Figured thisâd be a good opportunity to redraw my Monster Falls designs so I could post them here! Also thought it would be kinda funny to use Week 3 - which has the alt theme of âhandsâ - for an AU in which Ford technically doesnât have proper hands.
Also hey, I finally figured out how to do the Keep Reading thing, so full individual pics and design ramblings will be under the cut ^^ I am slowly but surely figuring out how to function on this site :P
Man I really need to get around to making a proper post about my Second Summer AU, this is the second time in a row Iâve used the designs from it and Iâve yet to talk about it at all :|
ANYWAY
First up we have Cervitaur!Dipper ^^ He had to take his hat off because the lilâ antler nubbins got in the way and he didnât want to damage it
I hope he looks sufficiently deer-like; Iâve never seen one irl but I looked at a bunch of pictures so it should be fine, also it doesnât matter because heâs a mythical creature and not a deer but STILL
Iâm sure being the only herbivore in the family is... not stressful at all (:
Gargoyle!Stan next ^^ Heâs the only one who can still wear pants lol, not that itâs terribly comfortable to do so with the tail and all but he has standards dang it
He canât take the shirt or coat off because the wings tore through them when he transformed and theyâre too big to fit back through. Itâs a good thing heâs so good at mending clothes or heâd probably be pissed about this.
Idk if thatâs a stony texture or scales but he sure is bumpy. I figure he can probably turn into stone as well since heâs a gargoyle so thereâs that
Whenever I look at Monster Falls stuff itâs always Mermaid!Mabel this and Unitaur!Mabel that MAKE HER BOTH COWARDS
Behold: Ichthyounitaur!Mabel ^^ Sheâs a cutie patootie and I love her so much
Sheâs basically just an ichthyocentaur but the fish parts are narwhal. A side effect of this is that she doesnât necessarily need to be submerged to survive and canât actually breathe underwater, but she generally prefers to be in the water anyways so they got her a tank :)
Finally, itâs Sphynx!Ford ^^ Figuring out how to turn everyone back would probably go a lot quicker if he still had actual hands instead of these big unwieldy paws. Mabelâs delighted though :)
Since both gargoyles and sphynxes are commonly portrayed as statues I imagine him having a similar ability to Stanâs, but he turns metallic or something. Probably not literal pure gold because thatâs hella soft and would be a terrible natural defense but something similar looking.
It seems quite appropriate to me that Fordâs default Monster Falls form is somewhat feline because fun fact: polydactyly is pretty common in cats! I donât know if that applies to big cats as well but I thought that was neat ^^
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I saw this post by @clownwry and thought "hey i could write a thing about this." And then I did. So i hope you enjoy it.
(Also on ao3!)
---------------
âGrunkle Ford.â Mabel whined. She leaned over the side of her tank, dripping water onto the floorboards. âWhere are Dipper and Stan? They said theyâd be back with snacks for movie-noon hours ago.â
Her Grunkle stopped grooming himself and looked at her, his barbed tongue hanging out of his mouth. He turned his gaze from her to the Mystery Shack brand clock that hanged over Mabelâs fish tank. It was true that his brother and nephew were overdue from their trip into town, however they were only thirty minutes late. The Sphinx-man shook his head.
âWell this simply wonât do now will it?â He scratched his cheek.
âThey owe us big time!â Mabel said. A vengeful grin spread across her adorable cheeks.
âAnd what would you be demanding of them?â Stanford said. He dug his paws into the carpet and stretched out his back.
âA million donuts.â Mabel punched the air. âNo, a trillion!â
âNow, now, Mabel, what have we discussed about proper bargaining with Stanley?â Stanford said. He sat on his hind legs.
âTo make sure we get the best deal.â Mabel said.
âCorrect.â Stanford nodded. âAnd if he gives us trouble?â
âWe bust out the cutest puppy dog eyes heâs ever seen.â Mabel smiled deviously. She tapped her fingers together, feeling like a villain from one of those spy movies that her brother watched all the time.
âWonderful! How about we fly out and see if we can make them pick up the first cassette of that cartoon that Soos showed McGucket during the Oddpocalypse?â Stanford asked.
âLetâs do it!â Mabel cried. She jumped into the air, splashing her pink scaled mermaid tail as she did, making a mess of water on the floor.
âStanley is very lucky that we got this floor varnished.â Stanford muttered.
The sphinx-man looked around the room for a moment before turning to his excited niece. âMabel darling, where is your harness?â
âRight next to my tank, Grunkle Ford.â Mabel pointed to a long piece of dark fabric that hanged from a nail in the wall next to her.
âAh right.â Stanford walked over and picked up the fabric in his mouth.
He lifted himself up so that he was holding the fabric into the tank. Mabel swam into the loop of the fabric, sitting in it like a swing in the park. Once she was securely positioned, she gave a firm tug on the harness. With his nieceâs confirmation Stanford lifted her out of the tank and carried her out of the living room and out of the shack.
Soon the pair were soaring through the air, flying high above the trees of the woods of gravity falls. Stanfordâs brightly coloured wings shone in the bright light of the afternoon sun. Normally Mabel would have loved to sit and watch them shimmer for hours, counting the colours that she could see; but right now she had an important mission to complete. Turning her gaze downward, she caught sight of the town of Gravity Falls far below both the two of them.
âI canât see them from up here, can we go lower Grunkle Ford?â Mabel asked.
âMmâ stanford said. He stopped himself from nodding and fly nearer to the town, bringing colourful ants that were the citizens into a more recognisable view.
She turned her gaze to the grocery store, the home of all snacks, but couldn't see any dissipating smoke from a dropped smoke bomb or see a commotion caused by a certain old gargoyleâs pick-pocketing hands. Humming to herself, Mabel turned to the library, the home of all nerds, she didnât see a trace of a deer struggling to drag a book bag thrice his size from the building.
âWhere could they be?â Mabel tapped her chin.
âMmâ Stanford tapped her shoulder before pointing to the video store.
âOf course.â Mabel tapped her head. âThose two are probably bonding over scary movies.â
The pair descended, landing next to a grey gargoyle and a deer-centaur that stood outside of the video rental store. They were lost in a heavy debate about costume quality versus special effects and the implications for the future of cinema.
âGrunkle Stan!â Mabel said, breaking the pairâs discussion short. âWhere have you been? The sunâs going to be down soon and youâll miss movie-noon.â
âSorry Pumpkin.â Stan said. He scratched the back of his neck. âMe and Dipper were on our way home with snacks when he saw a good movie for once and decided to complain about quality cinema.â
âIt looks like someoneâs first time using puppets.â Dipper crossed his arms.
Stanford stood on his hind legs and took the fabric seat that Mabel sat in out of his mouth. Choosing to hold it in his hand.
âUgh we really need to wash that more often.â Stanford said. âAnyway. While I'm sure this is riveting, Mabel is correct. We really should be hurrying along.â
âUgh fine. Câmon Dipper.â Stanley rolled his eyes. He bent over and picked Dipper up by his deer-stomach, letting him sit on Stanleyâs large bicep. âAnd if I hear a peep outta you Iâm letting you walk home.â
âScared Iâll beat you there old man?â Dipper said with a surprising amount of confidence.
âOh youâre on, kid.â Stanley said sinisterly. He let Dipper down and stared him down. âLast one has to do the otherâs chores for a week.â
The pair spat in their hands and shook. And before Mabel could blink, Stanley was up in the air and her brother had taken off down the street. Leaving her and Stanford in their dust.
âBet you 10 jelly beans, Grunkle Stan gets there first.â Mabel said after a beat.
â30 says he gets distracted by something and Dipper wins.â Stanford said.
âYouâre on!â Mabel grinned, shaking Stanfordâs free six fingered-paw.
I almost forgot to put the text version on Tumblr!Â
Hereâs chapter 2 of Of Monsters and McGuckets. The next chapter will probably be a big one, since I have a better idea where the story is going now, so it might take longer than just a couple of days for me to write and edit.Â
Donât worry, folks. I fully plan on seeing this fic through.Â
Chapter 1 on Tumblr, if you donât use/like Archive of Our Own.
Fiddleford usually made a point to ignore the way the Pines brothers acted on the rare occasions where they all shared a meal, despite the offense it was to his Southern upbringing. His Ma wouldâve slapped him across the head if he didnât chew with his mouth closed or say grace before every meal (a habit he kept even long after he stopped going to church).
Heâd hate to imagine what sheâd do if he ever ate like his two housemates. Stanley paid as much mind to table manners as he did the law, which was none. Sometimes heâd chew with his mouth open just to tick Fiddleford off, and even go as far as putting his muddy boots on the table if he really wanted to get a rise out of his boyfriend. On the other end of the spectrum sat Stanford, who either inhaled his food in a hurry to get back to his research or left it on his plate until it got too cold to eat while he made field notes.
Yet even those memories were not nearly as bad as the scene unfolding in front of him. Stanford had his paws splayed on the table, his face shoved on to his plate. Egg and grease smeared all over his mouth, and Stanford didnât seem to notice. The silverware lay unused next to Stanfordâs plate, jingling whenever he shifted to get a better angle.
Fiddleford held the edge of the table in a death grip to prevent his employer from tipping it over, and only for that reason. It certainly wasnât because he was getting very uncomfortable staring at those large, powerful jaws rip into his bacon with a growl, while he held it in place with one paw, like a lion would, he imagined, tear into a dead gazelle. Nor did it have anything to do with the earlier, far too casual comment about Stanford wanting to maul things.
Not at all. If Fiddleford happened to take a big gulp of coffee that felt like tar coming down his throat, that was just because of something else.
He took a chance to see how Stanley was doing. His boyfriend poked at his food with the edge of a claw, and Fiddleford wondered if he could even eat, or if he needed to in this form. Just as he meant to ask, Stan chewed his bacon, shrugged, tipped the contents inside his mouth, and swallowed his entire breakfast and the ceramic plate with a loud crunch. And burped afterward.
Fiddleford quietly sipped the rest of his coffee for the remainder of the meal and made a note to avoid eating with them until they got turned back to normal.
After the ordeal that was breakfast, they finally began retracing their steps to the lake. The woods in Gravity Falls managed to have an underlying, buzzing energy to it. It felt as if everything, even the trees themselves, were teeming with life, a fact that used to fill Fiddleford with wonderment. However, as he became aware of the fact that not everything in the forest was as keen as respecting sentient life as he was, that excitement got replaced by the kind of dread that settled heavy on his shoulders and wouldn't be shaken off until he was back in the safety of their home.
Stanford was excitedly talking about the notes heâd just made as they walked. Even with his ever-present anxiety, Fiddleford still found himself listening to what little they knew of their most recent discovery.
âIâve decided to call the mysterious liquid in the lake Fluvius Cantatis,â said Stanford, ducking under a branch. âJudging by the fact that I saw a few deer drink from the lake and suffer no outward symptoms, Iâm guessing the water only affects humans.â
Stanley walked right through the branch, snapping it by just walking into it. The man didnât flinch. Heck, Fiddleford would be surprised if heâd noticed it.
âThatâs mighty interestinâ,â said Fiddleford. âPerhaps the waterâs been enchanted? OrâŚcursed?â He shuddered at the thought. If exploring Gravity Falls had taught him anything, it was that curses were stubborn, tricky things that werenât dealt with so easily.
âBoth are a possibility,â said Stanford, nonplussed. âIf it was, indeed, enchanted, then thereâs a good chance that we may be able to figure it out with some study. Iâve learned a few spells from the walls of that cavern we explored while finding Mothman, so it may help us get back to normal.â
âI sure hope so,â said Fiddleford. âThere ainât no tellinâ what might happen if ya stay like this too long.â
âYeah, like how Iâm going to use the toilet when Iâm a giant rock,â said Stanley with a smirk.
Stanford rolled his eyes and continued forward.
âDonât be crude, Stanley,â said Fiddleford.
The gargoyle shrugged. âJust tryinâ to lighten the mood.â He noticed Fiddleford adjust his backpack for the third time in the last minute. âYou, uh, need help there, Fidds?â
âIf yer careful,â he said, placing the heavy bag on the ground. Now that he was free of the weight, his shoulders began to ache something awful. Fiddleford cracked his back as he straightened up, groaning. For the fourth time that week, he thought about finally getting around to making that appointment with the town chiropractor.
âJeez, whatâre you carrying in this thing?â Stanley picked up the pack and flipped the top open.
Inside were two pairs of thick rubber gloves, a few beakers wrapped in bubble wrap, metal tongues, a thermometer, glass jars with lids and an entire hazmat suit that Stanley had âborrowedâ from some godforsaken government facility one night he and Stanford had gotten while drunk out of their minds. (Those were the only details he'd been given in regards to what went down that night, and after careful consideration, Fiddleford decided that it was probably for the best that it stayed that way).
Stanley raised an inquisitive eyebrow. âA bit much, dontcha think?â
Fiddleford huffed. âOne of us has to be careful. That lake donât sit right with me, anâ itâs better if one of us isnât affected by whatever yer afflictions are.â
Stanley swung the backpack over one shoulder. Â âRelax, Iâm pretty sure ya gotta bathe in this stuff for it to do anything. Me anâ Ford jumped right into it.â
âWe donât know that,â said Fiddleford. âAnâ I donât want to take any chances.â
Stanley cast a glance at his brother, who was walking ahead of them, focusing on re-discovering the path theyâd went on yesterday. He put a hand on Fiddlefordâs shoulder. Even with Stanley being as gentle as could be, the weight of his hand felt crushing. He sucked in a breath.
âSorry! Shit, I didnât meanââ
âI-itâs okay. Yer just stronger than usual, sâall.â
Stanleyâs joints made a grinding sound as he retracted his hand and let it fall by his side. He cleared his throat. âLook, Iâm right here whatever happens, alright? And uh,â He cleared his throat. âIf Ford gets carried away, just let me know and Iâll wrestle him back to the shack with us if I haveta.â
âI-I may frighten easy, but thereâs no need to be tip-toeing around me as if Iâm some sorta newborn kitten.â He forced himself to fake what heâd hoped looked like a reassuring smile.
Stanley frowned, and Fiddleford didnât need a magic spell to know that the man disagreed. âLook, Fidds. I guess we havenât really talked about this, anâ this might not be the best place to have this conversation, butâŚI canât help but notice youâve been more on edge lately.â
The way he said those things made the Southern man bristle. He crossed his arms. âI donât follow.â Fiddlefordâs tone was about as inviting as a grizzly bear in a picnic. âWhatever happened to me beinâ more assertive?â
âHey, I meant that. ButâŚâ Stan rubbed the back of his neck. The friction made a grinding sound that only served to worsen Fiddlefordâs nerves. âFidds. Come on. You jump outta your seat if you so much as see a gnomeââ
âThose little devils kidnapped me, if ya havenât forgotten!â
Stanley winced, probably remembering the âGnome Incidentâ, as they all called it. It was a sore subject for Fiddleford. Not only did he get mistaken for a woman, but he also ended up getting dragged halfway through the forest by an army of small but astonishingly strong men while tied up like a hog. When Stanley and Stanford came to help after at least a half-hour of humiliation, theyâd gotten so many bite marks and bruises from the whole rescue mission that theyâd almost considered going to the hospital. The remaining shred of their dignities had been the only reason they hadnât.
As if that all hadnât been bad enough, the ropes had left some nasty cuts on Fiddlefordâs wrists and ankles. It took weeks for them to heal, and to this day Stanley would still punt away any gnomes that were unfortunate enough to be in Fiddlefordâs vicinity.
âYeah, thatâs my point. Youâve just been more jumpy, andâŚâ Stanley seemed to be struggling to get the words out of his mouth. He was squirming where he stood.
In other circumstances, Fiddleford wouldnât have given him such a hard time. Stan was being more open with his emotions, and that wasnât easy for him. The young scientist just wished it hadnât been this particular subject heâd decided to be open about. âAnâ what?â
âLook, Iâm gettingâ kinda worried. You looked like you were about to have a heart attack this morninâ when we came to the shack.â
Fiddleford set his jaw. âIs that what this morninâ was? Ya thought that Iâd still have my tail stuck between mah legs even after I knew it was you?â He hadnât expected his anxiety to be so obvious, and now that he knew it was, it was like having someone tear his clothes off in the middle of the town. âWell, excuse me for exercisinâ some caution!â
Stan raised his hands at him, defensively. âHey, that ainât what I meant.â
Fiddleford squared his shoulders. âYou think that just âcause Iâm not as well-adjusted to this townâs strangeness as the two of ya, I should just stay inside and have my nose in a book or tinkerinâ away while ya and yer brother do all the dangerous work!â
In actuality, the thought of him doing just that appealed to him greatly, but he wasnât about to admit that. âIâll have ya know, Iâm an inventor! Iâve made things that could fry a man in two flicks of a lambâs tail!â
Stanleyâs brows furrowed. âI haveâŚno idea what that means.â
âIt means, Stanley, that I ainât some dainty thing that ya need to protect. Iâm a grown man with a son of mine own, and Iâm more than capable of lookinâ after myself!â
âFidds, come on! Donât be like that!â
But Fiddleford had stomped past Stanley, keeping his gaze straight ahead. He caught up with Stanford, who had just came across a couple of bushes that Fiddleford assumed concealed the entrance to the lake.
âAh, perfect,â said Stanford, blissfully unaware of the tension between Fiddleford and Stanley (business as usual, then). âItâs right past here. Allow Stanley and I to go first. After all, we have already been exposed, and thereâsââ
That was it. Fiddleford walked ahead, ignoring whatever was about to come out of Stanfordâs mouth. Which was not, he quickly realized, an intelligent thing to do, as his next step sent him sliding down a steep dirt slope that had no business being there.
The twins called his name somewhere behind him, but it was too late. He was tumbling down, the world a blur of browns and greens. He inhaled some dirt and coughed in a vain attempt to clear his burning lungs. Just as he thought heâd be doing this forever, he splashed into a body of knee-deep water and stopped moving.
And now there he was, on his hands and knees, looking like a right fool, in front of his boss and boyfriend, no less. He sighed, bringing a shaky hand to his face, staring down at his reflection. The water had a strange purple hue. Wasnât that just his luck that he wiped his face with water that had probably been contaminated orâ
âOh,â he said, staring at his palms. The skin began to tingle, glowing with a soft purple light. âShit.â
A headache that felt as if the Devil Himself had just driven spikes into Fiddlefordâs head had him doubling over. The pain was strongest on the left and right sides of his skull. His legs ached, and his feet felt numb. He watched with detached, morbid fascination as they broke through his shoes and got longer, until he was staring, slack-jawed at a set of rabbit feet. He wiggled the toes, his brain still struggling to process his new, horrifying reality.
The entire bottom half of him was part hare, tufts of chestnut brown fur poking out of the waistline of his now torn-up pants. He tried standing up, gasping as his head swung back, heavier than heâd ever remembered it being. He quickly held it in place with his (thank goodness!) human hands. Licking his lips, he brought his hands up to the top of his head. His fingers caressed what felt an awful lot like two large antlers, and a pair of rabbit ears.
A jackalope. He was a jackalope.
Of all the things, of all the mythological creatures in all of existence, he was a goddamn hare with antlers, because life had decided that Fiddleford McGucket hadnât suffered enough today. The only solace he found was the fact that his face was still human, if the reflection of the lake was anything to go by, which was at least something. Heâd probably drown himself right then and there if he had a rabbit nose or some other nonsense like that.
Fiddleford dragged himself out of the lake. The water didnât drip or fall off his skin. Instead, his body seemed to absorb it. That wasnât worrying at all.
âFidds, are you okay? Shit, hold on, Iâm almost there!â
Stanley skid down the slope and ran towards him. His wings were raised off the ground so he could run without tripping over them, and his eyes glowed more intensely than heâd seen them yet. Stanford wasnât far behind, his wings occasionally flapping to help him keep his balance.
The usual sense of relief heâd get whenever Stanley came to his aid was, to his increasing concern, being overrun by something else. It was like somebody had flipped a switch inside of him, activating a strong, fight-or-flight instinct that Fiddleford couldnât ignore even if he wanted to.
Suddenly, his mind didnât see Stanley Pines, his beloved partner, and Stanford Pines, his good friend and employer. All he could take in were teeth and jaws and claws that could gut a creature like himself in seconds. This new instinct was worse than any panic attack heâd ever had, his throat tightening, his breathing labored, his head throbbing, seemingly taking over his own body, which began to move as if on its own accord.
He ran back in the woods, getting as far away from Stanley as his legs would carry him, which turned out to be incredibly far, incredibly fast. His heart thumped against his chest as he kept moving forward, crashing through bushes, any coherent thought was far gone, replaced with the need to get away now.
Had he been in his right mind, heâd have noticed Stanleyâs big, heartbroken eyes on his back until he was out of sight, swallowed up by Gravity Fallsâ forest.
*
Stanford caught up to Stanley just as the latter watched his boyfriend run into the forest at a pace that would almost put Stanâs car to shame. Heâd barely seen what Fiddleford had turned into after falling into the lake, but whatever it was looked like some weird bunny-thing that probably had little to no way to defend itself. Well, he guessed running like hell was a damn good way to defend oneself. Couldnât argue with the results.
âGreat.â Stanley held his head. âJust fuckinâ peachy.â
âThat could have gone better,â said Stanford.
âYou decide to become Captain Obvious today or somethinâ?â snapped Stanley. He gestured towards the direction Fiddleford went. âHow the fuck are we gonna find him?â
âCalm down, Stan. I have a plan.â Ford pushed his glasses up his nose. âDo you remember those microchips that Fiddleford made?â
Stanley stared at his brother as if heâd just started speaking another language. âSixer, this ainât time for your nerd talk, Fidds could get eaten by a mountain lion or bear if we donât do somethinâ!â
Ford glared at him. âThis is why Iâm bringing it up. Fiddleford it to help us track each other in the case that one of us gets abducted again.â Ford rummaged through the knapsack he always brought with him and pulled out a clunky metal remote with a glass screen. He turned it on. âAha!â
âWhat?â
âItâs working magnificently! Fiddleford will be pleased to know that the remote has no problems picking up his signal.â
Stan loved his brother, he really did, but it was shit like his brother managing to be excited about some science gizmo while his friend was hopping around the woods in a panic that really tested his patience. âYeah, Iâm sure heâd also love to be alive to talk about it, so why donât ya shut yer yap for five seconds so we can get him?â
Ford huffed. He stared back down at the screen. âHeâs going towards the middle of the forest, so at least he isnât near any caves.â He stopped talking, eyes widening. âWe need to move. Heâs coming across Manotaur territory.â
Stanley swore. âThen letâs go already!â
âStan, youâre slower like this. You should let meââ
âOh, hell no, Pointdexter. Iâm not waitinâ here while you go off after him. Heâs gonna freak out if he sees you alone.â
Ford opened his mouth, saw the expression that Stan had on his face, and let whatever stupid thing he was going to tell Stan, die. âFine but try not to lose me. Iâm going to have toâŚâ He sighed. âRun on four legs.â
Even in his state of mind, Stanley couldnât resist grinning. âMaybe this situation isnât all bad.â
Ford took off his boot and threw it at his brother. It bounced off him. Stan didnât even feel it.
âFiddleford better be grateful for this,â muttered Ford as he freed himself of his other shoe and began toâthere was no other word for itâgallop in the direction Fiddleford went.
Filing the mental image of his brother running around like a giant housecat for later, Stan lumbered behind him. He was determined to keep up, not wanting to waste more time.
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An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Chapters: 2/?
Fandom: Gravity Falls
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Fiddleford H. McGucket/Stan Pines
Characters: Fiddleford H. McGucket, Stan Pines, Ford Pines, Stanford Pines
Additional Tags: Mystery Trio, fiddlestan, Fluff, Alternate Universe - Monster Falls (Gravity Falls), Bad Decisions, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, POV Fiddleford H. McGucket, Young Stan Twins, Fiddleford McGucket Needs a Raise, You Know It's Bad When The Man Who Built A Murder Robot Is The Voice of Reason
Summary:
Fiddleford just wanted to have his morning coffee in peace, but Gravity Falls and the Stan brothers had other plans.
I actually love my boy Fiddleford, please believe me.Â