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Thank you so so much for taking the job! He legit came out perfect đť His expression, the lighting, his outfit, everythiiiing~ (My god the lighting!!) Seriously made my whole month haha
One of the many times Wales had to rescue England from his own hare-brained schemes. Regaled to an exasperated Portugal and to you, dear reader.
Historical folklore UK bros (with a hint of Engport) fic set between 1605 and 2026.
Shrewsbury Museum, Shropshire, 2026
Portugal frowns as he peers into the brightly lit cabinet, reading the affixed label for the finds of a wetland archaeological survey.
âArenât those the earrings I gave you?â
âNo.â England lies.
âDid you throw them away? I thought you liked them?â He accuses, sounding faintly offended.
âNo! I mean, I did like them!â
Gabriel raises an eyebrow expectantly.
Arthur rubs the back of his neck. âYou wouldnât believe me if I told you.â
âTry me.â
Shropshire, near the Welsh border, 1605
âAre you sure this is necessary?â Arthur gripes as they secure his hands behind the stake. With chains, this time, instead of rope.
âShut up, devil-whore.â The man spits, yanking the chain tighter than necessary.
âLook you already killed me once and you know it doesnât work.â
The man shudders, as if remembering Arthur sitting back up after being mauled by the dogs theyâd set on him. The bastards had clawed one of his best shirts.
The man shuts his eyes and vows as if praying. âThe Lordâs vengeance shall soon be upon thee.â
âIâm just saying that Iâm the third witch youâve killed this year. Donât you think you might be getting a little paranoid?â His new king is fanatical about the witches and daemons supposedly plaguing his kingdom.[1]
âIt is our duty as servants of God,â the man says solemnly. âTo weed out evil where we find it.â
âThe last one you burnt just because her neighbourâs vines died.â
âDeath unto death,â he whimpers.
âLook I just donât want you wasting all this wood.â
âGod have mercy on your soul.â
âOh, very well,â England tests the give of the chains and the thick wooden stake creaks under his nation strength but does not snap. The pile of wood under his feet is insufficient for a proper burn, which means heâll likely smoulder and choke to death.
âI suppose you should get on with it then.â He suggests helpfully.
The fellow staggers backwards, muttering under his breath, and the vicar steps towards him with a lit torch. Arthurâs nostrils flare at the smell of smoke and his hands instinctively clench and tug again at his bindings. He restrains the urge to flinch during the vicarâs sermon every time he brandishes the spitting torch close to the kindling. He should go to death with dignity at least. But itâs almost impossible not to track the movement of the flame with his eyes.
The vicar touches the torch to the kindling and, as heâd thought, it smoulders. The wood is too green, cut down in eager haste. The acrid smoke stings his eyes and burns his throat. He tiptoes as much as he can as the heat steadily builds, and his whole body instinctively fights the bindings with the desperation of a snared rabbit as flames slowly start to lick upwards. Is this how sheâd felt?
THUMP.
England looks down and sees the arrow impaled in his heart. A quick merciful kill. He only has a moment to be grateful before his consciousness slips away into the cool, shallow pool of half-death.
---
Arthur wakes up to a cool, dark room and a splitting headache. Voices murmur downstairs in what Arthur guesses is a public house, which means he must be in the next town over at least. A chair is pulled up beside the bed, as if someone had been watching over him, but the occupant is nowhere to be seen. A longbow and a quiver of arrows is propped up in the corner.
The sheets feel stifling and heâs soaked through with sweat where the healing processes of his body have generated immense heat. His soul is back, but he waits for the rest of his body to catch up.
His fingers and toes gain pinpricks of feeling as blood rushes back into the tiny capillaries. His stomach gurgles horribly as his digestive system grinds back to life, and he tastes metal in the back of his mouth from acid pooled in his throat. His diaphragm pings like a bowstring as it settles back into place. He tests his smoked lungs and throat, humming a hoarse tune into the room.
The door opens mid-tune and Wales bustles into the room backwards, carrying a bowl and cup in his hands and kicking the door shut. His hair is longer than when England last saw him, dark and curly and loosely tied back. When he turns, he has a moustache and pointed beard in the current court fashion.[2] He is dressed for the road in a dark doublet, with sensible ribbons at his knees securing the ends of his trousers to prevent draft. A pair of worn leather gloves have been abandoned on the foot of the bed.
âOh, good youâre awake. I thought I heard you.â
Dylan insists that he came up with the melody, whistled between them over centuries of campfires and journeys across rolling plains.
His brother sets the bowl and cup down on the small bedside table and Arthur smells some kind of pottage with lentils and peas. Heâs suddenly so hungry it hurts so he tries to sit, kicking back the sweat-sodden bedlinens.
âEasy,â Dylan murmurs. He helps Arthur up and hands him the bowl and a spoon. Arthur takes it and lifts the spoon to his lips with shaking hands and manages to get about half of the spoonful in his mouth.
âThank you,â he croaks with his new throat after a few bites when he can think straight again. He glances pointedly over at the bow and arrows resting innocuously in the corner and thinks of curling flames and grey smoke.
Dylan pretends not to see it and makes him drink the cup of hot water with verjuice and honey. âItâs not much. Youâre lucky I found us a room.â
Dylan is the best marksman of them all whether his weapon is a bow or a matchlock musket. The arrow through Arthurâs heart had been a perfect shot, carefully and precisely delivered. There was no luck involved.
âItâs good.â
His brother grunts to accept the veiled compliment. He settles on the edge of the bed. Englandâs hand has stilled its incessant trembling as the food settles in his belly and Wales fusses and taps his hand to remind him eat slower. Thereâs a faint crash and someone cheers downstairs. Wales gently brushes a spider away as it crawls over the bedsheets. There's dozens of them up in the rafters, recently hatched.
âHow did you end up on a bonfire anyway?â Dylan finally asks.
âWhat are you doing here?â Arthur counters evasively.
âDelivering the kingâs messages. Now you.â
Arthur shrugs. âCursed their well.â
His brother rolls his eyes. âAnd whyâd you do that?â
âFor a laugh.â
âArthur.â
âSo that theyâd have to go to the marshes for water.â
Wales frowns. âWhat? Why?â
âFor Ginny Greenteeth.â[3]
âYou didnât bargain with her, did you?â
âNot on purpose!â
âWhat do you mean not on purpose?â
 Arthur shrugs defensively, eyes darting anywhere but Dylanâs searching gaze. For a second Dylan can see a much younger boy squirming out of consequences for his mischief.
âI took something from the marsh.â
Dylan pinches the bridge of his nose. âYou took something from faerie waters and didnât think that might constitute some sort of bargain?â
âI didnât know it was her marsh. She used to be further north.â
âWhat even was it?â
England mutters something unintelligible under his breath.
âPut your teeth back in.â
âA brooch.â Arthur says louder.
âA brooch?â
âNot just any brooch!â
Wales growls. âNo, no donât say it. You nearly got yourself burned over a piece of faerie jewellery?â
Arthur shrinks because Dylanâs anger is scarier than Alasdairâs for its rarity. âItâs manmade,â he ventures.
âOh hagâs teeth Arthur!â Dylan cuffs him across the head. âIâve met magpies less covetous.â
Arthur frowns and eats another spoonful of pottage to avoid replying, too embarrassed to admit the truth about the bog. And anyway, it was hardly true. Heâd met magpies with far more egregious aspirations of wealth.
âWhat did you curse the well with?â
âPigâs blood in the water.â
Wales makes a face. âYou might be the first witch burnt to actually deserve it. I should have left you up there.â
England doesnât feel particularly apologetic towards the people who had tried to kill him twice over, so he just slurps the dregs of his bowl obnoxiously.
âYou should remove the curse,â Dylan says with a tone of reprimandâlike one of the kingâs bench judges. Wales has served justices beforeâhe has the right level mind and sense of equity for it.
Arthur wipes his chin and puts the empty bowl down. âIâd owe Greenteeth then.â
âYou got yourself into this mess you can get yourself out of it. Just give the brooch back.â
England blanches. âIâm not giving the brooch back.â
âWhat could be so special about some damn brooch?â
He shrugs again, refusing to meet his brotherâs eyes. Itâs part self-consciousness and part exhaustion, as the meal after his overnight resurrection has left him sleepy and warm.
Wales brother sighs and shoves him over. âRest more. Iâll chew you out properly in the morning.â
---
Under the cover of night Arthur dresses and sneaks back to the village. He undoes the curse on the well, scuffing over his hidden curse-marks on the bottom of the bucket. Itâll give fresh clean water in the morning, and the parishioners will congratulate themselves for having burnt the right person.
What had been his house has been picked clean floor to ceiling. England reaches up and brushes his hand over the rafters over his bed. There, concealed from prying eyes, is the gold and red enamel brooch heâd taken from Greenteeth. He thumbs the trefoil patterns as he sneaks back to the inn Wales had taken him to and climbs back into bed as slowly as he can. Dylan snorts and rolls in his sleep but does not wake. Arthur sleeps with the brooch clutched to his chest.
---
âThis is what you took from the marsh?â Dylan gapes, dropping his spoon into his porridge with a wet splat.
Arthur scuffs the toe of his boot under the table, looking down into his oats. âIf you donât want it, I can just give it back.â He reaches for the brooch to take it out of Dylan's hands but his brother snatches it away.
âWhat do you mean, give it back? This is my brooch you know.â Wales says indignantly but his eyes are gentle.
England shrugs, embarrassed. âI thought you might miss it.â
âI havenât seen this in centuries.â Wales reverently turns the brooch over in his hands, feeling the pin tip for sharpness. âIt looks the same as it did the day it went in.â
âYou dropped it?â
Dylan nods absently. âI was carrying you, I think. Youâd gotten an infection in your foot, and you didnât want to walk.â
He pins it to his doublet. It looks completely out of place against the new fashion. But it makes Wales look a touch more how England remembers his earliest memories of him.
âI recognised it when I saw it,â he says.
Wales brushes a thumb over it. âIâm surprised you remember it. You would have only been little.â
Thereâs an unspoken truce between them. Siblinghood comes at the price of justice. Wales had lost his laws, his kings, and his sovereignty at the hands of Englandâs Plantagenets. Who in turn were not really Englandâs Plantagenets at all but descendants of Franceâs wayward nobility. Arthur canât give Dylan his kingdom back. All they can do is remember and maintain the act of brotherliness. Dylan is a better man in that way than Arthur is, who still wants to tear Francisâ throat out even though his kings have not been French for a long time.
For now, at least, Arthur is away from court and Dylan, as a kingâs messenger on the border between England and Wales, is closer to the crown than he is. In a yearâs time it may change, and trouble is brewing around the crownâs anti-Catholic stance.[4]
âSoâŚyouâre happy to see it?â Arthur fishes for approval in a way heâd never admit to in front of his European allies and enemies.
His older brother grins. âWell letâs see if we can offer Greenteeth something else.â
---
âNo.â The green hag sneers. âIâll drown you.â
âYou havenât even considered it.â Wales replies in old Welsh and waves the brass belt buckle at her.
âI donât want your new trinkets. I want that,â a long spindly finger reaches for them from the ragged edge of her brown cloak dripping with slime and bladderworts. Greenteeth points stubbornly at the gleaming brooch affixed to Dylanâs chest. âBack.â
âItâs not even yours,â Dylan plants his hands on his hips.
âIs mine!â She cries indignantly, spitting a fragment of broken mossy tooth in rage. âIs mine and the Wessex boy took it.â She splashes the stagnant black water around her at them, glaring at Arthur.
âI dropped it and Arthur returned it to me. Thatâs only fair.â
Greenteeth grumbles. âDropped it so long ago.â
âI could say there is a dirwy due for not telling me when I dropped it.â[5]
Greenteeth licks her teeth, weighing her options against the grave charge of concealment. âGive me something else.â
Wales makes a show of turning the buckle over in his hands and considering it. âSomething else?â
âYes.â
Dylan reaches for Arthurâs ear and pulls out the golden hook through his ear lobe.
âOi!â
Dylan shushes him and presents the earring to Greenteeth, and her yellow eyes light up with curiosity.
âDylan,â England growls. âThat was a gift from Portugal.â
âHear that Greenteeth? This is all the way from Lusitania.â
Greenteeth blinks like a frog and turns the earring over in her hands, shaking it so that the enamel starburst jangles in the low grey light.
âDo we have a deal?â My brooch for the earring?â
Greenteeth peers suspiciously up at Wales. âTheyâre a pair. Both earrings.â
âDeal,â his brother says happily.
âDylan!â Arthur says indignantly again, but his brother elbows him hard then smiles beatifically at him when he grunts.
âGive her the damn earring.â
Arthur reluctantly hands it over, mourning the loss of Portuguese gold. Greenteeth snatches it and cups the jewellery in her hands, stroking over the delicate enamel work.Â
âAndââ Dylan reaches into their shared bag between them and pulls out a handful of baby spiders, scuttling and rolling over his hands like smoke at the sudden low light. âThese. Just a few bites and your teeth will be as white as milk.â
âLike milk?â Greenteeth murmurs covetously, reaching out for the handful of baby spiders.
âBy oak, ash, and thorn,â England swears solemnly.
Greenteeth stuffs the spiders into her mouth and rolls them around, chewing and making a face around globs of black spittle.
âWell?â
Greenteeth swallows and grins hopefully at him, showing a row of mossy crumbling teeth and chewed up spidersâ legs wedged between them.
âYouâll make the queen of fairies herself jealous,â Wales says.
Satisfied, Greenteeth thrusts her hand out and crunches another mouthful of spiders when Arthur hands them over.
âWe have a wedd?â[6]
Greenteeth hums and nods. âI will spare you this time, green sons of Brutus.â
Shrewsbury town, Shropshire, 2026
Portugal raises an eyebrow, unimpressed. âSpiders?â
âSpiders.â England affirms solemnly.
The other sighs and stirs his coffee with the pink spoon provided by the trendy Danish cafĂŠ theyâd dived into to escape the rain. He sips it, makes a face, then tears open two packets of sugar and dumps them in.
âSo, am I out of trouble?â Arthur aims for light-hearted but even to his own ears it lands as a spurned husband hoping his wife will let him back in the house for dinner after staying out too late.
Gabrielâs lips pull up slightly around the rim of the coffee cup. âYouâre forgiven, though I have a bone to pick with Dylan now.â
âBe my guest,â Arthur exhales, happy to be out of the line of fire.
They sit in comfortable silence, listening to the bustle of the cafĂŠ and the baby babbling at the table next to them and watching the rain slide down the window.
Gabriel frowns as if having recalled something and swallows the mouthful of pastry heâd been chewing pensively. âAnd what about that ring I gave youâthe one with the carnelian? Cost a fortune. Youâd better have that at least still?â
The ring is deep in the caves of the Peak District with one of the pixies who had demanded a toll fare for Arthur to leave the faerie circle heâd carelessly stepped into. To break one ring, you must gift another.
Arthur clears his throat. âWell. You seeâŚâ
Historical notes
[1] Referring to King James I (VI of Scotland), who actually wrote his own book âDaemonologieâ, which endorsed the witch-hunting craze.
[2] i.e. the Stuarts. The fashion in the seventeenth century tended towards fuller facial hair and pointed beards.
[3] A grindylow hag-figure from English (particularly the Shropshire/Cheshire/Lancashire counties) folklore who pulled unsuspecting victims under the water in bogs and marshes.
[4] In November of the year this fic is set the Gunpowder Plot will be attempted and Guy Fawkes discovered as one of the co-conspirators. Soon after that, England will establish its first North American colonies, fundamentally changing Arthurâs place in the world and in his relationships.
I lied I have this UKBros fic I'm working on as well as my Napoleonic and Porteng stuff:
greenteeth [Excerpt, WIP]
âI took something from the marsh.â
Dylan pinches the bridge of his nose. âYou took something from faerie waters and didnât think that might constitute some sort of bargain?â
âI didnât know it was her marsh. She used to be further north.â
âWhat even was it?â
England mutters something unintelligible under his breath.
âPut your teeth back in.â
âA brooch.â Arthur says louder.
âA brooch?â
âNot just any brooch!â
Wales growls. âNo, no donât say it. You nearly got yourself burned over a piece of faerie jewellery?â
Arthur shrinks because Dylanâs anger is scarier than Alasdairâs for its rarity. âItâs manmade,â he ventures.
âOh hagâs teeth Arthur!â Dylan cuffs him across the head. âIâve met magpies less covetous.â
Arthur frowns and eats another spoonful of pottage to avoid replying, too embarrassed to admit the truth about the bog. And anyway, it was hardly true. Heâd met magpies with far more egregious aspirations of wealth.
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Si yo digo que todavĂa es el aniversario de Hetalia, todavĂa es el anivesario de Hetalia (?)
My contribution to the Hetalia 20th anniversary fanzine: Draw a Circle, it's Hetalia! (which you can download for free at @hetalia-20-anniversary-zine â¤ď¸đĽ
OKAY BUT YOUR TAGS I WANT THE NAPOLEON FICS I WANNA WRITE FRAN BEING CRAZY NAPOLEON SO BAD JOIN ME JOIN ME JOIN ME
I'm writing a 1901 fic with Fran entrenched in bohemian culture (bc he's pouting and trying to find himself after losing the Franco-Prussian war), and 1901 is also when they pick up talks of the Entende Cordial.
Uhh i got excited and off track
Have you considered 19th century PrUk? :3c
IâM WORKING ON IT CAPTAIN I PROMISE.
I love Napoleonic France but I also love the rest of Europe being kind of salty that itâs France of all people whoâs got them all by the throat. Thereâs a really good line in âMars at Restâ by fizzycherrycola about Prussia being kind of jealous that France got Napoleon for a general and I think that dynamic is very interesting.
ALSO turn of the century Bohemian France is super fun, especially because by that point France has been overtaken as top dog in Europe by Britain and I wonder how France copes with seeing his ancient rival surpass him. France is often portrayed as being quite smug and superior and, to be honest, up until 1815 heâs earned that right because he really is the supreme power in Europe. The medieval Holy Roman Empire can sort of go toe-to-toe with him and the Hapsburgs have their time as the dominant power, but when you look at French history as a whole France has always been one of, if not the most, powerful nations in Europe. From 1815 the age of Napoleon is over and, as you say, he loses the Franco-Prussian War. But he can fall back on his arts and culture for European dominance and relevance, and even as late as 1901 French is still the lingua franca for international diplomacy (replaced by English only post-WW1 as the Americans move in).
And then of course the Entente Cordiale! Which marks a fundamental shift away from the traditional European rivalries and British âsplendid isolationismâ towards what will become the WW1 alliances (with the Triple Entente including Russia). I wonder, though, whether in the hetalia universe it coincides with a genuine change of feeling between Arthur and Francis or whether it takes WW1 to really change their opinions on each other. Because in retrospect the Entente Cordiale has held strong, but in 1904 Iâm not sure Britain and France really fully trusted each other. At its core the Entente is an imperial foreign policy agreement, not an ever-lasting commitment. Itâs one of those things where only with hindsight does it look important (a bit like Magna Carta). I imagine England and France diligently attending the Entente and playing the part while shooting suspicious daggers each other waiting for the other to blink first.
AND FINALLY, Pruk! These two bastardsâŚThey absolutely bring out the worst in each other. Prussia who surrenders his chaplaincy and re-enters European politics in the early 1700s and quite quickly finds an ally in England who is vicious and ambitious and hungry to beat France. England who sees in Prussia a nation like himâan underdog with a head for war who is determined to rise above his meagre station. They get along like a house on fire and during the early nineteenth century their relationship is brought closer together by the coalition against France and Napoleon. Their monarchies become inherently entangled by marriage, and the last Prussian emperor Wilhelm II is born in 1859 and is half-British (the son of Princess Royal Victoria).
On the other hand, I think there is a permanent sore spot in their relationship over Alfred. Prussia was not Americaâs official ally, but they did tacitly support the independence cause, and Iâve seen hetalia hcs that place Gilbert alongside Baron von Steuben training the American troops. Seeing Prussia with a young Germany probably makes Arthurâs vengeful side rear its ugly head because how can it be fair that Prussia gets a child to raise after depriving England of his. I can see a protective Prussia hissing at England to stay out of a young Germanyâs affairs and England sneering back that itâs funny how that rule only seems to apply now. They might be entangled (occasionally horizontally) with each other, but thereâs also all of the complexity that comes with representing a nation.
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