if you’re still taking requests for CRK, could you write something about the ancients with a minion of their respective beasts? If not all of them maybe hollyberry and Pure Vanilla
maybe the reader followed the beasts before they corrupted and just don’t know how to let go, still clinging to the hope that the virtue they followed is still down there.
But they don’t hate the ancients, they don’t hate anyone.
(Sorry if this sent twice, tumblrs being weird)
Grief Is the Price of Belief
Tags: Pure Vanilla Cookie x Reader, Hollyberry Cookie x Reader, Post-War Reflection, Found Family, Bittersweet Hope, Broken Ideals, Quiet Redemption, Soft Angst, Comfort Without Fixing, Supportive, Disillusionment.
Warnings: Emotional Distress, Grief and Loss, Past Manipulation.
A/N: Might be ooc in Hollyberry Cookie's part because I haven't reached chapter 10 yet... 🚶‍♀️
The Spire of Deceit has long since fallen silent. The wind howls through broken marble and whispers through the cracks like forgotten prayers.
You sit on the edge of a shattered balcony, legs dangling, the stars above unbothered by Cookie-kind’s suffering. Below, the remnants of what once was—your loyalty, your devotion—lie buried under moonlight and ruins. You once followed Shadow Milk Cookie, not out of malice, but because he spoke of truth twisted by perception. Of freedom from dogma. Of eyes opened.
Pure Vanilla Cookie stands quietly behind you. He doesn't speak at first, doesn’t offer pity, only presence.
“I used to think,” you say, “that he only wanted to free us from illusion.”
You don’t mention Shadow Milk’s name. Neither does he.
“I know,” Pure Vanilla says softly, his staff glowing faintly beside him. “So did I.”
You turn to look at him. He doesn’t meet your eyes—his remain closed, as always—but you sense that he sees you more than anyone else ever has.
“I didn’t hate you when the war started,” you whisper. “I didn’t understand. I still don’t. But I never… hated you.”
“I wouldn’t ask you to,” he replies, his voice nearly lost in the breeze. “I failed him. Failed you. Truth is not a weapon. I tried to wield it like one… and forgot that it can break like glass.”
You inhale shakily. “He’s still in there. Somewhere. Isn’t he?”
Pure Vanilla Cookie sits beside you slowly, the vanilla orchid eye in his staff blinking once, as if contemplating. “Truth doesn’t disappear,” he murmurs. “It gets buried. Shrouded. Sometimes corrupted. But I believe… no truth is ever truly lost. Only misremembered.”
You look away, tears pricking at your eyes. “Then why does it hurt so much to believe in it?”
He smiles faintly. “Because belief is an act of courage.”
There’s a silence. The kind you share with someone who knows grief as well as you do.
He doesn’t tell you to let go. He doesn’t ask you to forget. He just remains there, a steady warmth at your side.
“You once followed a shadow,” he says gently. “Now… maybe you can walk beside the light. Not to erase the past, but to honor what was once true within it.”
The scent of battle always clung to her—berries, dust, and iron—but it was her laughter that rang first.
And for the first time in ages, you wonder if you can.
“Oi! Thought I might find you brooding again.”
You didn’t lift your head. The fields outside the Garden’s border were blooming again, but you couldn’t bring yourself to look at them.
Eternal Sugar Cookie had made them bloom once. Not like this, but better. Sweeter. You had believed in her—before.
Before the Garden became a cage.
Before joy turned into compulsion.
Before comfort became control.
“She only wanted everyone to be happy,” you said aloud, your voice cracked.
You heard a grunt, then the sound of heavy armor as Hollyberry Cookie dropped beside you, resting her arm over her bent knee.
“She forgot the cost of real happiness,” Hollyberry muttered. “The kind you fight for. Cry for. Bleed for.”
You looked at her. She was fire, always—loud and alive and real. And you had feared her once. Not because she was cruel, but because she reminded you of everything you’d run from.
“She wanted to protect us from pain,” you murmured.
“She protected us from feeling anything at all,” Hollyberry said. “That’s not kindness. That’s fear with a ribbon on top.”
You winced. “Don’t speak about her like—”
“Like she’s gone?” Hollyberry looked at you then, eyes sharp. “She is. That Sugar you followed, the one who just wanted to help? She’s buried under layers of illusion. Candy-coated chains.”
Your heart cracked. You hated how right it sounded.
“I still see her,” you whispered. “Sometimes. In her voice. In the way she smiles.”
Hollyberry’s expression softened. She sighed, brushing a hand over your shoulder—not gentle, but steady.
“Yeah,” she said. “I see her too.”
You blinked, startled.
“You do?”
“I fought her, didn’t I?” Hollyberry shrugged. “Face to face. I saw the hurt behind the honeyed words. The desperation in that perfect paradise. I saw her soul crying out—and I still said no.”
You swallowed.
“Was that… easy?”
“Not in the slightest,” Hollyberry said. “She meant a lot to me. Still does. But if I let her keep me there, I’d be betraying her worst.”
Your hands trembled in your lap.
“I don’t hate her,” you confessed. “But I can’t live in her dream anymore.”
Hollyberry stood. “Then don’t.”
You looked up at her.
“Come with me,” she said. “We’ll grieve her together. We’ll remember her right. And when the day comes that she wakes up—if it ever does—we’ll be ready.”
You didn’t know if that day would come.
But you took her hand anyway.
Because Hollyberry didn’t promise false comfort. She offered a path forward. One you could walk, even with grief stitched into every step.
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Ghosts Don’t Lay Down Their Weapons (They Sing to the Metal Until It Softens)
CW: mentions of trauma, guilt, parasocial dynamics, emotional vulnerability.
This piece is written for those who already know Bucky Barnes—not the surface-level Winter Soldier, but the man underneath: the victim, the fighter, the friend, the healing ghost. If you carry his story in your chest the way I do, this is for you.
James Buchanan “Bucky” Barnes is a fictional character from Marvel Comics and the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Once a bright and loyal soldier in the 1940s, he was captured, brainwashed, and turned into the Winter Soldier—an assassin weaponized by Hydra over decades. Beneath the violence and myth, Bucky is a man grappling with memory, identity, and the guilt of things he was forced to do. His story is one of trauma, recovery, and quiet resistance. In him, many of us have found not a hero or villain, but a mirror.
First Fire.
Bucky Barnes feels like someone opened my chest, ripped all my innards that got in the way, and forcefully, without an ounce of regard for pain or remorse, took my soul and turned it into words on pages. It felt like I was looking, not at the entirety of me like some sort of clone, but more at the gruesome and most vindictive version of me that I believe is only resting, simmering inside, waiting for the right time to explode, to hurt, to harm, to feel any ounce of real emotion. But the thing that really draws me into this character? All his demons, his guilt, and the weight he carries were none of his fault. It was forced upon him. He had no control over anything. He did not want to become the most feared assassin, synonymous with a ghost and a boogeyman meant to scare disobedient children. I guess because, deep down, this anger, this violence, this need to hurt—myself or otherwise—were something I did not want. I don’t want to be bad. I want to be good. But I had no choice nor the power to go against what life had laid out for me. Bucky was a victim, not a monster. I was mean and bad because I had to survive, and maybe there wasn’t much of a difference.
It is easy to mistake one thing for another. Like how chaos could become comfort if you never knew better. Maybe this thing that I feel when I see a character that mirrors my ache could be called love. Love in the sense that I have memorized the arc of his life so well that it feels like I have this person I could turn whichever way and still know. I know him and his demons, and the story of it is something that is mine to own and bring in my pocket when I couldn’t understand myself—because at least I understood him. I have endured so much, and am enduring still, but at least this thing that I recognize, the comfort of the story that I know so well, remains the same even if I don’t. Even if I don’t recognize myself anymore.
He was a victim of his circumstances. He was an ordinary person, who loved, laughed, fought, lost, and believed in doing the right thing. He did the right thing, but somehow it still ended up not meaning anything. His story was—is—stained. I wake up every day and think, “I wanna do good, do right by people,” and always, always, always without fail, I end up poisoning anything I touch, whether I deem that I did, or others decide I have sinned. This common ground is quite funny if it isn’t so tragic.
I Made a Home in the Trenches.
And even then, when I see myself in him, I do not have the slightest idea how to change. Because even if I do, it feels like I keep opening the door to my freedom only to find another door, and another door, and another door. And there’s only so much one can take before they stop bothering, no? His abuse made him undeniably strong, inhumanly fast, knowledgeable in any and almost everything. When I was forced down to the mud, I made sure to learn about the nooks and crevices, made friends with the critters, made myself at home. I stood up and made my hurt a weapon so that no one could ever make me little again. So, I guess some good can come out of hell. Bucky changed the course of the millennia. He shaped history, dare I say more than his patriotic counterpart. He was a well-oiled, relentless, sharp-eyed weapon. My grit? My bite? My ability to stare at a hole through a brick wall? All good and useful—and they aren’t. Until it doesn’t serve their purpose or goes against their narrative. Bucky gets cryofrozen once people have had enough of him; I get branded as too much and made me to be the villain when my mouth runs on the opposite side of their comfort.
Trigger Words, Trigger Wounds.
But is that it? Do I stay there? Should I start finding my trigger words? Longing (I long for the person I could be if I were okay), Rusted (My faith in anything has rested for so long I’m not sure it even exists anymore), Furnace (Where do I look for the warmth I so desperately try to give people?), Daybreak (Is it over? Is hope here?), Seventeen (Everyone went their separate ways—I think I’m still in that classroom), Benign (I could be this, I want to be this), Nine (She grew up too fast), Homecoming (I don’t have one), One (I have always been alone, even when I wasn’t), Freight Car (Don’t let me go, don’t let me fall).
My Place is in the Telling.
Bucky Barnes had his north star. One that he looks to in times of confusion, of reluctance, of doubt. Whatever happens, he will and would always look out for the little guy. As long as he’s behind this man, his ideals and his heart, Bucky knows he’s on the right path. His loyalty is so deeply ingrained in his very being that it broke seventy years of conditioning, torture, and abuse. I sometimes fear that I don’t have that moral compass to hold on to with all my might so I could never lose sight of myself and my life’s why. But maybe my north star has always been my courage and unrelenting belief that no matter how far I stray, and how long and arduous the journey back is, I could and should always go back to this. To me that sees things no one cares for. To see the stories, to see the truth in fiction, to keep it alive, to nurture it. To smell the books and get lost in a world not my own—because who else will? Bucky knows his place is to follow the not-so-little guy anymore. Mine could be making sure their story of overcoming evil and the mechanism of an ever-changing world is never forgotten. I do not have to force myself to change just to prove that I can. I can always do it with or without their prying eyes.
And even more, my apology and my side of the story can always quietly exist. It does not have to be loud anymore. I am allowed to exist without always apologizing for it. Bucky’s history is only just starting to change to the truth—the ugly after the glory. I can give myself the grace to trust that my truth will surface when it is ready to be heard. And in return, I must let people be. Let life run its course without interfering.
The Quiet Kind of Camaraderie.
With the truth comes the weight of a revelation. I look to him and his pain because I can only hope to have even an ounce of the strength he possesses to take control of his life. To be accountable, make amends, and stand on the fact that he is good—and he always has been. And that sometimes, as unfair as it sounds, good people do carry more than they should. And we just must learn to live with that.
Without uttering a single word, with no moment to coexist (because he obviously is not real), I am understood in a way I feel like I am sometimes not ready to be understood. There is a black, leaking substance that flows through my heart, and it is not good. I feel like we all have it, in different amounts, and it is never an easy conversation to have. To be that vulnerable and admit that certain evilness resides in you… No, I don’t think I could ever get used to laying it in the open and having people, actual people, see. Which is why I guess it's comforting to know that such a character exists—somewhere in the world another person goes through the same exact rabbit hole of admiration and recognition, and it’s a quiet sort of camaraderie. We cry through his periods of pain, we get indignant when his humanity is questioned, we mourn his life as we mourn ours, and we discover our ability to love and live again through the rediscovery of his agency. This fantasy, no matter how childish to some, has created a safe space for me to exist as myself in truth before she could manifest. I think of it as a bus stop amid a storm, taking refuge just until the rain passes and the bus arrives to take me to the next destination, with the knowledge that if I had to go home, this stop would always be there and stand the test of time.
Debrief.
It is lonely sometimes, to have this wonderful thing that no one else understands. But I guess that had always been the theme of the story. There are things that we must do alone. There are things that we must do for ourselves that no one can do for us, whether that’s navigating life after years of brainwashing or looking for something to keep as a reminder of home. Is that love? And more so, is it wrong? I find myself thinking, who cares? No one gets to decide what and how you survive. If it makes you a better person, a better human being, then I don’t see anything wrong with that. There are many more evil things to worry about.
Bucky Barnes has taught me a great deal of things, but more importantly, he has taught me that no matter how painful, how unfair, how debilitating the cards dealt to us are, we must find that anchor that will ground us in our truth—and if you do find it, hold on to it with all that you have. There’s no use pointing fingers or playing the blame game. Just decide who you are right then and there and stand on it. He inspires me to do the work. To make a life for myself, separate from what has been decided for me—because I can do that. His pain is a mirror of my own, and by understanding how he rose from it, I can hope that I can rise from my own hell as well. And one day, if I no longer need to depend on this story to be and feel real, I will still have a friend I can always count on to be with me until the end of the line.
If you resonated with this, I’d love to know. Reblogs help it reach others who might need a fictional North Star of their own.