Giant/tiny-obsessed writer & collage artist
SFW | 20s | Canadian | Unreliable plant waterer | Eater of midnight cheese · · · “For who has shown contempt for the day of small things?"
– Zechariah 4:10
Feel free to call me Bella, but I can also be summoned by the discography of Gregory Alan Isakov or cool pictures of clouds.
I'm a Giant/tiny speculative fiction writer with a lifelong fascination for what happens when very large and very small characters find themselves in a Situation. Most of my work falls somewhere under the fantasy umbrella, with a strong focus on familial, platonic, and romantic relationships.
While all of my writing is safe for work, many of my stories explore heavier themes. Content notes are provided at the beginning of each one.
When I'm not dreaming the day away, I play volleyball, ride my dirt bike, and dabble in painting and collage. Then again, most of the time I'm dreaming the day away.
And yes, I'm perfectly serious about the clouds.
Completed Original Stories
The Daylight Candle (~7.3k)
As the oldest of three, Mason has taken it upon himself to look out for his brothers. But his strict, no-nonsense way of doing things doesn’t always sit right with them. When Robby fails to show up for school pickup one day, tensions boil over, and Mason is forced to confront what happens when you push someone too far.
Winning Affections (~1.3k)
A giant castle guard tries to win the princess’ heart by using every cunning insight he has into her own.
The Hide-and-Hunt Social (~9.6k)
At a trendy cross-scale hunting event in the woods, Leanne Jones’ first time being chased by her giant husband becomes something far more raw, revealing the quiet imbalance at the heart of their relationship.
And more to come!
Favourite Giant/tiny Works
(Coming soon)
Tags
Writing (#bellametrewrites)
Collage (#bellametrecollages)
Thoughts (#bellametretalks)
Asks (#bellametreanswers)
Additional Notes
I'm always looking to improve my craft. If you'd like to help me grow as a writer, feedback and constructive criticism are always appreciated.
You can also find me on Wattpad, where I post all of the same stories.
Happy reading and God bless!
Note: Please don't steal, repost, or use my writing or art without permission. Thank you.
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So I played a manhunter-type wide game at camp a little while ago, and apparently my brain's response to being chased through the woods in the dark was, "Ah. But what if it was giants?"
Anyway, that's how this story happened.
Because HOLYYYYYYYYYY MAN.
My brain has not shut up about that experience since. So naturally I turned it into a G/t story. As one does. 🎩
SYN: At a trendy cross-scale hunting event in the woods, Leanne Jones’ first time being chased by her giant husband becomes something far more raw, revealing the quiet imbalance at the heart of their relationship.
OC content | Premature themes (16+) | Mild peril | Power dynamics | Married couple romance | ~9,600 words
The Hide-and-Hunt Social
Bellametre
It was only when Leanne Jones saw the jagged wooden signs lining the dirt road that she began to wonder if she had made a mistake.
MIXED-SIZED COUPLES
HIDE-AND-HUNT SOCIAL
CHECK-IN THIS WAY!
She sat poised in the tiny seat behind the plexiglass walls of the SafeSeat MicroCabin Keith had bolted to the dashboard, squinting first at the signs through the windshield, then down at the crumpled brochure in her lap. Clearly, the people who had designed the two had never consulted each other. The brochure was all soft creams and looping cursive, the sort of thing that might advertise a ladies’ luncheon or a summer garden party. The signs outside, by contrast, looked as though they had been hacked together with a blunt axe and a couple broken lava lamps.
Gooseflesh prickled along her arms. She rubbed her hands over them, trying to smooth it away.
Phyllis had brought the whole thing up last month at the quilting circle, where Leanne and the other Mini wives of the neighbourhood gathered on Wednesdays to sew handkerchiefs for their husbands and exchange news. “All the rage,” Phyllis had declared, flashing her smile that was more gum than teeth. “Everybody’s doing it.”
And the brochures she passed around certainly knew how to sell themselves. Words like sensation and community-sanctioned thrill curled across the foiled headings. Leanne had been curious in spite of herself. Thinking back, it had been some time since she and Keith did anything out of the ordinary. A brisk romp through the woods and a bit of excitement sounded healthy. Modern. Just the sort of thing a good wife suggested now and then to keep life lively. She had even gone so far as to start watching the two-o’clock jazzercise program and practice her jogging form on the coffee table. Elbows up, swing in step, breath one-two, breath one-two.
But sitting there now, with the green walls of the forest encroaching on all sides as they reached the end of the road, Leanne wondered if she ought to have read the fine print.
The thought barely had time to settle before Keith started backing up. He eased the station wagon neatly between two enormous mud-caked trucks, their tire treads so deep Leanne imagined she could have lain down inside one. This time, she kept her hands folded tightly in her lap. She didn’t want to fidget.
The keys jingled as Keith switched off the engine. The steady hum of travel faded, and silence settled over them. From behind her cabin, Leanne could hear him going through the familiar routine of working out the stiffness after hours of sitting. He did it all the time at home: first removing his glasses, then pressing his shoulders back against the seat, and finally rubbing the bridge of his nose. After church. After cribbage. After evenings hunched over the dining table reviewing office reports. It was one of his little habits.
And when your husband was eighteen times your size, you came to be very well acquainted with his little habits.
“You know, hon,” he said at last in that thoughtful lilt of his, “I gotta admit, this isn’t the sort of outing I’d have pegged you for.”
No surprises there.
Leanne straightened. “I thought we might try something new,” she replied, careful to sound confident. “Phyllis said when she and Scott tried it for the first time a few weeks ago, it was like nothing they’d ever done before. And it’s in all the magazines now. Common Ground Weekly called it the number one new pastime for couples of every shape and size.”
She reached down to unfasten her seatbelt, but that was when she noticed something strange.
Her hands were shaking.
Not badly, but enough to make the buckle difficult, especially with the way it always liked to stick. Assuming it was only fatigue left over from the drive, she gritted her teeth and wedged one of her cherry-red nails beneath the latch to try and pry it loose.
“A few of the girls are planning to try it later this month,” she went on quickly, “but I thought we might as well get ahead of things. Beat the rush and all that—oh, for goodness’ sake, why won’t this thing open—”
Keith’s voice suddenly came much closer, stirring her pageboy curls through the holes in the back wall of the cabin. She caught the clean smell of his aftershave.
“Need a hand, hon?”
“No! No, I…” She attacked the buckle more ferociously, heat climbing up the back of her neck. “I’ve got it! I’m just… excited, is all.”
There was the soft rustle of fabric as he settled back into his seat again. “I’m excited too,” he said. “Heard a bit about it from the fellows at work. Sounds like it could be a real good time.”
Leanne’s nail broke just as the buckle sprang free with a triumphant click. She pushed up to her feet, smoothing her dress back into place. Then her necklace. Then her collar. She tidied one curl, then another.
Took a breath.
Then she walked out of the cabin and finally turned to face Keith. He sat behind the wheel with one arm draped over it, the other resting beside the open window. His shirt was buttoned neatly to the throat, its crisp lines climbing into the angle of his jaw. His brown hair was coiffed to the side, bringing out the dark flecks in his hazel eyes. Nine flecks in the left, eleven in the right. She had counted them many times.
He looked at her. Slid his glasses back into place.
Leanne was suddenly aware of herself. It wasn’t only that Keith was handsome—though he certainly was—but that there was something deliberate about him, as though each movement had been measured and approved before it happened. Even after seven years of marriage, there were moments when the full weight of his attention still caught her off guard.
But seven years had also been a firm and efficient instructor, and she was not about to stumble over the plain old look on the plain old face of her plain old, ordinary Keith.
“A fine day,” she said, cheery once again. She brushed the front of her dress, glad she had not gone with the heavier circle skirt, with its crinoline forever tangling around her knees. The shirtwaist offered a much freer range. “Come on. Let’s go see what this thing is all about.”
Keith nodded and slowly brought his hand over, laying it palm-up on the dash as always. She balanced her pumps in the familiar grooves of his skin and looped an arm around his thumb. Then he lifted her carefully and let himself out of the car.
As they made their way along the marked path, though there were plenty of pretty green things flanking them on either side, Leanne couldn’t keep her eyes off the ring on Keith’s finger. It caught the light filtering through the canopy of leaves above, shining like polished honey: a simple band of gold with one faint indent, no wider than a hair, running all the way around it.
It made her twist the ring on her own finger. When they had first gotten engaged, they had decided to follow the intersizal tradition of cutting her ring from his, a symbol of unity that had seemed so romantic at the time. But lately, for whatever reason, she couldn’t help but notice how Keith’s ring looked… incomplete. Almost defective, missing that line in the middle.
The thought soured her stomach, and she hated herself for having it at all. Beneath her, Keith’s hand kept its usual steadiness, carrying her through the trees as if nothing had changed. She swallowed and forced her gaze away.
The path was longer than it had looked from the parking lot, and Keith walked for nearly ten minutes before rounding a bend into the main clearing. The grass there was clipped short and soft, and four tents stood scattered around the middle, none higher than his knees. Streamers and bunting banners crisscrossed between them, and a drink table had been set up along one edge. Minis clustered beneath the white canvas, adjusting jackets, tugging laces, comparing ribbons. Farther out, near the treeline, the regular humans stood in loose groups. Almost all of them were men, their overlapping voices blending into a low, unhurried rumble of talk and laughter.
It looked… chipper.
Leanne asked Keith to set her down beside the largest tent. He did, as careful with his footing as ever when other Minis were nearby, and once her shoes touched the grass, he stepped away. She thought he was giving her space to handle the check-in before returning with instructions, but instead he drifted toward the men, extending a hand before disappearing easily into their circle of conversation.
Right.
“Leanne!”
The voice cut through the air. “I knew you’d make it!”
Leanne summoned a smile as she spotted Phyllis pushing through the gaggle of people beneath the tent, another woman close behind her. Phyllis’ hair sat in the same platinum perm she wore every day of her life, wrangled into a shape that allowed the powder on her face to glisten in the hot sun. But there the familiarity ended. Instead of her usual silk blouse and slim-ankle trousers, Phyllis wore a loose shirt tucked into men’s pants, with sturdy boots on her feet. Actual boots. She looked less like she had arrived at a social afternoon and more like she was preparing to enlist in the army.
“Leanne,” Phyllis said again. She was carrying two paper cups of iced tea and managed to spill only a little as she threw her arms around her. “I’m so glad you made it. The other girls said you’d chicken out, but I knew you wouldn’t be a spoilsport.”
The coarse stitching of Phyllis’ shirt dug into Leanne’s chin. When the hug ended, she stepped back and accepted the cup Phyllis held out to her. The other woman remained beside them, staring across the clearing at the giant men. She was lean and sunburned, with sleeveless, muscular arms and a thick mop of blonde hair. A nickel-brass whistle hung from her neck, and bright ribbons had been pinned up and down the straps of her overalls, sparkling like gumdrops.
“Phyllis,” Leanne said. “Yes, we made it… you look, um…” She tried to let her gaze travel discreetly over the outfit, but it came to rest with obvious disbelief at the boots.
“Adventurous?” Phyllis supplied with a sly smile. She gestured toward the other woman with her cup. “Bev here had extras I could borrow. I was wearing my workout clothes, but they’re the brand-new paisley set and Scott didn’t want the leotard getting dirty.” She looked ready to pitch into a full tirade about that when she paused, frowning slightly. “Where are your clothes?”
A blush crept into Leanne’s cheeks. Evidently, the shirtwaist wasn’t nearly as free-range as she had thought. She took a sip of iced tea, but it was grainy with sugar and painfully sweet. Desperate for rescue, she glanced toward Bev.
But Bev was still surveying the men across the field, her jaw slack. After a moment, she gave a small nod in their direction, and her voice trickled out in a loose, warm drawl.
“That sky-high drink of water your husband?”
The line of her gaze was fixed on Keith’s white shirt. Leanne nodded.
“Glory.” Bev rested her knuckles against her mouth. “You must’ve done something right.”
It wasn’t the first time Leanne had heard something like that. She just looked at the ground, tracing a finger around the rim of her cup.
“That one over there in the plaid is mine,” Bev went on, pointing toward a huge bearded man with shoulders like an ox. He was talking with one of the big volunteers carrying a stack of maps. “Hal’s chased me through courses all over the state. Last time we were down in Gravelheel Park, I had to get stitches after I cracked my head falling down a gopher hole.” She reached up and pulled back her hair to display the damage.
Leanne’s brows nearly climbed off her face. A long, ugly red line ran above Bev’s ear.
“Wow, that’s… “ She pressed a hand lightly to the side of her own face. “Goodness. I’ve never done anything like this before.”
“Oh, that’s the best way,” Bev said at once. “You get all the nerves. All the adrenaline. Second time’s still fun, but the first?” She gave a low whistle. “Unmatched.”
A subtle ache began to form beneath Leanne’s hand. From the edge of the crowd, a volunteer in a tie-dye shirt and clipboard approached. For one hopeful instant, Leanne imagined she might be asked whether she needed water, or a chair, or perhaps a place to briefly pass out. But the woman’s face opened instead into a bright, practiced smile.
“Welcome! If you’ll follow me, I’ll get you checked in.”
Phyllis gave a squeal and caught Leanne by the elbow, and before Bev had quite finished wishing them luck, she was swept beneath the tent, pulled through the crowd like a needle through cloth. Feminine chatter pressed in on every side. Nearly all the players were women—women of every sort, many bearing scrapes and fading bruises from what Leanne could only assume were earlier games. There were very few men.
At the main table, she received a safety lecture she scarcely heard and seven waivers she scarcely read, ticking boxes beside phrases about “gentle handling” being subjective and organizers assuming no liability for catastrophic injury or risk of death, before signing each page with a hand that hardly felt like her own.
Then came the bins of spare clothing behind the tents, where Phyllis helped her wrestle leather trousers of uncertain history beneath her dress and find galoshes only two sizes too large to replace her surrendered pumps. Leanne already felt perfectly ridiculous, and the feeling only worsened when volunteers began threading through the crowd with plastic whistles and big coloured sashes, each couple marked in matching colours so hunters would pursue only their designated partners. Hers was bright purple striped with mustard yellow, wound twice about her waist with the tails hanging behind, while the whistle was hung round her neck.
“Perfect,” gushed Phyllis, cinching the cord until Leanne could barely swallow. Phyllis herself wore a starchy pastel pink sash. “Now all you need is war paint.”
“War…?” Leanne’s eyes were pulled across the field.
The men had drifted closer to the tents, standing in clusters, stretching, laughing softly among themselves. Their voices rolled through the air like distant thunder, and Leanne rubbed at the ache that had begun to build behind her left eye.
“Hon?” a loud, low voice cut in suddenly.
Leanne nearly jumped out of her skin. She whipped her head up, heart racing, and found herself looking into the familiar dark flecks of Keith’s brown eyes. He was kneeling in the grass just to her right, a little way down the slope.
She scolded herself. It was Keith.
Only Keith.
From the corner of her eye, she caught sight of Phyllis with her head tipped back, one hand pressed over her mouth. Her cheeks were flushed and her eyes shone with barely contained delight. Leanne curled her hand into a fist, seized by a sudden and very strong desire to sock her squarely in the arm. Instead, she adjusted her absurd sash with as much dignity as she could and lifted her eyes to her husband.
“Don’t suppose you’re here to whisk me away early?”
Keith smiled. It was a pleasant smile, certainly, but it arrived a second too late, like he had been caught in a private thought and only just remembered to put it on. He lifted a map and let it unfold in his hand.
“The head start they’re giving you should be enough to get you to the creek in the middle here,” he said, tapping a blue line. “Good cover there. Deadfall, low sightlines.” His finger dragged across the page, circling another patch of trees. “And if you panic, you’ll likely cut east.”
Leanne stared.
“Obviously, there’s the strategy of hiding near the starting line and waiting out the hunters while they run deeper into the forest, but it’s not much of a strategy if I already know about it.”
Her heart sank. She could see the changes in him now: no glasses, collar unbuttoned, a purple-and-yellow ribbon tied around his wrist. His sleeves were rolled to the elbow, the white cuffs slightly strained in a way that made it difficult not to notice the strength in his forearms. There was colour in his face she had not seen all morning.
He folded the map, his thumbnail scoring the crease with a slow, dry hiss, then he reached down with his free hand. With the very tip of his index finger, he delicately placed it beneath her chin and tilted her head up. The pad of his skin was rough and warm.
“Don’t go thinking I don’t know how smart you are,” he said with a small smirk. “I’ll be hunting you the whole way.”
It was practice alone that kept her expression composed. Only her eyes moved of their own accord, straying helplessly to the ring on his finger. It shone in the sunlight, incomplete as ever.
A horn sounded, gathering the clearing to attention. Conversations tapered off and the volunteers clapped, smiling.
“Welcome, everyone!” cried a voice through the speaker, crackling at the edges. “Thank you for joining us today. As we approach kickoff, we ask that all guests who have completed registration please proceed now to the designated starting lines. Move with intent, for players who fail to report promptly will be collected at their hunter’s convenience.”
Laughter rippled through the crowd.
“It’s time,” Phyllis whispered beside her.
The men began moving toward the far side of the clearing, putting distance between themselves and the Minis with an ease that made the difference in scale feel suddenly very real. Keith pulled back and slipped the map into his back pocket, then brushed the grass from his knees as he rose to his full, towering height. For an instant he stood still, head turned toward the trees in unreadable concentration. Then he looked down at Leanne again and smiled.
“See you in a bit,” he said with a wink.
He strode away to join the others, his loafers thudding heavily against the earth.
Leanne felt numb as Phyllis guided her with the rest of the women toward the trailhead. With every step, she only wanted more to turn around and return to the safety of the tents, rather than march closer to the wall of trees that now seemed far more threatening than they had only minutes before. She tried to imagine what it would feel like to walk beneath such titans, but the only sensations that seemed to reach her were the leather trousers pinching behind her knees and the hollow clonk of her bare feet inside the galoshes.
As they walked, the announcer’s voice continued overhead. “As always, this is a trust-based event. Hiders will enter the woods first, followed by a ten-minute grace period before pursuit begins. They are advised to remain off the mulched hunting paths to avoid serious risk of injury.”
They reached the starting line, a length of rope in the dirt.
“Emergency equipment and communicators are stationed throughout the playing zone. Should you or another player require medical attention, please locate the nearest communicator and notify our team immediately.”
They arranged themselves side by side.
“When a hider is caught by their pursuing partner, they are out of the game. The only other official methods of withdrawal are sustaining a critical injury or blowing the whistle with which they have been equipped. At that point, the pursuer must immediately cease play and escort them back to the tents. Laughing, yelling, screaming, pleading, crying, and vomiting do not constitute valid withdrawal and will be treated as part of the game.”
A volunteer moved down the line, straightening sashes and tightening whistles.
“The first human to catch their partner wins the Hunter’s Ribbon, while the Minivariate who lasts longest wins the Hider’s Ribbon. Play with integrity and enthusiasm. Remember: this is cooperative, consensual, and meant to be fun. Thank you, and enjoy the game.”
Several women whooped. Others bounced on their toes. Leanne felt sick.
Just ahead of her, the trees rose like the spires of some colossal gothic fortress, so tall she wondered how their tops did not carve grooves in the blue of the sky.
She looked quickly along the line, hoping to find another doubtful face, some companion in alarm. But there was none. Every woman wore the same tightened expression of purpose, hair pinned back and bodies coiled like springs. Some had even streaked mud or paint across their cheeks.
Leanne could feel her grip on herself beginning to slip. Each breath was barely enough to keep the black at the edges of her vision at bay. Images of being trampled the moment the horn sounded kept flashing through her mind until every joint and muscle felt as though it were turning to liquid.
Then there was pressure.
On her hand. Warmth. A squeeze. Leanne felt the black recede a little and she looked over, surprised to find pink-nailed fingers interlaced with her own.
Phyllis gave her hand another squeeze. It was like a pulse, guiding her own heart back into rhythm. Leanne looked up and caught Phyllis’ eye, full of sympathy. She was smiling too, but not with the gummy, manic grin from before. Something softer. Quieter.
“Humbling, isn't it?”
Leanne had never heard anything like that come out of Phyllis Whitaker’s mouth before. But even so, she could not deny that something in her pounding chest settled at the words. Phyllis squeezed her hand one more time before letting go and turning back to the forest, bending her knees and curling her fists.
Leanne bent her knees. Curled her fists.
The loudspeaker buzzed.
“Hiders, are you ready?!”
Absolutely not.
“On your marks… get set—”
The entire line of players surged forward like greyhounds released from a gate. A woman beside Leanne nearly bowled her over as the airhorn blasted across the field. One instant they were there, sashes flashing at their waists like beads on baited hooks; the next, they were gone. Leanne stumbled after them, lifting her dress as she followed. She barely had time to draw one last breath of warm, ordinary summer air before she was swallowed by the waiting dark.
Immediately, she felt the shift in temperature. The hair along her neck and arms lifted as she crashed through the dense green of the forest floor. Other players darted through the brush around her, the colours of their belts flickering through the leaves, their laughter and voices dancing on the wind. She tried to keep her eyes on them, but even Phyllis disappeared quickly, and within only a few minutes the only sounds of forest escapade she could hear were her own.
Snap. Rustle. Crack.
It was so loud. And yet she had no idea how else she was supposed to move. It was difficult even to recall the last time she had been properly outdoors. Life for her had a way of becoming mostly interiors. The suburban house. Her tiny kitchen atop the counter of the bigger kitchen. Often the extent of her time in nature was the few potted plants that Keith kept on the windowsill where she could reach them.
She tried to remember the jazzercise rhythm she had learned, and the buoyant, theatrical voice of the curvy instructor popped into her mind:
Swing in step. Breath one-two. Breath one-two.
She kept plowing headlong in a straight line, long grass and low-hanging leaves smacking her in the face. Her imagination kept trying to conjure images of whatever might be waiting just beyond the next step, but she forced herself to stay calm. There was no need to worry. The orientation had specified that all animals larger or more dangerous than goldfinches had been culled in this part of the forest for the game. There was, strictly speaking, no risk of any creature more alarming than that.
Well.
Perhaps except one.
Breathe. One-two. Swing in step.
Despite her chest already beginning to burn, she pushed herself onward until she eventually came across one of the mulched hunting trails. It cut a winding swath through the trees, wide enough for two dozen Minis to walk abreast, smelling sweet and loamy. The moment Leanne spotted it, she turned on her heel to change course, but stopped. There were Minis running along it. She couldn’t see them clearly from this distance, but the licking colours of their sashes were unmistakable.
Equal pangs of contempt and jealousy simmered inside Leanne. She scrutinized those vivid colours as they raced along the trail, taking advantage of the clear ground to get ahead while they could, even though it was taking a risk.
And knowing she would not do the same.
She swallowed down the emotion in her throat and turned back toward the bushes. At the same time, like a hammer striking metal, the second horn reverberated through the trees.
Leanne tripped into a spiderweb and nearly went down over a mushroom, catching herself at the last instant before stumbling into a blackberry thicket. Big thorns snagged her arms, leaving behind thin, stinging lines and pulling painfully at her curls.
Calm down.
She was fine. She was playing the game and was, in fact, making perfectly reasonable progress.
She simply could not seem to say any of it out loud.
Instead, she clung to the rhythm she had found, the only steady thing left to her.
“Swing in step,” she whispered. “Breath one-two. Breath one-two.”
Slowly, the forest began to change. Leanne became aware of a new ache in the fronts of her thighs as the ground sloped downward. She tried to keep her attention on her footing, but it grew steadily more difficult as the vegetation thickened, forcing her again and again to slow to a walk just to push through some stubborn creeper or another. It was getting colder, too, the saplings giving way to denser trees that crowded the light into narrower and narrower slits until the brightness above felt very distant indeed.
Eventually, she came upon a wide gulley. It cut across her path from left to right as far as she could see, and so she stopped. In truth, the pause was welcome. She had time to draw her breath, to wipe the sweat from her eyes.
The gulley appeared to be the creek from the map, nearly dry, with only a thin trickle of water weaving between the cracks of the large, unforgiving rocks. She looked along the edges in both directions for a fallen log, any kind of bridge, but there was nothing. Only the drop.
There was no useful direction except forward, so she began to descend, lowering herself from rock to rock in a manner she very much hoped no one was watching. It was not an elegant process, nor was it kind to her clothing. She tried not to think about what would need mending once this whole ordeal was over.
She had not made it even halfway down when she heard something that halted her mid-scoot.
A whistle.
Shrill and thin, like a trapped animal, and close. It was somewhere farther down the creek bed, perhaps a hundred steps away.
Leanne sat very still.
Some logical part of her mind told her she ought not to go toward it. But a primal, less articulate part had already decided otherwise. Against her better judgement, she picked her way through weeds and tall grass forcing themselves up between the rocks. The air seemed heavier here, the space tighter and more enclosed.
When she finally broke through into a shallow, ankle-deep pool, her breath caught in her throat.
It was Bev.
She sat in the water clutching her ankle with one hand. Her pant leg had been rolled up and her boot lay beside her on a rock. Mud streaked her clothes and bare arms, and her hair had come loose, hanging around her face in a wild, damp tangle. She waved her sash above her head with her other arm, her whistle clenched between her teeth.
“Bev—” Leanne exhaled.
Bev dropped her arm and snapped around to face her. The instant she saw Leanne, her eyes widened and she shook her head violently, waving her away in frantic, jerking motions. Go. Go.
But her ankle was badly swollen. The skin around it looked tight, hot, and shiny. There was no possibility of running on something like that.
Leanne stumbled closer. “Oh—oh, my goodness. You’re hurt.”
Bev’s hands flew up again, more desperate now, shooing her back as though trying to drive off a stray animal. She jabbed a finger past Leanne toward the trees behind her, her mouth shaping a word soundlessly. Run.
“I’m not—I can’t leave you,” Leanne said hurriedly, dropping beside her in the water. “Just—just wait a second. Perhaps I can—”
She swallowed. What was one meant to do for a twisted ankle? Ice? Elevation? Neither was especially available under the present circumstances.
“Can you stand?” she asked, already slipping an uncertain arm beneath Bev’s. “If we go slow, we can—”
Bev made a strangled sound somewhere between pain and frustration, seizing the sleeve of Leanne’s dress. For a second, Leanne thought she meant to use her for leverage.
But then she saw her face.
Bev was smiling.
It was the most terrifying smile Leanne had ever witnessed. Bright, trembling, and reminding her very much of a lit fuse. Bev looked on the verge of bursting into laughter or tears or perhaps both. Yet beneath it ran something steadier than either: resolve. And woven through that resolve, unmistakably, was eagerness.
“He’s coming,” Bev whispered.
The words sent a cold spike down Leanne’s spine.
“Go,” Bev said, louder now, urgency sharpening her voice. Her smile remained. If anything it grew almost girlish with excitement. “You have to go. Don’t let him see you.”
Somewhere in the trees there was movement. Something large. Something moving fast.
Leanne reached out and gripped Bev’s arm. “Oh, Bev, we must move. What if it’s not Hal? What if he doesn’t realize it’s you?”
“It is, and he does. Don’t worry, he knows the sound of my whistle.” She gave it a flick and it pinged against her nail. “But he doesn’t know you’re here. If he sees you, he’ll go and find your man. It’s how he plays. Now go, get out of here.”
Leanne couldn’t stop the whimper of desperation that escaped her lips. “Bev, please,” she begged. “He’s going to catch you if you stay here. He’ll make his move when you’re vulnerable like this—”
“I know!” Bev shouted. She shoved Leanne in the chest, still smiling that awful smile. “For God’s sake, what aren’t you getting? This is the best part! Let me be!”
Another crash, closer now. More branches breaking. The water around them began to quiver, but Bev’s eyes were fixed beyond, shining as though she were waiting for the main attraction at a fair.
Leanne went rigid.
“You’re crazy,” she sputtered. “Crazy.”
Without another thought, she turned and ran.
She scrambled up the far side of the bank, bashing her knee against a rock, and burst into the brush beyond, branches clawing at her while her breath tore raggedly through her chest. She did not look back. She could not. Behind her, the forest broke open with the sound of heavy footfalls, undergrowth being trampled, something immense advancing with terrible ease, and then—
A shriek split the air.
Leanne ground her teeth against the sound. It echoed around her, then behind, lingering in the creek bed long after she had put distance between it. But she only ran harder, driving her legs forward even as they trembled. She ran and ran and ran. Heaven knew whether she had ever moved so far or so fast in all her life.
At last—after direction and time had become equally unreliable, after the forest had blurred into mould-dark greens and browns—she collapsed onto a rise of roots at the foot of a cedar, dragging air into her lungs.
She had no idea how long she had been running. Ten minutes. An hour. A year, perhaps. But she could go no farther just then. The backs of her heels were raw from the boots, and the headache she had carried since the tents now beat steadily against her skull. She leaned back on her hands and tipped her head upward. Blood trickled in a warm line down her shin.
These women made no sense.
What was the point of such a ridiculous game if the Minis had no chance of winning? To be subjected to something so demeaning, so openly humiliating, and be expected to call it recreation? It was madness.
She pulled the clip from her hair and tried to run her fingers through her curls. Impossible. There were leaves, grass, and something sticky in them. She threw the clip to the ground and brought her galosh down on it, crushing it into pieces.
If everyone else wished to throw themselves gleefully beneath stampeding feet, they were welcome to it. She, for one, intended to use sense. No more making an exhibition of herself.
She was going to hide.
Leanne rose, wiped the sweat from her upper lip, and set off to try and take stock of her surroundings. As she moved, the forest grew greener and wetter, the earth softening underfoot. Huge gnats orbited her head. Once her galosh sank ankle-deep in black mud and came free with an indecorous squelch, but she went stubbornly on.
She finally spotted an especially tall tree with a fork splitting the trunk some distance above the ground. She stopped where she was and looked up. It was high enough that no hunter would think to inspect it closely, and certainly not reach into it. She might sit there in perfect safety until the horn sounded. She might even dry a little in the breeze.
She grabbed the lowest branch and did her best to climb. The first two went tolerably. The third less so. By the fourth she was panting. By the fifth her arms had begun to burn.
At home, heights were different. At home there were ladders built to scale, little bridges from shelf to shelf, handles and railings. These branches were rough, too wide to grip properly, and set just far enough apart that she had to hoist nearly her entire weight with her arms alone.
Still, she persisted.
At last she dragged herself onto a branch wide enough to stand on sideways and clung to a splintered edge of trunk, chest heaving. She was perhaps level with Keith’s hip, hardly the triumphant height she had imagined. She glanced up at the fork above; it remained several hard pulls away.
Suddenly, voices drifted through the trees, and Leanne froze.
“...but Ronnie insisted on doing it. Bought herself boots and everything.”
“How long is she gonna last, you think?”
“Would’ve been five minutes, but I’m going easy on her. That way, when this is all over, maybe I’ll only hear about it for a week instead of two.”
Leanne’s throat constricted. She tried to flatten herself against the trunk, but there was very little of her to flatten and nothing at all to hide behind. So she was forced to watch, completely exposed, as the giant men came into view between the trees. They were enormous, loose-limbed, muddy at the cuffs, ribbons tied at their wrists. One fair-haired, one dark.
Neither Keith.
“You should see her when she gets mad,” the fair one was saying, “when you’re the size of, like, a cig and a half, there’s only so much you can do.”
“That’s why I usually scare Jess out of it before it starts,” the dark one replied. “Trust me, when I catch her, I’m gonna make sure she never wants to play this game again.”
The fair one kicked a rock. “If only that worked with Ronnie. I’m pretty sure she’d stop seeing me if I pulled something like that. I—oh, dude, look!”
Both their gazes locked on Leanne, and she felt as though she had been nailed to the tree. For one suspended instant, no one moved.
Then the fair one’s mouth slowly curved into a smile. He clicked his tongue. “Keith’s girl, isn’t she?”
Leanne’s heart gave a sharp, panicked jolt. She folded an arm across her waist, trying to hide her sash. “Oh,” she managed, her voice barely holding together. “Oh, please—”
But something eager had already lit their expressions. Without another word, both of them turned and broke into a run.
“Wait!” Leanne blurted. She let go of the trunk to cup her hands around her mouth. “Wait! I—”
The bark gave way beneath her feet.
The fall wasn’t far, but it was enough to turn her stomach over itself on the way down. She struck the ground on her back, the air punched from her lungs. Mud splashed over her chest and across her face, and she slid a few inches into the stagnant water pooled at the base of the tree.
She laid back, unmoving. The world rang hollow and distant around her. Then the pain came rushing in. Her shoulder, her hip, the sting of wounds she hadn’t even felt before. Her chest heaved uselessly as she tried to breathe, her body refusing to cooperate. The ground sucked faintly at her elbows where they’d sunk into the mud. When she tried to push herself up, they buckled almost immediately, dropping her back down with a soft, pathetic splash.
“I can’t—” she choked. “I can’t do this.”
Everything around her was so stupidly large. The trees, the rocks, the grass, even the pauses in the noise. Her own breathing felt excessive, like it was carrying for miles.
It was just like—
Just like—
No. She squeezed her eyes shut.
But her mind would not let her alone. Images forced their way in, crowding upon one another: the morning Keith had to open the jam jar after she insisted she could manage it; the evening he poured cold water over her when she burned herself trying to push his coffee cup closer; the times she had miscounted the ladder rungs and made him steady her with a finger; the afternoons she had strained her voice calling up to him from the floor; the days she left messes on the counter because some were too large to clean by herself; the nights she was so exhausted from traversing the house that she could hardly speak to him when he came home from work. Seven long years of it, settling layer upon layer like dust.
Leanne sat up, wiping the wet strands of hair from her face, and was mortified to discover she was crying. Tears streamed from her eyes, leaving warm tracks through the mud on her cheeks. A sob slipped out, and she clapped a hand over her mouth.
Who did she think she was? This wasn’t a game. Not for her, climbing trees and crawling through mud. She belonged in her quilting circle, teaching the other wives how to embroider daylilies and geraniums. In the kitchen, positioning fruit on a Jell-O salad or untangling cords in the junk drawer. At the table, polishing Keith’s favourite cuff links.
Here, she was just…
She glanced down into the muddy puddle beside her and saw a strange creature staring back. Its face was streaked with brown, scratches cut across its cheeks, and pine needles jutted from its matted hair like horns.
…Small.
The whistle hung against her chest, its cord damp and twisted.
She raised a hand and ran her fingernail along the hatch marks in the plastic. All she had to do was blow it. One sharp breath, and the nightmare would be over.
No one would blame her, and certainly not Keith. Of all people, he would stop immediately, even if the rules had not required it. He was always good like that. And he would not question her, either. He would gather her up and find somewhere she could wash off and put her hair back into a presentable state, then carry her to the car and take her out for dinner wherever she pleased. He would not make comments or little jokes about the why of it. He would let her sit in the crook of his neck the entire drive home if she wanted.
And yet there were so many things he could not be telling her.
Her hand went limp, falling into her lap, and a glint of gold caught her eye. Her ring, somehow still there despite everything. It was dulled by mud, sweat, and blood, and as she looked at it, the old emptiness began to stir again inside her. Her stupid ring, made from gold cut from Keith’s own band.
Through a blur of tears, she yanked the ring from her finger, glad that the slippery grime was useful for at least something. She held it in her palm, her hand shaking with the electric urge to throw it away.
It’s so small he probably won’t even notice it’s missing, she thought.
“Okay, but that’s only because you didn’t give me a chance to get my glasses first.”
Leanne gasped under her breath. She looked up, and there he was, standing right in front of her—but not as himself. Instead of seventy-five inches tall, he was only five. Her eyes widened, and a bright smile broke across her face.
At the sight of it, he stepped back, his brows drawing together in nervous indignation. He crossed his arms. “You told me you weren’t going to do this anymore.”
Her memory stirred. She knew this scene. It resembled a conversation she had once had with the real Keith only a year or so earlier, beside their bed, when she had sat on the nightstand explaining a dream she’d had in the night… something she thought about far too often. But now that memory seemed to be trespassing into the fantasy itself, the lines between them blurring.
Mini-Keith turned away and began pacing back and forth. Leanne tried not to notice the soft ache of having him so close, small enough that she could see all of him at once.
“Do you like me better this way?” Keith asked curtly.
Leanne nibbled her lip. “Do you?”
He stopped. “You didn’t answer my question.” He shot her a look, his eyes darker than she had ever seen them. “Is this easier for you?”
Her heart gave a sharp pang. “Don’t say things like that.”
“I’m not the one wishing it were different.”
Emotion welled up inside her again. She looked down at the ring still cupped in her palm, then back at him. There was a Mini-sized ring on his finger. Seamless. Whole.
“I just…” she said at last, her voice breaking. “I wish we matched.”
He looked at her for a long moment. Then the hard line of his mouth eased.
He uncrossed his arms and came over, lowering himself into the mud in front of her. When he reached her, he tipped her chin up so she had no choice but to meet his eyes.
“We already do, hon,” he said quietly. “But not like this.”
She scoffed, but it came out thin and broken, more of a breath than laughter. “How can I know that for sure?”
A faint smile touched his mouth. “Start running and I’ll show you.”
And just like that, he was gone.
Leanne blinked. She was back in the mud, back in her aching body with all its scrapes and bruises, still holding the little circle of gold in her hand. She looked down at it, ran a finger around the band—once, twice, three times—clearing away the grime.
She took a halting, broken breath of the acrid forest air, the taste of it bitter on her tongue.
Then she carefully slid the ring back onto her finger.
She gathered her legs beneath her, wincing at the pain, and pushed herself to her feet. Wobbly, but standing. She scraped the dirt from her face and wiped her hands on her dress without looking at the streaks she left behind, then tore a strip from the damaged hem and tied back her hair in a messy knot, debris and all. She loosened the whistle where it hung at her throat. She tightened her sash.
“Breath one-two,” she murmured, wiping the last of her tears away.
And then she took a step. It stung her heel, and so did the next. But she coaxed herself forward all the same.
She watched where her feet landed, choosing what looked like the least treacherous patches of ground. Her pace was slow, but eventually she worked herself up to something between a brisk walk and a jog, keeping her elbows pumping at her sides. She lifted her galoshes clear of roots and furrows, parted branches with one hand and kept the other near her dress so it would not catch. When the ground dipped she hurried; when it rose she ducked and moved through whatever cover was available, barely pausing before pushing on again.
It surprised her how quickly the forest changed once she stopped fighting it. What had seemed a chaotic green mess began to separate into something usable. Logs became barriers to slip past rather than climb. Nettles became warnings. Even puddles seemed to announce themselves just in time to avoid.
The silence split into kinds too. There was the ordinary quiet where nothing was near , and there was the strained, pregnant silence that came just before something disturbed it.
Once, hearing footsteps far off, she slid beneath the roots of an overturned log and lay there with her cheek against the damp earth, scarcely daring to breathe, while someone thundered past on one of the hunting trails. She waited until the tremors were gone. When she crawled out, her dress was completely beyond recognition, yet she found herself still moving forward.
She had begun to feel a curious little pride in herself. Not vanity exactly, but something more authentic. She was doing it. Not gracefully, nor in any manner that could be called athletic, but doing it.
She crossed into a stand of younger firs where the trunks grew close together, neat as umbrella handles set in a rack. The floor there was springy with old needles. Light slipped down in pale narrow shafts. It was almost pretty enough to be a place for a picnic.
Then she heard it.
Not the careless crashing and blundering of the others, with whole sections of the forest being bulldozed in their wake, but the quick, measured thump-thump-thump of a stride where each foot consulted the next before coming down.
Keith.
Her body answered before thought had time to present itself. She darted left, bent beneath a low branch, crossed a scatter of stones, then veered right beneath a spray of teaberry leaves that brushed her on all sides. Behind her came another series of footsteps. He had found her trail.
She let out an involuntary burst of laughter and clapped a hand over her mouth.
“Mercy,” she breathed, and ran harder.
There was no terror in it now, only a bright and dreadful exhilaration that sharpened every sense. The green was greener. The air colder in her throat. Her heart pounded against her ribs.
She heard him alter course when she altered hers. She heard him vault a fallen trunk she had run through. She heard, once, very close, the swish of branches against his sleeve.
He was gaining.
Leanne sprang over a rivulet, landed badly, recovered herself, and sped on. Her breath came quick and hot. Her cheeks burned. A laugh kept trying to break out of her again. She would not permit it. This was serious business.
She was at a full-force run when, ahead of her, lying across the path of needles, she spotted a stick. Clean, dry, taut-looking, no thicker than two of her fingers.
She knew at once.
Without pausing, without letting herself think twice about it, she planted her heel squarely upon it.
CRACK!
The sound rang out like a pistol shot.
Behind her, his pursuit changed instantly. Straight toward her now. No more searching left in it. No guesswork.
Leanne gave a little cry and ran on. She felt absurdly light. The trees flew by. Her sash tails whipped at her legs. Somewhere behind her he laughed—a breathless, astonished sound she hadn’t heard from him in a long time.
“Leanne!”
She looked back. That was a mistake. She saw him bolting between the trees, shirtsleeves rolled, hair fallen loose at his forehead, eyes fixed upon her with such warm and hungry determination that the sight of it turned her knees to water.
She faced forward again, but too late. A root caught her galosh, and she stumbled with a gasp.
In the same instant the world rose.
No—it was she who rose.
A great hand swept cleanly round her leg, lifting her up and out of the run as easily as one might gather a dropped napkin from the floor. Her free foot kicked into empty air as the forest wheeled, and then she was upside down, held fast by one leg in broad fingers.
Keith stood bent over, breathing hard enough that each breath moved her with it. His hair was mussed, his collar open, his face flushed with exertion and delight.
Leanne was breathless too. She could not have said whether it was from running or from being there in his hands, but did it matter? One thing she did know was that she was very glad she had worn the trousers. Her dress hung down by her hair, which had come loose again. Filthy curls fell into her eyes. She was smiling so much it hurt.
For a moment neither of them spoke. They only looked at one another with the strange, bright foolishness of people who have been altogether too earnest in their play.
Then Keith’s thumb adjusted gently at her leg, securing his hold.
“Got you,” he said.
And Leanne, still panting, only laughed as she hid her face behind her hands.
A cool breeze blew through the forest, and as they set off at an easier pace, Keith gently gathered her back into a dignified position. Leanne sat secure in the cradle of his palm, one hand wrapped around the base of his thumb, the other toying with the ring on her finger. They continued to say nothing. They only breathed. His came deep and slow, still a little ragged from the run, while hers were quicker, trying gradually to imitate his and become normal again. Now and then his thumb moved, almost absentmindedly, to settle her more comfortably where she leaned against him.
The forest seemed a different place on the way back. What had been so frightening at first now looked cool and serene. The trees were no longer endless black towers but firs and pines and cedars. Puddles reflected strips of purpling sky. Lightning bugs started to flicker to life.
Keith glanced down at her once, then again, as though unable to help himself. “I still can’t believe you ran like that,” he said at last. “You near took ten years off me.”
Leanne gave a little laugh and tucked a loose curl behind her ear. “Did I?”
“You surely did. I thought I’d have you in two minutes flat.” He shook his head. “Then there you were darting under logs and cutting across stones like some kind of little rogue.”
She made a modest sound, half chuckle, half dismissal, though a warm glow stole through her at the words. After a few more steps she said, quite seriously, “We should do it again sometime.”
Keith stopped so abruptly that she had to grip his thumb to keep from being tipped forward.
He looked down at her.
Leanne, feeling suddenly shy, inspected the cuticle of his nail as if it were of great interest.
“You mean that?” he asked.
“I do.” She raised her eyes. “Though next time I think I should like to wear something proper from the start.”
He gave a small smirk, one corner of his mouth lifting so that she could see the dimple in his cheek, and her heart quietly fluttered.
“I agree,” he said, bringing his hand up to his chin in that thoughtful way he had when analyzing something. “In my professional opinion, I think the pants introduced an entirely unnecessary layer of resistance.”
By the time they reached the clearing the afternoon sun had softened to amber. The tents glowed white at the edges and the streamers moved lazily in the breeze. There were fewer people now, clusters of couples standing about with drinks, mud, ribbons, and flushed faces.
As Keith approached, several heads turned. A whisper went round, then a little cheer. People started clapping. Leanne blinked.
Near the main tent sat Phyllis and Bev. Bev’s ankle had been thickly swaddled and lifted onto a folding chair, but she was smiling as though it didn’t bother her at all. Kneeling behind her in the lawn was the mountain of her husband, Hal, his face pinched in concentration while his huge fingers worked, with surprising delicateness, at her shoulders.
When Bev saw her, she raised her paper cup in salute. “There she is!” she called.
Leanne was about to look over her shoulder before remembering where she was. Keith lowered his hand to the ground and let her step onto the grass. She straightened automatically, aware that everyone was looking at her. A volunteer came forward holding a ribbon on a velvet tray. It was blue with gold edges, stamped HIDER’S RIBBON.
Leanne stared at it. “I’m sorry,” she said. “There must be some mistake.”
“No mistake at all,” said the volunteer, beaming. “Last hider to be caught is the winner.”
The clearing broke into applause again. Bev whistled through her fingers. Hal pounded one great hand against his thigh.
Leanne turned slowly to Keith. He was already lowering himself, easing down until he sat upon the ground.
“You mean…” she began.
He had taken out his glasses, and now polished them with the handkerchief from his back pocket. It was the new one, the one she had spent months embroidering with oakleaf hydrangeas. He only ever brought it out when he meant to show her off.
“You won, hon,” he said mildly.
The ribbon was pinned to the front of her dress. It sat there absurdly splendid against the mud. The prize for the best prey.
But… somehow that didn’t feel so bad.
And then, in that moment, for reasons she couldn’t explain, she felt her eyes wander over to Bev. She still sat with her ankle on the chair, one of its metal legs dented from being handled perhaps a little too roughly, and she was smiling. But there was also a particular twinkle in her eye, one that made Leanne roam her eyes over her disheveled hair, the scrapes on her arms, the mud on her clothes and ribbons. She reached up and touched her own hair, her own skin.
Her own ribbon.
From behind, Phyllis sauntered up, looping her arms around Leanne’s and resting her chin on her shoulder. “A little better than Jell-O salad, ain’t it?”
Leanne lowered her hand. She looked around again at the social as things were starting to wind down. The volunteers were already getting ready for the next game, sweeping the wooden platforms where the registration tables sat, collecting the whistles, and throwing all of the coloured sashes into soapy water bins so they could be washed and hung for tomorrow. One of the Mini moving vans had been started up, and the smell of exhaust mixed with warm pollen.
Then Leanne felt the arms around her slip away as Keith’s hand moved into her field of view, approaching her from the side. It stopped in front of her, palm up, and she didn’t need to look back to know Phyllis had likely turned away again, hiding her smile. She kept her gaze forward, though, eyes resting on the familiar expanse of skin she knew so well.
“You did so good, hon,” Keith murmured. “I’ll take it from here.”
She hesitated. Somewhere deep inside was the smallest prodding that she needed to be back on guard. Her dress needed mending and her nails needed filing and her muddy, muddy hair needed fixing. She almost reached up to wipe away something smeared across her face.
But instead she unwound her sash, kicked off her boots and slid the trousers off her legs, tossing them to the side. She stepped barefoot into Keith’s waiting hand, and he held obediently still as she allowed herself to collapse to her knees, then her stomach in the soft grooves of his palm. She felt the air grow warmer as he wrapped his fingers around her whole body, then the swoop in her stomach as he got to his feet, and then there were no more thoughts after that.
__________________
You can also find this story on my Wattpad under the same username, in my G/t oneshots collection Offset. Constructive comments and feedback are always welcome.
being overly cautious of men makes the concept of gentle male giants so insanely appealing to me because oh my gosh. What do you mean you are literally physically capable of so much harm, capable of dehumanization and weaponizing masculinity, capable of belittling and erasing any desire to embrace femininity for the sake of a traditional dynamic, yet we’re SO gentle. So careful. Lowering your voice, making your actions known before they’re performed, making it feel GOOD to just be little and protected 😭 like, going from being overly cautious and terrified to actually trusting a male presence because this giant has done nothing but prove you’re precious and worth taking care of. Being seen as beautiful and in need of affection. Casual boyishness on a controlled level for your comfort. Devotion. Maturity. Being a soft spot to someone tough. Especially scenarios where this huge guy is doing something so ridiculously gentle like brushing hair with a mini brush between their fingers. Smoothing down skirt fabric between two fingers. Pinching cheeks. It all means so much more when it’s expectations being subverted.
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a series of g/t childhood media that had a chokehold on me before I knew what g/t was
some of these are questionable! You’ve been warned.
Peter Pan
the secret world of Arietty (duh)
Epic
Alvin and the chipmunks 😭
THE SMURFS
Harry and his bucket full of dinosaurs…
the iron giant
the tale of despereau
doc mcstuffins
Toy Story
ratatouille (I would read an entire borrower fic with identical plot)
the princess and the frog
bee movie (IK.)
the littles
the tinkerbell movies; specifically the great fairy rescue and the pirate fairy (neverbeast has great g/t potential too)
Alice in wonderland
the Barbie life in the dreamhouse episode where Barbie and Raquelle shrink
Barbie princess charm school (their little fairy companions!!!)
The Lorax (those fish/bears were little and the onceler would manhandle them)
Tom and Jerry????
the mako mermaids shrinking episode
the wizards of waverly place shrinking episode where Alex got kept as a doll for a little while
sword art online! Yui and Kirito/Asuna were my INTRODUCTION to parental g/t, it literally changed my brain chemistry. The gifs are great too. I might have to make an entire post about it
squid girl
This isnt g/t media but honourable mention is the movie poster for Geek Charming, I literally thought it was gonna be about shrinking or something but no it was just for the lols
Bear in the Big Blue House (especially Bear and Tutter)
The Nut Job
The Rescuers
Aladdin (SO MUCH in this one)
One specific episode of Johnny Test where Johnny gets turned into a spider
The Mouse and the Motorcycle
Barbie Thumbelina
The Big Comfy Couch
An Xbox 360 game for The Adventures of Tintin, specifically the multiplayer mode where Captain Haddock bonks his head and the levels take place in a dream world full of giant enemies. I remember Red Rackham being rather large, and the idea of a giant pirate made my brain very I happy indeed
First time actually posting my writing to Tumblr. I wrote this specifically for it, in the past few days. I extend my thanks to @bellametre for encouraging me to post.
Author: AudaciousIntegral (I, Hailey)
Title: The Right Measure
Themes: Giant/tiny, romance, fluff, queer characters, The Borrowers
Audience: Teens and older, SFW
TW: Swears, premature themes
Chapter 1: A Normal Cup Of Tea
Strange was that day. It started in a guise of normality, only to unravel into a chaotic chain of events that would change Ryleigh forever. She simply wanted to have a cup of tea. A normal cup of tea. A cup with only tea in it.
'Shit, fuck, hell, aghh,' yelped the tiny creature, half-drowning itself further as it swore at its own demise.
Ryleigh froze in bewilderment as they witnessed the utterly absurd scene before them, their hand still suspended in the motion of reaching towards the cup to drink it. They lay lazily on the sofa in the comfort of their home, mouth ajar in confusion and eyes fixated on what appeared to be a very small person in their cup of tea. It flailed, clumsily leaning upside down over the rim of the cup, and its head sank into the liquid, no, was submerged in it.
Should I help it? Ryleigh wondered. She had little reason to aid intruders like this one as they disturbed her peace and her tea, but its high-pitched cries of panic as it failed to reclaim stable ground beneath its feet disturbed her even more. Especially with how human they sounded.
Fine, she thought, and sighed. Her hand, which had still not budged in the confusion, inched closer to the cup, then delicately grasped with two fingers the 'legs' of whatever that thing was, and gave it a firm yank upwards.
Ryleigh held the culprit in the air by the legs, and examined it. It dripped with tea, and blood was rushing down to its head, which flushed a bright red. Its flushing was then emphasised by the sudden realisation that not only it was no longer drowning, but Ryleigh also had caught it. It had gotten quiet suddenly, confused, before it snapped out of it and threw them a glare filled with what appeared to be a generational amount of venom.
'Put. Me. Down. You fuckin' monster,' the intruder spit through its teeth.
Ryleigh recoiled, shocked by the animosity.
' . . . Into the cup of tea?' They enquired with a certain rigidity.
'Course not, you muppet. On the ground,' it urged with perceptible frustration.
'The odds of me cooperating are becoming slimmer by the second, with that attitude,' Ryleigh asserted calmly. 'Ask nicely.'
The creature's little face twisted with outrage and, for a moment, it seemed it was holding back a horribly offensive retort. A few seconds later, though, it swallowed its anger and adopted a more jaded expression.
'Fine. May Her Highness please place me on the surface in the vicinity of the vessel containing liquid,' it said slowly and heavily, unwilling to be even convincingly faux-diplomatic.
'That will do for now,' Ryleigh sang lightly.
They did as asked and gently laid the intruder next to the cup of tea, and allowed it a moment to settle before beginning their interrogation. 'There is much I require an explanation for. First of all, what even are you?' They asked.
'I don't owe you shit. In fact, I'm leaving,' it said, and began to walk away, still dripping in tea.
Leaving? Ryleigh thought, taken aback. Does it really think it can barge into my home, dive into my tea, insult me, and leave whenever it wants?
'Ah, you seem to misunderstand. You will leave when I will allow you to. Not before that,' she said coldly. Her fingers then chased after the creature, pounced, and quickly snatched it again, this time by the waist. It yelped as her grip expelled the air out of its lungs suddenly, then groaned in frustration and began to struggle against it. With little respite, they raised the squirming intruder to their face and studied it sternly. My, it really looks like a human, but very small, Ryleigh noted. In fact, it exhibits the angry expressions of one, and screams insults at me like we are having a row at the pub. How bizarre, they thought. They stared down at it with a serious expression mixed with slight annoyance and disbelief until it exhausted itself fighting against their hand. Soon enough, its struggling faltered, and the living room was quiet again.
'Finished?' Ryleigh said.
'Not until I have your blood on my hands,' it replied with a feral expression.
They brushed off the comment. 'Right, so, you don't really have that power over me. You will answer my questions, and I won't let you off before that. Do you understand?'
'Go to hell,' it shouted.
Ryleigh rolled their eyes. 'You sure are feisty for such a little thing. Well, your tone might change once you realise that, if you don't come home, others might come looking for you. I know you can't be acting alone, with how diminutive you are. And the others, I'll catch them all the same, if they're anywhere as clumsy as you,' they asserted. 'So, for the last time, do you understand?'
That possibility seemed to make the intruder uneasy, and Ryleigh felt a weak squirm between her fingers. After a moment of reflection, it nodded with a grave pout on its lips.
'Good!' Ryleigh exclaimed. 'So, again, what are you?'
'Borrower,' it said flatly.
'That does not help me much, I'm afraid. Are you a kind of little human?' they asked.
'Don't you dare compare me to your kind,' it replied, tensing up in their hand.
'But it is something like that, isn't it? You look like a person, just a very small one,' they pushed further.
'I guess,' it sulked.
Ryleigh leaned back onto the sofa, borrower still in hand, and dropped her hand until it laid on her thighs. From this perspective, the borrower looked so small. But it refused to return her gaze. I guess it hopes I will lower my guard for a moment, and seize the opportunity to run away. At least, that's what I would do, if I were in its position, she thought. To her own surprise, she found herself empathising with the poor thing. I still don't know its name, she noted.Curiosity burnt inside her, so she continued to ask it questions.
'Perhaps this is a strange question, but, do you have a name?'
'What do you think, tall fuck? Yes, 'course I have a name. It's June, and you'd do best to remember it when I'll take away everything you own and everyone you love,' it snarled.
Ryleigh brought the she-borrower close to their eyes again, doubt showing clearly on their face, unrestrained, unyielding. 'Right. And I suppose you have the bite to back this up, June?' they asked with skeptical snark.
'I've got bite alright,' said June, before planting her teeth into their finger.
There was a sharp tingle, they felt, in their index finger. Like that of a swarm of tiny needles trying to break skin. However, the pain itself was barely noticeable to them. They almost felt sorry for her, sorry that she was under the impression that this was meant to prove her point. Bold spirit, naive girl, Ryleigh thought.
'I'm afraid that doesn't feel painful in the slightest,' they said with feigned disappointment in their voice. 'And, by the way, my name is Ryleigh. Nice to meet you too,' they teased.
June's eyes grew wide, the weight of her powerlessness hitting her abruptly, and while she continued to defy Ryleigh, something about her demeanour seemed to fold and soften.
'Ughh, who cares. You're mistaken if you think I'm ever gonna make buddy-buddy with something, someone like you. Now, will you let me go or not?' she whinged.
'Not quite just yet, little one. You owe me an explanation for your admittedly unfortunate fall into my teacup. This is my home, after all,' Ryleigh said.
June shifted and one of her eyebrows twitched. 'You don't need to know that.'
In turn, Ryleigh raised an eyebrow. 'As a matter of fact, yes, I do. Go on then, tell me; I'll happily be here all day. See, I'm not the one stuck inside my hand right now,' she insisted.
June glanced away from her, staring into the distance for a moment, then sighed and turned back to Ryleigh with an exasperated expression. 'Fine, I'll tell you, since you're being so stubborn. I saw you hid a cube of sugar in there and I wanted to quickly take it out while you weren't looking and bring it home. That's all,' she pouted.
'Sorry?' Ryleigh asked, wondering if she heard right.
'Yeah. You didn't look like you were drinking the cup, so it was worth a shot,' June continued.
'Hid . . . a sugar cube. In my cup of tea?'
'Are you slow or sumthing? Yes!'
'I don't know how to tell you this, June, but, sugar melts in liquids. It's gone.'
'W-What?' June blurted out, blinking rapidly in shock.
'I can show you if you want, but yes, really,' Ryleigh said, her voice sounding more amused by the second.
'Oh, I'll be . . . I took all that risk and got caught just for something that isn't even here anymore. This is the worst day of my life,' June said, defeated and sinking into Ryleigh's hand.
There was something simply endearing to Ryleigh about someone making such a naive mistake. This little intruder, she didn't mean any harm. No, she simply was wildly incompetent. It made them wonder if she could even find her way home, at this rate. 'Well, it could be worse,' Ryleigh said then smiled, 'you could have stumbled upon a much less welcoming host than I. At least I won't squash you or feed you to a cat.'
'Uhh, that's a very low bar, but thanks? I guess you don't seem like the panicking type. Kinda weird, actually. You're too calm,' June said, then squinted her eyes, 'you are going to feed me to a cat, aren't cha?' she said.
'No!' Ryleigh exclaimed, smiling nervously. 'No. Especially not now that I can see you are just a very little person. And now that we've cleared everything up, you are a guest in my home. You rightfully deserve my hospitality,' Ryleigh asserted.
'I don't want your hospitality. You said you'd let me go. What makes you think I won't go home immediately after that?'
'You're having trouble breathing. And I have to hold onto you tight because your body is as limp as a wet facecloth. You're in no state to go anywhere,' Ryleigh observed sternly.
June blushed and suddenly straightened, her breathing becoming more regular. 'Touché. I'm surprised you even paid attention to that,' she conceded. 'By the way, your hand is fucking crushing me in here.'
'Oh. My apologies, it's hard for me to tell. Then, well, I don't know if this is an odd request, but, may I hold you in my palm for a moment?' Ryleigh enquired.
'I feel like we've gone past the point of asking first before tossing me around. Knock yourself out,' June said.
Ryleigh swiftly rotated their hand and released their grip on the little lady. June gasped for air and lay still for a moment, comforted by the overwhelming warmth and softness of their fingers, a new sensation she would have to become accustomed to, she wagered. Ryleigh, on the other hand, still felt conflicted; they had wished to lay June back on the table respectfully, but the rather likely possibility that she would dart away and collapse from exhaustion or otherwise hurt herself tortured their mind. They weren't used to this dynamic, weren't used to tiny women who stumbled into their cup of tea, really. How protective they needed to be without coming off as patronising was something they had yet to learn, they realised. Being a little patronising is fine anyway, at times. Just because she's too proud to admit that she needs my help doesn't mean I'll let her off that easily. Small animals tend to be like that, they thought. Their eyes drifted away from June slowly, now focusing their thoughts on working out food and shelter for her. Whilst they remained deep in thought and distracted, June lay lazily in their hand, blond head lodged between their thumb and slightly curled index finger. She stared at the ceiling blankly, crushed under the weight of exhaustion, only her mind able to race anymore. Her passionate personality and intense struggling came at a high cost; there were just so many times in a day where she could muster all of her body's strength and adrenaline to throw herself at a problem. Now, she felt the withdrawal, the aftershock. I feel miserable. How am I gonna get out of this? Gwen's gonna fucking kill me,she thought. Her muscles ached terribly, and it felt like the more time passed, the more Ryleigh's skin glued to her, and the more she didn't want to leave her torpor. Getting up was soon going to be out of reach.
'June?' Ryleigh's voice boomed in her ears.
'What?' She groaned slowly, as if roused from a thousand-year slumber.
'Biscuit?' Their right hand had suddenly appeared before June's eyes, holding out a little chocolate chip biscuit on the tip of their fingers.
She didn't respond. With difficulty, she rose slightly and crawled towards it, and studied it for a moment. Ryleigh's hand was visibly trembling to her, that with microscopic adjustments of its position, but still decidedly offering the treat. Suddenly, June grabbed the biscuit from their fingers and began to devour it ferally. She had little concern for cleanliness or manners, bits of chocolate smearing her face all around her mouth, and made a threatening growl while she ate. Ryleigh watched with a mix of concern and fascination as she swallowed the whole thing within a minute, and smiled.
'Better?' They asked.
June, finished with the biscuit and wiping her mouth with her arm, sighed and looked up and directly into their eyes. 'Better,' she said. 'You didn't have to do that, though.'
'Ah, see it as compensation for the proper scare of earlier,' Ryleigh replied.
'I wasn't scared.'
'Right. Let's say it's for me gripping you too hard.'
June nodded. 'Sure.'
'Now, we've got to find you a place to sleep, don't we?' Ryleigh then stood up. The abrupt motion sent June tumbling and pressed against their fingers, and she clung the best she could onto the giant's hand until it all stopped.
'Fuck's sake, Ryleigh, where's my warning?' She shouted, a bit shocked and annoyed at being tossed around again.
They remained silent, eerily staring right at June, until the shadow of a cheeky smile grew wider.
Hawthorne getting a "hands-on" demonstration. eheheheheheheheheheheh. hehe. hehehheh. hah. hahahahah.
anyways Lonicera can change size because she's a plant and i said so and i can't be bothered to check the wiki to see if thats actually possible for affini (it probably is i think??? right??)
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Considering how most people keep gt as a secret interest, I've always wondered.
Imagine you leave your mark upon the niche gt community, whether it be making art or writing stories. It's not much, but you enjoy it and make it for the love of the game.
You've grown up, and you have less and less time to create, and you stop, tired of the reality of adulthood. Your passion is still there, but the spark is barely a flicker of what it once was.
You are a lurker again.
You grow older, eventually, and settle for the role of parenthood. You have a happy family and life is perfect.
Your blog is pretty much inactive save for the reblogs you make. But one day, a user commented on the one unfinished story you wrote 15 years ago.
It's a simple "i love your story, i can't stop rereading it! Do you plan on continuing again?"
You never planned to continue it. But touched by that one reader, your motivation lights up again, and you write, just for that one reader who you know will care for your words that come from the very essence of your soul. You've loved gt since you started having memories after all.
Behind the reader's screen, your child bonds with you in the secret interest you both share.
Your child loves you, and you love your child, in a way neither of you both expected.
Or just think about the fact that anyone could be into gt but no one is brave enough to announce it. Your doctor could be thinking about tiny people as i speak rn.
You know what? Fuckit. I'm doing a G/t reblog game!
Tag yourself with:
- Your name and basic information (that you're comfortable sharing)
- Your IRL height (if you're comfortable with sharing that.
- Your ideal G/t height
- How long you've been a G/t fan
- What you like to see in G/t content
- What you don't like to see in G/t content
- What G/t size ratio you prefer
- Your favorite official G/t media
- What OCs/projects you have, if any
- What franchise/piece of media you want to see more G/t fan content of
- Tag your Tumblr G/t friends!
- Tag some Tumblr G/t people you like (aside from your friends)!
I'll start:
- Alan, he/him, 18 y/o, male pref. bisexual + homoromantic, AuDHD
- 6'3" and counting
- 3 inches (tiny)
- Almost 4 years at this point
- I love fluff, lots of fluff. I also really like fearplay too. Casual, slice of life G/t scenarios are also really cute too! I prefer more animalistic tiny/borrower designs, I just find them cooler than just "normal human but tiny". And of course, I'm a sucker for pretty giant men. ❤️
- I avoid fetish content like the plague. Whenever I see someone who posts that sort of stuff, I block them (unless they fascinate me, in which case I keep them unblocked out of sheer curiosity). Also, I tend to avoid stuff labelled Macro/micro, as that's normally the term used for NSFW G/t. I also really don't like cruel giants, that stuff just makes me sad.
- 1:24 works best for me. Borrowers being 3 inches tall, giants being over 100 feet tall.
- I must consume every piece of Borrowers media out there. Also kaiju if that counts.
- I haven't really made any G/t OCs, but I have been working on fan characters that are G/t. I've also been working on a Vocaloid Borrower AU called Oliver in the Walls (or Oliwall for short, thanks Spinny for coming up with that name), and I've also made a Giant!Utatane Piko x Reader fanfic that I hope to continue.
- WE NEED MORE OMORI G/T AND VOCALOID G/T AND WE NEED IT NOW.
Tumblr friends (you don't have to partake if you don't want to, but you can if you do):
@immemes72 , @spinnymcwinny
G/tblr people I like:
@deathdestructiondoom , @cyanophen , @underyour-floorboards , @omyrahwrites
Hi guys I'm gonna do this because umm it seemed fun and I was tagged yaaaay
- Soma, she/her, 16 y/o, lesbian, AuDHD !!!
- 5'6. BORING!!! Too average smh.
- I like the idea of being either a giant or tiny, so I think my ideal giant height (though I would prefer to be a human with a tiny companion) would be somewhere around 100–150 ft or so? And if I were tiny. Probably 3 inches.
- literally my entire life LMAO. I read a Jack And The Beanstalk book at like 5 and it was all downhill from there man.
- fluff, obviously. Everyone loves fluff. And some fear play is always good!!! Also I really like borrowers :P and I will always eat up anything where the giant feels guilty in any way. Like if the tiny gets hurt and the giant blames themselves? I am eating that shit UP.
- I mean I kinda like anything, but I'm not usually too much of a fan of language barriers. Also I agree. Cruel giants make me sad. I've mentioned this before, but it's so hard for me to make cruel giants.
- I kinda like anything, but I think if the tiny is like finger-sized then that's peak. Minigiants have kinda been growing on me though. Not including those, I like 2-4 inch tinies (1 inch is alright, but a little extreme) and 100-200 ft tall giants.
- not all that well known in the g/t community, but Sugar Apple Fairy Tale is pretty good. The romance is REALLY boring, but the g/t is cute. Hilda is another good one, but g/t is a little less prominent
- oh goodness. I have so many g/t ocs I couldn't even begin to name them all. My main ones that I've talked about on here though are Vivi + Oli. Shoutout to borrower x princess. I've also posted a drawing of Nerine + Mayari, but it's old and kinda bad.
- Heaven Official's Blessing. Please.
- unfortunately, none of my friends use tumblr, and even if they did, they do not know about g/t 🥲🥲
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE MENTION (LOVE YOUR STUFF)
Hello
— I’m Yello, he/him preferred, Autism, 15 (ik shocker), straight as a line and as single as one could be :(
— 5’10” (177.8 cm)
— 6 inches (15.2 cm)
— I’ve been g/t fan since back in mid-2023 when I watched pinkacolla’s content for the first time and loved it
— I love seeing giant women (NOT THE FREAKY WAY YOU DUMB FUCKS) as i feel it could lead to more fluff scenarios but i really love sizeshifter x human/tiny, holy shit its the best.
— I hate seeing sexualized giants in g/t media (in or out the community) and furry giants (NO HATE TO ANY FURRIES BTW)(and i mean full furry, no half human-half animal hybrids count) OH AND THE DUMB MACRO/MICRO TAGS, oh and anything fetish
— I don’t really care but i feel 1:12 (or 1:15) as a tiny to giant ratio is pretty good
— Has to be one of these three (all are pretty good), Secret Life of Arriety, Monsters vs. Aliens, and A Bee Movie
— You already know I got (human and giant) Ray and Raegan, Amelio and Amy (both of these pairs being Genderbend Giants), and Jett and Sakura
— Splatoon g/t. ESPECIALLY ART, and also Persona and Sonic g/t
— (wish i could mention these people again) BUT COOL G/T PEOPLE: @ratcatcher0325, @tea-potato-gt, @guaxinimraccoon, @misamy-art, @isumietokyo, @pipinpali, @afraidparade
nYA!- I GOT TAGGED (since a long time ago, BUT I FINALLY REMEMBERED TO REBLOG THIS)! THANK YOUUUU >:3 💜💜💜💜💜💜💜🪻🪻🪻🪻🪻
☾︎ - You can call me Jooj, or just Jo! I'm 17, Brazilian demiromantic, ambivert and very friendly :3
☾︎ - 5'8.1'' (1,73m), but I wish to grow taller! >:3
☾︎ - uhh... it depends on my mood :< (but I'd stay in my current height, even if I was a sizeshifter)
☾︎ - I've been into G/t since... Does "since forever" count if the little 4-5yo me liked to imagine the silly old "Jack and the beanstalk" fairytale but Jack and the giant could be friends... SINCE THEN I ALWAYS WONDERED WHY GIANTS WERE PORTRAYED AS "evil, brute and ogre-like appearance >:P" AND NOT AS "gentle, friendly and funny 🥺" !- oh sorry, i yap a lot ;-;
☾︎ - that's a hard question, since i can easily LOVE everything... uhh... I like when people in the G/t community tells a thing about their day/experiences that feels like G/t! It makes me happy to think that small things and moments can bring the biggest joy to their hearts! OH, I also LOVE fluff, angst and fearplay! cuddles, arguments and FEAR! my three favorite spices when you guys cook 🫶🫶🫶
☾︎ - what do i dislike? easy thing to list. NSFW (i'm okay with gore, but i have AN EXTREME DISCOMFORT with sexual content, i hate it), any kind of fetish and sexualized stuff (EW! KEEP IT AWAY FROM ME!), pet x master trope, massive size difference (i have a like-dislike relationship with this one, it depends A LOT) and... Macro/micro (i get shivers everytime i read these words)
☾︎ - The Secret World of Arrietty... is the only one i can remember (I HAVE A BAD MEMORY 😭😭😭)
☾︎ - I have that G/t Game Project (that i decided to call it "Giants do Exist") and the OCS..? i have a ton of ocs, but my main ones are Stella, Alister and Kaio! and don't worry about the remaining ton of ocs, they will appear soon :3 (i'm both mysterious and lazy, but i'm speedrunning to show you guys everyone as soon as i can :<)
☾︎ -Alien Stage... PLEASE! TERRARIA G/T TOO (like a tiny in the terraria world or a giant-)! And Beyblade Burst, and Pokemon, and BLOODMONEY, AND SONIC, AND- *explodes*
☾︎ - My G/t Tumblr friends! (Sorry if you don't want to be tagged or if you've already been tagged :<)
-My name is Venise (yeah like the city 😁✨), you can call call me Vee if you prefer, she/her, I’m from France 🇫🇷, lesbian (in a relation😉❤️), ambivert and love to make friends✨
- I’m 5’4 (1,62m), and I’ll never be taller 😔🥲
-well I’ll definitely change my size anyway because im kind of complexed on it so but it really depends on my current mood so I think I’ll be a size shifter, but if I had the stick with a size I think I’ll stay in mine (with a couple of more inches) and my tiny partner 💞
-well I’ve discovered that G/t was a real thing back in 2020 when I first went on tumblr but I ALWAYS LOVED THIS KIND OF DYNAMIC!💞 I’ve grown up watching things like “Arriety” and “Arthur and the invisibles” and always love this kind of interaction:] I’ll always create tiny objects for fun and put them on my shelf like a tiny house (still does it 🥹✨💞)
-well I just love everything… I mean can you blame me THERE ARE INCREDIBLE ARTIST HERE AND I COULD NECER CHOOSE!!!💞✨💖 I do like angst and fluff these are the best with fearplay! But yeah Chou could give me anything and I’ll enjoy it with passion ❤️🥹
-NSFW content, I understood the meaning a little while ago but didn’t know what it really was and I don’t like it. I won’t judge because people can like it and everyone can have there preferences but I personally can’t read of see this things (I find it uncomfortable) and like micro/ macro I just… don’t like that (not hate towards the furry community I love them💞)
-5’9 (1,75m) average human height and 1’4 (3,5 cm) small tiny
-well I think it will be The Secret world of Arrietty (I can only think of this one (I love the ant man movies but I don’t think that counts has g/t💞✨)
-I’m currently working on the story of my two girls August and Lune💚💜🥹 (August is a human and Lune is a borrower) and also working on there family and friends design for the story (I plan on doing comics about it 😁💖💕✨:]
-well I don’t think of anything in particular basically if you do G/t in a fandom I’m in my over joyed so 🥲✨ but I like the marvel ones a lot 💖
THANK YOU SO MUCH TO EVERYONE WHO TAGGED ME!!!🙏🙏🙏❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥Rest assured, I noticed, hehe
-Ilovegt, she/her, 16 yo, ENTP-A, :D
- ≈ 5'8" /172cm
-smaller than an adult's finger, but reaching at least one phalanx.Often, I want to feel like a borrower, if I'm with people I'm comfortable with
-all my life...Yes, seriously, I've been a G/t fan all my life, as have all my friends I've asked, which is very strange.It feels like the love of giants and crumbs is innate, because I remember that even in my very, very early childhood I played out similar scenarios, and even the fact that I remember it is surprising.The most interesting thing is that I recently found out that the very first G/t book of my childhood is my mother's book, the only one she took with her and carried through a huge number of crossings.I suspect that she's just not a conscious gt lover, but I can't prove it)))
-When, despite the difference, the characters try to get along with each other and adjust to each other, showing their respect and awareness in order to trust a giant or take responsibility for such a tiny life.Or vice versa, when a relationship develops terribly at first, but after a while the giant and the tiny one get to know each other much better, breaking down every barrier in their path.I love it when, despite so many barriers in G/t and perhaps even more than those related to growth, characters try to overcome them in order to understand each other, to become closer, because despite all this, love for each other is born in them.As individuals to individuals, not necessarily romantically
-The borrower has a poorly prescribed Stockholm syndrome, when it feels like the author didn't want to tell a scary story, but just romanticized it.:[.Of course, everyone has their own way, I may also like this, but when the author realizes what he is doing.I also don't like it when adult borrowers are treated like little children and their dignity is belittled, I know many people like this...But not to me, for me it looks like antics and humiliation.In general, everyone has their own way, I don't like to have discussions in a public space, only if in person
-As long as they can communicate safely, or at least do it from a distance
-The secret world of Arietty and the Steel Giant, of course XP
Actually, I prefer the original stories of the little authors on Tumblr(Or it doesn't matter where), you know..well, they are much more beautiful than most G/t media, because big projects have gone through a lot of uninterested hands, it's not bad, it's just a fact.And the little G/ t stories, even if they are sometimes clumsy, unpolished, they do not have a normal structure, but they are real, sincere, somehow they still catch on despite the fact that the author is an amateur and not a professional.I'm not trying to say that big projects are not like that and do not reflect the author, or even more so because there is so much work involved in them, of course, what nonsense, it's just that there are very few good stories for the mass consumer created by people who burning with this story, if you put it all together.
-A lot, but so far I've only been doing comic with Trevor and Bennett :P
-I don't know, honestly, anything can get me hooked, even something I didn't expect.The most important thing is that the author loves what they do
-Ehem...many of you have already been tagged...My apologies for bothering you again <|_
- my ideal g/t height is 2 and a half inches! (6cm)
- Honestly, all my life. Or like from the age 1 or something. When i was at the daycare, and had a fairy imaginary friend and giants always excited me.
- i love to see more of how a normal sized relationship dynamic changes after one of the lovers suddenly shrinks.
- i mean... i like borrowers, and i understand why people like borrowers but i would love to see something different. I feel like the trope has gotten a bit too... classic? Something fresh would be nice. In my opinion! Do whatever that makes you happy, that's just me.
- around 1:30. Big enough for the giant to see the tiny's face and read their expressions, hear their voice and touch them without hurting them if they're careful enough but small enough to be covered by their fist and for everything else to be overwhelming.
- also arietty and the iron giant! As the book i love Gulliver's travels and as the series i adore george shrinks! And i also think epic 2013 is highly underrated
- I'm currently trying to finish my comic the linden and blue spruce! I dream of actually improving it as i grow and finally make it into a movie. I also might start a new story as a side project, of an old but beginner oc Aspen (a young forest spirit, giant ofc) orrrr of a possible pair of spiritual ocs. Might happen!
- i mean... I'm not in many fandoms aside from my audio obsession so I'll take anything I can.
I'm abby, she/they, currently bi-curious and demiromantic, 23 y/o
my irl hight is 164 cm (5'3'' is this how it's written?)
ideal g/t hight is 10 cm (3 inches ig)
I've loved g/t forever, but I discovered the g/t genre and Tumblr like 3 years ago I think?
I love human-to-tiny dynamics the most, shrinking, fear play and all that jazz. Borrowers honestly seem like basic g/t to me but I still love it to death lol. I love protective giants so so so much (yes I know my daddy issues are showing)
I don't like vore. at all. mouth play is on the fence for me but eating ppl is honestly just unappealing to me. also g/t-caused deaths, and I like ratios that are TOO big. like when the giant doesn't see/sees them as insects and not human.
I don't have the energy to search up the ratio... but again it's like 6':3'' more of less
my fav g/t media has to be arrietty, but I've watched the 4th episode of Trollhunters a million times bc it's my favorite show and it was a shrinking episode so I'm just in love with it. it's not at all perfect, but it's what we got, with such a niche interest it's hard to find something exactly to your liking. Oh! also transformers is the best big g/t franchise I've found so far, I love it so much.
I have my main project "Mar and Jake"! a story I'm developing for years now (that I couldn't find the time to continue in a long while). it features Mar, the tiny, and Jake, the "giant", as well as a size shifter and more :3 I also wrote genshin fanfics lately with yumeshipping as I discover my romantic identity though it all.
more g/t fan content's gotta be for genshin. I know it's not something that many g/t creators are playing or are interested in but it really will be an amazing thing for me to find more ppl who love genshin in this community
well, I feel like my closest friends already did this, so I hope @soakedmilkgt hasn't been tagged yet lol
WAHOO thanks for mentioning me! Now I have an excuse to play this game. 🤭🤭
My name is Bella and I’m a twenty-something gal who’s doing my best to write the things I’ve always wanted to read.
I’m five feet and three inches babbyyy. Not terrible, but it’s just short enough for people to call me as such, and I usually have to push the seat all the way up to reach the pedals.
Most of the time I’d like to be small enough to eat the drupelets on a raspberry like apples, but being the size of a mountain would be pretty cool, too.
I’ve been a G/t fan since I was conscious, I think. One of my earliest memories is sitting in the cart at Superstore looking at a picture of the Jolly Green Giant on a can of corn and being sad that I couldn't meet him in real life.
I absolutely love it when G/t is used as a storytelling device to reveal and overcome someone’s weakness. A self-reliant tiny has to learn to rely on a giant for survival. A selfish, cold-hearted giant has to learn to be gentle with others much smaller than him. An emotional size-shifter must learn to embrace her emotions. That kind of stuff is like crack cocaine for me.
I really hate it when G/t content doesn’t do anything with it. There’s nothing more disappointing than seeing size differences pop up in a story, but it’s like nothing changes. DO SOMETHING WITH IT! Have some fun! Explore what it would look like for these characters to have their friend suddenly change sizes! So much wasted potential.
The image of a hand being able to wrap around almost an entire body has always been brain-scratching for me, so probably something like that. But I’ll take just about anything.
If I had to pick a single one, it would be The Borrowers. Those books fundamentally changed my brain chemistry as a child. The 1992 BBC show only furthered the damage, and it’s now my favourite iteration of the story I’ve seen to date.
I have probably close to half a dozen G/t book ideas and countless short stories in the making. I’m hoping to one day make my oneshots collection Offset a fully-stocked home depot to enjoy, and to write at least one book with multiple chapters.
G/t takes on old fairy tales like The Little Mermaid and Little Red Riding Hood are pretty cool, but overall I prefer original content, especially ones by indie artists and authors. I feel like G/t hits harder when it’s a core element baked into a story’s DNA.
I don’t think I’ve gotten to know any G/t people on here well enough to call them friends, but I’d love to some day!
Some G/t creators who inspire me: @fae-of-the-forest01, @gtbug, @kuberish, @okminer07, @misamy-art, @narrans, @sageshell-draws, and @so-very-small. Seriously, their stuff is so good.
Another lil comic strip tehe! Ngl all the budget went to Wynn in that one panel lol. Just wanted to give the whole black and white style a try for this comic :}
I don’t really have a style decided when it comes to the comics yet so you’ll probably see a lot of experimenting with the looks of the comics and feel free to let me know if there’s a specific look that you like! (I’m indecisive oh well 🥲)
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A little something that came to me in a burst of inspiration a few evenings ago. I had so much fun writing this one 🤭🤭 Hope you enjoy! (And to the person reading this whose creativity inspires me every day, thank you. The circus has come to town.)
SYN: A giant castle guard tries to win the princess's heart by using every cunning insight he has into her own.
OC content | Premature themes (14+) | ~1,300 words
Winning Affections
Bellametre
“A hundred men,” the giant began, leaning against the castle wall beside Eleanor’s balcony. His guard’s helmet was tucked beneath one arm, and his gauntlets hung from his belt. He tipped his head back with a smile, bright blue eyes flashing as though he could feel her watching him. “Did you know giants have the strength of a hundred men?”
“So with a hundred and one soldiers,” Eleanor said coolly, looking away as the glow in his eyes brightened, “I could cut you down and carve out your heart?”
The giant chuckled. “That’s not very princessy of you.”
Eleanor sighed and turned her attention back to her mirror, fingers massaging around the half-finished braid plaited along her aching temples. She had sent her ladies-in-waiting to fetch lavender oil, honey cakes, and mulled wine.
“Adopted princess,” she corrected.
“Fine,” the giant said. “And yes—you could carve out my heart. But giants are terribly sentimental about their hearts. You’d have to run off with it over the mountains.”
A pause. Eleanor lowered her hands.
“Don’t,” she warned softly.
“What?” the giant said, all innocence. “You’re inferring things, Ellie. I didn’t do anything.”
“You were going to. Don’t pretend—”
“Oh, Majesty,” the giant simpered, spreading his hands. “I’ve been such a monster. Fetch the fire and pitchforks and we’ll get right to the slaying.”
“I’m not queen yet. You can’t call me Majesty.”
The giant lifted an eyebrow. “How about masquerador?”
Eleanor twitched. “Quit it.”
“Oh, you find me charming,” the giant said, standing to stretch his back. He set down his helmet and stepped in front of the balcony. It reached only his chest, and his face filled nearly the entire window.
Eleanor’s eyes flicked toward him despite herself.
“Face it,” he said, grinning. “You’re entranced. I’m glorious. Otherworldly. And I know exactly how to coax you away from your noble responsibilities.”
“Name a single time that’s worked,” Eleanor said dryly.
“Winning the heart of the queen herself? The most famous maiden in the land?”
“I’m not quee—”
“Progress is being made,” he cut in with a shrug. “I’ve had a tactical advantage ever since I joined the personal guard.”
Eleanor snorted.
“You’re not very resourceful,” the giant chided. “You’d miss me if I wasn’t here.”
“I doubt that very much.”
There was the turn of a heel, then a swift and surprisingly silent departure, and Eleanor was alone. The air stirred where he had stood, lifting the apple blossoms scattered across the tiles. A few fluttered down onto her coverlet.
Eleanor gripped the seam of her dress, her heart beginning to pound. She rose and hurried to the railing, the stone cool beneath her palms as she leaned over the edge.
“See, now that’s something,” the giant said, suddenly popping up from below the balcony.
Eleanor jumped and stumbled back, nearly tangling herself in her robes. Her cheeks reddened, and a scolding about leaving a princess unguarded welled up in her mouth, but then the giant smirked, and the words died on her tongue.
“What is?” she asked, defeated.
“Awfully archaic traditions, don’t you think?” the giant went on, lifting a hand beside his face to gesture toward her. “Stuffy gowns. Heavy jewels. Scalp-tearing braids. It’s all a bit much.”
“It’s my coronation.”
“A coronation you don’t have to attend,” the giant said quietly. His eyes were all sky and ocean. “Come on, Ellie. I could whisk you away anywhere you want to go. You only have to ask.”
Eleanor studied him for a long moment. “Why?”
“Hm?”
“That’s what I want,” Eleanor said. “Answers. You’re a guard of the highest rank, a position every other giant in the kingdom covets. Every need you have is provided for tenfold. Why are you so determined to lose that by persuading me to desert?”
The giant tilted his head to the side. “Why do you think?”
Eleanor threw up a hand. “To say you did it! That you persuaded a member of the royal family the monarchy is nothing but folly. That you convinced me to run away of my own volition. That you accomplished something… impossible.”
“Or,” the giant said, stepping closer, “maybe it’s because, since the day you appointed me, I noticed the shadows under your eyes. Or how you sit on this balcony and look toward the mountains whenever you have a free moment. Or how, at the end of the day, you still manage kindness to me, even though this burden is killing you.”
He paused.
“Maybe I thought it was time someone returned the favour.”
Eleanor shook her head, but she couldn't tear her gaze from his eyes. They were too blue, like lapis set into living marble by a master sculptor. Eyes made for bewitching. For promising wild, crystal-cold adventure in places far beyond the mountains.
“Maybe it’s destiny,” the giant continued, inclining toward her. “Maybe it’s because you’re meant to accomplish something impossible.”
Eleanor shifted her weight, but she didn’t move away. “I’m meant to accomplish the impossible?”
“Uh-huh,” the giant whispered. His breath drifted over Eleanor’s bare arms and neck, rustling her hair.
And then his hand. It rose over the balcony slowly, carefully closing the distance and curving behind her, hovering, not quite touching. It was calloused, clean, and larger than her whole body.
“Something perfectly impossible.”
“What?” Eleanor asked, turning her head toward the creases and whorls of his fingers. He smelled of leather and rainclouds, nothing like the monstrous things the kingdom’s gossip liked to imagine. “What impossibility is that?”
The giant’s eyes caught the light. They glowed so blue it seemed they were the only points of light in the world.
“Fly away.”
Eleanor inhaled sharply. She felt the weight of his palm as it finally settled against her from heel to crown, each pulse in his veins a slow, steady rhythm where their skin touched. Her own heartbeat roared in her ears. For a moment she imagined his enormous fingers curling around her waist—firm, but gentle—and the rush of wind lifting her hair as he carried her into the open sky.
She could scarcely catch her breath.
“Lydan…”
“Ellie,” he answered softly. “A hundred men, Ellie. They’d never stop us.”
And then Eleanor laughed.
The giant paused, then pulled back to consider her, his expression searching.
Eleanor shook her head. “I can’t believe you managed to turn that into another proposal.”
“What?” the giant asked, letting Eleanor push his hand away. “I’m easily the greatest opportunity you’re ever going to come across.”
“Don’t,” Eleanor warned, though she was still smiling.
“Well, you can commission me to pillage the castle and steal you away anytime you like,” the giant went on, entirely unperturbed. “Right in the middle of your coronation ceremony. Maybe even—”
“Enough!” Eleanor said. “You’re insufferable.”
“Naturally.”
“And distracting.”
“You like it.”
“Perhaps,” Eleanor admitted. “But that doesn’t mean I’ll—uh—“
The giant laughed. “Run away with the resident monster?”
“Yes,” Eleanor said. “I won’t be running away.”
“So you say,” the giant remarked.
“But I appreciate the effort. And I enjoy your company.”
“I know you do,” the giant said easily. “I wouldn’t bother you if you didn’t.”
“You wouldn’t?”
“No.” He reached out with one last experimental finger to brush gingerly against her side. “What are you so afraid of, Ellie?”
Eleanor sighed and stepped back. “I take my oaths tonight.”
“Ah, yes,” the giant murmured, standing back to his full height. “And then you’ll be a proper queen.”
“I will.”
“And you’ll leave this tower for the throne room.”
“Yes.” Eleanor hesitated. Swallowed. She knew she had command, but… “What will you do?”
The giant grinned.
“Oh, I’m following you there too,” he said lightly. “Winning a queen’s affections sounds far more interesting than winning a princess’s.”
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You can also find this story on my Wattpad under the same username, in my G/t oneshots collection Offset. Constructive comments and feedback are always welcome.