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schizobass · 2 years ago
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The Dandelion Wars, Chapter One
The child was found behind Jacey Likeel’s tavern, spitting and howling and clawing for dear life.
She was small, and young, probably only 12 years old, with a nest of hair and a strange wardrobe that consisted of rough belted trousers that didn’t even reach her knees and a massive roughly woven sweater that hung around her like a sack. She had a scar on her upper lip and a pair of sharp black eyes that seemed to assess the whole situation in a breath. And her conclusion? It was fighting time.
Of course, the onlookers got the head wizard, Laudine, as fast as they could manage, as soon as she left her meeting, and pulled her down to the docks to look at the child. She was, after all, in charge of the country’s defense, and while no one really viewed this child as a threat, it couldn’t really hurt to be sure.
“Is she hurt?” Laudine asked, as she floated down the street, her long blue silk dress flowing around her. “Can you tell?”
“She won’t let anyone get close enough to tell, M’Light,” One of the cobblers said, apologetically. “We’re really not sure what to do.
Her lips pressed together in a thin, sharp line.
She knew, of course, why she was the one fetched, and not her brothers. Jeynu would never in a million years take this seriously, no doubt making it some sort of joke, before brushing off the child and leaving it to fend for itself once more, while Delmonico would just scare the poor thing, but it still made her bitter to have been reduced to “responsible motherly one” for the hundredth time.
The child was huddled behind a pile of barrels, teeth bared at anyone in sight, and that didn’t change when she saw Laudine.
That was a first, the wizard had to admit- for her whole 32 years of life, never before had she ever been treated as a physical threat, without an ounce of respect.
“Hello, dear,” She said, trying to channel her absolute best kind leader voice. Around her, the crowd murmured in approval. “What’s the matter?”
“Fuck off,” The child muttered, and everyone balked. “I don’t want to talk to you.”
Laudine blinked, hard, before bursting into laughter. Uncomfortably, the crowd chuckled along.
“Oh, I’m sorry, I’m sorry. I- oh,” The wizard took a second to wipe her eyes. “Do you know who I am?”
“I don’t know and I don’t give a damn,” The girl snapped. “You could be Neve Campbelle for all I care.”
“I’m Laudine,” Laudine said. “I’m the head wizard of the Triacrona.”
The girl paused in her snarling at that, blinking up at her. “The fucking what of the where?”
“Hm?”
“Wizards aren’t real.”
At that, it was Laudine’s turn to be rendered speechless, blinking at the girl uselessly. “I’m sorry?”
“Wizards aren’t real, you stupid fuck,” She repeated, slower. “Just because you dress up like it’s Halloween doesn’t make you a wizard.”
Laudine frowned. “I think… I think you should come with me. Where are you from?”
“Nunya.”
“Where?”
“Nunya business.” The girl said, looking strangely proud of herself.
Laudine exhaled, trying very hard not to lose her temper. This was probably just a lost little girl with a very strange sense of humor. Once this was all resolved, she’d go home, and have a nice long bath, and read a book or two on moths or butterflies. And maybe blow something up.
“Come on, honey, let’s get you to the manor,” She said, trying very hard to smile. It seemed to work if the second wave of content murmurs to sweep the crowd meant anything. Yes, no one could say Laudine wasn’t good at her job, that was for sure. “Come on.”
“What if I don’t?”
Laudine sighed, pinching the ridge of her nose. “Then I’ll have the guards throw you into a dungeon. How about that?”
Of course, the guards wouldn’t really throw her into a dungeon- she was obviously under 20, the legal age to be considered an adult, and Laudine wasn’t sure the people would like that all that much, especially considering their reaction to that rather empty threat, but still, it seemed to work, as the girl only hesitated a moment longer before standing.
She was incredibly small, probably only coming up to Laudine’s hip. Maybe that was normal for a child her age. Maybe not. She was stick thin too, reminding the wizard a bit of herself as a child. Her nest of hair was a similar shiny black, as well, although Laudine wasn’t she’d ever had it quite that tangled in her life.
That’s where the similarities ended.
While Laudine had dark brown skin and a proud nose, the girl had pale skin and a flat bridge, little slanted eyes with nubby lashes. She vaguely, Laudine thought, reminded one of a cat, or perhaps a fae dog.
“What’s your name?” Laudine asked.
“I’m not supposed to give my name to strangers.”
Laudine snorted. “I’m very clearly not a Fae Friend, you have nothing to worry about.”
The girl squinted at her. “What?”
“What’s your name?”
“...Millie.”
“I’m Laudine,” Laudine said, thoroughly unable to remember if she’d already said that. “Head wizard.”
“This is so weird,” Millie muttered. “Wizard named Lardy, why not?”
“Laudine.” Laudine corrected.
“That’s what I said.”
She squinted. “Where are you from, Millie?”
“New York.”
“Where?”
“It’s in another time,” Millie waved a hand. “You wouldn’t know it.”
Laudine stared at her for a beat before turning and walking. After a second, she heard the girl’s shoes flap against the ground behind her.
“Hey, Lardy, where are we going?”
“The manor,” Laudine gritted out. She was really looking forward to blowing something up when she got home. “I’m taking you to meet the other two Crowns.”
“The what?”
“My brothers. The King and The Head of Architecture.”
“Oh,” Millie fell silent for a few glorious moments, before sniffing loudly. “If your brother is the King, why aren’t you princess?”
“Because I’m a wizard. You can’t be a wizard and a princess,” Laudine sighed. “That’s just not how it works.”
“Why?”
Laudine didn’t respond.
The walk wasn’t a particularly long one, but fortunately, the hills and scenery were enough to wear Millie into silence for the rest of the walk. Laudine was seriously starting to suspect this was a farm kid who’d never been to the capitol, if her shocked expression at the fire fruit trees was anything to go off of. She probably had never seen faelora.
By the time they’d reached the manor at the top of the hill the city was built on, Millie was breathing hard, her little round face red. Laudine felt a moment of guilt, but it faded as soon as Millie’s face wrinkled in disgust.
“That’s such a lame castle.”
“It’s not a castle,” Laudine sighed. “It’s a manor. Our castle is elsewhere.”
“That’s stupid.”
Laudine rolled her eyes, nodding to the guards at the front gates, who let her in.
The manor’s front courtyard was a beautiful affair, with community gardens and a small pond with a bridge going over it, but Millie seemed unimpressed, huffing under her breath as she followed Laudine to the front doors.
“Herrady,” Laudine called to the butler. “Can you fetch my brothers? Tell them we have a young guest who claims to be from another time.”
“The future,” Millie piped up. “Way in the future.”
Herrady raised an eyebrow, but turned curtly and marched off.
Millie sat down on the tile floor.
“Oh, stand up,” Laudine sighed. “Or sit on a chair.”
“I don’t want to,” Millie whined, laying down now. “It’s soooo hot outside and the floor is so cool.”
“It’s not hot out,” Laudine said, stooping to grab the girl’s arm. “You’re wearing a sweater.”
“Yeah, but it’s also hot,” Millie grumbled, wrenching her arm away. “Leave me alone.”
“Millie.”
“Lardy.”
Laudine snarled, leaning down to grab at her again, but Millie twisted away, wiggling, wormlike, on the floor, her shoes squeaking maddeningly on the floor. Laudine let out an irritated cry, and Millie laughed, leading her on a chase around the floor, Laudine stooping and swinging her arms like some sort of ape, trying to catch the girl, only to be closely evaded.
Finally, Laudine’s temper snapped, and she pulled out her staff.
“Woah, Lady, chill.”
She whirled, glaring up the stairs at her brothers, who stood on the top landing, watching in amusement.
The siblings certainly looked similar to a certain extent. They had the same warm skin tone, the same black hair and eyes. They were all tall, all with perfect posture. That’s where the similarities ended.
Jeynu wore architect’s robes, simple and warm colored, layers on layers and belts on buckles. His head was shaved short, his goatee neatly trimmed. A smile danced on his face, his eyes sharp and amused, he looked perfectly at home in the calm manor, looked just as at ease as he always did.
Delmonico, however, was larger than his siblings, not only in height, but in weight. His hair, like Laudine’s, was long and wavy, but unlike hers, it flowed free around his shoulders. He wore his kingly robes, all white and red, all trimmed in seal fur and gold. Tattoos of bones plastered every joint, a skull across his face. He was watching the affair with a wide smile, clearly ready to laugh at any moment.
“Lady, you can’t fireball the kid,” Jeynu said, amused. “That’s not okay.”
At that, Delmonico let out a laugh, a raspy, rough chortle.
Millie stood, eyes wide and caught on the king’s face.
“I can see your bones,” She breathed. “That’s crazy.”
“It’s just a tattoo,” Laudine sighed. “It’s not his real bones.”
“It could be real,” Delmonico shrugged. “Who knows.”
While Jeynu and Laudine had soft, sweet voices, and spoke with eloquence and grace, Delmonico almost spat every word, stumbling over the sounds, cutting himself off at the end of every sentence like he meant to say more. His siblings were used to it, as were most of the staff, but that didn’t mean that this rude little child would have the same respect.
And she didn’t.
“You talk weird.”
“You look weird.” Delmonico said, immediately.
Her jaw dropped, and then, to Laudine’s surprise, she lit up. “Fuck yeah, you’re cool, big man! What’s your name?”
“Delmonico,” Delmonico announced proudly. “I happen to be King of this fine Kingdom.”
“What kingdom is that, England?”
“Triacrona.”
“I told you that,” Laudine muttered. “Like an hour ago.”
“I forgot,” She shrugged. “Whatever. I don’t know where that is.”
“Are you sure you’re from a different time?” Jeynu asked. “Or a different world?”
“I don’t know. You guys have magic, right? We don’t.”
“You don’t have magic?” Jeynu asked, incredulously. “How does that work?”
“I don’t know, it just does,” Millie said defensively. “How the hell should I know?”
“How old are you, anyways?” Laudine asked.
“12.”
“And how’d you get here with no magic?”
“I don’t know, me and my little brother were walking home, and then suddenly I was here.”
“Hm,” Laudine gave her brothers a look. “Right.”
“I believe you,” Delmonico said, not very helpfully. “I bet you really are from another world.”
“Del,” Laudine said, wearily. “Don’t-”
“No, I do too,” Jeynu said. “I remember hearing something about this happening before. Supposedly we all descended from people who fell through cracks in the other world and ended up here, or something.”
“I’ve literally never heard of that,” Laudine said, thinly. “Is this another fae tale?”
“No, this one came from a book.”
“And was the book written by a fae?”
Jeynu stared at her.
“Right.”
“So… you guys are going to help me find my brother and get home, right?”
“Right,” Jeynu smiled. “And until then, you can live here, with us, as an official ward of the state.”
Laudine was starting to think it was very much a mistake on her part to bring the girl here.
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shepscapades · 2 months ago
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Here's my finished piece for Edition 6 of the @trafficzine, for Wild Life!
I was so excited to draw the Tuff Guys, so I jumped at the chance to be able to draw their shenanigans from Session 1! It was a blast and pleasure to work on this, and I really struggled with a lot of the coloring process, but I'm so proud of how it came out! :D
So many wonderful and inspiring artists and writers participated in this edition, so please go check them out and give the zine a read if you can! <3
Progress and Detail shots below the read more!
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fantasykiri5 · 2 months ago
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Day 3 of HADM: it’s Tango Tek! Of the Create series variety, since he doesn’t have a season skin and this one fits his base theme too well.
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hybbart · 6 months ago
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Day 2655: As winter trucks on, everyone hauls up as the snow piles up in the city below...
Short story below the cut
Snow accumulated along the penthouse's enormous balconies, and the many large windows. Beyond was a landscape whited out by the frosty blanket, difficult to discern the shapes of any of the distant buildings through the heavy weather.
Tango's arm quietly ached. These days he could almost ignore it. Jimmy would chastise him if he knew, say it was not healthy, but what was there to do about it? hypocrite that he was, the avian had his own issues, even if it normally was not painful. They'd spent all morning pretending like Tango couldn't hear his unnaturally deep breaths, or that he'd turned his machine up higher. It was already high compared to before they'd been separated.
Today, though, was an okay day for Tango. He could almost ignore it. His prosthetic couldn't, but it was far too cold for it anyways. There was little to do while hauled up, he'd taken to hardly wearing it the past two weeks as the cold settled in. If not for their few chores and Jimmy's returning energy they'd both be hauled up in their room still.
But they still needed to clean and they still needed to eat. So, while he waited for False to return from taking care of the animals for them and the signal from Wels that his brother was still safely locked up, he cleaned. Plucked the dead leaves from the plants, moved muddy clothing to the laundry room, put away the last game they'd played, anything he saw that he could do.
Humming echoed from the hall, riding the same breeze that wafted a lovely smell of spices and meat. The last of a deer False had found. It was easy to mindlessly work with the smells and sounds of Jimmy cooking nearby. Or maybe it was just easier because he knew there was something tasty waiting at the end of it all. His thoughts were quick to get lost imagining the various dishes, unwilling to risk a fork getting thrown at him for interrupting to ask. It couldn't hurt, though, to take a peak..?
The room dimmed as great ruddy wings blocked the whiteout. False's terrifyingly sharp talons seemed like they might crush the railing beneath them, and Tango was silently glad Jimmy's were that of a songbird and not a raptor like their new companions. It wasn't as graceful as Wels' or Grian's landings either, the woman lurching slightly before hopping down to the ground. A few months ago Tango might not have noticed, but he'd seen the three avians come and go so often from that window he couldn't help notice the differences.
"All the chickens are accounted for, and your horse is fed." She announced, giving a salute with her smile that Tango returned.
"Thanks again for this." He said for the fourth time that day. "Jimmy can't even get himself off the ground this week, never mind carrying-"
"I told you it's fine." False waved him off as she slipped off her cap. even just the short flight from ground level to the 40th some-odd floor had it coated in a heavy blanket of snow.
Tango opened his mouth to protest but a yelp escaped instead, accompanied by clattering metal and plastic. It took them both a moment to realize it hadn't been him at all. Both spun towards the hall, a squeaky curse echoing. Tango was the first to rush forward.
Jimmy was leaned over the counter, head in one hand and the other limply stretched over the kitchen island where his leftovers bucket had spilled over the edge. His breaths came heavy and quick, much worse than earlier. Feathered ears twitched, well aware of his new company but unable to pick himself back up to say anything. At least until Tango had his arm around him. Then, he found the ability to give a weak protest, easily ignored as Tango guided him towards the bench-chest on the far wall.
Tango only glanced to False for a second, to check she had followed, "Go turn up the airificator." He directed.
"I'm fine." Jimmy wheezed. It was as though he'd just ran several miles, his hand clutched to his chest to catch a breath of air that would not come to him. "I just got a bit dizzy and dropped my knife."
"Is that all." Tango muttered, running his hands down Jimmy's tubes looking for any knots or breaks. A wing smacked his head until he backed away.
Jimmy huffed, though it wasn't entirely clear if it was frustration or his inability to breathe. "Just give me a minute! It's already high enough. I don't need to get used to it being even higher."
It was pure stubbornness. And if Tango was honest, he wasn't sure what to do with it. Normally it was himself being stubborn about his arm and Jimmy knocking sense into him. Jimmy could be as stubborn as a mule, but it'd never been directed at his health.
Sheepishly, False appeared around the corner. "I turned it up, there's not much room for higher, though."
"See?" Jimmy said pointedly. It was true, that it wasn't good for Jimmy to have it so high for extended time. But if that's what his body needed right now, then what could they do? Suffer and almost drop a knife on himself, apparently. Tango's brows knit together.
"You go lay down, I'll finish the cooking."
Jimmy balked. "You have one hand!"
"That's one more than you right now." He knelt down, allowing the hunched avian to look down on him. "It's not going to get better if you push yourself."
There was a look in his rancher's eyes, one that quickly shifted between several emotions until they were almost glassy, before he dropped his head, his grown out hair curtaining his face out of view. Tango sat there, running his hand up and down Jimmy's arm, until a weak voice escaped between gasps, "What if it doesn't?"
If it didn't? There wasn't much to be done if it didn't. They'd live with it like they did every time things became incrementally worse, and a bad day became a regular day. But if this was a regular day, what would be a bad day? Tango couldn't bring to let himself think about the thought that seemed to be consuming Jimmy at that moment. Not while Revy was still in the back of his mind. So, instead he says, "It will."
There was nothing in Jimmy's expression that conveyed any faith in those words.
"You need to let yourself rest." False interjected, hesitant to step forward when both men's eyes turned to her. She fiddled with the tube in her gloves, still having yet to even remove her coat. "Your lungs, if they're straining you need to let them rest for now, build up strength."
"For how long?" Muttered Jimmy, expression resigned. He'd already spent weeks in bed.
False wasn't one for complicated answers. "As long as it takes. You've been straining them for months, it'll take a while. And there's no better time to do it while we're all cooped up in here anyways."
"But it's just cooking. If I can't even do that-"
"Singing while running back and forth and wielding heavy utensils and pots? Your muscles aren't exactly in great shape either after that, it's probably taking it out of your entire body. And there's a difference between exercise and straining yourself."
She pushed he hand to her chest, "If you rest now I can help you with your breathing."
Both ranchers blinked in shock. "What?" Tango asked.
She ignored them at first, taking her time to pull off her scarf and coat, hanging both up on the back of a chair. Hands went to her clothed ribs, and she took a deep breath as her wings flexed. They stuttered, that same oddity Tango had noticed in her movement. "Look, you've met my sister, right? H?"
"Yeah..."
"Then you must have noticed she has a few less limbs." False nodded, fluttering her wings. "She's basic."
"That's a bit rude." Tango couldn't help joke, earning a shoulder bump from Jimmy to quiet down.
She groaned, and then threw her arms out, "I was born from an alteration of her genetics, I wasn't naturally an avian."
That made sense to Tango, knowing what they could do to Doc when he was already alive. It quickly cascaded, other pieces of the puzzle clicking into place.
"I had to learn things you already know, and make up for things that didn't quite take. This included an obnoxious amount of physical therapy, especially dedicated to lung capacity." She put her hands on her hips, taking in a deep breath as if it were an example of her newfound capabilities before releasing. "I don't exactly know all the doctor-y mumbo jumbo behind how it all works, and we don't have all the big fancy equipment, but I know what helped me and what will probably help you some."
"False..." Jimmy sounded torn, and Tango couldn't blame him. It was hard to have any hope after living with his lung damage for seven years, steadily watching it get worse and worse. Their conditions had been very different, but was there really something False could offer that Scar hadn't already offered them in the past? How much was there that she could realistically do? At some point there had to be nothing at all. But it was tempting, even if just to get back to what it had been before, or at the very least prevent it from getting worse. There wasn't much farther it could fall, after all, any lifeline looks tempting.
"It's worth a shot, innit?" She shrugged, giving a tentative smile. "It's the least I could do, is at least try. At worst it does nothing."
"At worst I get my hopes up." Jimmy sighed, leaning his head against Tango. It seemed his body was beginning to decide for him that it was time to rest.
Tango brought his hand up to his rancher's hair, running his claws through the long strands in comfort. Whatever you want to do, I support it. That was how they always operated, wasn't it? He let his tail curl around Jimmy's talons. "I think either way, for now rest is in order."
That Jimmy found the strength to grumble about. "Fine, all of you can go hungry. I don't care."
"That's the spirit!" Tango chirped, hauling the whining avian to his feet. He couldn't pick him up with only one arm, so he resigned to dragging him down the hall. He stopped as they reached False, giving her a grateful smile before shuffling past her. He hissed as his stump bumped against the wall. Jimmy's head shot up immediately. "It's fine, I'm used to it." Tango strained to say through the jolt of pain. He'd forgotten just how tender it had been that day.
"You shouldn't be used to it." Jimmy chastised. "It's not healthy."
Tango gaped at him then burst out laughing, "Okay, Mister Hypocrite. Time to go to bed."
"Excuse me!"
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0asterous0 · 1 month ago
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Love Ranch Masterpost.
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☪ ・���━━━━━━━━━━━ art credit: @antwuzhere
- Summary -
After years of working together in "Ranchers Revenge", Jimmy and Tango suddenly have a competition, as a new ranch finds its place in the fields across from their own. "Love Ranch" is now in business, and they have to face the new rancher in town to keep their place in the market.
On the other side of the fields, Scott is already regretting his life choices. Whose idea was it to set up a therapy counselling basically on a farm? Ah, right.. his.
!!The fic is #Trafficshipping!!
✎ ﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏
- Worldbuilding-
ೋ Official designs! -|- Scott, Tango, and Jimmy -|- Love Ranch lineup (Scott, Cleo, Martyn, Skizz) -|-
✎ ﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏
- Chapters -
ೋ [Coming soon]
✎ ﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏﹏
- Tags -
#Love Ranch AU - All my AU related posts will be here!!
#Love Ranch Talk - a place where I answer your questions about characters/events/worldbuilding. You can post yourself under that tag, or send questions into the box, and I will make sure to reply to your questions, theories, ideas, and interpretations.
#Love Ranch Fanart - If I get you invested enough for you to draw fanart of the AU or write something about this world with your vision, I will be REALLY happy to see it! You can tag the hashtag AND me, if you want!!
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stealingyourbones · 11 months ago
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DPxDC the Olympics AU.
Jazz is competing for sharpshooting
Dick is competing for team gymnastics
Y’all can work it out from there :)
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aerodyssey · 2 months ago
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Hermit-a-Day May || Day 3: Tango !!
Honestly really proud of how he turned out, especially my first attempt! I reallly like how it came out :D I did have to redraw some bits because my first attempt at the full design seemed too basic, but glad I did because I love the cool arm !
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glitchedmagic · 3 months ago
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Etho looking up is what gave the game away. 
He had that look in his eyes. Cautious and alert and just the right amount of paranoid. He opened his mouth to call a warning—
Tango was moving before he even processed anything else and the explosion that would have killed him instead just launched him forward, where he hit the grass and rolled up onto one knee, reaching for a sword he didn’t have. 
Bdubs shouted something. Cub groaned. 
Those damned red names couldn’t give him a moment’s peace—
Tango blinked. Red names? This was Hermitcraft. It had been months since the last life game. 
But he looked up to the top of his now-ruined cliff and there was Cub, another TNT minecart in hand and Tango swore he saw a flash of red. 
It was gone as quickly as it appeared. Bdubs negotiated a fishing tournament, Cub ran off and reappeared in brightly dyed leather armor and a fish mask (that obscured his eyes, Tango noted). Scar joined them and there was peace and fishing for a while. 
He sat on the grass next to Etho, his tail flicking lazily through the air as he watched his bobber. Etho had his feet in the water and looked to the casual observer like the picture of serene. 
Tango wasn’t the casual observer. 
He’d seen Etho sit just like this on the edge of a fortress of snow, dark oak tree at his back, watching the world around him. Later, he’d joined Etho on a narrow bridge a hundred blocks in the sky, watching the ants below plant wheat on a dumb bridge. And most recently, they’d sat by a river and listened to Bdubs chatter in the distance, and waited for the chaos to resume. 
“Your fishing rod is smoking.” Etho said softly. 
Tango dropped it and… yep. There were clear marks from his claws burned into the handle. 
Etho splashed a bit of water onto it and the smoke was whisked away on the wind. 
“Whoops,” Tango tried to laugh it off and reached into a pocket for his fireproof gloves. “You know, fishing is intense and all that.”
Etho looked at him for a long, soul-exposing minute. Then he turned back to his bobber and said, “This isn’t the life games, ya know.”
“I know—“ 
“But whatever is going on, it’s not that different.” Etho finished, his voice at a volume for only the two of them to hear. “And if Cub’s already breaking out TNT minecarts around people’s builds…”
“We’ve been thrown right into the end game.” Tango agreed. “What can we even do about it, though?”
“The exact same thing you do on the life series. Survive. Keep on your toes. Distract and deflect when you can, run when you can’t. Have back up plans and alliances and know that at the end of the day, the only person you can trust is yourself.”
“That’s…” Tango let out a breath. His attention had long since left fishing. “How have you not won yet?”
“I don’t know. I certainly deserve it,” Etho laughed. 
“Humble today, aren’t you?”
The two of them fell into silence. Bdubs and Scar were bickering somewhere behind them, something about horses. Scar laughed loudly and Tango wasn’t sure if it was his imagination, or if the laugh was a little more maniacal than usual. 
He glanced over his shoulder to where Cub was standing, fishing rod in hand, and posture stiff. With the mask, it was impossible to tell where his attention was focused. 
A fish tugged on his line and Tango started to reel it in, feeling it fight against the pull. He let out a low breath, settling his fire. “I think I need to start carrying a sword.”
Etho just hummed in agreement.
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cannibal-walleye · 2 months ago
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Day 3: Tango!!
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Skizz's journal for Tango! By me and @enkays-den. Here's the link to our ao3 fic, if you want to read more about our universe. (LOTS more coming soon!!) Feel free to ask any questions you might have :)
Also, @hermitadaymay is doing a fundraiser for Gamer’s Outreach! Here’s the post! There are stretch goals and $1 raffles, if anyone wants to contribute
All journal posts, if you're interested :P
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lunarcrown · 1 year ago
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New From Eden Chapter, new pain :,,,0
SERIOUSLY THOUGH AQUA SAID: ya liked the drama of last installment?? TAKE THIS!!!
Timmy seeing Jimmy and realizing just what Bravo wanted him to “be like” and him saying this line….GUTTED ME. Because you KNOW he didn’t say it with one ounce of “I’m gonna make him feel guilty” energy. NO, poor Timmy saw Jimmy, in all his golden, strong glory, and immediately was like “I understand.” I HATE ITTTT I LOVE ITTT IM ILL ABOUT IT!!!!
Timmy get on tumblr and see that you’re loved.
ANYWAYS!!! In addition I can FINALLY show the spoiler on his character page!! We’d planned wayyyy way back for him to get his hair and wings clipped in a fucked up way in an attempt to “help” him (and an underlying attempt to make him something he was not) but I decided to spoiler it just because we weren’t sure when that would come up + a bunch of other whispy story ideas still in the air so SPOILERED IT BECAME
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Tango from @watcheraurora's fic: King's Tide!
HIGHLY recommend this fic!!! Honestly WatcherAurora is one of my favorite ranchers writers EVER!!!
Tango's showing off his amazing swimming skills for his pretty human lol wheeee backflips!
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schizobass · 2 years ago
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Deiforms, Chapter One: The End of All Things (Part Three)
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It’s not that Sean didn’t like his friends- or, god forbid- his girlfriend. He liked them just fine.
It’s just that they hadn’t known him nearly as long as his old friends had. They didn’t understand him.
Ash knew when he was getting quiet, that meant he was getting overwhelmed. Lori knew when he started fidgeting that that meant he wanted to say something. Miki knew when he huffed out air through his nose it meant he was ready to move on and do something else. Kyrie knew to put the volume in the car on even numbers because odd numbers made Sean uncomfortable.
These guys didn’t know that and, at the end of the day, he wasn’t really sure how to explain it either, so he just kind of went along with whatever they wanted.
He didn’t dislike them, is the point. He didn’t. He just wished sometimes that they knew him a little better.
Lillian looked up when he walked over, and lit up, perfect, pearly teeth shining at him from dark brown lined lips. “Hey big guy! How’ve you been?”
“I’ve been alright. School’s been ass, but what’s new there?”
“Amen to that, big guy,” Dean said, where he was laying on his back, arm covering his face. “I didn’t realize how much I’d miss summer until it wasn’t summer anymore.”
Sean sighed, nodding.
The thing you need to understand is that Madi’s gang wasn’t popular. Definitely no more popular than Ash’s gang. What they gained with Lillian, they lost with Madi herself, and Dean came in with his perfectly average reputation and demolished what minute bias of social standing they had.
And Sean… well, Sean wasn’t particularly popular, nor was he unpopular. People saw him, and recognized him from class and the hallways and the cafeteria, and said hi to him, carefully avoiding names lest they misremember.
He brought nothing to the group, beyond dating Madi, and having known Dean in elementary school when their teacher kept making jokes about their names rhyming (they didn’t if you pronounced them right) and being third or fourth cousins with Lillian.
He didn’t really belong.
But he sat down in the grass, and grabbed a soda from the cooler and cracked it open, taking a swig that was perfectly normal sized, and watching Madi pull out her phone to squint at the screen.
“Ash again?” He asked.
Dean lifted his head, squinting around.
Dean wasn’t very good at being a jock. He wasn’t very handsome after repeatedly getting his face smashed in by a ball and the floor, and he wasn’t mean enough. He also knew too much- just random facts no one knew or wanted to know, and he would happily chime in to any conversation to contribute. He wasn’t much help to the team in basketball games, but he was too good to kick, so he sat in a comfortable limbo of being too well liked by his teammates to be bullied but not well enough liked by his peers not to be. He had been adopted as a child- not from China like so many people seemed to think, but from Pennsylvania. He was half Korean and half Indonesian, but he always told people he was from Pittsburg when asked.
“Is he still calling you?” He asked, squinting in the bright light. “Maybe you should pick up-”
“No, I told you, he’s probably just calling to ask if he can have my leftovers.”
“You said he’s been calling since 6 in the morning, and he was out of the house when you woke up, that’s a little weird.”
“Wait, when did you say this?” Sean asked, blinking.
“The Snapchat groupchat?” Lillian said, before her jaw dropped. “Oh my god, we never added you-”
“-He doesn’t have Snapchat,” Madi said, irritably. “Because he doesn’t know how it works.”
“I don’t,” Sean shrugged weakly. “I don’t understand social media.”
“It’s fine,” Dean said. “I only got it so I can keep track of my teammates.”
“Creep.” Lillian nudged him with her shoe.
The two of them had been dating for a little over a year at this point, but they’d been going out on and off since seventh grade. It’s not like they’d ever broken up- not properly- they just… stopped dating every now and then. And then they got back together. And then they stopped. It was weird.
No one in Sean’s old group was dating. Kyrie and Lori had gone out on one date, back in freshman year, and kissed once, but that was it, and they all vowed not to bring it up. Now, it felt like everyone was a couple.
He kind of missed sitting around in Lori’s basement, bitching about teachers and eating cold pizza and sipping lukewarm soda because the Capsums didn’t believe in putting soda in the fridge.
But that was the past now.
Things were different.
During their last hangout, before he’d gone to the dark side, he’d warned them he wasn’t going to be eating lunch with them anymore, because Madi wanted to hang out with him more, and the way they all looked at him, disbelieving and incredulous, the way Kyrie laughed a little bit… it hurt.
It’d been a while- long enough that Sean thought that he was getting used to it. But maybe he wasn’t. Maybe he never would.
“Do you guys think,” Lillian started, taking a long sip of her drink. “That there’s such a thing as God?”
“What?” Dean asked, rolling over.
“I had a weird dream last night, and I think I believe in God, now. What do you guys think, though?”
Sean huffed, laying back on the grass.
That was one thing about this group- the conversations were weird.
Dean had only just started to get rolling with the more complicated details of his theology lecture when Sean’s phone rang.
“If it’s Ash, ignore it.” Madi said, calmly, from her perch atop the cooler.
It wasn’t. It was Lori, so he picked up.
For just a second, everything was fine. Everything was perfectly alright and nothing was wrong. For just a moment, Dean was explaining monotheism to Lillian while Madi took a hit of her grape vape, and he sat there with his phone to his ear, and said “Hey, Lori, what’s up?” like it was any other call.
“Sean,” Lori said, their voice wrecked. Static wrenched the phone, and in the background, sirens could be heard. “Sean, something’s happened.”
Madi’s phone rang. She pulled it out, irritated, but upon seeing the name, she paused, before answering it, putting it up to her ear.
“What… what happened, Lori?” Sean asked, still staring at Madi, hunting for clues.
“There was a fire,” Lori said, as Madi’s eyes widened. “At my house. We were all inside, and-”
“Fuck,” Sean gasped out, suddenly feeling a horrible crushing weight on his chest. “Is everyone okay?”
Madi screamed, throwing the phone and collapsing to the ground in a little ball, covering her head and sobbing. Lillian and Dean rushed to her, reaching out to grab her, trying to pry her hands from her hair.
“Lori?” Sean asked, duly.
“Ash didn’t make it out.”
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leons-art-pit · 7 months ago
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my tango design :D
i have so many world building thoughts about nether hyrbids, but Tango here is a mix of Blaze/Piglin/Human
He can light his fur on fire at will (and against his will if he's emotional enough :D)
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leafdoodles · 8 months ago
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Long overdue fan art for @watcheraurora’s ranchers superhero au fics because my god have those fics been rattling round my brain at a constant rate.
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stygiansauce · 1 month ago
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It's Sports AU Summer, of course I started a hockey au
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watcheraurora · 3 months ago
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A Promise Broken, A Promise Kept
Okay fine, brain. I give in (I got this idea and it wouldn't let me go until I finished it) (The idea for this kinda possessed me and I wrote this over the course of like four days. It's 43 Google Doc pages but I wrote it in Tumblr drafts lol) 15.8k words
"Where... where did my tissue box go?" Jimmy demanded, lifting up the novel off the end table as if he'd find a whole box of tissues hiding underneath it.
He texted his housemate—who was out with some friends—while he searched. You didn't happen to move my tissue box before you left, did you?
He doubted it. If Scott moved things in the house, he usually told Jimmy about it or asked if something was okay to be moved. But Jimmy always kept a box of tissues on this side table. They liked watching movies and Jimmy was a crier in a lot of them. So he kept the tissues next to where he sat on the sofa.
Except it was missing.
He scoured the living room, checking behind the sofa's throw pillows and underneath the sofa as if there was room in any of those places for a full tissue box to hide.
Nothing.
Jimmy stood with his hands on his hips in the middle of the room and looked around, confused and frustrated.
He stomped to the bathroom and grabbed a tissue from the other box to finally blow his nose in the hopes that his stupid springtime allergies would give him a rest.
His phone buzzed in his pocket and he pulled it out.
Scott: No... I haven't touched it. Why?
Jimmy replied quickly, It's just not there. I must have moved it and forgotten I did, I guess. Or maybe Norman snatched it
He didn't actually believe he forgot he moved it, but he didn't want Scott to get worried or irritated at him for losing something so silly.
He huffed in frustration, threw away the used tissue in the bathroom bin, and went to go check Norman's usual haunts (cat tree, litter box, bed, the back of Jimmy's closet) to see if there was a shredded tissue box at any of them.
There weren't. Jimmy huffed. He went back out to the living room to go back to spring cleaning. His mother had taught him, many years ago, how to oil the wood of the side tables once a year to keep them nice. In his old, worn out football uniform that was so tattered he only ever wore it to paint or clean these days.
As he sat next to the end table with his oily old washcloth—he'd been using the same rag with furniture oil that never got out for a few years, keeping it in a plastic bag in the back of the cleaning cupboard—he caught sight of the living room vent.
The slats were covered in dust.
He bent back and snatched up the duster from where he'd left it on the back of the loveseat. Then leaned closer to the vent.
He blew hard to get the initial layer of dust off.
"Achoo!"
"Bless you," Jimmy said automatically.
Then froze.
"Hello?" he called. "Is someone there?"
Silence.
"Hello?"
"Achoo!"
That was definitely a sneeze.
Followed by a skittering noise that sounded like quick footsteps of some sort of creature.
Inside the vent.
Most wall vents were bolted or screwed to said wall. But this house was so old that it was loosely clipped instead. Jimmy kept meaning to get some bolts and drill some holes but had yet to actually do so.
He popped the cover off and peered in.
There was nothing in there.
Jimmy scrunched his brows and pulled off his glasses. The lenses were a tad dusty but otherwise not terribly dirty. He dug into one ear with his pinky nail. No excessive amount of wax. He looked around. "Norman?"
The jingling of the cat's collar was audible from Jimmy's room.
Jimmy got up and grabbed his phone. He texted Scott.
Running to the store. I think we might have a mouse. Gonna grab some traps.
He got a thumbs-up emoji of acknowledgment from Scott.
He threw on a different outfit quickly and shoved his slip-on sandals onto his feet before heading to his car.
Forty-two minutes later, he made it back.
"—had to go to two different stores to find the humane kind," Jimmy was saying into his phone when he threw open the front door with a bag in his hand. "No, Joel—Joel—you know I don't have the heart for the other kind." He rolled his eyes and ran a hand through his hair. "Oh, don't 'Jimmy, lad' me in that tone! I'm not gonna call the exterminator! That defeats the purpose of getting a humane trap to capture the mouse instead of kill it. This will be fine, I promise." He paused. "Yeah, yeah. You too. Bye." He tossed the phone carelessly onto the sofa and got some bait out of a cupboard to get the mouse traps ready.
Jimmy woke to the sound of skittering footsteps. He jolted and looked around his dark bedroom. It was blurry. He patted gently at his bedside table to find his glasses, which he shoved onto his face.
Something metallic creaked. Jimmy's head whipped to look at the vent in his room, between his dresser and his desk.
It was slowly tilting open. Jimmy watched with wide eyes.
A tiny human-shaped figure stepped out from behind the vent, slowly closing it behind themself. A pair of insectoid wings drooped down their back. One of them was bent at an angle Jimmy had to assume was unnatural. In the darkness, they had fire for hair that cast a gentle, soft candlelight glow on the area around them.
He watched the figure tiptoe over to his desk and jump up onto the handle of the bottom drawer with a tiny, quiet grunt. The non-bent wing wiggled. The bent one just twitched. The tiny person kicked their legs and scrambled to get up onto the handle. From there climbing up onto the drawer's ledge. Then the next handle. The next ledge. The next handle, then up onto the top of the desk. Every time, the tiny little person wiggled and kicked their legs to scramble up.
Once on the desk, the little person crept directly to the pencil cup. Jimmy watched them hop up with a flutter of the non-bent wing and snatch a pencil out of the cup. A short one Jimmy had been using to draw.
The little person inspected it and sat down on the desk in a shaft of moonlight, mixing the silvery moonlight with the golden firelight. They pulled something out of their pocket. Jimmy watched as the tiny person stuck their tongue out in concentration and began to carve the pencil. Specifically sheering off a small section of the wood from one side. The little person started muttering under their breath.
"And we do the carve-y carve-y. Make a nice little thin stick. Nice sturdy stick. Hehehehehe." The voice and figure seemed masculine, though with the tiny person's size it was hard to tell.
Jimmy watched as the rest of the pencil wood was broken off. The tiny winged person pulled a short loop of thread out of the pocket of his little red outfit and unwound it to get to the thinner fibers. He started to try to brace the piece of wood against his bent little wing. He winced as he tried to bend the wing back into a straighter position, hissing and baring his teeth like it hurt. He tried again to bend the wing back.
Then he whimpered and Jimmy couldn't stand to just watch anymore.
He sat up. "Can I help?" he asked.
The tiny guy screamed and scrambled—falling off the desk and scattering the bits and pieces he'd had in his hands.
"Whoa!" Jimmy lurched off his bed and managed to catch the little person before he could hit the floor, careful not to close his hand to crush the wings any more than they already were or burn his hand on the fire for hair. Which had gone out for just a moment to reveal normal gold hair beneath it in short waves, though it quickly sparked back up to its prior merrily-burning flame. Though the fire didn't burn around his hair. Rather, his hair became the fire.
Jimmy lifted him close to his face.
"Are you alright?"
The good wing fluttered fast as the little guy screamed again. "Human!" The word was an exclamation of fear as he tried to get to his feet and run away. But he had nowhere else to go on Jimmy's palm.
"Hey, heeey there, little guy. I'm not gonna hurt you," Jimmy said soothingly. "I want to help you."
The tiny person—the word fairy hit Jimmy in the face like a train when he finally put together why he had wings and those pointy ears—was still scrambling to try to get away. He was shorter than Jimmy's hand was long and as he screamed, he showed off little fangs as his good wing fluttered and the bent one twitched. Red dust fell from the movement of the wings, landing on Jimmy's palm.
"Ssshhh! You're gonna wake my housemate," Jimmy hissed. He brought his other hand up as flat as the first so there was more room to stand on. "I'm not trying to hurt you."
"Put me down, put me down, put me down!" the fairy pleaded.
Jimmy slowly lowered him down to the desktop and waited for him to climb off. Then returned the scattered thread, pencil shaving and sharp tiny piece of metal that the fairy had used to cut the pencil from the floor to the desk top. The fairy bundled the pieces up in his arms and looked around wildly for a way down.
"You can call me Jimmy," Jimmy said. "What's your name?"
The fairy regarded him with suspicious eyes. They were as red as his little outfit.
Jimmy took a step back and crouched on the floor so he could be closer to eye-level with the desk, rather than looming over it.
"You can call me T... Tango," the fairy said reluctantly.
"Hello Tango. Are you hurt? Your wing looks bent."
Tango still regarded him with suspicion. The bent wing twitched as the normal one flickered. Scattering more red dust. "I'm trying to fix it," Tango said, the slightest of pouts forming on his mouth as his pointy ears drooped a little. He tightened his grip on the small scraps.
"Can I help you fix it? I can hold the stick in place."
Tango's tiny red eyes narrowed. "No," he said. "I'll do it myself."
"You don't trust humans, do you?"
He took a few steps back over the desk top.
"Okay. I don't have to help. You just seemed to be struggling on your own and I wanted to offer if you needed it." Jimmy bounced a little and moved back a bit. "You're a fairy, right?"
Tango nodded. A tiny little nod, even for someone his size. Almost impossible to see if Jimmy hadn't been searching for a response.
"What happened to your wing?"
Tango glowered into the middle distance as his fire for hair flickered faster. "Stupid cat," he muttered. Almost like he didn't want Jimmy to hear.
Jimmy rubbed his eyes under his glasses. "Big fluffy cat? Kinda creamy-grey? Blue collar?"
Tango muttered something else that Jimmy couldn't quite make out.
"I'm sorry. That's my cat. Norman. He must've thought you were a bug. He likes bugs."
Tango mumbled something Jimmy couldn't hear.
"Is there any way I can help you that doesn't involve touching you? Can I get you something to drink? Some water? Or some milk?" Jimmy had heard a few stories about fairies. They liked gifts of cream or milk, didn't they? Jimmy and Scott didn't really keep cream in the house but...
Tango's normal wing perked up completely at the suggestion. "Milk?" A tiny smile seemed to be trying to form.
"Yeah. Can I get you some?"
Tango nodded. His fire hair grew a little brighter. "Yes please!"
Jimmy smiled. "Let me go get some. Don't go anywhere." He got up and tiptoed off to the kitchen.
Tango plopped back down onto the desk top, sitting and trying to re-fit the little stick and the threads to splint his wing. Maybe he should've asked for Impulse's help after all. Maybe if he wasn't so stubborn—he could have clenched Zed and Skizz's hands while Impulse realigned his wing. But no. He had to get caught by a human in the middle of the night. Idiot. Stupid Tango.
He put his knife back in its sheath in his pocket and pouted. This was going to hurt.
But a bit of milk... that would be quite the treat. A nice little reward for resetting his wing.
He quickly set up the splint and got it ready to brace against the ridge of his wing and tighten the threads. His small hands moved quickly. He ignored the fairy dust that fell from his wing, shaking some off his hand.
He bit down on a piece of wood that had come off the long pencil he'd carved the splint from. Humans would call it a shaving. But it was a perfect size for Tango to bite down on while he realigned his own wing. He'd balked before and he got caught by a human because of it. He couldn't allow that to happen this time.
Carefully, he positioned his hands on the ridge of his wing. His fire hair simmered low.
He couldn't count himself down and reset the wing on the wrong number to avoid tensing up. That wouldn't work when he was aware that he intended to do it.
So he just jerked his wing back into place.
He bit through the shaving with his fangs and his hair flared bright and hot as he screamed.
Quickly, he tightened the threads to splint the wing. Only once that was accomplished did he finally relax. Slumping to lie facedown on the human desk, all his limbs splayed out and the tears of pain mingling with the fallen fairy dust. Making it into a red paste.
The human—Jimmy—burst back into the room, trying to be quiet but there was a wild glint in his eyes behind his spectacles. Tango's head snapped up to look. "Are you okay?" Jimmy whispered loudly.
Tango nodded. "I'm fine." He twisted to look at his wing. The ridge was still a little wonky, but it would straighten out in time as it healed. "Just... Had to reset my wing." He shrugged, his good wing fluttering with the movement, though the bad one could still do no more than twitch.
Jimmy stepped over and placed what appeared to be the lid of some sort of small bottle on the desk beside Tango before crouching to be at eye-level. Or as close as a human could get, anyway. "We don't, er, have any cups meant for someone your size. I hope this is okay."
The lid was the same width and depth as a soup pot back home. Though it wasn't completely full of milk, it still had quite a bit in it. More than Tango thought he might be able to drink on his own. But that wouldn't stop him from trying. He loved milk. Most fairies did. "Oh this should be just fine!" He reached for it and took it up in both hands. The lid's white plastic was lighter than the metal pot Skizz and Gem used to make soup. Easier to lift to drink.
Tango surprised himself by drinking it all. Fairly quickly. He must have really needed the sweetness after fixing up his wing. He shuddered all the way down to the tip of his good wing after wiping his mouth on his sleeve.
"That was delicious! Thank you!"
Jimmy smiled. "You're welcome."
Tango's wings flittered as some sort of vibration hit them. He gasped and ran across the desk, diving behind the pencil cup to hide. He sucked in a deep breath and his fire hair went out, turning back into normal hair. Hiding the light just like he'd done in the vent earlier when he'd borrowed the tissue box to try and make a cast for his wing.
The door to the room creaked back open. "Jimmy?" another voice asked, with a different accent, around a yawn. "Who're you talking to?"
Jimmy had stood up when Tango moved. Tango couldn't see what either human was doing. Just listening and feeling the disturbances in the air to stay hidden. "I'm not talking to anyone," Jimmy said. Maybe too quickly.
"I heard voices. I thought I heard screaming. Like. Really quiet screams."
"Oh! Sorry. I was watching a movie on my phone. I thought I had the volume down enough. Earbuds were irritating my ears."
"You were asleep hours ago. I heard you snoring."
"Yeah... then I woke up. Had a messy, stressful dream. Woke up. Turned on a movie to try to quiet my mind. Got a bit of milk to try and sleep."
There was a long pause between Jimmy and whoever the housemate with the different accent was. Tango did his best to keep his shivering wing as still as possible so it didn't chime with magic like fairy wings often did. He crouched low, feeling his bad wing slide soundlessly over the somewhat bumpy woodgrain of the desk that the human would think was incredibly smooth.
"You're sure you're okay?" the housemate asked.
"Yeah. Scott, I'm fine. I promise."
Another silence stretched out.
"Okaaay," the housemate—Scott—said. "I'll see you in the morning."
"See you in the morning," Jimmy replied.
The door creaked. The heavy footsteps of a human retreated. Another door creaked.
The human house fell silent.
Jimmy was standing carefully positioned in front of the desk to hide the mangled pencil from the door.
"I should go," Tango whispered. He went over to the drawers he'd climbed up to get up onto the desk in the first place as his hair sparked back into fire. He sat on the edge of the desk and started to reach out with his tiptoes to reach the ledge of the drawer, holding onto the edges of the desk for stability.
"Can I help you down, at least?" Jimmy whispered, crouching again. Holding out a flat hand toward Tango.
Who shrunk away. Jimmy twitched back just a bit.
"Or I don't have to. Just don't want to risk you falling and hurting your wings."
Tango kicked his legs. "Promise you'll just set me on the floor?"
"Of course. I promise."
Jimmy wouldn't feel it—but Tango could. A twist in the fabric of the world that came with making a promise to a fairy. Magic. If Jimmy broke that promise, he would be left to the mercy of the Fae.
Carefully, Tango extended one bare foot toward Jimmy's waiting hand. Jimmy moved it closer and let Tango slide onto it. He stayed low so he wouldn't lose his balance and fall.
Jimmy moved his hand down slowly. "Is that how you got into the house? Through the vents?"
"Mmhmm. Lots of lovely little tubes and tunnels with these nice little ventificators to move around in." Tango wiggled playfully, and Jimmy smiled. He had a nice smile. Tango decided he liked it. Humans had such small canine teeth, compared to a fairy's fangs proportionally.
Jimmy hesitated before lowering his hand all the way to the ground. "Will you come back?" he asked. Tango's good wing began to bristle as the magic did. "I, er... I'd like to see you again."
"I gotta return your tissue box. It didn't work to help my wing. So... yeah. I'll come back. Just... don't try to catch me in a jar."
"No, I would never. I promise," Jimmy said.
Another twist of magic stretched between the two of them.
"Be careful making more than surface-level promises to fairies, Jimmy. Your folklore exists for a reason," Tango said, hopping the final distance off Jimmy's palm and onto the floor. That first twist of magic eased and disappeared. He stumbled a bit through the thick carpet and pried open the vent. "Sleep well."
Dodging into the unnaturally rectangular ductwork, Tango skittered out of the house, his way lit by his hair.
"Where have you been?!" a voice demanded. Tango squawked in surprise and whirled to see Skizz storming over, all seven inches of him, his dark blue wings fluttering fast behind him, buzzing and chiming with power.
Tango curled in on himself. "Just, y'know, out and about."
Skizz's thunderous expression didn't ease. He reached around Tango and grabbed at his good wing, pulling it up. The bad wing lifted slightly in tandem. "And what is that?!"
"A splint. To heal it."
"Tango!" Skizz exclaimed. "You can't go running around human areas by yourself!"
"What about humans?" another voice asked as Impulse poked his head out of his hole in the tree's hollow trunk. His black moth wings with their yellow eyes swept back and forth slower than Skizz's more traditional fairy wings.
"Tango was sneaking around human territory!" Skizz snapped.
"No, I was fine! I was safe!" Tango protested. "I just needed something sturdier and straighter than a normal twig to splint my wing!"
Impulse didn't look convinced either. "Tango, you know how dangerous humans are. Lizzie got too close and she was never heard from again. She disappeared."
"I know. I wasn't—look. I just have to return something I borrowed and then I'll never go back, okay? I just needed something to help me fix my wing. I have it now. And once I return what I borrowed, I'm done."
Lizzie had vanished years ago and no one else had turned up missing since. Tango didn't understand why the whole court was still so scared of getting too close to humans. Sure, humans were enormous and physically stronger than any fairy could ever hope to be, by the nature of their size, but fairies were the dangerous ones. Humans didn't have magic. They couldn't. Their blood simply couldn't conduct it the way a fairy's could. Fairies were the ones that held the true power over humans. Sure some humans were bad and there would always be stories of fairies getting their wings ripped off—but most of them were relatively harmless.
Skizz's grip tightened on Tango's shoulder. "Make sure you are."
Tango returned to the human house the next night, dragging the tissue box through the ductwork. For a human it probably weighed next to nothing. But it was no small feat for a fairy to drag it all the way through from the exhaust vent outside to the one in Jimmy's room. The weight wasn’t the problem so much as the size. It was unwieldy compared to Tango’s height. And while it was fairly heavy, he could still drag it.
He peered through the slats in the vent to confirm he was, in fact, in the vent that led to Jimmy’s room. He recognized the bed and the rest from the night before. Slowly, carefully, he pushed open the vent. The metal creaked.
The bedcovers rustled and Jimmy sat up, putting his spectacles on. Cub needed spectacles too.
“You’re back,” he whispered with a delighted smile.
Tango nodded and began to drag the tissue box out of the vent. “I told you I needed to return the tissue box,” he said.
“How’s your wing?” Jimmy got out of bed and tiptoed over to the vent, pulling it open more and pulling the tissue box out with one easy, effortless movement.
Tango shrugged. His good wing fluttered and the bad one twitched. "Doesn't hurt as bad now that it's got the brace-ificator."
"That's good." Jimmy bent down and offered a flat palm to Tango.
Who just stared at it for a few moments. "I have to walk everywhere. I can't fly," Tango pointed out, his eyes slowly traveling up Jimmy's muscular arm to meet his eyes. Which where warm brown in the firelight of Tango's hair. "That's not fun for a fairy."
"Sorry," Jimmy said sympathetically.
"It's fine. It'll heal soon enough." Tango hopped up onto Jimmy's palm and sat cross-legged in the center of it. Jimmy lifted him up to be almost eye-level. "Fairies tend to heal quickly."
"That's good, at least."
Tango nodded.
"Can you... can you stay? For a little bit? I just—gosh, I have so many questions! I didn't know fairies were real."
Tango fidgeted. The longer he was away from the tree, the more his family would think he'd been caught. And sure, technically, he had. He'd been seen. But he hadn't been trapped. And he didn't need the whole court swarming to try and save him. He took a deep breath. "I can stay for a bit," he said. "But not too long. And I might not be able to answer all your questions."
"That's fine, that's fine," Jimmy said with a nod.
Tango's ears flicked as his good wing wiggled. "What's your first question?"
"How do you hide from humans?"
Tango snickered. "Well. I don't mean to alarm you, but we're pretty small," he said, smiling. Jimmy smiled back and Tango's tiny heart thudded faster. "We're not too small to see, obviously. But being small helps us hide."
"Do you, like, have magic?"
Tango's gaze flicked up to where he could almost see the flames of his hair. "What do you think?"
"Does that help you hide?"
"The fire doesn't but the magic does."
"And the fire comes from the magic, right? I saw your hair turn back into hair and then into fire."
Tango nodded. "Yep! I'm a fire fairy!"
"Oh, I definitely couldn't've guessed that," Jimmy said, voice colored by playful sarcasm.
Tango giggled.
Something in the house creaked and Jimmy went utterly still, holding Tango closer to his chest and looking toward the door. Tango's good wing flitted and then rested. "Housemate?" he whispered.
Jimmy listened for a few long seconds. "I think it's just the house settling," he whispered back.
Tango nodded.
Jimmy perked up. "Oh. Come with me into the kitchen." Still carrying Tango on his palm but moving slow to not cause too much motion, he climbed out of bed and held his hand up to his opposite shoulder. "Care to hop over there? Might be easier."
Tango looked at where Jimmy's collarbone—exposed by the loose sleeveless shirt he had on—made a hollow below his shoulder.
Fluttering his good wing, Tango stepped onto the collarbone and braced his feet there to sit on Jimmy's shoulder, holding onto the edge of the sleeveless shirt.
Jimmy walked slowly to the kitchen. Creeping through the house. "How long can you stay tonight?" he whispered.
Tango shrugged. "Not too long. I need to get home."
"Will you come back?"
Tango didn't answer immediately. Jimmy was opening the fridge. He pulled out a large jug of milk.
"Here. I went to the shops today and bought these. They're meant for a little girl's dolls but I thought it might be a good size for you." He opened a drawer and pulled out a tiny plastic cup that he set on the counter. Blue and clear. Next to the cup in the drawer was some sort of dropper. That he stuck in the milk and squeezed the bulbous top. When he released the pressure, it sucked milk up the tube, which he then used to fill the little cup. "I think this was supposed to be used for medicine but we've never opened it from the plastic before," Jimmy added, indicating the dropper.
The cup was still a little too big for Tango, but after the lid the night before, Tango knew he could more than handle the cup. Jimmy held a hand out and let Tango hop onto it and lowered him down to the counter.
"I... might be able to come back," Tango said. "But it won't be easy. Fairies are supposed to hide from humans. My family will get mad if they know I got seen."
"Well, I certainly won't tell them."
"I know." Tango took a big drink of the milk. "That would require you seeing them and no one gets this close to humans besides me."
"Why?"
"I'm curious and they're scared. We lost a fairy who got too close to humans years ago. Never heard from her again. But I can't just... quit." Tango's bad wing twitched. "Even when stupid cats get me."
"Mm... you might be a little bit reckless."
Tango laughed, trying to stay quiet, as his wings tried to flutter in tandem. "You... are singing to the wind there, skippy," he said.
"I'm what?"
"Y'know. Telling me something I already know."
"O-oh."
“Is that not a human phrase?”
“Er… I don’t think so.”
Tango hummed in thought and took another sip of milk. "Any other questions?"
"Yeah—what did you mean last night when you told me to be careful and folklore exists for a reason?"
"Did you do any reading on Fae?"
"Er..."
"It's dangerous for a human to break a promise to any fairy. Just like it's dangerous to give one your name."
"I think I've heard of that."
"I'd hope you had."
"What about fairy rings? The mushrooms in the woods?"
"Be careful of them. Humans don't often survive well in Avalon. And if they do come back, they're forever changed."
"So it exists?!" Jimmy hissed.
"Of course. That's where we're born." Tango sipped his milk. "That's where we'll go when winter comes back. We're only living on the human plane because spring and summer here are delightful." His wings tried to flutter.
"What's it like to fly?"
Tango looked up at Jimmy. A small smile formed on his face. "There's nothing like it."
After doing his best to wash the Barbie doll cup and dropper, Jimmy hid them away and took Tango back to his bedroom. "I should probably go now," Tango said quietly. "I don't want to risk my family noticing I'm gone."
Jimmy nodded. "I get it."
Tango hopped into Jimmy's hand and let Jimmy lower him to the floor. He slipped nimbly into the vent.
"I hope to see you again," Jimmy said.
Tango's wings flickered and twitched. "I'll try to come back. No promises, though."
"I understand."
Tango pulled the vent shut. His footsteps were quiet in the ductwork and faded fast.
Jimmy pivoted and flopped onto his bed, climbing under the covers.
Sleep claimed him quickly and before he knew it, morning light was streaming through his bedroom window. He could hear Scott whistling in the kitchen, bustling about making himself some breakfast.
Slowly, Jimmy clambered out of bed and went out to the kitchen. Scott was standing in front of the stove with a frying pan on it, whistling as he cooked what smelled and looked like hash browns. He was in an Extravagant Breakfast mood, then. Not surprising for a Saturday.
Jimmy, making no move to be quiet and letting his footsteps make the floorboards creak, approached from behind and planted his face on the topmost curve of Scott's spine, groaning in complaint into the loose fabric of Scott's T-shirt. He and Scott had been close friends for years and knew he wouldn't mind Jimmy planting his face in his back to complain. Something Jimmy could really only do with Scott—Scott was one of very few people who was taller than Jimmy. That group also included Etho, next-door.
"Bad night again?" Scott asked.
"Yeah."
"Sorry." Scott turned off the stove and turned to wrap a comforting arm around Jimmy's shoulders. "Should we try getting you some sort of sleep aid?"
Jimmy took a deep breath and huffed a sigh. "No... not yet, anyway. If it persists, maybe." He wasn't sure how to explain that his lack of sleep was self-inflicted.
Scott pinched his chin in order to examine his face, tilting it around. "What's been keeping you up?"
Jimmy shrugged. "It's more like I've been waking up in the middle of the night and then struggling to get back to sleep."
"I'm sorry, Jimmy. You can always wake me if you need to."
Jimmy shook his head as best he could with his chin still pinched. "No. No reason for us both to be tired. I'd hate to make you share my suffering for no reason."
Scott sighed, affectionate and exasperated. "Helping you isn't suffering."
"Lack of sleep is."
Scott tutted. "How about this, if you're struggling to get back to sleep and you think it'll help, come crash with me. Just climb in and wake me up and I'll help you get back to sleep."
Jimmy was quiet for a few moments. "We'll see," he said.
"I have a good idea to tucker you out tonight."
"Do tell."
"Joel and Grian called this morning. Well. Grian called this morning on his and Joel's behalf."
"Mm."
"Ultimate Frisbee. They want to go to the park and play tonight."
Jimmy perked up. "Really?" A smile formed on his face. He blinked, trying to force his eyes to focus. He forgot to put his glasses on. Scott nodded. He wouldn't call himself an athlete compared to Jimmy, probably, but neither would Grian and Joel. Joel used to be an athlete before he'd wrecked his knee when they were kids. Now, they all just liked to all be bad at sports together. Messing around more than actually playing.
"Yeah."
"Did you tell them we're in?"
"I told them you would be in and that I'd think about it."
"I'll text them. Are Lizzie and Mumbo joining?"
"I think so. And I think they were considering extending the offer to Martyn and Pearl."
"Awesome!" Jimmy felt himself smiling, his fatigue forgotten. "We're gettin' the whole gang together!"
"Well. Enough for a four-on-four, anyway," Scott remarked.
Jimmy beamed. "Sounds fun."
In Jimmy's experience, getting eight adults together to hang out was nearly impossible. How Grian and Joel managed it, he had no idea. But he wasn't going to complain. He had all his friends from school in a park and they were playing Frisbee. What more could he ask for?
"Martyn, pass it!" Jimmy called, running and clapping to show he was ready to catch. Grian was tailing him hard, but Grian's legs were significantly shorter and Jimmy was quickly outpacing him.
Martyn was currently trying to throw it around a frantically-trying-to-intercept Pearl, waving her arms through the air.
"Timmy, go long!" Martyn shouted, hurling it as hard as he could at an angle.
Jimmy pivoted and took off. Laughing as Grian shouted in protest behind him that his long stride wasn't fair.
Tango lingered in the canopy, hiding amongst the leaves. Watching the humans play a game with a flying disc of some sort. Jimmy he recognized—though he hadn't been expecting to see him here. But he didn't know any of the others. Which he did expect.
Jimmy wasn't wearing his spectacles. Tango wondered if he could see okay.
He was playing with seven other humans. Two with long hair and feminine frames, five with shorter hair and more masculine frames. All of them seemed to be having a good time.
One of the feminine frame humans went running. She had long pink hair pulled back in a pair of pigtail braids.
One of the human men caught her around the waist. He had curly dark brown hair with a bit of green in his bangs. "I got her, Jim! Throw it!"
The woman squealed and laughed, kicking and writhing, smiling wide. "Joel!" she protested. "Let me go!"
Tango's entire body went rigid.
He knew that laugh.
He knew that smile.
He knew that voice.
"Lizzie?" he whispered.
His body kicked into motion all at once. He leapt for the next tree over and caught a branch, scrambling up onto it. He ran across it to the next branch, getting closer and closer to the big open field the humans were playing on at the edge of the woods. Trying to get a better, fuller view of the area. He cursed his stupid wing for not being able to fly. To move faster.
When he finally got to a clump of leaves he could hide in while still watching the humans, he slowed down to pant and then peek.
The woman had rounded ears. She was human-sized. She was wearing human clothes. The roots of her hair appeared to be a light brown, making the pink fake.
But, no doubt about it, that was Lizzie.
She was alive.
Tango reached for his magic and plucked at it, sending the vibration of it across the field to Lizzie—only to feel it dissipate before it could touch her.
She had no magic anymore. Nothing to resonate with his bid for connection. No way to reach back.
She wrenched out of Joel's grip and went running after that flying disc.
Tango grabbed at his magic again. But instead of gently directing it toward Lizzie, he formed it into a spear of words and hurled it in her direction.
She stumbled while trying to catch the disc and went completely rigid.
Lizzie, is that you?! It's Tango. Do you remember me? How are you human?
Her eyes—big and blue and oh-so-familiar—scanned the trees. Sweat clung to her brow, plastering a few pink strands of hair to her face. She panted.
Joel slowed to a stop beside her. "Love? You alright?" he asked, setting a hand on her lower back. Tango realized they were wearing colorful rings on matching fingers. Lizzie's was pink with flowers carved into it. Joel's was green with leaves carved into it. He glanced toward the trees she was peering at. "What's wrong?"
She shook her head. "Nothing," she replied. "Just tired."
Her eyes found Tango's and locked on.
"I'm gonna take a bit of a breather," she declared, straightening up and marching toward the trees. She sat at the base of the trunk of the tree Tango's branch was part of and leaned back. She waited for her human friends to stop looking at her and then knocked twice on the trunk, pulling her braids from her back to drape down her chest. Her gaze searched the canopy for Tango.
He was already running down the branch for the trunk, using the chunky bark to climb down, hiding away from the humans until he hit the grass and circled it.
Lizzie's hand was waiting in the grass for him, her body turned away from her friends to hide him.
Tango jumped onto her palm. "You're alive?" he hissed quietly.
"Ssshhh!" she whispered, bringing her hand up to her lap, body still angled to block him from sight of the other humans. "Tango, please—you can't tell the court!"
"What?! Why not?!"
"Because they'd never understand."
"Lizzie, we thought you were dead!" Tango whispered.
"I know. Well, I figured, anyway."
Tango's bad wing tried desperately to flutter in tandem with his good one. But the splint and the pain stopped it. "Lizzie—why did you—how could you leave us like that?" He grabbed onto her finger with his whole hand where he was kneeling on her palm.
She twisted, a fond expression on her face, as she watched Joel and a shorter man in a red knit sweater argue and bicker about something. "I love him, Tango," she said quietly.
Tango's heart thudded in his chest. "How could you leave us though? Your family? How did you... how did you become..." He looked her up and down. "One of them?" He didn't mean to sound disgusted, but his disbelief clouded his tone and might have come across that way.
"Magic."
"Obviously. But what kind of—"
"Lizzie? Everything alright?" Joel called.
"Fine, babe!" Lizzie shouted over her shoulder. She whipped back to look at Tango. "Listen—please don't tell the rest of the court. I don't—Skizz would lose his mind and I can't do that to Gem and the others. It's better if they think I disappeared. Please, Tango." The desperate pleading in her eyes made Tango's heart twist.
"N... no it's not," he whispered.
"Tango. I married a human. I can't go back to being a fairy even if I wanted to. Not anymore. And I don't want to anyway." She put the barest tip of her finger under his chin. "Tango, please. Promise me you won't tell the court."
Tango blinked up at her in disbelief. "You know I can't do that," he replied. "Fairies never make promises."
She sighed. "I know. But... please?"
Tango sat in silence for several long moments, listening for any other humans approaching.
"You... you loved him enough to give up your life and your court and your magic to be with him?" Tango's voice had gone small. "To be human?"
Lizzie nodded.
Tango took a deep breath and sighed. "Okay. I won't tell anyone."
She sagged a little. "Thank you."
His red gaze hardened. "But you should."
Not waiting for her response, he hopped off her hand and slid down her leg into the grass. His good wing flickered irritably.
He leapt up onto the trunk of the tree and climbed until he was up in the canopy's branches, catching glimpses of Lizzie's pink hair through the leaves.
"Lizzie?" Joel called.
"Coming!" Lizzie shouted back. She picked herself to her feet and ran toward him, kissing his cheek. He smiled softly at her. Fondly. Affectionately.
Tango's heart twisted. He wasn't sure whether to be happy for her or sad that the court lost her forever.
"Whoa—WHOA!" a familiar voice shouted. Jimmy tripped and spilled onto the ground, rolling over in the grass as the smaller human man in the red sweater dogpiled on top of him, cackling. Another tall man (this one with blue hair and dark brown roots showing it was fake like Lizzie's pink) draped himself over Jimmy's legs and the tall, willowy, brunette woman flopped over all of them. They were all laughing—even Jimmy as he shouted for them to get off of him. Despite the conflict tumbling around in Tango's heart, he couldn't help but smile.
It seemed humans and fairies weren't that much different when it came to friends.
Two weeks passed before Jimmy saw Tango again. He wasn't woken in the night by the vent cover creaking open. Nothing else went missing. Norman wasn't on alert. Jimmy was starting to convince himself that he wasn't going to see Tango ever again. And that would be fine. Tango said it would be difficult to get away and not make his family suspicious. Jimmy was disappointed—he found Tango fun and friendly and he enjoyed spending time with him—but he didn't want Tango to risk his own safety.
But Jimmy found himself leaving the Barbie cup with some water in it next to the vent on nights when Norman slept out on his cat tree in the living room instead of at the foot of Jimmy's bed. Just in case.
He was roused from his sleep by something irritating his nose. He twitched it and sucked in a deep breath, peeling his eyes open.
Tango was leaning sideways, his head tilted, to try to be parallel to Jimmy, his hair normal rather than burning so he wouldn't light the pillowcase on fire. He was holding onto Jimmy's nose and squishing it back and forth. "Jimmy! Jim-my!" he stage-whispered in time to the squishing of Jimmy's nose.
Jimmy jolted backward as clarity snapped to attention in his brain. "Whoa!" he hissed. "Tango! What're you...?"
Tango beamed and bounced on the pillow like a kid jumping on the couch. "I finally got to come visit!" Both of his wings flicked. The bad one was still splinted, but the splint wasn't as long, like it could move again but hadn't yet regained full mobility. "How have you been?" he asked quietly.
Jimmy rubbed his face and patted around his bedside table for his glasses. "Er... I've been alright. Just going through life, y'know?" He pushed his glasses onto his face.
Tango straightened up properly and his hair sparked back to life, burning merrily. "I guess," he said. "Human lives seem so boring. You just, like, clean things and go to work."
"Well what do you do?" Jimmy asked. "Do fairies not have jobs?"
"Pfft. No. Why would we need jobs? We gather our own livelihoods and we share when we don't have enough and someone else has excess. We dance and we play and we enjoy the world and her natural beauty as she gives it to us."
"Sounds nice."
Tango grinned. "It is!"
Jimmy grunted as he sat up properly. He offered a hand to Tango. Who hopped up onto his palm and knelt. Jimmy lifted him to his shoulder and Tango moved to perch there instead. "Did you see the cup I left next to the vent?"
"I did! Thank you. It was very much appreciated." Tango wiggled and smiled happily.
Jimmy got out of bed, Tango clinging to his tank top's collar to stay steady. "Want some milk?"
"I'd love some!"
"Let's go then." Jimmy went to the vent and picked up the small cup and took it with them out to the kitchen.
Partway there, Tango stood up on Jimmy's shoulder and clung to his ear to stabilize himself. "Guess what?" he whispered directly in Jimmy's ear.
"What?"
"A human fair is in town. And a small court of fairies hides among the fair's equipment when they travel around. Their court and mine are going to have a little party while they're here. I'm so excited."
"Fun," Jimmy said, opening the fridge. "Maybe I'll get my housemate to go with me. Keep an eye out for you."
"Oh, I won't be at the actual fair," Tango said dismissively. "That's too dangerous and my big brother would never let me be around a crowd that big while my wing is still busted. Our party will be in private, silly."
"Right, yeah. 'Course," Jimmy replied. "I knew that."
Tango giggled.
Jimmy lifted a hand and lowered Tango down onto the kitchen counter, where the cup had been filled with milk. Tango picked it up and lifted it in both hands toward Jimmy like a toast. "Cheers!" he chirped before taking a sip. Jimmy smiled. "I saw you playing the game with the throwing disc thing, by the way."
"Oh, did you?" Jimmy asked. "You saw us playing Frisbee?"
Tango nodded and drank more milk. "Mmhmm! It looked like fun."
"It is."
"I saw the smaller red man tackle you."
"Oh, Grian didn't tackle me. I tripped and he took advantage to just fall on top of me. He's a menace. But he's also my older brother and I love him."
Tango was quiet for a moment. "I have an older brother too," he said softly. "He's the main protector of our court. He keeps us safe. He's a good leader." He cleared his throat. "Which one was your housemate again?"
"The really tall one with blue hair."
Tango's chin dipped in a quick nod. "Got it." He looked around Scott and Jimmy's kitchen. Well, mostly Scott's kitchen. Jimmy didn't consider himself handy in the kitchen whatsoever—thankfully Scott preferred cooking for at least two or more.
"What were you doing at the park?" Jimmy asked.
Tango shrugged, his wings flicking a little. "I wasn't at the park: I was in the woods. But I heard humans shouting and got curious."
"Ohhhhh," Jimmy said, nodding sagely.
"My older brother would be really mad if I was actually in the park. Humans are likely to hurt fairies."
"Makes sense."
Tango slipped out of the exhaust vent of the house and climbed down the drainpipe. He snuck quietly across the small backyard and ducked through a diamond-shaped hole in the chain-link fence. Putting him solidly in the forest.
He headed back to the court's hollow tree. It was a long walk for a lone fairy and dawn wasn't far off. But he didn't dare reach out with his magic to see if someone was willing to come get him. The rest of the court would tattle to Skizz and Impulse if they knew Tango had snuck out of the tree again to visit a human.
Tango kicked a speck of dirt as he walked along with the sole of his bare foot.
He thought about Jimmy. Who would be quite the catch were he a fairy. He'd probably be a defender, like Skizz and Scar. Big and strong. Fairies didn't have jobs. They had roles. Skizz was the defender and the leader. Tango and Impulse were fixers. Bdubs was a maker. Gem was too, but specialized mostly in textiles. Fern kept the library. Scar and Cub were tricksters on top of being defenders—or semi-defender, in Cub's case. Cub was one of the thinkers. The wickedly smart one who mostly got put in charge of planning.
But Jimmy would probably be a defender, if he was a fairy. Dark blond and dark-eyed with that strong jaw—maybe he'd be another mothwing like Impulse...
No. He'd have a swallowtail butterfly pattern. Like Fern's. Except Jimmy's would be yellow—a tiger swallowtail rather than Fern's spicebush. Despite the fact that Tango almost exclusively saw Jimmy wearing blues and whites, he got the feeling that yellow wings would suit him nicely. A vibrant accent color.
If Jimmy were a fairy, Tango would have snatched him up years ago.
The thought pulled Tango up short. He stopped walking and leaned against a tree trunk. Where had that thought come from? Sure, Jimmy was handsome—but he was also human. Being attracted to him did Tango no favors. It was pointless. It could never be—
Lizzie.
She became human permanently.
Tango shook his head and went back to walking quickly through the woods. Lizzie might be willing to abandon her court, her family, her magic, her wings for the love of a human—but Tango wasn't.
Skizz would probably stop him if he tried even if he wanted to.
Plus, Tango wasn't that great at complicated magic and he couldn't imagine a ritual like that could be anything less than astronomically difficult.
No.
No handsome human for him.
That was fine.
He was almost to the tree when he heard a fairy's wings behind him. He ducked into a bramble, put out the fire in his hair, and looked back. It wasn't forbidden for him to wander the woods at night, but if Skizz was the one who caught him, he'd probably get lectured (again) for being reckless. Out in the dangerous woods alone at night.
Tango wasn't that worried. As a fire fairy with burning hair, most big creatures that could eat him—like owls and foxes—didn't get anywhere near him. Most of those creatures were afraid of fire.
But who else was heading back to the tree just before dawn?
Keeping low and quiet, he saw a familiar figure heading into the hollow knot in the tree that led to the court's homes. Insectoid wings shaped like a traditional fairy's like Tango's and Skizz's. The fairy was wearing a fluffy coat made of moss.
What was Bdubs—the king of hounding the court to get a good night's sleep—doing out and about in the woods in the middle of the night?
Tango watched him land gently and disappear into the hollow trunk before he ran at the trunk himself and leapt into the air, grabbing the bark as high up as he could and climbing it to get inside.
"Y'know, I've never had funnel cake before," Scott remarked as they wandered the fair, watching a family walk past with a funnel cake in hand.
Jimmy halted in his tracks, putting a hand on Scott's forearm to stop him too. "Shut up! You haven't?!"
Scott shook his head and brushed his blue curls off his forehead. "Never."
Jimmy squeezed Scott's arm. "We have to remedy that right now," he said, smiling. "C'mon. Let's find a vendor. My treat. We're splitting one—I think we'd both be sick if we tried to eat a full one on our own. And they're better when shared anyway." He smiled, and received a smile in return. His hand slid down Scott's arm to take his wrist and drag him through the fairground to find a place selling funnel cake. "I should warn you: the powdered sugar is messy. But it's so worth it."
Scott laughed. "I trust you," he said. "I don't mind a little sugar."
He pulled Scott along behind him until they found a vendor selling funnel cake and Jimmy dragged them in line. While they waited, he looked around. Trying to catch sight of any fairies sneaking around. Not that he expected to see any of them. But he still kept an eye out.
At one point, Oli and Eloise rushed past, giggling and throwing Jimmy and Scott a brief wave before falling into a line for one of the rides. A rickety-looking roller coaster Jimmy was not getting on, no matter what. The Ferris Wheel looked a little safer but still a bit sus—he was only getting on if Scott asked.
They made it through the line and got a funnel cake. Scott located a picnic table in the shade where they could sit down and try it without worrying about getting bumped into while walking.
Jimmy broke off a piece of the cake. "Wanna try it first or shall I?"
"You go first," Scott said. "You were the more excited."
Jimmy put it in his mouth. Sweet, soft, and slightly crunchy from being fried. He hummed in rapture. "Oh, that's good," he said around his mouthful. He broke off another piece and held it out for Scott. "Try it."
Scott leaned forward and took the piece between his teeth, smiling all the while.
Jimmy's eyes widened just a little. He'd expected Scott to take it from him with his fingers, not his mouth. He wasn't worried Scott would accidentally bite him, just surprised.
Scott chewed thoughtfully, eyes unfocused and nodding as he did so.
He swallowed. "That's delicious," he declared.
"Right?!" Jimmy agreed.
The two of them sat at the picnic table for a while, eating their treat piece by piece, sharing as equally as possible when they both wanted to just devour the whole thing on their own. Jimmy knew if he had that much sugar and oil all at once, he'd probably be sick and Scott agreed, but the taste was almost enough to make the idea worth it.
Partway through, Oli and Eloise collapsed at their same picnic table. "What a rush!" Oli exclaimed.
"That roller coaster doesn't look safe," Jimmy said.
"Didn't feel safe," Eloise agreed. "I could almost feel my brain rattling around in my skull."
"But it was fuuuuun!" Oli drawled.
Jimmy met Scott's eyes. Scott nodded with one small movement. They each broke off a piece of the funnel cake and offered it to their friends. Both turned it down, claiming their stomachs needed a moment to settle before they could try to put anything in it.
Jimmy and Scott didn't complain about getting the whole thing to themselves, but both of them would have felt remiss had they not at least offered to share with their friends.
They were just polishing off the last little bit when a shadow fell over them. "Well, well, well! Look who we found!" a voice said. Jimmy looked up.
"Etho! How are ya, man?" he asked. "I'd hug you or shake your hand, but..." He looked at the veritable mess the funnel cake had left behind. Etho just chuckled, one arm around his partner—a somewhat short guy with fluffy, curly black hair who was somehow braving the heat of a summer evening in a green jacket that appeared to be made of moss. He was holding a large bear plushie that was eye-achingly vibrant magenta.
"It's all good," Etho said. "We're fine, aren't we, Bdubs?"
"Uh-huh!" Bdubs nodded enthusiastically.
"Enjoying the fair?" Etho asked the four sitting at the picnic table, the corners of his eyes crinkled to show he was smiling behind his face mask.
"Yep!" Oli chirped.
"Lot of fun," Scott agreed. "Just tried funnel cake for the first time."
Bdubs perked up. "Funnel cake?" He spun to look at Etho, pressing his front to his side and wrapping both arms around him. "Can we get some, please, please, please, please, please!"
Etho gave Scott a playfully-chiding look. "Look what you've done." But he rested his chin in Bdubs' curls. "Yeeeaaahhh, I guess. Let's go find some."
"The nearest stall is right over there," Jimmy said, pointing toward the one they'd got theirs from.
"Thanks," Etho said as Bdubs began talking loudly and dragging Etho in the vendor's direction. Etho was smiling.
"I take it you know them?" Oli asked.
"Next-door neighbor," Jimmy said. "And his partner. Who I don't know as well but seems nice."
"Aaahhh, I see," Oli said in a goofy voice like he was a Film Noir detective.
"Look at that sunset," Eloise said quietly. Everyone turned to see the sun dipping toward the horizon, turning orange and painting the sky and its clouds golds, oranges, pinks, and almost reds.
"Ferris Wheel?" Oli said to Eloise.
"Ferris Wheel," she agreed. They got up and went to go get in line with a brief goodbye.
"Should we, too?" Scott asked. "Take some pictures?"
Jimmy smiled. "Sounds fun!"
They dusted themselves off—the powdered sugar got everywhere—cleaned their hands of the remnants of the funnel cake, threw away their trash, and went to follow their friends.
They got on right as the sun was touching the horizon, pausing every few degrees to let others board as well. It was an old, more traditional Ferris Wheel with benches big enough for two people, rather than a huge one with dangling baskets for six or more.
That suited them just fine.
Scott had his phone out, taking pictures of the sunset. He turned his camera toward Jimmy. "Smile," he said.
Jimmy did. Scott's camera shuttered.
"Ooh. That's a new profile pic right there," Scott said, showing the results to Jimmy. In the light of the setting sun, his early tan was bronzed and his hair had glints of gold. The whole picture was warm and glowy.
"Yeah—please send that to me."
"'Course," Scott said. But he switched his phone to selfie mode. "Bring it in, first." He leaned close. Jimmy leaned to match.
Scott took a couple selfies of the two of them. Including one where they turned around to let the half-sun silhouette them. Jimmy smiled and laughed.
When the pictures were done and Scott's phone tucked back in his pocket, he rested his head on Jimmy's shoulder. "Thanks for this," he said softly. "Thanks for telling me the fair was in town. It's been a long time since we did something just... out-of-the-norm."
Jimmy nodded. "Welcome. Happy to be here, having fun."
Scott hummed agreement as they watched the sunset continue to deepen. The highest points of the sky were already inky with stars poking out. The rising moon was bright opposite the sky from the sun. Jimmy took a deep breath and sighed, content and happy—and wondering where Tango was and whether he was having a good time.
"Sun's down! Time to paaaaarrrrrtyyyyy!" Zed exclaimed, falling off the mushroom of the fairy ring and catching himself with his pink-and-yellow wings. The fairies cheered. Someone broke out the wine, its distinct scent filling the air. Tango smiled, his wings wiggling. He still couldn’t fly, but at least he could move his bad wing just a bit.
The music started, and so too did the dancing. Tango was the only fairy stuck on the ground, but by Oberon that wasn't going to stop his friends from making him dance with them. Gem, Impulse, Skizz, and Zed all got their hands on him and lifted him into the air.
He laughed as his friends hauled him around through the sky, singing and dancing along to the music. At some point, someone shoved a hollowed-out seed full of wine into his hand.
Never one to avoid a bad time, Tango drank down the whole thing. There was nothing quite as delicious as fairy wine. It always left him feeling sparkly. His wings chimed as they fluttered, but his right one still couldn't hold him up. Gem laughed where she was mostly behind him. "Tango, that tickles!" Green fairy dust drifted down from her orange monarch butterfly wings, mingling with the pink-and-gold dust from Zed's.
He glanced around. Bdubs wasn't here. He'd claimed exhaustion and had gone to his room last night and hadn't emerged since. Fern was sitting on a mushroom, a seed in her hand that she'd probably only had a single sip of, talking to one of the fairies that had been traveling with the human fair. The fairy was taller than even Skizz with reddish, mechanical wings, curled horns, and green skin. An uncommon type of fairy, but not unheard of. The horns and skin, at least. The mechanical wings were almost unheard of. Fern's expression was one of sorrow as she talked to him.
But other than that, both courts seemed to be having the time of their lives. A Fae Revelry was a party like nothing mortals could even hold a candle to.
Tango took the next seed full of wine that had been handed to him and downed it too.
He wasn't going to remember most of this party in the morning, probably.
He was fine with that.
He let himself get lost in the moments and the wine as it went straight to his head. He danced with his friends and ate whatever food had been provided by the fair's court, enjoying his court's specialty wine with abandon. Fairies partied a lot, but it had been a while since they had a second court to enjoy partying with. The other court seemed to think the same because they were matching the same level of overdoing it that Tango's court was doing.
At some point he found himself back on the ground, holding both of Fern's hands as they jumped in circles. Gem's appeared at some point but left after a bit. Scar crashed into them both with Cub right behind. "Watch the wing, watch the wing, watch the wing!" Tango exclaimed as he crashed into the grass. Thankfully, both his wings were unharmed as he hit on his side.
He heard himself laughing, but he wasn't really fully present in his own mind. Addled by the wine and the food and the music.
He hoped, distantly, that Jimmy was having a good time.
Tango woke up in the lawn behind Jimmy's house, half-hidden by a flower bush. He'd heard of the concept of a hangover before but fairies didn't get them, so he was just tired.
He pushed himself upright and looked around. He had no idea how he got here. He had vague memories of Skizz and Impulse lugging him back to the tree, suspended between them as they flew. But at what point in the night had he stumbled through the woods to get here? Why had he come here? He couldn't remember. Another vague memory of him wanting to tell Jimmy "something important" was lingering just out of reach of his recollection.
A masculine voice on the other side of the fence shouted, "Aurora? Have you seen my trowel?"
Followed by a feminine voice shouting, "Check under the wheelbarrow!"
The shouts jarred Tango out of his thoughts as the neighbors started arguing. Lighthearted and friendly with no real bite to any of the words.
"Don't make me come out there, Etho!" the feminine voice called with a laugh.
Tango peered around, making sure the stupid cat who'd busted his wing wasn't outside and that the neighbors wouldn't see him. Once he confirmed, he took off running for the exhaust vent, leaping into the air and squeezing himself through the gaps to access the ductwork.
He snuck quietly through the ducts until he found the living room. Where he'd borrowed the tissue box from originally. It had been restored to its place, apparently. He could see it through the slats in the vent.
Jimmy was lounging on the sofa, holding one of the glowing rectangles. He'd called it a phone... right? Tango didn't remember. The stupid fluffy cat who'd busted his wing was on Jimmy's lap. Jimmy's free hand was idly petting him. The tomcat's ears twitched in the direction of the vent and his hair started to raise a little. Jimmy noticed.
Tango held his breath and turned his fire hair back into normal hair.
The cat was still bristling.
"What's wrong, Norman?" Jimmy asked, his hand stilling in the cat's fur.
Norman hissed toward the vent.
Tango hissed back, baring his fangs and flaring his wings.
The cat mewled pathetically, looking surprised, and buried his face in Jimmy's shirt.
Jimmy set his phone on the low table by the sofa and rolled off the sofa, landing on his knees on the floor, holding the cat in one arm. "Tango? Is that you?" he asked quietly. His voice sounded tired. He had a button-up shirt on over his sleeping sleeveless shirt.
Tango ignited his fire hair again. "It's me."
"Okay. Be quiet, my housemate's home, but..." Jimmy looked around. His free hand reached up and touched the pocket on the chest of his shirt. He lifted the flap and pulled it open. "Hop in."
Tango dodged out of the vent and creaked it shut before running across the floor, jumping up Jimmy's leg and climbing the loose overshirt before crawling in the pocket and pulling the flap down over the top so no one would be able to see him. The pocket was muffled and a little darker, but it was warm. Right over Jimmy's heart. Which he could feel in the vibrations of the fabric.
Tango couldn't help himself and Jimmy wouldn't see—he snuggled closer to Jimmy's chest. Closing his eyes.
"How was your party?" Jimmy whispered.
"Wild," Tango whispered back with delight and rapture. "How was the fair?"
"It was fun! I had a good time."
"That's good." Tango yawned.
"Tired?"
"I was awake for most of the night."
Jimmy hummed. "Sleep in my pocket. You're safe with me," he said.
"I don't think that's a good—"
"Tango. I promise: I will never hurt you."
Magic twisted between them.
Tango yawned again. "I warned you about making promises to fairies," he pointed out. But he was already burrowing down in the pocket, snuggling close to Jimmy's warm chest and eyelids growing heavy. "'S dangerous."
Jimmy's hand gently cupped his pocket. It was warm. "This one I think I can keep," he said softly.
"I promise not to hurt you either." Tango hummed and rested his head against Jimmy's beating heart. Drifting off.
Tango woke up from his unexpected nap disoriented. Where was he? Why was he surrounded by fabric on all sides? What was that rhythmic thumping?
Peeling his eyes open, memories came crashing back. Right. He had taken a nap in the chest pocket of Jimmy's shirt.
That rhythmic thumping was Jimmy's heartbeat.
He shuffled a little.
Jimmy was humming softly. A tune Tango didn't recognize. Occasionally singing some lyrics under his breath. There was quiet clatter accompanying him. "—I keep on hopin' we'll eat cake by the ocean..." Jimmy sang.
Tango managed to get to his feet in Jimmy's pocket and lift the flap covering it just enough to peek through.
Jimmy was cooking. There was a black metal frying pan on a stove and something yellowy in it that he was moving around with a black plastic spatula.
"—lose our minds and go crazy-crazy, ay-yayayayaya—"
"Whatcha makin'?" Tango asked, keeping his voice down in case Scott the housemate was nearby.
Jimmy jolted. "I didn't realize you'd woken up!" he hissed.
"Just now," Tango reassured. He twisted and moved the flap out of the way so he could look up at Jimmy's face. Laid back and relaxed—and really, really handsome. That strong jaw and nose and brow bones framing his face. Tango's heart was going about as fast as a hummingbird's wings and he forced himself to look away. "Whatcha makin'?"
"Eggs," Jimmy said. "I'm not good at making much else, but I can make eggs."
"Where's your housemate?"
"Out in the garden. He has a blood feud with the morning glories going."
"Why?"
"Morning glories twist around other plants and choke them out. They kill the flowers and the hedges and they grow back too fast. I guess. The garden is really more Scott's domain. I let him futz with the flowers and the hedges and I do my best to take care of the inside of the house. Which includes making us both some lunch while he weeds. You can talk normal volume for now. I'll warn you if I see him on his way back in."
Tango shuffled in the pocket a little bit. "Morning glories are good for being able to climb otherwise-unwieldy plant stalks," he said. "Which fairies really only care about when..." He released a long breath. "When their wings are busted." He looked down at the frying pan.
Jimmy reached up a free hand and cupped the pocket comfortingly. His hand was warm through the fabric. "It'll heal, right?"
"Yeah. It has been healing. It'll be fine soon enough. I just hate feeling useless and grounded." Tango rested his chin on his hand that was holding the top of the pocket.
"Is taking it easy not an option?" Jimmy asked.
"I get bored."
"Ohhh..." Jimmy's body rocked like he was nodding in understanding. "I get it."
Tango looked out the window nearby. The sun was past its zenith. Afternoon. "I need to get home before my court freaks out about where I've been," he said, starting to pull down the top of the pocket and push the covering flap up. "I've been gone too long already."
Jimmy turned off the stove. "Okay. I'm sorry to see you go. But I understand. Can I get you anything before you leave? Some water or some milk?"
"I wish I had time for that. But it's a bad idea. I gotta go."
Jimmy sighed. "Be safe." He moved over to the vent Tango had come in through and crouched low, opening his pocket and helping Tango out onto his hand. Which he then lowered to the floor as his other one popped open the vent.
"I will." Tango smiled as he hopped off Jimmy's hand and into the ductwork.
"Will you come back?" Jimmy asked quickly, before Tango could disappear into the ducts. Tango paused, his hair simmering lower, going from yellow to red.
He smiled, though. "I'll try," he said.
Before turning and running into the ducts, his bare feet making soft thunks against the metal.
He made it to the exhaust vent that led outside—and saw the blue-haired housemate bent over a bush, wearing gloves covered in dirt, ripping morning glory roots out of the ground. His back was currently to the exhaust vent, but there was a lot of open grass between Tango and the nearest hiding place.
Tango shifted back and forth on the balls of his feet, fidgeting with his fingernails nervously. He was already wasting time. Skizz was gonna be so mad at him for being missing for so long the morning after a revelry. Especially one as crazy as the one the night before.
"Scott! Lunch is ready!" Jimmy shouted.
"On my way!" Scott called back. He ripped out one final morning glory and got to his feet. He pulled off his gloves and headed for the back door.
Tango seized his chance to leap from the vent and bolt into the hedges. He wove between the bushes' stems, grabbing branches to lift himself up and swing his legs through gaps where the floor was obstructed.
Through a hole in the fence and into the trees.
The buzzing of wings met his ears.
Right as he got bowled over. A tangle of limbs and wings falling to the forest floor.
"Ack!"
"What the—?!" The loud voice was familiar.
"Bubbles?"
"Tango?"
Bdubs and Tango disentangled themselves from one another, brushing off dirt and shaking off their wings.
"What're you doing here?" Tango asked.
"I could ask you the same thing, mister!" Bdubs exclaimed.
Tango searched around for a good answer, and couldn't find one. "I, um... I..."
"Don't tell me you're in love with a human too!"
"I wouldn't say tha—wait. What do you mean, 'too'?"
"Rats," Bdubs cursed under his breath.
"Bdubs, are you... in love with a human?" Tango was fairly certain he already knew the answer considering Bdubs' shifting eyes and shrunken demeanor. Which was saying nothing about his prior response. But it seemed kinder to ask.
Bdubs shredded a piece of moss off the sleeve of his jacket. It started growing back immediately as Bdubs picked apart the bit he'd pulled off, making tiny little flakes fall to the ground. "Don't tell Skizz," he whispered. "Please. I know he's just trying to protect us while we're in the human world but—"
"No, I wouldn't." Tango shook his head.
"Are you..."
"I don't know," Tango admitted. "I... might be falling. But we're just friends. By accident."
"That's how me and Etho got started. Accidentally met."
Tango nodded. "If Skizz asks, we were out in the woods together." Fairies couldn't lie, and that was technically true. "He'll be less suspicious if we show up together."
Bdubs jumped on the excuse. "Yes!"
"Let's head back. Walk with me. We were together in the woods the whole time."
Are you in love with a human too? Bdubs words chased each other around and around in Tango's head. He laid on his bed in his room of the tree and put his arm behind his head, looking up at the woodgrain of the ceiling. Lost in thought.
Jimmy made his heart get faster. Jimmy was handsome and sweet.
On the way back, Bdubs had told Tango that there was a spell he used to make himself temporarily human-sized so he and Etho could spend time together in the human world. There was also a spell to make a human fairy-sized, but it was much trickier to accomplish and humans couldn't be disguised as fairies—no wings—as easily as fairies could disguise themselves as human.
Tango liked spending time with Jimmy. But it felt too soon to say for sure whether he was in love. "In love" seemed like a big step. Maybe the first initial pieces of a crush were falling into place. But he wouldn't go so far as to say he was in love with Jimmy. Handsome and sweet and kind as he was... It was too early for in love.
He rolled onto his side, listening to an owl hooting nearby, thinking too hard to fall asleep yet.
Maybe he'd get Bdubs to teach him the temporary spell. Maybe he'd... could he give it a shot? Outside of fire magic, Tango wasn't the best at magic. He wouldn't want to fail the spell and end up a tadpole or something. Which wouldn't surprise him.
He pursed his lips. Not yet. He wasn't in love yet. And he wasn't going to ask Bdubs for the spell yet. Maybe one day. But not yet.
He closed his eyes and tried to sleep. Trying to ignore the way Bdubs' words were still spiraling through his head.
A month passed, spring gradually warming up. The days getting a bit longer. Tango visited Jimmy about once a week, if he could swing it to get away. Though sometimes more time passed between. Ten days to two weeks. But Jimmy was always happy to be woken in the middle of the night to Tango poking him in the nose or pulling on his hair to wake him up.
"Jimmy?" Scott asked, snapping his fingers a few inches away from Jimmy's face to catch his attention.
Jimmy shook his head to clear it and smiled. "What's up?"
"I asked if you were interested in going to the shops with me. There are a few things I need to get for the garden and then I thought maybe we could grab some lunch while we were out, for once. If you wanted to join me."
Jimmy nodded. "Sounds fun! Let me go get some socks and shoes on." He got up from the table and went off for his room.
"Psst! Jimmy?" Tango crept around the house, darting between hiding places where the stupid cat couldn't paw at him and bust his other wing. "Jimmy, are you home?" The house was dark. None of the artificial lights were on. The only light was whatever sunlight could make it through closed blinds and curtains.
He found his way to Jimmy's room. It was both empty and messy. And dark. Unoccupied. "Jimmy?"
Silence.
Tango adjusted the threads on his splint and his wings fluttered. And then drooped.
He climbed up on Jimmy's desk and found the pencil he'd mangled to make his splint. Holding it in both arms, braced against his torso, he wrote a note on a little square pad of paper—that he put under Jimmy's pillow so he'd find it when he was in private.
Stopped by to say hi. Sorry I missed you. -T
The tiny independent café was pretty empty for lunchtime on a Saturday. Maybe the looming clouds were keeping people at home.
Jimmy had his mouth pressed against his thumbs where his hands were clasped and his elbows were on the table while he and Scott waited for their lunch to be ready. Scott was checking his shopping list and hadn't really even noticed Jimmy was watching him with a thoughtful expression on his face. He was ticking things off and muttering under his breath while Jimmy just watched.
"Scott?" Jimmy finally said.
Scott looked up. "What's up?" he asked.
Jimmy took a deep breath. "I was thinking about that fair we went to," he said.
Scott nodded. "It was fun. Thanks for telling me it was in town."
"Yeah. 'Course."
"There's something more you want to say, isn't there? You've got that face on."
Jimmy nodded. "There is."
"Alright. Out with it."
"It's about how I found out it was in town."
Scott put his elbows on the table and interlaced his fingers, phone discarded, screen down, off to the side. "I'm listening."
Tango scoured the court's library, deep in the roots of the tree. He had a little paper and some ink ready to write down everything he'd need.
"Whatcha doin', Tango?" Bdubs asked loudly.
Tango whirled. "Ssshhh!" he hissed. "I'm glad you made it. I need your help to find something."
"What?"
"You were right. And I need your help."
"Tell me what you need," Bdubs said.
“Jimmy! Jimmy! Jimmy!”
Jimmy woke up to Tango scrambling up the side of his bed, clutching at the sheets to pull himself to the top of the mattress. Fatigue vanished. He propped himself up on his elbow. “Tango! I’m glad you’re here. I have a big surprise!”
“Oh! I do too!”
“Ooh! I bet my surprise is bigger,” Jimmy whispered.
“I seriously doubt it,” Tango whispered back playfully.
“You go first.”
“No, you. I insist.”
"No, no. I want you to say yours first."
"Mm-mm. My lips are sealed until you tell me yours!" Tango beamed cheekily, shaking his head.
Jimmy grinned. “You remember my housemate, right? Scott? With the blue hair?” Tango nodded. “Well. He and I have been dancing around feelings for each other for ages now. Neither of us really wanting to ruin our friendship. But I thought about what you’d said about taking what life gives us and finally decided to tell him. And he felt the same and—he’s my partner now! We’re together! Tango, I love him so much. Thank you for helping me have the courage to say something.”
Tango’s wings dropped. “O-oh,” he said. “Yeah. That, uh… that certainly is big news.”
“What’s wrong? Aren’t you happy?”
“No, I am! Just… My news isn’t as big by comparison.”
“Well, what was your news?”
Tango’s wings lifted and fluttered in perfect unison. “My, uh, my wing is all better. I can fly again. Kinda, uh, paltry news compared to yours.”
“Oh, Tango, that’s amazing! I’m so happy you’ve got that part of your life back!” Jimmy smiled. He reached out as though to offer Tango a friendly touch with one fingertip, but Tango took a step away.
“Yeah. Me, uh, me too.” His wings trilled like a hummingbird's as he lifted off the bed. “I should… I should let you get back to sleep. I’m sure you’re busy now with a new romance.” He swooped over to the open window he must have come through, his wings trailing red dust. “Sleep well, Jimmy.”
"Do you not want to stay a few? Have some milk or water?"
Tango's wings glimmered in the shaft of moonlight. "No, thank you. I don't want to keep you. Some other night, maybe."
“Tango, are you sure you’re okay?”
Tango smiled. But his hair was simmering low and red, rather than big and yellow. “I’ve certainly been worse,” he said before ducking through the window and disappearing into the night.
The shock broke before Tango made it back to the court’s hollow tree. He plummeted into some soft-looking leaves and clung to the branch, sobbing. He’d found the spell Bdubs used to be human-sized temporarily to be with his… Etho. He’d found the ritual Lizzie used to become human permanently. He’d been all ready to square up and tell Jimmy his real feelings. Ask for a real chance as equals on a level playing field. Confess he’d been in love with Jimmy for awhile.
A sob wracked through him.
Not meant to be.
He wasn’t lying when he said he was happy for Jimmy. Of course he was. He loved Jimmy and wanted him to be happy. He was happy Jimmy found someone who made him happy. He just couldn’t ignore the overwhelming tidal wave of sorrow that crashed over him.
He pulled his little scroll of magic notes out of his pocket and began to lift it up to his hair.
He stopped.
He couldn't bring himself to do it.
His grip on the scroll was going to crease the paper, probably, but he couldn't quite bring himself to burn it.
He just let himself cry. Away from the court. Away from any prying eyes. In a tree where he could just release the emotions where no one would ask questions he didn't want to answer.
His heart broke and his chest felt both hollow and like he was caught in the vice-like grip of a human fist. Unable to escape. Pain gnawed at his chest and heart, spurring tears to fall, plopping on the bark of the tree branch.
Something else burned—and Tango cried out, clutching at his chest in surprise. "Wh... what?" he rasped out.
The burning—it was magic.
That twist in the fabric of magic that Tango had almost forgotten about over the past month.
A promise.
Which promise had Jimmy made? Why had it broken?
"J... Jimmy," he whispered as panic descended over him. He spilled himself off the side of the branch, his wings fluttering fast to catch him in the air. He twisted and shot back toward Jimmy's house. Trying desperately to remember which promise Jimmy had broken. Why was his memory so bad?
He got back to the house just in time to see a rather vacant-eyed Fern climbing over the fence from the house next-door. The one Bdubs often left.
"Fern! Fern!" Tango hissed, darting out of the trees to intercept his friend. Her eyes were glassy and empty, her black wings mostly blending into the night. "Fern, what's wrong? What's going on?" He knew, already, but he was hoping she would remind him which promise had broken.
"Someone broke a promise," Fern droned blankly.
The door to the neighbors' house opened. "Fern?!" a voice hissed. Tango turned to see a woman about the same age as Jimmy with brown hair that turned to purple toward the ends in a loose T-shirt and trousers leaning against the frame.
"Someone broke a promise," Fern repeated.
"Rora? Something wrong?" a voice Tango now recognized as Etho's called from deeper in the house.
"Everything's fine," Rora called back. Her eyes locking with Tango's for just a moment before she stepped back and nodded. The back door shut.
Fern moved around Tango and headed for the window to Jimmy's room. Somewhere distant, he could hear humming and buzzing.
Tango twisted just in time to see the rest of the court emerging from the trees.
"No, wait—wait!" Tango exclaimed, zipping to cut Fern off. He threw his arms out to stop her from being able to open the window. "Now wait, just listen to me—"
He got cut off by Fern waving a hand and the window flying open.
Skizz slammed into Tango and they both went tumbling into the room, landing on the desk. Skizz didn't even seem to realize he'd done it, getting up and flying over to the bed.
The court landed on the pillow around Jimmy's head.
All of them were muttering about broken promises, not seeming to really notice Tango at all. All of them were leaving colored fairy dust all over the pillow and bedding.
Jimmy's eyes were open but they were just as glassy as the court's. His mouth was slack and he seemed to be in a sort of fugue state.
"Stop—wait—Skizz—stop!" Tango pleaded. He flew over and hovered in front of Skizz, his wings fluttering madly, feet dangling an inch above the pillow to be level with Skizz's height. "Skizz, wait! Please!" He grabbed Skizz's shoulder and shook it.
"The human has broken a promise to the Fae," Skizz said, voice toneless. "He falls under Fae rules. Left to the mercy of Fae control." Skizz grabbed Tango by the shoulders and pushed him down.
Tango's bare feet slipped a little on the cotton pillowcase.
But it seemed to snap the court out of their drone state. Zed's mismatched wings flittered as he looked around. Impulse sneezed his own gold fairy dust off his face. Gem's brow was furrowed as she kept Bdubs from falling over. Scar and Cub were near one another, as always, shoulders pressed together for comfort.
"Tango?" Zed asked. "What's going on? Who is this? Why are we here?"
"What promise was broken?" Fern put in.
Tango ignored their questions. "Go home, all of you," he said firmly to the court. "This isn't any of your business."
Skizz's firm hand rested on his shoulder. "We can't leave yet, Tango. Not until the price for a broken promise is paid."
"Price..." Tango couldn't remember what the price was anymore.
Skizz bent to give him a gentle look. "The promise was made to you. You have to lay a geas on him. He's under your control. He can't be freed from this state until you give him a command."
"No," Tango insisted, pushing Skizz's hand off his shoulder, his wings fluttering madly, but not lifting him up in the air. "I made him a promise too. That I would never hurt him. I'm not going to curse him with a geas."
Bdubs' mouth fell a little slack. "This is the human you fell in love with," he whispered quietly.
A murmur rippled through the court.
Skizz's expression hardened. "You what now?"
Tango set his jaw. "It doesn't matter," he spat. "He doesn't feel the same. He has a partner he's in love with. But I'm not going to hurt him. Broken promise or not, he doesn't deserve that. I won't be the wicked trickster fairy who ruins his life. I'm not that spiteful. I can't do that to him."
"Then you confine him to this forever," Skizz retorted.
Tango stiffened. He thought quickly, looking around Jimmy's bedroom. "You said the geas was a task to fulfill?"
"Them's the rules, Tango-Top," Skizz agreed.
Tango fluttered over to Jimmy's ear and knelt next to it. He closed his eyes and thought. One of his hands curled into a fist in Jimmy's hair. Just to ground himself.
He took a deep breath. "Get rid of any evidence that we ever knew each other," he said. "That mangled pencil. The doll cups. Throw it all out."
Clarity sharpened in Jimmy's eyes as Tango stood up and took a few steps back. He took a deep breath and blinked several times, rousing. "What in the... Tango, hang on!" he protested quietly. Tango's shoulders were curled forward and his wings and pointed ears drooped.
"How much of that did you hear?" he asked quietly.
"All of it!"
A pang ricocheted through Tango's chest. "So... you know. How I really..." He shook his head. "It doesn't matter." He looked at the rest of the court. "Go home. The price is set to be paid. Leave," he said, a sharp edge to his voice.
Bdubs was the first to take wing toward the window. Gem followed. Then Scar and Cub. Fern looked wary but she lifted off the pillow and crossed the room. Zed, Impulse, and Skizz were quiet for several long moments, all looking at Tango. He narrowed his eyes, his fire hair flaring brighter and hotter.
"Go," he ordered.
For a moment, he thought they wouldn't. "Come on, guys," Impulse said, his moth wings sweeping through the air. Skizz and Zed took wing just after him and the three of them went through the open window.
Jimmy sat up. His body seeming to be moving without his conscious command. "Wait—Tango—hang on—why—" He stumbled a bit getting out of the covers, one foot getting caught in the bedding for a moment. "Why did you order me to get rid of the evidence that we've known each other?" He was already moving to his desk—which was covered in multi-colored fairy dust from the entire court's flight in and out of the room—and pulling the mangled pencil out of the cup.
Tango swallowed down the lump in his throat, flying alongside Jimmy's head. "Because with the evidence disposed of, it'll be easier for you to forget me."
"Forget?!" Jimmy demanded. "How do you mean forget? Are you going to magic away my memories?"
"No. I'm not good enough at magic for that. You're gonna forget eventually because you're human and that's how human memories work. Not too long from now, all I'll be is a recurring dream you had for a month and then never again."
"What?!"
"I'm never coming back here, Jimmy. I'm not putting you in this position again. Your broken promise wasn't even your fault. It was mine. And I won't do that to you again. You'll never see me again. I'll be a pleasant memory of a fuzzy, funny dream you once had. A silly fairy with fire for hair."
"Tango wait. That part that the moss-covered fairy said. About you being in love with me—"
"It doesn't matter. You're in love with your housemate. You should be with him. He makes you happy. I was just a friend and I have no right to any of your feelings. I, uh..." Tango rocked in the air. "I'm going back to Avalon for the rest of the year. Leave the rest of my court alone. They're not as forgiving as I am. You probably will never see them anyway." Tango stopped directly in front of Jimmy's face, making him halt in the hallway on his way to the kitchen where the doll cups were. "Jimmy, I'm sorry. I'm sorry I messed it all up."
"Wait, Tango, don't say that—"
"I was gonna tell you, earlier, that, uh... that I'd found some magic that could temporarily make me human-sized. I was gonna ask for a shot with you. But I'd rather you be happy with your human partner. It'd be much easier for you. So... thank you. For all the fun we did get to share. It was worth it, to me." He flew close to Jimmy's face, his fire hair turning back into normal hair to not burn him. "Be happy, Jimmy. That's your real geas from me. Your real command. Be happy and live a full, human life. Forget about me. Let me be just that pleasant, silly dream. Nothing more."
Tango leaned forward and pressed a warm kiss to the space between Jimmy's eyebrows.
"Be happy and love freely," he whispered.
He darted around Jimmy's head and flew for the open bedroom window, zipping out into the night as little more than a tiny ball of red light.
Jimmy's body moved of its own accord, taking the mangled pencil and the plastic Barbie cups to his neighbors' rubbish bin before delivering him back to his own bedroom and finally releasing him from whatever hold the magic had on him.
He ran out into his backyard. "Tango!" he whisper-shouted. "Tango?"
Silence. Nothing more than the crickets and other night bugs.
Tango packed up his room in the tree, making sure everything was neatly organized.
"Knock-knock," a voice said from the doorway. He turned to see Skizz, Bdubs, Zed, and Impulse lingering there. "What're you doing?"
"I, uh... I'm going back to Avalon for the rest of the year. I'll come back next spring. I just..." He shook his head. "I don't think it's a good idea for me to be here. Not with everything I messed up. I need to go home. Clear my head."
Zed was the first to step over the threshold. "We'll miss you," he said softly.
"I know," Tango said. "I'll miss you to. But I'll see you when autumn gets too cold."
"That's right, you will," Impulse said.
Zed wrapped his arms around Tango. "Come on, bring it in," he said. Tango clung to his friend tightly. Skizz and Impulse wrapped arms around the both of them in a crushing group hug, Bdubs draped outside them all as best he could.
"I'm sorry, Tango," Skizz said. "I was too harsh earlier."
"No. You were right. I got too close to the humans and I made a mistake and it almost hurt one. It won't happen again."
Skizz rested his chin in Tango's hair. "Be safe in Avalon, buddy."
"I will."
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