating, trying to find somewhere else to go, somewhere else to hideâanything to keep him away from you.
Should you go for the courtyard? Twoâs no longer guarding that doorâat least as far as you can tell, who knows if he needs to be near it to stop you from leaving. You feel a pang of guilt and regret for no longer staying to guard Grandmother, but with Lasky specifically focused on you and no real way to hold him off, youâre no use to her except to distract from her. The closet door was slammed shut so hopefully these assassins will just forget sheâs even there.Â
You head back towards where you came from originally, where Laskyâs been herding you. Hopefully you can find some of the Governorâs guardsâor anyone, really. You sloppily knock over any chairs, ottomans, side tables you come acrossâanything to slow down your pursuer as you go. A wild, likely foolish part of you wants to run towards Dale. For all the fight still raging, and him already dealing with multiple opponents, you know heâd try to protect you. But your presence would just make his fight harder. Right?
âYou bitch,â Laskyâs voice is ragged with pain and you hear his heavy footfalls getting closer as you round a short couch. âGetââ Whatever words he was going to say next are cut off by a thump and a wet gurgle. Unable to help it, you turn around.
Laskyâs already much closer than you expected, his eyes wide with surprise as he looks down at the raw spike of iron protruding from his chest. You identify it as a fireplace iron and look beyond him to see Daleâs back disappearing from the doorway.
A gasping cough brings your focus back to Lasky in time to see him collapse over the back of the couch and stop moving. You pant where you stand, feeling staggered by the sudden absence of an immediate threat. You canât dwell on Laskyâs death, you can barely process your gratitude to Daleâonly relief Laskyâs not capable of hurting you anymore.Â
Should you return to Grandmother? You hadnât actually gotten that far with how messy the room is. Hide in that closet to defend her if need be? Hadnât you just proved how ineffective youâd be at such a task? You got in one good blow that was more accident than anything and still needed Dale toâ.Â
You hesitate and absently use your dagger to finish a cut made to the fabric of your dress. You take the strip of cloth and wrap it around your bleeding arm. The sudden pressure on the wound makes you flinch and grit your teeth against the renewed pain.Â
Just as you secure that makeshift bandage in place and resolve to leave to find help, Vi comes running full speed out of the side room. You know the moment she spots you because she changes direction, heading for you. Immediately, you try to run for the door, but she anticipates your movement. She runs around wide, blocking that as a viable exit.Â
Without thought, your turn, heading back the way you came and for the courtyard. Sheâs fast though, faster than you with her sturdy boots and training while your skirts and soft shoes only slow you down. She catches you just before the desk and closet youâd started this mad dash from.
A side hit from the spear bruises your side and you cry out as you are spun around. Thereâs desperation in her eyes as Vi lunges to cover that last few feet between you. She slams you back against the wall, her spear shaft across your throat. Your wrists too are pinned up in the skilled maneuver. Her wide, terrified eyes bore into yours. âWhat the fuck is he? Youâre going toââ
The clash of metal on metal followed by a wet cough and a triumphant growl from the other room cuts her off. You only try to wrestle her for control briefly. Youâre no match for her strength. Instead, you try desperately to wriggle your hands free, trying only to get more room to breathe. Your head is tilted back, your throat throbbing as she fixes her gaze back on yours. You try to say something, you donât even know what, but she doesnât give you a chance.
âThey lied, heâs not human,â she spits. âHeâs a skinwere.â Itâs clear Daleâs revealed enough of himself that she knows heâs possessed, not enhanced. Another word for a possessed human is a demon wearing human skin or skin were for short. Itâs a very negative term though and you think she might be localâyouâve heard that term used more in Northridge than even at school. No wonder sheâs scared out of her mind.Â
She must be able to tell youâre not surprised by the news because her eyes narrow, âYou knew.â Itâs not a question, but you canât speak or even move your head to answer anyway. She doesnât seem to need you to.Â
She pushes against you with her spear, completely cutting off your air before she pulls back enough to let you speak. You cough, gulping in air as she orders, âTell me how to kill it. Tell meââ
Before she can make any more demands, you drop your whole body down heavily. There was enough space now between the spear and the wall to let you, although it still wrenches your wrists and hands painfully. Your head hits the wall as you tilt it back to allow the movement.
Wrists and head hurting from the spear, backside throbbing from smacking into the ground as a dead weight, youâre moving before you can think about it. Crawling around her legs on your hands and knees. You scurry towards anything that can be perceived as safe. The sound of something heavy being flung into the wall makes you flinch.
A heavy blow to your back makes you yelp, collapsing onto your stomach. âYouâre not going anywhere,â Vi snarls, the butt of her spear, pressing down with insistent force. âNot untilââ
The pressure abates abruptly and you turn on your side to see something long and black around her wrist, pulling her weapon off of you. Your vantage point, combined with your throbbing head, makes it hard to follow all the action, but it looks like a black snake that Vi tries to tug off with a yell.Â
She draws a knife with her free hand to strike the black thing, but the crack of bone breaking causes her to scream as her spear drops from her limp hand. It falls harmless to the floor. You manage to pick it and throw it far away. You know sheâd be more capable of taking it from you than you would be at wielding it.
Vi finally looks behind her, following where the solid shadow stretches to and screams at whatever she sees. You only see another long dark ribbon of tangible blackness wrap around her neck before sheâs pulled backwards with a strangled sound. She disappears out of your sight.Â
Another thwack and gasping whimper make you wince, paralyzed on the floor, mind unable to decide what to do next.Â
You hear footsteps heading for you accompanied by a tap of wood on wood. Then you hear a worried, âSana?âÂ
Relief floods your body and you desperately need to see Dale, to reassure yourself that despite the horrible clashes and yells, the violence and the destruction, heâs whole. No matter what he must look like given what youâve seen and how his voice still has an echoing, deep quality to it. You brace yourself on your palms to push yourself up. Opening your mouth to answer him, youâre interrupted by a crack before you can.
âI knew it,â an unfamiliar voice meets your ears. It has a strange, otherworldly grit to it and you freeze instantly. âHow all these other humans are so blind, Iâve no notion.â
Dale hisses, âHide,â before you hear him move away from you and towards the voice. You follow his suggestion, too cowed by the return of the threat to want to do anything else. Half crawling and half dragging your tired body, you tuck yourself under the heavy wooden desk.
âAs though you are a paragon of subtlety,â Dale snaps back. Heâs clearly nearly in that other side room once more, but his voice carries more than perhaps heâs even aware.Â
âAh,â the voice concedes, the sound carrying just as easily. Is that a demon power? You wonder with only slight delirium, projecting your voice? â But I am not trying to be. Neither of us are.â
âUs?â
âYes,â a far more human voice replies this time. âUs.â The two voices overlay on that word before the more inhuman voice continues, âWe are not all so rude as to kick out the original owner. Some of us know what it is to share.â
You realize itâs Two, who has apparently decided to finally enter the fight and whoâs strange nickname suddenly makes a lot more sense.
âI care not how many of you are fitted in that body,â Dale replies. âYouâll do no more harm here. Youâll not fulfill your mission.â
âPerhaps,â the casual menace of this voice is not intimidated by Daleâs confidence or orders. âOr perhaps there is simply more to be gained and less to be shared.â
Dale must see no more reason in talking because there is only the sound of movement and metal after that. Grunts sound from all three voices, perhaps more distinct given your inability to see and only to hear. Theyâre not enough to tell you whoâs winning and youâve no notion of how Dale stands in contest with another actual demon. Neither are likely attempting to hide their natures, but is that an advantage to one or the other? Or a wash?y
Does the Two being both help or hinder them? They had also implied that Dale was not sharing his own form, which meant the human who had been Dale was gone, didnât it? Neither of them are mentioning Clen, so is he dead too? What sort of creature was the demon in Two? You know demons vary wildly, even the intelligent ones, in a manner far greater than humans did, what if this one was more powerful than Dale?Â
It feels like ages of simply listening, though in reality is likely only a minute or two. You canât take knowing so little about what is happening. You hesitantly move forward and cautiously kneel up to see just over the surface of the desk.Â
Theyâre indeed still in the other room, moving so fast you can hardly tell whoâs who. Front he glimpses you catch, neither of them are in forms that are entirely human anymore. Part of the fight seems almost mundane, the swords meeting and breaking apart as they circle, engaging and dodging stabs and slashes. The shadows in the room move unnaturally and at least two seem to be even more independent than that. They whip around Dale to meet and deflect animate stonework, colored grayish-green with a rusty red shot through it. The rock seems both to come from the columns and walls of the room beyond, despite looking nothing like ones in this room, and from nothing at all.
Your heart is nearly in your throat as Daleâs shadows seem as if they would be far weaker than something so sturdy. A big chunk of stone falls from the ceiling causing Dale to need to dodge to the side. He catches Twoâs sword stroke awkwardly as a result. A clatter reveals that heâs been disarmed. His sword sent flying from his hand to land behind Two.Â
Dale retaliates with a riot of shadows which erupt between them and forces Two back. It also nearly leaves them out of sight of the doorway and you straining to follow whatâs happening. Daleâs back is to you and only half his body visible, while Twoâs nearly on the other side of that room. From what you can tell heâs beginning to resemble a statue more than a person, if a moving one.
âI believe youâre unarmed now,â Two says with a smirk.
âI do not need a weapon to be armed,â Dale snarls, the shadows of the room flickering dizzyingly. His entire body seems more amorphous than ever before. You think he looks taller than he typically is, but thinner too. The arm you can see is oddly shaped, as if it is bare but also, more like a medical mannequin from classâbone and muscle with no fat to be seen. He brandishes his hand to better display the black claws he now has. In fact, youâre certain heâd been wearing a green suit earlier, but itâs black now too. Even his dark hair is even darker, untied and wild, longer than it should be.Â
You keenly appreciate Daleâs rebuttal, but you still hate that his sword is gone from his hand while one remains in Twoâs. They shift their stances and you automatically try to compensate with your position to keep your view. You bump into a lamp thatâs been knocked to the floor.
As you push it to the side, something on the ground catches your attention. You peek around the edge of the desk to get a better look and very deliberately donât look too closely at Viâs body, only a few yards away. Instead you focus on the long, thin piece of polished wood instead. Daleâs cane.Â
Instantly, you know you need to get this to Dale and more than that, you want to do something, anything to help him. Carefully, you put your hands down on the cold stone floor to steady yourself. Then you move just far enough out from behind the desk to grasp the foot of the cane and pull it towards you.Â
You grasp it firmly in your hands and peer back over the top of the desk, checking to make sure that Daleâs still the one closest to the doorway.Â
Once you see that he is, you call out, âDale!â Then you lean up high on your knees and throw the cane like youâve seen others throw a javelin. It soars through the air and into the further room where Dale and Two are tangled in a confusing knot of shadow and stone.Â
They break apart at the sound of your voice and Dale leaps backwards as if propelled by some of the shadows under him. A hand, black like heâs wearing gloves or dunked his arm in ink and clawed, snatches the cane out of the air with careful precision. You think you see the glint of a blue eye on the back of his hand, practically the only color standing out against his form now.
âWill that do you any good?â Two asks, seemingly curious more than anything as he watches Dale hold the cane. You canât tell if his lack of anger over this fight, the way he keeps treating it like a tournament fight for entertainment, is a good thing or not.
Dale says nothing, merely twists the handle. He carefully pulls off the wood to reveal a long green rapier.
âJade,â Two hisses, taking a full step back. âA dangerous weapon for one such as ourselves to wield.â
âAll weapons are dangerous,â Dales replies brusquely. âHumans regularly use weapons as deadly to themselves as they are to their enemies.â
âHow adaptable. All the shade in your nature, I presume,â Two says, a mocking edge to his tone.
âYou are not the only one who can use stone to their advantage,â Dale bats back as easily.Â
Two lets out a bark of laughter and the sound seems to come from far more than two mouths, let alone one. You would give nearly anything for him to never do that again. âIt has been so long since I spoke with one of us with intelligence still left to them up here. The sunlight seems to drive too many insane. Almost a shame to kill you.â
âA good thing then,â Dale says as he charges, âthat you will not.â
The visibility of the fight becomes impossible after that. Thereâs too much movement from shadows and they move further into the room. Youâre back to primarily trying to gauge the fight based on sound alone: thuds and crashes and ripping that you canât identify.
âSo close. But perhaps you are correct,â itâs the human voice this time, panting but not demoralized. Some of the sight line clears and you see Two hunched over, a hand on their chest. âI shall not be able to kill you nor collect the bounty so generously placed on your head.â They pick up their head, âHowever, the knight had the correct idea.âÂ
âYes,â the grating demonic voice picks up and they slowly straighten. âIâm certain you must have supplies or books worth perusing. I can tell your form is impeccable underneath, despite your essence spilling out. This body, with him intact, still gets a bit stiff if Iâm not careful. I shall be intrigued to ascertain how you accomplished such a thing.â
âYou think I will allow you to leave?â Dale hisses. âAfter all youâve done.â He throws a hand out to emphasize the general state of destruction around them.
Two laughs and it's one of the most unsettling things youâve ever heard. It has a screech to it that makes your skin crawl. You are resisting the urge to cover your ears or yell yourself in order to drown him out when he looks over and meets your eyes. His dirty red eyes, the color of dried blood, bore into yours across the distance and he rushes for you.
He crosses the distance faster than he should be able to you and thereâs a ripple in the walls that seems to respond to him. Panic seizes your heart and mind as you instinctively dive back down and under the desk. Your hands desperately latch onto and drag a broken ottoman to cover the open part of the desk.
Curling up behind it, you feel something slam into the makeshift shield, pushing you and the desk back, the wooden legs squealing against the floor as it moves. A wordless roar comes from further away and another crash echoes through the room. The sound of what you think are books falling to the floor and a heavy grunt follow.
Then, silence.
You cough a few seconds later, unable to help it due to all the dust the stone moving has kicked up. You think you hear a smothered groan while you attempt to stop, but you stay rooted in your hiding spot, waiting.
After another dull thump, Dale calls your name. His voice is still strange and yet you can hear the confusion and worry in it. You can hear a lot more than that actually. Your eyelids flutter despite being unable to see anything other than dust and dingy wood.Â
Your name sounds different than when heâs said it in the past. There is a depth to it, meaning below the surface that you can hear when heâs like this. Like emotion and inflection and neither of those.Â
Thereâs a layer of softness, of imagery that it conjures up, that you can almost feel through his voice. Of gentle sunlight through the window on a clear day. Your favorite chair and the taste of fresh, sweet honey melting on your tongue, soothing and comforting. Its respect and harmony and the potential to be more than you are alone, of joining and of belonging. Tension leeches from you in waves, like taking off so many heavy coats to stand unburdened. You want to drown in the sensation, you want to hear him say nothing, but your name for the rest of your life.
You want to come out, to go to him, regardless of what you might see. Hesitantly, you push the ottoman away and start to crawl out from beneath the desk. Shakily, you stand up and turn to face Dale.
To your surprise, he looks far more human than the glimpses youâd gotten of him during the fight. His eyes still glow unnaturally and his hair is too long and wild. Heâs roughly the correct height again with no too tangible shadows or extra eyes, though youâre not looking at his hands on purpose. His skin for the most part is a shade of human coloring once more. He doesnât seem to be bleeding either, no obvious large wounds or injuries.Â
You canât handle a direct conversation about his nature now, not after all of this, and so you look beyond him to assess the rest of the situation, although you can tell by a feeling in the air that Two is gone.
The room beyond him does look as though the bookcase closest to you had been tipped over or thrown towards the desk, but Dale is standing in such a way as to suggest heâd caught it before it fell. His free hand is also held open in a gesture towards the wall behind you, where you can see large bricks of rock have come loose, though not enough to threaten the integrity of the wall itself.
You meet his eyes once again and he finally relaxes, shoulders drooping as you both stand in the aftermath. Then heâs striding forward and the cool fingers of his free hand grip your chin as he examines you.
âI am fine,â you say, which would probably be more convincing if you couldnât feel tears dripping down your cheeks. His eyes rake up and down your form, obviously trying to assess that for himself before finally settling back on your face once heâs done.Â
Something that might be relief starts to spread over his face until he freezes. He withdraws his hand abruptly from your face, tucking it behind him with a speed you donât bother to try to match. Instead you resist the urge to swap towards, wanting his touch once more as it had felt grounding.
Then he blinks, his eyes darting around the room with renewed concern. âWhere?â Dale asks.
After a second of confusion, you realize who heâs asking after. Your hand closes around the door handle for the closet and you pull the door open to reveal a still unconscious Grandmother hidden away safely.
You grab one arm of the chair and Dale the other as you pull it out from the closet. You donât even care that heâs clearly doing the majority of the work. It takes a second before you can see her chest moving with her breathing.Â
âGrandmother will be too,â you say, not sure who youâre trying to convince more.
âGood,â Dale says. He carefully brings a human thumb to wipe away your tears with a tenderness that does not match the danger that lingered in the way he still holds himself. You canât help but lean into his touch, the safety he offers, if only to you. âIt would only be worse for them if you were not.â His eyes slide to Grandmotherâs unconscious form and menace seems to drip from his voice. âIt shall be bad enough for them as it is.âÂ
You jump at the sound of a door opening, looking past Dale to see two of the governorâs guards walk in. They stop, gaping in the doorway.
Dale straightens, ignoring the reinforcements that have finally shown up. He doesnât respond to Grandfatherâs concerned voice calling his name and Grandmotherâs and even her own. His head swivels to the direction of the courtyard, where Two went.
Fear grips your heart and your hand lands on his forearm, âNo.â He doesnât look back at you either. He gently, but inexorably pulls out of your grasp. You canât stop him, you know that you canât, but you canât stand the thought of him leaving, of him pursuing this threat. âNo. Dale. Donât go after him!â
He ignores you, jade rapier in hand, and runs out into the courtyard.
âDamn you,â you say, voice tight as you try to stop more tears from welling up. What if heâs found out? What if Two can do more to hurt him? What if there are others in wait and heâs outnumbered? What ifâ? You wipe your eyes more harshly than perhaps you need to as you force yourself to focus on what you can do, who you can help.
While the other guards race to follow Dale, Grandfather hurries across the room to be on the other side of the chair, calling Grandmotherâs name. You can feel her breathing, but you need to see if her heart is in trouble. You check her pulse as you tell him, âWe need a doctor. Now.â
Destroy the myth that libraries are no longer relevant. If you use your library, please reblog.
TV Executives: âif the strike goes on, you wonât get new episodes of your favorite shows! You wonât get new movies you were looking forward to! Isnât that terrible, what the writers are doing to you?â
Me: Bitch, that might have been an effective threat in 2007, but we have since survived a Covid shutdown and discovered ways to amuse ourselves while we waited, we can outwait this shit, too. I got a pile of shows saved I havenât even watched yet, and a Mt. TBR waiting for me.
Compensate (and respect) your writers for their work, assholes.
A/N: Alright, y'all, the long-awaited poem is HERE. It took a while because I had finals and needed to prepare for move-out, but I did it!
CW: Reader was written in mind as a Black woman, HOWEVER, given that I didn't mention any pronouns or genitals, this is GENDER NEUTRAL <3
Venus, Have Mercy On Me
Riri Williams x Black!Reader

I like you
I like you a lot.
Whenever I look at you
My world starts to spin
My heart drops into my stomach like a slice of pie.
Your presence gently invades my surroundings, filling up my head with thoughts of you and I.
Your beautiful grin makes my heart stop beating
Again and again.
Your captivating brown eyes pull me in
Making me feel like we're the only ones in the room.
Everytime I hear that beautiful voice of yours
My stomach fills with crickets
The rubbing of their legs making my stomach cramp and churn with anxiety and nerves.
Your smooth skin reflects off the sun like a mirror
Smelling like Shea butter and freshly printed paper.
Your hair is braided into neat cornrows that fall down your back
They sway back and forth when you walk
Reminding me of silk curtains on a canopy bed.
When you walk out the room I grow sad
I'd do almost anything to bask in your reverence for a little bit longer.
At night I pray
I pray to the Roman goddess of love to give me guidance and the courage to talk to you.
I say:
"Venus, have mercy on me"
The end! The title was inspired by Venus Versus Mars by Dreamer Isioma, I recommend their music đ©đŸâđłđ. But anyway, I hoped y'all liked it! Have a good evening <3
P.S. can someone please tell me how to center paragraphs on this damn appđ this format is actually pissing me off so bad đ§đŸââïž
Taglist: @vampzxi @cjariot @riptidezzzz @si-gh-cosis @bellaallebbella1 @unkindn3ss-of-rav3ns @glassdovescene *some of y'all I couldn't tag, apologies*
Be lookin at my phone like: What the hell are you doing?!
me @ y/n when they do something iâd never do:

like babe this isnât us ?? get it together