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Lights off / lights on
My oc Mar having some fun with a human
>>Click here for a nude version<<

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More RPG npcs from the picrew: Anwen, anamenfath of the Keepers of the Stone tribe of Eir Glanfath, also purveyor of very intriguing magic tea which definitely contained St. Gyranâs Horn among other herbs Dal couldnât quite identify; and her brother the Galven Ardghal, busy organizing the Glanfathans to defend the Dyrwood from Waidwen.
Refining this Lady horse and now she has a name (Aubrey) & a mystic unicorn bf. She escaped from a pet dealer and ran into a forest filled with all sort of strange creatures. There she met the guardian spirit of the forest, both fell in love and had a hybrid child named Arrah.
Arrah's "hands" are a mixed between his mum's and dad's. He's more flexible than his dad but not as good as the mum. Arrah can stand and walk on two looking more human like but probably as he grows older, he will have his dad traits more.
Ardghal before she died
[[ A sideways landscape selfie of Reagan, standing between two horses. One of the horses is a brown-black, with a white blaze and mane, which has been carefully braided (see here). The other horse is significantly larger and completely black. The black horse is vaguely unsettling, though its hard to pinpoint if its a result of the bony structures growing on its face, its glowing red eyes, the drops of blood around its mouth or the way its captured image leaves black spots across your vision when you look away. Reaganâs elbow rests on the black horses neck as it holds its head over its neck, and a worn brown stetson that those who frequent the theatre club might recognise is balanced on its head.
The photo is captioned âyeehawâ]]
(( for context nickatnightwalker: youre like a texan on your posts with all that get the fuck off my territory shit youve got going on i half expect to hear gun shots any second now))

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think my boy needs a haircut
this innocence is brilliant, i hope that it will stay // this moment is perfect, please don't go away, i need you now. â„
drabble with finn n ardy just ramblin abt their personal goals
âWhereâd ya learn to butcher deer like that?â Ardghal asked, throwing back whatever unholy liquid sloshed about in his canteen. It mostly definitely wasnât water - Griffin could say that much.
 He shrugged, laughing nervously - it was more or less one of those things he learned secondhand from his father. At least, not too long before he died. Finn cleanly sliced through the parts he had segmented earlier that morning - butchering a whole damn deer was⊠daunting, but not impossible. He wiped his knife on a piece of cloth he left on his lap as he examined the part. Sirloin would be good. He knew there were a lot more steps to this - considering theyâd have to age it first - but they were out in the middle of the forest. Finn wasnât looking to prepare a gourmet dinner. Just food for two people.
âMy⊠Father was a butcher, I learned a lot when he was still around. I was a little soft for it growing up, but heâd teach me how to butcher some animals like pigs or chickens.â He checked to make sure the meat didnât have any of the extra, unneeded bits, then focused on the little extra steps. âIf I were situated permanently somewhere, maybe Iâd do more like age the meat and slow cook it, but this isnât really the time to do it.â
âDidnât expect someone like you to know that. Itâs a good talent,â Ardghal said. âYâlook too skinny to be rippinâ apart a whole animal.â
âIâm stronger than I let on,â Finn laughed, looking up to smile at the vampire. âSort of aâŠâ Not a successor thing. âS-Sort of an aasimar thing. At least, for me.â
âKeep forgettinâ youâre aasimar,â he said softly. âIs Celosia gonna be comfortable to ya? Theyâre only just acceptinâ religion again, yâknow.â
âIâll be happy to be anywhere but Altissima right now, thank you,â he said as he jammed the two sizeable steak pieces onto a skewer. âIâm⊠sticking with you for now until I know what Iâm doing.â
âYou wonât be findinâ any paradise by my side, kid.â
Griffin scoffed, raising an eyebrow. âHow old are you, Ardghal? Few centuries, maybe a few thousand years old? Weâre practically on the same wavelength in terms of maturity. You donât need to call me a kid.â
The man hummed, he must have agreed with his point. âYou still wonât be in a good place. Just remindinâ ya. I wonât be goinâ down a safe road gettinâ home.â
âAnd why is that?â Finn tilted his head as he looked through Ardghalâs bag for something to season the meat with. Nothing. Typical. He frowned.
Ardghal handed him his canteen. Finn turned his offer down at first, but he insisted, pointing to the meat over the fire.
âBourbonâs good with deer steak. It enhances the flavor. Best we got if you wanna season it.â
â... You⊠use alcohol. To season meat.â
âHey, learned it in Rondeletia. Brings out the best in a venison stew. Taught that to a little girl that wanted to become a chef. Just try it. Yâdonât gotta drown âem in it, but just a little bit will do the trick. Just make sure to rotate it some so it soaks up the booze.â
 ⊠Sure. Finn took him up on his offer and settled down the fire some, then poured a bit of the alcohol onto the steaks. The smell was nauseating - too much for his sensitive nose. Finn honestly couldnât take overly flavorful food, but he did like deer, and heâd be damned if he wasnât making it right. He handed the canteen back to him, then continued rotating the cuts.
  He honestly forgot what he was asking Ardghal, just focused on making their meal. It had been like this the past few nights - one of them would hunt and the other would set up a place to sleep. Ardghal was an ideal person to share a tent with, considering his natural warmth, and he definitely didnât care if Finn was in his tent. Sure, the fact he was naked was⊠odd, but Finn tried to ignore it the best he could.
 Ardghal was more bothered about having someone with him, but Finn insisted he could hold his own. Honestly, Finn just didnât want⊠he didnât want to find out where to go. He wasnât sure where his story would take him. He had been stuck in Altissima all his life - and he meant that.
 First he was trapped with his mother - an overbearing, abusive woman who mostly kept him trapped in her house. His father was good to him, but when he died, protecting Finn during a hunting trip, his mother⊠Lost it. Treating him like an omen, taking her rage out on him but never to the point of killing him. The gods will condemn me too if I kill you. But if I enact their divine rage on you just enoughâŠÂ
 It didnât end until she threw him at the landsâ rulers - he was half-dead and they promised they would cover up her âmurderâ. Instead he ended up in their âsuccessor programâ. Finn⊠Wasnât sure still what the point was. But he was stuck in a single enclosure, considered the âsuccessor of the eyeâ. He had to walk extreme lengths, every week, to check other people like him and make sure they werenât close to the brink of losing themselves.
 It was some⊠Goal, for their religion. To touch the hand of the gods? Finn wasnât sure. He seemed to be the only one who could leave his enclosure. He felt horrible for some of the people there - a small child, a woman endlessly swinging her sword underwater, a former holy knight trapped there after they found out he wasnât just an incubus.Â
 Some were mothers, some werenât⊠Finn wanted so badly to try and get everyone out, but he was afraid for their lives.
So, chalk that up as the second way he was trapped.
 He ran away from it all at one point. Sure, he built up a friendship and⊠love with one of the successors he never expected having, but it wasnât safe. They were all going to die, technically. He remembered tearfully telling Nikita he didnât want to leave him alone, but he didnât want them all to be stuck there, a means to an end. But once they broke things off and talked about it even more, he promised heâd be back.
 So he abandoned his post. The family probably gave up on looking for him - the cathedral was a damn maze. But he soon ended up in the hands of a group surrounded around their religion - one that took their practices to cult-like levels. They saw him and thought he was an angel sent from the gods themselves.
 So. They took him in under the guise that he would be taken care of, that heâd be safe. But he was trapped again. Groomed and kept in a room as their beacon of âhopeâ.
 Griffin⊠Only escaped when he saw Ardghal. During the lull of a blood rain. He ran to him crying for help, trying to get away from his captors after a breakdown resulting from everything heâd been through his whole life.
And Ardghal⊠He hadnât seen someone so⊠Feral.
 He remembered standing behind the wolfish man in terror, watching him practically bulldoze his way through several members of the cult trying to keep Finn away. Something in his actions felt personal, but he wasnât sure why. But Finn crying to him, sobbing about how they were going to trap him again and heâd have no way out - it triggered something. The most vivid image in his head that day was the man standing above him after he got him out - bathed in blood and dirt, clothes torn, skin marred and bloody, brandishing his axe and heaving like a damn beast.
 It was. Terrifying. But in that moment, all Finn saw was his goddamn savior. Ardghal dragged him out of the country and he planned to drop him off at the next village, but Finn begged to stay, telling him he could fight and offer protection during the blood rain. And he did. His holy magic was well honed - so they had a deal.
 He had his own amount of freedom, and Ardghal wasnât a bad partner to travel with. Not to mention he could finally ask someone to address him the way he wanted to be. When they met, Finn was still unfortunately presenting himself as a woman. Long, annoying hair, stupid, stupid dresses. One of the reasons he felt safe if the Finels tried hunting him down (that is, if they figured out he was gone in the first place) was the fact he looked so different now.Â
You wouldnât be able to find him if he wasnât her.
 Ardghal also was just interesting to talk to. Both had such radically different upbringings, and he really liked⊠him. He enjoyed his company and was more dismayed at the idea of them losing touch. He wasnât really sure what Ardghal was looking to do, what his goal was - but they were beginning to look like friends, especially with how they were sharing a sleeping space now.
 A part of him felt guilt, the idea of living a normal life when his first friend and lover, coupled with all the successors he respected and cared for so much, were suffering still. He knew theyâd all wish it for him, but he was determined to figure something out. But he couldnât exactly do it alone. So he was just biding his time like an idiot.Â
âSo, you donât plan to find any sorta paradise hanginâ out with me,â he started to say, as he brought out some of his weapons to start up his weekly upkeep, âhave ya figured out anything beyond leavinâ your home? Itâs been⊠a while, and I may stop for a while when we get to my old home, but⊠You seem to not know what you want right now.â
Finn swallowed, watching him wipe his axe clean.
âI⊠Iâm not sure. The most sure thing in me right now is the fact Iâd like to still follow you.â
âIâm not up to anything that you would consider homely, boy.â
â... You know,â Finn frowned, rotating the meat. âWhat⊠are you doing, anyway? Youâve never told me. Youâre a mercenary or something, right? Why havenât we picked up any merc work?â
 The vampireâs eye twitched, but he made a noise to himself, taking out a little sharpening stone to run across the blade of his axe. He looked up at Finn, his light eyes narrowed for a moment.
âNot exactly a mercenary, if thatâs the answer youâre lookinâ for.â
âYou⊠Arenât?â He tilted his head, frowning deeper. âWhat about those camps we took care of? I thought that was part of it.â
âItâsâŠâ He took a moment, swallowing. âI⊠Respect ya, so this may take a moment.â
âWell, I wonât pry if itâs too much. I trust and respect you too,â Finn said, smiling. âYouâre the first person I came out to besides my friend back home, so why wouldnât I trust you back?â
âThis is just⊠Different. Different from simple merc work,â he said, focusing on sharpening his axe. Bits of metal scraping off, filing away all the kinks in his weapon. âItâs specific. Iâve beenâŠâ He took a deep breath. âOkay. So. Have ya noticed anything about the camps weâve raided?â
âWellâŠâ Finn tapped his nails on the log he sat on, humming. âI guess the fact theyâre mostly groups of people that kidnap⊠others. And all. Sorta like my deal. We save people and get money for it. But I thought maybe that was what mercenaries do.â
âMercenaries can work on the battlefield in wars, boy. Some of âem will raid towns for ya. Some will do contracted political work for a price. What weâre doinâ is⊠Well, weâre workinâ towards my own personal goal.â
 Finn stared at the man for a moment, watching him keenly sharpen his axe. It was sort of fascinating, satisfying, watching him sharpen it. He wondered where he was getting at with this. But his tone sounded⊠grim.
He swallowed, looking at their meal.
âDo you⊠have a grudge, against these people? Are they connected?â
âNo, not really.â He flipped the stone, buffing out the scratches. âIâm lookinâ... for someone.â
⊠Oh.
Oh.
 Finn nervously rotated their food as he listened, hoping Ardghal wouldnât feel weird now. He swallowed again, watching the scratches start to disappear.
âI, uh, well. Years ago, after I left RondeletiaâŠâ Ardghal inspected his axe for a moment against the fireâs light. âI met a woman.â
Oh. A wife?
âShe was religious, we lived in a little town in Celosia together. Long story short, we were engaged and she was expectinâ. SheâŠâ He wiped off some of the shavings and tested the axe against the cloth. Seeing that it barely cut through, he continued sharpening it. âShe died giving birth to our daughter.â
âIâm⊠sorry,â Finn breathed. âI didnât realize weâd be going into something so personal. We donât have to talk about it if you donât want to.â
âItâs fine. Iâm just givinâ ya the short version of the story. But that little girl was⊠still is- sheâs my everything.â
He paused, then gave Finn an earnest look.
âYâtold me you were close with your father, werenâtcha?â
âY-Yes.â
âThe way a child looks to the parent they love, sâlike⊠Lookinâ at god, I spose. Donât like that sayinâ, but itâs that same respect and love. Just a lot less fear. Iâm sure, from what yâtold me, your father loved you. He died for ya. I felt that way âbout her. Still do.â
âDid⊠Did something happen to your daughter, Ardghal?â
He was quiet. Deathly quiet. Finn couldnât believe the chill he felt when he said that.
âShe⊠Her nameâs Sydelle. Sheâs been my everything and, yes, something⊠Happened. Iâm not sure what,â he breathed. âShe⊠Talked a lot about beinâ scared of somethinâ. Slept in my room often and didnât leave my side for a long time. But the one time I wasnât lookinâ, she disappeared.â
âShe just⊠she just disappeared?â
âAnd Iâm not sure what happened. But someone took her. She⊠Sydelle is smart, even at her age, I knew my girl meant it when she felt she was beinâ watched. And I lost sight of her when I shouldnât have.â
âIâm sure it isnât your fault, Ardghal,â Finn said softly, wishing he could reach over to hold his hand.Â
âIâm not⊠gonna fight âbout it. But I know damn well someone got my girl. And Iâve been lookinâ around this area, from Celosia to Altissima, even the valleys of Antirrhinum, Iâve looked into cases like yours. And nothinâ.â
âI guess⊠because you think maybe some cult took her away?â Finn chewed on his lip, eyes darting to the food over the fire. âI⊠If it helps, I didnât hear anything about a vampire girl back home, a runaway or anything.Â
âSure, it helps. Crosses it off my list.â He inspected his axe for a moment, eyes narrowing. âI got friends tryna keep an eye out for her back home. Even the rulerâs got eyes out for her.â
He paused, then briefly glanced at Finn. âSometimes, I get the feelinâ somethinâ else is goinâ on there.â He ran his hand over the blade, rubbing his thumb against it. âDunno why. Canât tell ya. Iâve seen my fair share of shady shit happen, so thereâs just thisâŠâ
âA feeling,â Finn finished for him, as he started to take the meat off the heat. âYou think someoneâs involved.â
âDonât like conspiracy theories,â he said, taking a swig from his canteen. âNot my kinda thing. Donât like thinking about what ifs. But itâs my girl. I try to ignore it, but somethinâs up.â
âIs that why⊠youâre coming home?â
âPartially. I wanna look around the area more than I did before.â He stared into his canteen for a moment, then stared back at Finn. âYou can stay, but Iâll still be workinâ on this.â
âThatâs⊠okay,â Finn said, nodding. âI have my own goals I need to figure out, butâŠâ
âYour own goals?â Ardghal rose an eyebrow. âYâsaid you werenât sure what youâd be doinâ next.â
âThatâs the truth,â he breathed, as he worked on checking the meat now. âI have a goal, but no ideas as to how to pursue it. I just⊠need to save my friends from where I was in the first place and itâs a little impossible.â
âWe coulda gone back at the time, maybe,â he said. Finn couldnât believe he was offering. He swallowed, nervously handing him his own portion of their meal.
âI⊠Itâs complicated. It wouldnât be solved if we just saved everyone. Thereâs a lot more to it and⊠Iâm scared, to be honest. I want to figure out more and see what I can do and make sure itâs put to an end.â
 The only real way heâd be able to is if he were close to someone on the inside. At least someone with a tiny amount of knowledge and ability to get there, easier than just being him and a complete outsider. But Finn doubted he would ever get that far. This was a situation he definitely didnât know the scope of - going in to take everyone out of it was going to be a disaster. Especially considering heâd have to return everyone to their homes, and what if the Finels just came back to drag them all there anyway?
 One missing successor was enough. But the whole damn set? Theyâd have no problem seeking them all out. At least Finn had the saving grace of being trans. He looked completely different now.
He sighed, picking at his food now, as he looked into the fire.
âI guess it goes deeper than just me. It requires a lot more subtlety and⊠I would much rather look into things and go careful with it.â
âGotcha,â Ardghal replied, already tearing into his food. âYou got somewhere to stay, then. House is prolly all run down and shitty, but I havenât been there in a minute.â
âThatâs okay,â Finn saidly, smiling. âI can fix it up, if anything.â
âThereâs a little town nearby, you can get whatever we need. I got some money saved up so it wonât be a problem. You can do what ya like, Iâll jusâ be figurinâ... somethinâ out.â
âIf you donât mind me offeringâŠâ Finn was working on cutting up his food, making it easier to eat. He needed to take his food in smaller doses with how bad his stomach was. âI would like to help, while I figure my own end out, if thatâs okay?â
âNow, yâdonât have to-â
âI want to,â he said, cutting him off. âYou helped me and Iâd like to help you. I donât know if Iâd be able to figure much out, but⊠I think an outside perspective into your situation would help. M-maybe. I donât want to say I know better than a father would, butâŠâ
âNo, thatâsâŠâ Ardghal took a deep breath, setting his emptied plate aside. That was honestly impressive. Finn was barely through a quarter of his food. âThat would help. A lot. Thank you. I⊠havenât had much luck and any sorta lead would do a lot of good right now.â
Finn blinked a few times, shocked he⊠took to it so well, but he smiled, scooching over to pat him on the hand.Â
âI donât know if itâd be much help, but Iâll be happy to offer anything I can, Ardghal,â he said, smiling a little more than he realized. âItâs the least I could do with all youâve done for me.â
 Ardghal made a little grunt, the softest smile on his face. He moved his hand to set it on top of Finnâs as he tried to find some way of making it feel less⊠awkward, maybe.
âIf I do have any sorta request,â he said, glancing at the fire, âIâd say Iâd like for ya to cook that again. Maybe show me more shit yâknow how to make.â
âAww, really?â Finn laughed, starting to blush. âItâs nothinâ special, especially with what we have. Iâm not really used to seasoning either, since my stomach canât take a ton of it.â
âItâs fuckinâ good,â Ardghal said. His blunt response just made Finn laugh harder. âI mean it. You have cookinâ duty when we get back.â
âSure, sure,â he said, smiling. âDo you want to post up for the night? I might sit out a little longer, but if you want an early start tomorrowâŠâ
âNah, I wanna sit ânâ talk a lilâ more. Feels nice, for once.â
âWell, I can run you through the steps of butchering a deer, if you ever want the information.â
âHow âbout we find somethinâ else instead of that. Gonna make me even hungrier.â
⊠He was still hungry?!