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Thimbleful Thursday: Parts and Points

“You, uh, really take trying out your product seriously, don’t you?”
The man was nervous. Sheen’s workshop did that, got people thinking about all the pieces coming to life, or about all the meat parts they still had.
That was, however, no excuse for rudeness.
“Mmm?” Sheen made like he didn’t know what the guy was talking about.
“Your, uh, your arm?”
He’d actually said it. Sheen marked a point in his favor.
“This?” Sheen sent a thought through the wiring and detached his metal arm — mostly composites and ceramic, but “metal arm, meat arm” sounded cooler. “Does this—” he waved the stump “— look like something I did to myself?” Continue reading
Helping Hands I
How can I help?
Yarrow Tallum had said those words all her life. She’d grown up in a family that had helped. She had gone to a church that had helped. She had moved to this city working with a not-for-profit that, above all things helped.
When the not-for-profit had turned out to be not quite what she wanted with her life – or they hadn’t wanted quite what she did, or something; it had ended, and it hadn’t ended in a fun way, and that was really, in the end, the bits that mattered – she’d taken the first job that had come to hand, and from there another one and now, seven years after she’d moved into this city, she found herself walking down a back street to what was very politely called “the place” by people who knew about it.
The weather was getting cold and it was only going to get colder. The snow had already started to fall, and the forecasters and weather-witches and all the old almanac signs all agreed, for once: It was going to be a long and very hard winter.
Yarrow had been hearing rumors for a while, the way you did if you listened to people, really listened. And they said that there was someone named Katydid. And that Katydid was doing things.
In this city, there were any number of things that one could be doing. There was a priest talking to the fae in a church that had once been drenched in fae blood. There was a woman reclaiming the Crossroads park. There was a person who sat at the same corner every day and sang, songs like angels had come down from heaven, songs that lifted you up and made your day better.
There was an amazing world out there, but Yarrow was not going down to “the place” because she wanted to rubberneck.
It was going to be cold, so she dug through her closets and she found the three winter coats that had never fit quite right and the packs of socks that her mother liked to send her. She found three blankets that she didn’t need, and a pack of scarves and mittens and hats.
She cleared out her cupboard of canned food, except what she needed for the next week, and when she had this all in a shopping cart, she ran back upstairs and grabbed a can opener and her camp stove. And a box of tea and her second-best tea kettle.
That ought to be a start, she thought. And she started walking towards The Place.
If you asked her, Yarrow would have told you people need help more than I need these things. But it was more than that. It had always been more than that. And some of it…. sometimes she had to admit it was a little selfish.
Bundled up, she walked briskly through town towards “the place” – towards where she was pretty sure “the place” was. She had cash in her pocket for panhandlers – but there were none on the road, no buskers, nobody hiding in the little alcoves and corners, nobody being sent away from the convenience store or the warming their hands over an air outlet.
It made the city feel too quiet, not alive enough. It made her both worried and hopeful. It made Yarrow wonder, more than where are they, what are they giving to the city normally, that we don’t notice?
All God’s children got a place in the choir, her father would’ve said. And every note that isn’t there is notable.
That wasn’t enough of an answer, but that was a question for another day. Today, she passed one skinny kid who looked both lost and drawn, that was it, and she said to them “I hear the Place is this way.”
“Isn’t the Place for, I dunno. Like…?”
“Are you hungry and cold? Then the Place is for you.”
The nerve of her, she thought, to say that when it wasn’t her place. But the words had come from somewhere and it wasn’t really her mind that they’d come from. Still, she added, “or. When I’ve dropped these things off, you can come back to my house. I don’t have much but I can give you dinner and a place to crash for the night.”
“I’ll… You’re going to the Place? I’ll come with you.”
Magic didn’t solve everything, that was one of Yarrow’s first lessons. The city still had its problems, steeped in magic as it was, some of them caused by that very magic. But kindness…
They walked in silence, except Yarrow passing him the mittens on the top of her pile and a meal bar from lower down in the pile. The kid looked sort of grateful and sort of embarrassed. She wondered how long they’d been wandering around, and if they had any place to go that wasn’t Yarrow’s house or The Place.
How did things get here? She wondered, but then, the way that she’d been taught, she also started to wonder how do we get things away from here?
When they reached the Place, she realized that someone – or someones – had moved on to the next step, the part where you stopped wondering and started moving forward.
- Helping Hands I
- Stone Soup and Other Gifts
- Katydid’s Camp, a story of The Fairy Town for the Giraffe CAll
- Loaves, a story for the Giraffe Call @Rix_Scaedu

Bad Things: Pet
Content warnings: dehumanization (literally), torture, captivity, more torture, humiliation, loss of self, semi-starvation and food-based torture. Off of this prompt.
@Chanter_Greenie, I bet you know who this is.
Someone remind me to post the post-Ghost Story bit once I find it?
The transformation had hurt like hell.
On bad moments, he held on to that.
She was good at these things; he was pretty sure she could’ve made it painless. She liked the pain — she like his pain.
When he’d realized what she was doing, he’d tried to run away, despite the shackles holding him down, despite the blades she’d driven through both his feet. “Little beastie,” she’d purred into his ear. “Beast you are, and I don’t think you look the part enough.” Continue reading
Beauty-Beast 40: Yourself

First – Previous – Landing Page – Next
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“…We should do what we have to with our day.” The look on Timaios’ face had nothing to do with business and everything to do with business. But his words… he had to pay attention to his words.
Ctirad cleared his throat. “As you wish, sir.”
Timaios’ expression, if anything, became more lascivious. “Oh, oh Ctirad, you are delicious right now. Can you smile a little for me?”
“For ‘delicious,’ sir, I can smile more than a little.” He let his lips turn up in a broad smile and lowered his chin, not out of shyness but to look up at his owner through his eyelashes. “I’m glad you the way I look in the clothes you bought me, sir. Timaios.” He shifted one hip, posing. “And when we are done with business I hope you like taking them off of me too.” Continue reading
Bad Things Happen Bingo: Mischief

Count: ~800
Chara(s): A god of Mischief (OC*)
Pairing(s): N/A
Fandom: Org Fic – Fae Apoc xover
Prompt: Muzzled
So this. This is a series of stories taking place in my universe, Fae Apoc, at the time just before the aforementioned apoc. Portals are opening up to one other world at that time, and in this story, well, they happen to open up into a whole BUNCH of worlds.
And from those worlds, a bunch of poor soon-to-be-victims-of-bad-things who bear some resemblances to fandom characters happen to slip through some portals. And then bad things happen to them.
Because that, after all, is the name of the Bingo.
Content warnings: bondage, capture, humiliation
This is technically Chapter Four. Chapter Three (Genius) and Chapter One (Asset) will return later.
4. Mischief
He’d really pissed off someone this time.
Mischief wasn’t sure how they’d taken him down; generally he could get out of any trap. That was, after all, what he was known and made for. Causing chaos. Getting out of trouble. Causing more trouble.
But right now, he was in a cage, and they had put a muzzle on him.
The worst indignity of all, the thing that was making him glare at the bars as if without words he might be able to tear them off their hinges, was that they hadn’t even done that specially for him.
There were people in three of the other cages, and they were all wearing muzzles and wooden collars.
After that, the indignity of being naked seemed hardly important.
But he was Mischief, and he wasn’t going to put up with anything like that. He could pull on illusion without speaking. He could pull on illusion without his magic. He could pull on illusion while half-dead and bleeding out.
He pulled his favorite court jacket and trews out of the air and wrapped them around himself. He tried for a smirk, but the muzzle pressed at his lips and his cheeks.
It was a nasty thing – splintery wood, like the collar, and metal, a piece over his tongue in metal with little spikes in it, and bands under his chin and over his nose. He had been muzzled before – by the court of his father, for being what he was. By the enemies of his father’s court, for the same reason. Those muzzles had been frustrating, annoying, and in the end, had shown that he had been caught doing his job, being exactly what he was supposed to. Continue reading
Haunted House 19: Wardrobe

First: A story featuring a male keeper and a female Kept.
Previous: In the Henhouse
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“You said…” Mélanie washed the eggs slowly. “You said that I had two assignments? I suppose that I should do those before morning is over…?”
“Oh! Thank you for reminding me. Yes. When you’re done with those eggs, we can go upstairs and I can show you where to find the best clothes. And then perhaps I’ll go out and do a little trading and give you some more time to yourself. Would you like that?”
“I…. I think I would be a little confused by that. But I would not dislike it, sir.” She finished the eggs and set them on a tea towel that appeared next to the sink. “Thank you, House. so… five outfits?” Continue reading
Nimbus!
Originally posted on Patreon in July 2018
and part of the Great Patreon Crossposting to WordPress.

And, of course, a lizard. Because that’s Nimbus for you. 🙂
Protected: That time of year thou mayst in me behold…
A New World 24: Mistress and Apprentice

First: A New World
Previous: Idiots
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“Perhaps I will teach you.”
Was she looking for an apprentice? Or for – well. Certainly she hadn’t been at a lack for invitations since she woke up. Of course, she had spoken to more people who did not work for her in the last day than she had in many months, perhaps many years, in the time before her long nap.
“I might enjoy you teaching me.” Gemma smiled at her with an expression that might have been interested in learning – or in other things. “You have a fascinating way of looking at the world. What is it that you do, that isn’t pretending to be an ancient potions-mistress?”
“Well, mostly, I am a modern potions-mistress,” Kael admitted. “It helps to have someone in the Tower, I suppose, that knows what sort of potions will actually work, which won’t do anything, and which could be fatal if handled incorrectly.”
“It certainly has to add verisimilitude. But there have to be other things you could be doing – working for one of the big corporations…” Continue reading