Christmas with the snarky, morally gray anti-hero notoriously known as Shadow!
Warnings: none
I know a LOT of people take the days near Christmas off from writing or doing anything, but I literally have zero friends in real life to hang out with for the holiday or do fun stuff with so I just decided to write instead đ (wallowing in self-pity because I'm such a dislikable weirdo I guess LOL-- on the sorta bright side at least I'm making new friends on Tumblr?? Even though most of them are anons at least I kind of feel appreciated I suppose--)
This is a short story about Shadow learning about the human holiday called "Christmas" -- and getting an unexpected surprise in the process.
Shadow glided down and elegantly landed in front of the lab's front doors, shaking snow from her wings. Sheâd originally wanted to go on a short flight around the city to stretch her wings, but it was snowing so hard it was hard to see anything, and she didnât want to accidentally crash. There had to be at least four inches deep already piled up on the ground.
Shadow walked into the main room of the lab and was hit with a blast of bright colors. She halted and stared dumbly, trying to process all the colorful lights draped around and a... literal tree in the corner? Who cuts down a whole tree just to stuff it indoors?!?
And in front of the tree was Thomas, hanging little round balls on the evergreen branches.
Shadow quietly approached from behind, head tilted to the side in confusion as she watched the human work, tying strings to decorations to the branches. She curiously reached out and flicked an ornament experimentally with a finger, making a quiet clink sound.
"What in the entire universe are you up to, Thomas?" She asked warily. It looked like a unicorn had puked random decorations all over the place in a general theme of red and greens.
"ACK!" Thomas jumped in surprise, instantly dropping the ornament he'd been fiddling with as he startled.
Shadow snatched it in a hand before it could hit the floor, raising a questioning eyebrow at it. "Why are you putting these things everywhere?"
Thomas's face turned red with embarrassment. "Can you NOT sneak up on me like that?!?" He squeaked. "You're like a literal ghost -- you're everywhere!"
"I'm not sure whether to be offended or complimented by that statement." Shadow wrinkled her nose, carelessly tossing the ornament in the box with the other Thomas had been taking out. "Mind explaining why it looks like a hurricane of colors tore through this place?"
"It's uh, a human holiday." Thomas rubbed the back of his neck sheepishly. "You decorate trees and houses and cookies and eat a ton of sugar and stuff. And some people host large gatherings and prepare giant feasts. There's also making gingerbread houses."
"And why must you bring a tree indoors to decorate it?"
"Not everyone does it, in fact a lot more people go and put lights on the trees in their yard -- but it's a human tradition to cut down an evergreen to light up a room. And then we put these cool things on it--" Thomas bent down and grabbed an ornament from his box, shoving it eagerly into Shadow's hands. "Go ahead and try it! It's fun."
"I think your definition of 'fun' is vastly different from my own," Shadow grumbled. But she humored him and hesitantly hung the ornament's string on the tree, adding to the dazzling sparkle. It was kind of pretty, she had to admit. But she'd never say it out loud.
"Oh! And there's one more part of the tradition, it's the most important one--" Thomas darted off and returned holding a small yet colorful box with a fancy bow on top. "Humans buy awesome gifts to give to each other! So here's to your first human Christmas!" He held it out, and Shadow cautiously took it with a puzzled frown.
"I don't know whether to be relieved or disappointed that it's so small," she said gruffly.
Thomas rolled his eyes with a chipper laugh. "Lighten up, Shadow. Just open it!"
Shadow raised a skeptical eyebrow at the gift. "If this is one of those pop-up-scare things I've heard so much about, I'm going to seriously kill someone," she growled.
Thomas paled, reaching to take it back. "Sheesh, I didnât realize you were so sensitive! Fine, I'll keep it!"
"Ah-ah!" Shadow raised the box above Thomas's head where he couldn't grab it, holding it just out of reach. "No taking it back. You gave me something, and you'll live with the consequences of your choices like a responsible kid."
"I'm 19 years old," Thomas scowled pointedly.
"And I'm 312 years old. Your point?" Shadow rolled her eyes dramatically, bringing the box back down so she could open it.
Thomas made another determined grab for it, but Shadow spun and swatted him like a fly with one of her white feathered wings, using it as a shield to block and keep him from snatching it.
"Shadow, come on, cut it out!" Thomas snapped, trying to reach over her wing instead -- with no luck.
"You first," Shadow growled back. She found it amusing how fast the human was trying to backpedal his gift after her threat -- which meant it was definitely one of those pop-up-scare things. Her threat had been a bluff, of course -- she wasn't actually going to kill anyone over a Christmas gift -- but Thomas wouldn't assume that, considering how morally-gray she was in general. He fully believed it to be a real possibility, which was perfectly in line with her past actions.
And Shadow couldn't help having some harmless fun with him, watching him sputter and panic uselessly in terror, believing her every word like the idiot he was. Well, mostly harmless fun -- the human might suffer an actual heart attack with how much adrenaline was rushing through him right now.
"Hmm, interesting," Shadow chuckled as she shook the box lightly, listening to the contents rattling around. She barely bit back a cruelly delighted laugh as she watched Thomas turn a few shades paler. The human was right, Christmas was fun.
"Whatever did you get me, human?" She purred teasingly. It was all a game to her -- but not for poor Thomas, whose heart was practically jack-knifing out of his chest. After all, Shadow was known to be violent and aggressive at times -- he had no way of telling she was in a relatively good mood today.
Shadow slowly untied the bow, taking her sweet time and using her wing to keep Thomas at bay. She held the lid on tight to keep it from springing open on her as she let the ribbon fall to the floor.
A mischievous smirk twisted her lips, and in a swift movement she aimed the top of the box at Thomas and let go of the lid.
Her intuition was right: it was one of those pop-up-scare-things. A coiled up plastic snake came shooting out of the box and smacked the human straight in the face, startling him.
Thomas yelped in surprise and flinched backward hard enough to trip and end up sprawled on the floor, a cartoonishly shocked expression on his face.
Shadow burst out laughing. She rarely ever laughed, unless it was sarcastic. But this was a genuine laugh for once, at his expense. Her wings shook with the force of it as she cackled evilly, clutching her ribs. "Oh, I think I DO like your gift!" She laughed between breaths. "That was priceless.â
"That was mean," Thomas sputtered indignantly, face flushing red with embarrassment.
"No meaner than trying to jump-scare the most lethal person in existence!" Shadow retorted, still laughing her head off. "You humans have the weirdest holidays!â
Thomas smiled sheepishly as he got back to his feet. âItâs a time of happiness and family gatherings. Thereâs nothing weird about that.â
âIt's probably not weird to you because you live in the âworld of weirdâ on a daily basis â this stuff is normal for you,â Shadow chuckled. âIâll admit though, youâve piqued my curiosity. What else do you humans do to celebrate Christmas?â
âOooooh youâre really going to like this one!â Thomas chirped. âLet's go outside!â
Shadow raised an eyebrow, but followed him to the front of the lab, watching as he bundled up in warm jackets and donned a hat and gloves. She didnât bother copying him; she was naturally extra hot-blooded due to being a Falkry. The cold didnât get to her as bad.
Soon the two of them were walking down the street to the local park, snow crunching underfoot. It was cold enough that their breath came out in foggy puffs.
âOkay, so have you ever heard of making snow angels?â Thomas turned to his white-winged Falkry friend excitedly.
âAh, the age-old tradition of getting frostbite. Iâm familiar,â Shadow answered sarcastically. âBut I think Iâll sit this one out. Donât want to damage my feathers.â
âPfft, buzzkill,â Thomas snickered. âThen try this insteadââ He bent down and suddenl;y scoffed up a handful of snow, flinging it at Shadow.
âHey!â Shadow nimbly sprung out of range. âOh, you will pay for that!â
Thomas blinked, and she was gone. âWhat theâOomph!" His voice choked off when he was suddenly flattened beneath a massive wave of freezing snow that crashed down on him from above. He quickly scrambled out of the aftermath and shook the frozen flakes from his hair, dancing a little as he tried to reach the stuff that had fallen down the back of his shirt. "Ack! Cold! Very cold!"
Once he had finally rid himself from the last of it, he looked up in confusion to see where it had come from, and spotted Shadow perched on a bobbing tree limb directly above him, laughing hysterically. The limb was devoid of any snow, and it was clear that she had intentionally jumped on the branch to knock the snow down on him.
"Seriously?" Thomas huffed, scowling up at her. "Was that really necessary?"
Shadow raised her hands innocently, still laughing. "Sorry, sorry, I just had to. You make yourself such an easy target. I couldn't resist. You should've seen your face!"
Thomas wordlessly bent down and scooped up a large handful of snow, packing it tightly together.
"Wait, what are youâ?!" Shadowâs voice cut off sharply as he chucked the newly made snowball up at her with all his strength, and she yelped in surprise as it clocked her in the face with a pfft sound, knocking her out of the tree. Her wings flailed wildly for a moment until they caught the air, halting her descent.
"What was that?!" She shouted from above with a shocked expression on her face, hovering in the air and sputtering from the snow that had gotten in her mouth.
"It's called a snowball. We humans use it to start snowball fights," Thomas called back.
"Snowball fights? So it's like... a non-lethal war with packed snow?" Shadow asked.
"Basically. But emphasis on non-lethal!!" Thomas leaned down and scooped up two more handfuls of snow and launched another round at her, which narrowly missed her face again as she smartly dodged to the side.
"Oh, it is so on human! Prepare to be destroyed!" Shadow let out a war cry and swooped down towards him, sharply pulling up at the last second so that her wings flung up a powerful gust of snow that covered Thomas head to toe. But he was not so easily beaten, and he revealed a hidden snowball he was hiding behind his back. Shadow was close enough that there was no way he could miss.
Her eyes widened for a moment in realization before the snowball hit her square in the chest, making her stumble back. It was all the opening Thomas needed to launch a barrage of snowballs at her, his arms becoming a blur as he threw one after the other, madly scooping handfuls from the ground, not allowing a moment's reprieve. Shadow used one of her wings as a shield against the attack, ducking her head behind it as she scooped up a snowball of her own.
Then, she moved her wing aside and threw her handful at Thomas as hard as she could with Falkry strength. It hit him in the stomach hard enough to knock him back into another pile of fluffy snow. She wound up for a second throw as he scrambled to his feet, and let it fly, this time smacking him square in the face in an explosion of white fluff.
Yeah, maybe Shadow was enjoying this whole âChristmasâ thing after all.
Main Masterlist
Masterlist featuring Shadow and Thomas-related stories
@scoundrelwithboba @lumpofsand @isikedmyself878 @iamheretohurt @fleur-a-whump
@ay5ksal @otterfrost @sausages-things @togzy
@whump-till-ya-jump @cravesunconditionallove @whumpwritinglover222
You guys get ONE animated wip for the Laikas Comet AMV Iâm working on âźď¸âźď¸ Itâs with the song Neighborhood #2 (Laika)
It will be posted on my YouTube channel! (But Iâll let you all know when itâs finished dw)
The woman was barefoot and caked in mud and ash. Her eyes glared up at his. Glowing, hungry.
"Impossible," The prince huffed. "But an excellent bluff."
"They all are," she said, voice hollow, gesturing across the landscape.
She picked her way through the destruction, hardly breaking eye contact even as she stumbled.
The prince laughed, but the sound wasn't convincing, even to his own ears. "Save your breath," he said. "They... They must have moved farther east."
"...Without their helmets?" The woman said, picking up a partially melted helmet from the rubble.
The prince faltered. "That... That's my father's helmet," he gasped. He seemed to look at her with a new wariness.
"You know who I am," the woman said.
"Y-you're nothing more than a legend," the prince said. "You... You must have stolen the helmet. To trick me!"
The woman grew closer.
The prince's mount chuffed and backed away.
"S-Stay back!" The prince said.
The woman tilted her head, but she stopped. "Go."
"Go?..." The prince whimpered.
"Go back to where you came from, and tell your kingdom what you saw here."
The prince gulped. Nodded. Ran.
He did not pause until the woman completely faded from view.
"I knew he was afraid of my conquering army, but I didn't think he would be stupid enough to leave you behind." "Oh, no, you quite misunderstand. Your army's already dead."
I love love all your writing and jealous villains / possessive villains always make me kick my feet!! Can I request a hero thatâs been under appreciated by the city and getting hurt / almost killed by civilians they were meant to protect? And the villain finds the aftermath? â°(*´︜`*)âŻâĄ
"My god." The voice was strained. Familiar. Them.
It really wasn't the hero's day, was it? They released a slow, pained breath, pushing themselves gingerly off the grimy, rain-puddled street. "Enjoy the show?"
"What show? You could have taken them. You should have taken them."
The hero grunted. They straightened. They wobbled.
The villain appeared out of the shadows, at their side, in an instant. It took the hero a moment to realise that the villain had placed a steadying hand on their arm.
The villain's face was harsher in the streetlight; all firelit edges, beautifully demonic, orange pinpricks glinting almost red in their furious eyes. Rain spat down, soaking into the villain's hair and clothes. They didn't seem to care.
The hero did a double-take. The flippant comment they'd been about to make died in their mouth.
"How much did you see?" the hero asked.
The villain's jaw clenched. "I just got here."
It was an unexpected confession. On closer inspection, the rapid rise an fall of the villain's chest suggested they'd been running.
"Huh," the hero said.
The villain's gaze raked over them, taking in every bruise and scrape and bit of blood. "You didn't fight back. Why didn't you fight back? You could have pulverised them. Made them fear ever hurting someone again. That's what you do if I attacked you."
The hero shrugged, awkwardly. They eased their arm free of the villain's grip.
"That's not an answer," the villain snapped.
"I would have killed them. Normal people can't deal with my powers."
"So better to let them nearly kill you?"
The hero shrugged again. Everything ached; they weren't especially in the mood for hearing about how wrongly they'd handled getting the flying spit kicked out of them, they weren't in the mood to explain how the villain was different. Even at war, it was easier with them.
"You're in uniform," the villain said. "They knew who they attacked."
"Oh." The hero hadn't realised. The truth of it struck them like a low blow and their shoulders slumped, as if it wasn't already far too late to brace and curl into a foetal position to guard the heart of them. "Right. Yeah. Well, bold move on their part!"
They tried for chipper. They failed completely.
The whole time, they'd been so preoccupied, they'd thought the strangers had no idea. A wave of stupidity, prickling with humiliation, washed over them. Their eyes felt hot.
The hero swore under their threat.
"I'm going to kill them." Possessiveness threaded low and heated through the villain's voice.
"I don't need you to do that."
"I know. It will be my absolute pleasure." The villain grabbed the hero's arm again as the took a step and stumbled. "They shouldn't-"
The hero could feel themselves beginning to shake, a myriad emotions welling up inside them, threatening to explode, as they listened to the villain's insistence that really no one else should be allowed to touch what was theirs.
"I said, I don't fucking need you to do that."
The villain went quiet. Still.
The hero closed their eyes again, already regretting their sharpness. A treacherous tear rolled down their cheek. Christ. That was all they needed, wasn't it? Cherry, meet the top of the garbage pile. They swiped furiously at their face and didn't say sorry. They couldn't say sorry. They'd never stop, they were sure of it.
"What do you need?" the villain asked.
The hero glanced up at them, startled.
It wasn't that the possessiveness was gone from the villain's face, only that the burning of it had finally cleared enough for the hero to see what lay beneath it.
The care, the sincerity, in the villain's question felt like a knockout blow. They didn't know what to do with it. They had no armour for it, no shield.
"What do you need?" the villain asked again, softer, when the hero said nothing. Their other hand rose, cupping the hero's cheek. "You want me to get you home? Your leg's screwed. You can't walk."
"I can walk." The hero looked down at their leg. They could...well, it wouldn't be fun walking. They eyed the villain. "Seriously?"
"Well, I'd prefer to hunt the bastards down and kill them, but I also do an incredible taxi service, yeah."
"Thank you."
The villain looked almost as uncomfortable as the hero felt. They shrugged. Their jaw worked, eyes narrowing when they caught sight of the hero's injuries again. The hero could feel the villain's fingers flexing against their skin with barely leashed violence - and, yet. It was leashed.
The villain dropped their hand.
"My car is this way. Can you - can I - I can help you get there. If I'm allowed."
"You're asking permission to touch me?"
The villain glared at them.
Despite everything, the hero managed a weak smile back. "Yeah," they said. "You're allowed."
The villain nodded, wrapping an arm around the hero, before pulling them up into an unexpected bridal carry. They were strong. All lean muscle and warmth against the hero's frozen body.
"I'm going to get blood on you," the hero said.
"Because nobody has ever bled on me before ever."
The hero huffed.
They let the villain walk them out of the alleyway, brain still sluggishly working its way through all of the implications of the villain's sudden appearance.
They'd come running when - what? When they learned the hero was in trouble? When they learned that the hero wasn't fighting back to the full extent they were capable of?
Thoughts were hard and the villain's car was warm, the heating soon on full blast.
Thank you. It welled in their throat again. The hero choked on it.
They didn't think they'd ever been as well looked after as they were that week.
Creation is hard. Please support the unpolished and the unhurried and the tired and burnt out. Quit glorifying the artists who work themselves to death as a metric to strive for. I'd rather an artist live a long and healthy life and update every two years with a 30-second short.
even though its great that indie animation is on the rise, it honestly concerns me that so many people hear "indie animation" and expect 22 minute episodes with smooth animation and expensive/popular VAs.
It kind of reminds me of when Webtoons became popular and then all of a sudden its userbase expected fully colored comics with 50 panels to come out every week. And you couldn't take a break for more than two weeks or else they'd complain.
CW: Violence
Beware, friend
story by @yeehawpim and illustrated by @rvicta
The crowd screamed and ran at the sight of Hero's monstrous transformation. Hero roared, a pained and animalistic sound. Their shaking hands grew to long and sharp claws. Their teeth, jagged and pointed.
Hero cautiously approached a mirror mounted on the wall, terrified by what they might find. They recoiled at the beast that stared back.
They fled, out the doors and into the crowded streets. More people screamed. Someone threw a can, and they yelped. Shots rang out.
"The beast is getting away!" Someone cried.
They darted down an alleyway, and they kept running until they felt well and truly alone.
Or, so they thought.
"Ah, so you're the one they're after," said a voice in the shadows.
Hero bristled. They knew that voice.
"Oh. Oh my," Villain whispered reverently, stepping into the light. "You're marvelous."
"It went this way!" A voice cried.
"You're not safe here," Villain said. They threw open the doors to an abandoned warehouse. "Quick, inside."
Hero scrambled into the warehouse doors, up the wall and into the ceiling rafters.
The Villain shouted, "It went the other way!"
The angry voices receded, and Hero momentarily relaxed.
Villain closed the doors and all looked around. "Well, that's not ideal."
Hero shrank back into the shadows. Villain couldn't see them.
Villain ran to an intercom mounted near the doors.
"Listen up," Villain called over the intercom. "My pet is loose somewhere in this warehouse. Whoever brings them to me unharmed receives a little bonus."
Their lackeys sprung into action, running back and forth along rows of shelving and in and out of the various shipping containers littering the warehouse. A few ran into each other in their haste.
"Where did you go?" Villain muttered, scanning the ceiling.
They locked eyes with Hero, who bristled.
"They're on the ceiling nearest the compactor," Villain announced over the intercom.
Hero jumped down and scampered across the concrete flooring. Two lackeys tried to head them off, and they ran towards a set of stairs. Two more lackeys blocked their path, and they jumped off the stairs and darted over the shelving, toppling boxes in their wake.
"Boss, they're too fast!" One of the lackeys complained.
"Get the tranqs," Villain said.
Darts whizzed by as Hero tried to shake their pursuers. They cursed themselves for seeking asylum from a villain of all people.
They dove down to a set of doors and launched at them, but they wouldn't budge. They looked for some kind of lock or obstruction, but too late.
Something hit their shoulder. They tried to wrench it out, much too late.
They snarled as Villain approached them.
"Sorry, darling, but I can't have you tearing apart my warehouse," Villain said.
Hero realized they were laying down. They tried to get up, but they suddenly felt so, so weak. Villain knelt down and pet them gently, peering into their terrified eyes. They tried to nip at the Villain's hand, but that didn't seem to deter them.
"Rest now," Villain said.
Hero whined and went limp.
Part 2
Look, writerâs block is not some giant, mysterious monster. Itâs you, in your head, holding yourself back because youâre afraid what youâre writing sucks. And hereâs the truth, yeah, maybe it does suck. But you know what? Thatâs okay. Writing something bad is still better than writing nothing at all. You donât wait for inspiration to strike, you show up, write the garbage draft, and then fix it later. Writing isnât about perfection, itâs about getting it done. Even if itâs one crappy page at a time.
"You fell right into my trap," the villain said. They didn't sound gloating, or even happy. In fact, they sounded worried.
"Y-you're going to lock me up, right?" the hero said hopefully.
The villain pinched the bridge of their nose. "Listen." They sighed heavily. "How do I put this. You're... More... Incompetent than usual."
The hero froze. "W-what do you mean?" They laughed nervously. "I-I trashed your lab. I got your henchmen to fight amongst each other. I even--"
"Yes, yes, you're still a thorn in my side, don't get me wrong." The villain frowned. "It's that you've fallen into this same exact trap three times in the last month. You know this wall shoots netting if you press a certain tile, and it's like... It's like you've intentionally been pressing it!"
"You expect me to memorize ALLLLL the little traps in your base?!" The hero scoffed. "Do you realize how WEIRD you sound?!"
The villain stared, deadpan, as they allowed a detailed map of their base to unfurl. Marked in red was every trap and trigger in the building. "Care to explain this?"
"That's not mine," the hero squeaked.
"Okay. That's it." The villain threw up their hands. "I'm letting you go. My henchmen will escort you out." They stalked over to an intercom on the wall.
"Wait, okay, fine!" The hero relented. They worried their lip. "I... The Agency... The Agency..." Their voice cracked a little. "F-fired... me..."
The villain stopped, hand hovering over the intercom button. "They what?!"
"They just..." Tears sprung in the hero's eyes. "Told all the other heroes I was compromised. They think I'm helping you."
"Why do they think that?" The villain snorted. "You're the bane of my existence. I can't have a moment's peace without you wrecking something."
"Yeah." The hero smiled, sadly. "Yeah, I am. But... They won't even talk to me."
The villain blinked. "Sooo... You're trying to... Prove yourself by being bad at your job?"
The hero flushed in utter shame. "Uh. No. I... " They laughed, high-pitched and strained. "It's warm in here. The cot in your cell is really comfortable. The food's not bad, either."
The villain's face pinched. "I give you stale bread and gruel."
"Yeah." The hero chuckled fondly. "It's filling, though." They curled into themselves. "They froze my bank account, evicted me, cut off my phone access. Can't even call my friends."
They shrugged. "Though, most of them work for the agency and have direct orders to not interact with me. So, there's that."
"You have nowhere else to go." The revelation was like a punch in the villain's gut. "You're homeless."
The hero bristled at that. "I'm just between homes," they stated defensively. "I'm working something out. It's temporary. I just need to get a new job--"
"You're hired." The villain set to work freeing them from the net. "Room and board in exchange for your work."
"...What?" The hero shrank back in disbelief. "No, I don't want your-- wait, really?"
The villain peered down at them. "This is not out of pity. You know better than anyone the weaknesses in my defenses, and you've seen my henchmen."
The hero cracked a genuine smile at that. "How do you know I won't betray you?"
The villain dabbed a tear from the hero's cheek. "... I have a hunch," they said fondly. "Besides, just having you out of my hair will save me so much on insurance."
They found you in the outskirts of town, mucking out stalls in indentured servitude. The Imperial Mage was collecting his mare from the stalls and pointedly berating you for the smell and to do your job properly, when he saw the birthmark on your forearm, and recognized it for what it was. The mark of the Emerald Phoenix, fated to bring an end to the Obsidian King. In an instant, he paid off your debts, you were whisked away to the castle.
The King himself ordained you as the Emerald Phoenix, the Chosen One, and you were given the robes and insignia to denote your unique station. Attendants set to work removing the years of muck and mire on your skin, burning your tattered tunic in lieu of sumptuously embroidered court uniforms. You were paraded through the streets, celebrated and revered by the people who once spat on you. For weeks, they trained you, pampered you, like their vast resources were but a pittance. For weeks, they gave you feasts, as if they could make you forget your hunger.
When the time came for the Great Battle, they fitted you with chainmail and plated armor with the crest of the King. They brought you forth and rallied behind you, a beacon of hope. And when you called upon your true power, like releasing a chained beast, the crowd cheered. A fierce cry tore from the back of your throat, and you were encompassed with flames. The plated armor on your back sloughed off, now hot molten metal. The fire erupted at all sides. The cheers faltered, and scattered into screams. Too late they ran, too late they all ran, but the fire scorched and melted and cremated like a crucible, and it consumed everyone, even you.
The prophecy fortold you would end the Obsidian King. No one seemed to question how.
You awaken in the ashes of your kingdom. The silence of ruin is engulfed by a moaning wind. The embers have died. Pools of molten metal, now cooled, surround you. Your skin appears foreign, new. You are reborn.
You are so hungry.
When you were selected as the Chosen One, you were showered with gifts, training, and a new cushy room in the castle. The Kingdom thought you would automatically be on their side, but the memories of your impoverished childhood will never fade.
That run cycle and spin kick!!! She is fast, but weighted!
Hey I'm back with another animation, that took forever đ accidentally deleted my progress from it last year around the same time as now. I worked on it on and off since then. I learned a lot again and now I can finally move on to other projects. This is the same character from my last one, Cassidy's the name, Kicks're her game! Terrible reference aside, I want this big lady of mine to kick ass and I believe I succeeded!
Just a little writing blog. Thank you for visiting.Please feel free to leave me an ask!
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