Tag Archive | prompter: clare

Into the History of Addergoole

Written to Clare’s commission for “More Doug.”

Nineteen-sixty-nine (or so, as canon suggests)

“This is the place.” Luke twitched his shoulders in the way that meant, somewhere under his Mask, his wings were flapping. “There’s the village, over here. We’re still building the houses. Regine calls them cottages…”

“I thought there was going to be a school.” From where they were standing, what Doug could see was a barn and a wheat field. The gesture his father had made indicated, as far as Doug could tell, more wheat field.

“There will be. Here.” Luke started towards the barn. Doug sighed, because what else did you do when your centuries-old father decided to be laconic, and followed, because he’d come this far; he might as well hear the old man out.

The barn, inside, looked like other barns Doug had been in. The sunlight poured in through the cracks. The smell of old hay permeated the air. And, hidden behind a half-wall of cracked, grey wood and under a hidden trap door, a long stairway led downwards.

The trap door, Doug noted, was only wood on the top; the underside was steel, and heavy steel at that.

“Regine bought this place from the U.S. Government. It’s a mess, still, but we’re working on it. The nice thing is – it’s built to withstand bombs. It’s also built to withstand fae.”

The grey concrete stairs suddenly seemed far more ominous. “The U.S. Government is fighting fae?” He paused. “We’re fighting fae?”

It might as well be we, since if his dad was fighting things, Doug would end up fighting them, too. His mother & grandmother would never forgive him if he didn’t.

“I don’t think they were fighting fae.” Luke turned on the stairs to look at Doug. “We’re not, either. But it’s always good to have a fortified location.”

Yes, Dad. Doug was old enough not to roll his eyes at his father. It didn’t mean he didn’t want to. “So you have a government bunker designed to withstand fae, under a wheat field. I thought this was going to be a school.”

“Said that already.”

“Still waiting for an answer.” The trap door closed on slow hydraulic lifts, and, as it did, lights came up. They were walking into a warehouse, metal shelves lining the walls, crates filling the shelves.

“We want it fortified, because building a school for fae kids is like putting a target on your building and asking the Nedetakaei to show up.” Luke walked into the warehouse. “We want it hidden for the same reason. And… there’s the other problem.”

“Other problem?” Doug knew, or, at least, he was pretty sure he knew. He was hoping he was wrong. He’d been hoping his father had gotten over that particular bit of stupidity.

“The Return.” Luke’s wings were Masked, but Doug could tell from the sudden breeze that he was flapping them. “It’s going to happen sometime in the next century.”

The same stupidity. “Dad, precognition is unreliable. You taught me that.”

“I did. I also taught you to be prepared for the worst….”

“…and ready to enjoy the best. What sort of enjoyment is there going to be in here?” He gestured at the crates lining the walls. “I’m depressed just walking in here.”

“We’re still working on it.” Luke was smiling. Doug mistrusted that smile. “Regine’s been spending money like it grows on trees.”

“She’s a Grigori; don’t they do that in their gardens?” The question came out sour; Doug wasn’t the least bit sorry. Regine had dragged his father away from home for most of Doug’s life.

His father barked out a humorless laugh. “They might. Come on.”

Doug followed. The hallways were concrete, the walls cement block, the closely-spaced doors steel with wire-reinforced glass. “Look…” He meant it as a joke, but it came out sounding nervous. “I know we don’t get along, but you don’t need to institutionalize me.”

“That’s what they were doing.” Luke swung open a door. The room on the other side was small and dark, shadows lingering in every corner. Doug noticed immediately that there was no handle on the interior of the door, and nearly as quickly saw the chains hanging from the far wall. “We don’t know yet what they kept here. There’s a lot of paperwork to go through, and Regine and Mike have only just started.” He closed the door. “They’re all like that. There’s a whole bunch of ripping out of walls to be done, first, and I called in some favors to get the place re-wired.”

“You know electricians?” Under his Mask, Doug’s broken winglets shifted uncomfortably. This place was too tight and too open. “Can we rip out some walls now?”

“Let me give you the full tour, first. There will be plenty of time to rip out walls, but you have to know what you’re looking at first.”

It was fair. Doug didn’t want fair. “Why are the halls so big?” Luke could spread his wings comfortably in here.

“Gurneys.” The word was clipped, almost spat out. Doug didn’t pursue it further, and Luke took the opportunity to change the subject. “We’ve already ripped out a few walls. Down here, we made a gathering room. We need someplace to… heh. Gather.” He shifted, rolling his shoulders. “Right down here.”

It seemed like they were hurrying, but Doug didn’t mind at all. The floors echoed. The doors seemed to stare at him. Out of the corner of his eye, he thought he saw something moving. It made him want to bolt, or to hit something. Neither reaction was very useful right now.

When Luke opened the doors to the “gathering place,” Doug could tell immediately that other people felt the same way about the concrete halls. They’d started the renovations here. Wood paneling lined every wall to chair height; the walls above the paneling were painted very pale blue. The dangling fluorescent fixtures had been replaced with indirect, hidden lighting. A few tables were scattered about – wooden tables, with stout legs and comfortable chairs. The floor itself had been carpeted in soft, plush stuff that felt like early-summer grass underfoot.

“A break from the institutional?” He could smell food cooking, and surprised himself by having an appetite.

“The whole place will be like this – eventually.” Luke scuffed at the carpet with one booted toe. “Carpet’s easier on hooves, they tell me. And it softens noises. Workings for that, too. So it won’t echo like a cave.”

Cave was a nice word for it. Doug took in the gathering room. “It’s like a different place.”

Here, he could imagine kids being happy. Bouncing around, throwing things, getting the carpet dirty, laughing. They’d get a chance to act human. He coughed. “A school?”

“Something between a high school and a college, the way they figure things now. And being Mentored. If the Council doesn’t shut us down-” Luke shifted his weight. “If they don’t shut us down, it’s going to be -” Doug watched his father choose and discard words. “It’ll be interesting.”

Doug looked around one more time. “Yeah,” he answered dryly. “‘Interesting’ is gonna be a word for it.”


After Year 9

To say the sub-sub-basement was a mess was not remotely covering it. They had – Doug was fairly certain – gotten all the students out. Now it was him and his father, looking around the wreck.

Doug’s shoulders twitched. “This is…”

Luke snarled. “How did they hide this? Unless…”

They both knew how he was going to finish that sentence. Unless Regine knew. Unless Regine had willingly built her school on cages full of… something.

Doug shook his head slowly. “No.” It nothing else, it had disrupted learning far too much – and, more than learning, breeding. Regine did not like disruptions.

Something whimpered far away.

Doug checked his weapons and rolled his weight forward onto the balls of his feet. “Still something left down there.”

“It’s disturbing.” Luke strode forward. “The set-up to keep those… things alive. It stinks of Workings. Not just the Workings we put on the place. Old Workings, and technology that didn’t exist in the fifties.” The breeze in the hall was sudden and ended just as quickly.

That’s what you think is disturbing? Doug raised his eyebrows at his father.

Hunting-Hawk twitched his shoulders. “Yeah, yeah. The whole thing is a mess. And there’s shit we haven’t found yet.” He gestured in the direction of the whimpers, which were growing louder.

Dough checked just his machete and his pistol and nodded sharply. “Let’s clean.”

The cracked tiles were uneven under their feet. The walls, once painted an institutional off-green, were scorched, the paint bubbling, the cement block underneath chipped. The foundation pillars were still strong – reinforced by Working after Working, these would hold up to an apocalypse. But everything else was in ruins.

They had cleared the fourth floor already. Now, they were in the labyrinthine mess beneath that. The halls were wide, too wide. “Gurneys,” Doug muttered. Under his Mask, the stumps of his wings twitched.


the below cut for author snidieness.

Continued in Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/creation?hid=2846820&rf=200475

If we’re being honest, this story was in part to thumb my nose at a “volunteer critic” who tried to take me to task for this line: “‘This place used to be some sort of government facility,'” here.

“You can’t just put this sort of line in here without thinking about it,” to paraphrase.

I have always resented the implications: 1) that I didn’t think about that line when I wrote it.

2)That I couldn’t backfill backstory whenever I wanted.

So, to that person, I say nyah, nyah, nyah.

And I thank my readers for letting me nyah a little. 😉

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/922979.html. You can comment here or there.

Kink/Fluff/Angst Meme: Jamian

Honestly, can’t tell if this is kink, fluff, angst, or all three

Sometimes, he just needed to get away.

He slipped on a different Mask, did his make-up the same way, and rolled vinyl pants up his legs. He slid on fishnet and big stompy boots, and headed out to a club that only knew him in this face and this guise.

You didn’t need to be an Empath, place like this, to know who was sick and who was dying, who was hurt or grieving, but Jamian used every power his Change had given him. He whispered a healing here, a soothing there, flirted with an angry man and took away his disease with a caresses and some nonsense words.

At the end of the night, he went home with a tired nurse with a healer complex, and let them both relax for a while.

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/885024.html. You can comment here or there.

The Border, a continuation of “Itty Bitty Package” and “Courier Duty”

After Itty Bitty Package ane Courier Duty. To [personal profile] thnidu‘s commissioned continuation.

Want to bring a specific more, please to my attention? Go here.

Pregnant? Pretza was unsure if she was more surprised at that or at his correct assessment of her as female. It must be the way she was carrying her package, against her stomach and chest and under her clothes.

It was a gift, and she should not kick the tires on a gift rover too much. “Sir.” It was no trouble at all to make her voice sound tired or stressed. “I need to get -“

He dropped his voice to a whisper. “Where everyone with any sense needs to get, of course. Orion Free Territory is just over that hill. But there’s a Corbetian contingent between here and there, girl. And you may not be my daughter, but I won’t hand you over either way.”

He took her hand. “This way.”

Tip Package 😉

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/865297.html. You can comment here or there.

Courier Duty, a continuation of “Itty Bitty Package” for Morepls (@clarekrmiller)

After Itty Bitty Package.

Want to bring a specific more, please to my attention? Go here.

The road wasn’t really a road anymore, not in this section of the country. It was three-quarters pot-hole and one-quarter bomb crater, with the occasional multi-terrain vehicle left abandoned half in one sort of hole or another. There were corpses, too – livestock and buildings left burnt out and falling down where they stood, people who had fought until they couldn’t fight anymore.

The front had moved forward; technically, Pretza had already gotten them through the worst of it. They had moved past the soldiers, past the tanks, past the first line of rear guards. They had crossed three minefields and one inferno. And they were almost to the border.

The road wasn’t actually safe, but moving near the road had served Pretza well. Too far off the beaten track, and they were likely to find bandits, deserters, and land mines. On the road, they were a target. She moved through the remains of the trees, instead, murmuring as quietly as she could to the tiny bundle pressed up against her chest. “It’s all right, just stay quiet a little longer. Just a little longer, kidlet.”

She avoided three soldiers and one deserter, and then ran smack dab into the fifth man. He grabbed her by both arms, shaking her and her tiny package.

Pretza took a deep breath and assessed the situation. At this range, arterial blood would splatter all over her and her package, which would not only attract flies but make them very obvious. His face was pockmarked and scarred, his nose broken so many times it was impossible to guess if he was Thalassan, Corbetian, or Orion. His hair was grey and nearly gone, and he wore no helm, no uniform, and no insignia.

“You’re not her,” he muttered. “You’re not her. Never really thought she’d still be here, but I had to look.” His eyes raked over Pretza. “But at the moment, you’ll do. Come on, girlie. The front is no place for a pregnant girl.”

Tip Package 😉

Next: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/865297.html “The Border”

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The Annual Sacrifice, a story of Dragons Next Door (or at least a teaser)(@anke)

As the title said, this came out more as a teaser than a story.

But I can always be enticed to write more! (Commission, sweet-talking, reviews…)

I asked for Non-Addergoole Prompts here; this is to [personal profile] clare_dragonfly‘s question and [personal profile] anke‘s request.

Dragons Next Door has a landing page here.


“I see you are participating in the annual sacrifice of a tree.” Zizny puffed smoke at me over the wall between our properties.

It might have been unusual to some to have a dragon talking over the fence at one, as it were, but after the last neighbors – the ogres – I was more than willing to take the far-more-polite and far-less-smelly Smiths.

But I confess, as used to Zizny and thez* ways as I was, I still stiffened. “We don’t use dryad trees.” It had been done, once upon a time, sometimes by the ignorant and sometimes by the cruel. But this pine tree had never been anything but a pine tree. “We’re not really… Christian, hard to be. But with Junie’s friends, it’s easier to just celebrate the holiday…”

The dragon next door puffed another harmless steam-cloud at me. “You are, I believe, under a great deal of stress right now.”

“I…” I realized Zizny was, in a draconic manner, laughing at me. “Yeah. Yes, I have been. You were teasing me. I admit, I did not know that dragons teased.”

“You are very clever about races not your own, Audrey. But you do not know everything.” Zizny dropped-jaw in a way I had learned was the draconic version of a human smile.

I smiled back, cautiously. “Well, then. What do dragons do for the winter holidays?”

* http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/181376.html#cutid2

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/860798.html. You can comment here or there.

Hard Hat and Easy Choices, a ficlet for the Genderfunk call

Written to [personal profile] clare_dragonfly‘s Prompt to my gender-funk call. More gender than funk, but still fun

“Excuse me, Miss, you can’t – Oh. Oh, excuse me.” He wasn’t really recognizing her; he wasn’t even reading the name on her pass. He was just looking at the green bar across the top of it that meant “money.”

“No worries. Here.” Andy fit the hard hat – custom-made and screaming of “money” as much as her pass did – over her ringlets. “The boots are steel-toed and, yes, I can climb in these jeans.”

“I’m sorry, Miss, Ma’am, it’s just…”

“I know.” She air-patted near the man’s shoulder. It wasn’t kind, she supposed, but she’d run into this enough times that it had gone from amusing to just tiresome and back again. “Look, I’m Andonia Carter, and this is my building. I just need to get up to the third row of balconies, all right?”

He looked flummoxed. They always did. She’d found if she was going to do this job, it was the only way to get what she wanted without sacrificing anything she didn’t want to lose.

“Ma’am, Miz Carter, you can go right up. I’m sorry, it’s just…”

“It’s always just.” She patted her ringlets, just to hammer home the point, and swung into the construction elevator. She’d have to go through it again tomorrow, probably – but eventually, word would get around.

It would have been easier to just dress like they did… but then she’d never make an impression at all.

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/816428.html. You can comment here or there.

There Are Always Choices

After And We Are Not Monsters.

The girl called Rohanna did not take well to the collar.

Viatrix had sympathy for that. Nobody in their house had ever taken well to submission and, to the girl, they were the enemy. They had stolen her from her crew at hawthorn-point.

What she did not have was tolerance. “No.” She knew she was getting sharp, and could not manage to soften her tone. “No, what did I say?”

Rohanna snarled. “If I washed the floor I didn’t have to wash the dishes.”

“Try again, little mage.”

“Don’t call me that!” Rohanna swung back from Via’s hand. “If I cleaned the floor… well… I didn’t have to wash the dishes.”

“Better.” This time, Via caught Rohanna’s collar. “So. Floor again, or dishes. Your choice.”

~

The boy – not a boy, the Kept – named Kavan didn’t know quite what to do with, about, or for Baram.

It was mutual. Baram found that the slender fae with the fragile-looking body brought out memories, and he’d never been very comfortable with the sort of memories he was getting now. He found that the not-kid brought out a protective urge, and for the first time that he could functionally remember, the urge was meet, right, and by the Law. And he found that the little Kept frustrated the living shit out of him, in large part by being terrified.

“Your choice,” he repeated. Again. “My bed or the couch-bed.”

“Whatever my master wants.” Kavan stared at the ground

“Your master. Wants you to choose.”

~

The one called Ardell could be made to see sense.

The other one, the one named Delaney, was rabid. She hissed, spat and swore, none of it in any way useful. It seemed she knew the Boss, and wanted the Boss to help them. Everything else was irrelevant.

So Jaelie spoke to Ardell. “The Boss is busy, cleaning up after the people you led here.”

“I knew you could handle them.” The man was insufferably smug. “I knew Baram could handle them. He’s as tough as a truck.”

“Tougher. But you brought them to our door, and that causes problems.”

Delaney said something. Jaelie watched Ardell. “So. We’re gonna need oaths, or we’re gonna need to take information from your mind. Your choice.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/799051.html. You can comment here or there.

The Beast We Become

To [personal profile] clare_dragonfly‘s prompt.
Set in Year 6 of the Addergoole School, about halfway through the year.

Aelgifu (Ayla) and Callista (as well as the mentioned others) are Addergoole characters.

“You can’t ignore it forever, you know.”

When Ioanna said it, she was gentle. Callista hadn’t gotten the feeling of being gentle yet, so it came out, like so much of what she said, rough and raspy and cutting right to the bone.

There was no question what Callista thought Aelgifu was ignoring. For one, she was waving at Ayla with all six arms. For another, they’d been talking about this on and off for the six months since they’d crewed up.

“I’m very good at Masking.” It wasn’t quite an answer, but she didn’t want to give an answer.

“Can’t Mask your brain, little jackalope.”

“Don’t call me that.”

“Why not?” Callista leaned forward, mid-arms resting on her thighs. “I’m a spider, you’re a jackalope, your pretty girlfriend is a face-changer, and your brother is an antelope. It’s just the way things are.” Her smile twisted into something nasty and fierce. “And Ib is a demon.”

“Ib is a demon.” There was no argument there. “But a jackalope is a mythical creature.”

It was the wrong thing to say, and she knew it before she’d closed her mouth. Callista rattled out another laugh.

“Look around you, sweetheart. We’re all mythological here.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/786589.html. You can comment here or there.

Unwelcome Guests – a story of Baram’s House Elves/Addergoole for the Giraffe Bingo Call Card

To [personal profile] clare_dragonfly‘s prompt to my Orig_fic Bingo card; this fills the “Unwelcome Guest” square.

Baram and his family are part of the “Baram’s House Elves” sub-series of the Addergoole ‘verse, which can be found here; Baram is also a background character in Addergoole.


There wasn’t so much a war anymore, as far as they could tell.

They didn’t get any TV anymore, local or cable or anything else. The radio they heard these days was sporadic at best, and there would be weeks where there wasn’t anything at all.

But they hadn’t seen a returned god in several months, they hadn’t seen an army soldier in the last month, and they hadn’t seen another Ellehemaei in a couple weeks. They had gotten a couple human refugees – they were a standing house with a standing wall and hedge, burning lights and smoke in the chimney – but the girls fed and equipped them and sent them on their way, if they were over eighteen, and added them to the child collection, otherwise.

Baram liked it that way. He liked the quiet, and he’d found that he didn’t mind all the kids around. Liked them, actually, if he was going to be honest… and he had space in his head to be honest, now.

(Which might have been because of the children, actually, something else he said only in his own head.)

There wasn’t so much of a war anymore… but there wans’t so much of a world anymore, either. That bothered the girls, Baram’s angels, and it bothered the children, but it didn’t really bug Baram all that much. He had his family, he had his house, and nobody bothered them here.

“Boss! Someone’s at the door!” Alkyone’s voice echoed through the house. “Trouble, I think.”

“Trouble.” Baram liked his armchair. It was soft, and comfortable, and normal. But he levered himself out of it before he was finished saying Trouble? “Kids?”

“Got ’em.” Viatrix slapped the Swish-boy on the ass. “Aloysius, get the kids and take them down to the safe room.”

“Yes ma’am.” Jaelie’s boy did have some use, at least in a pinch.

“Sword.” It wasn’t the first time they’d had unwanted guests. Baram took the sword from Viatrix’s hand. “Jacket.” He shrugged it on. He was tough, all the way through, but there were things, they’d found, for which it didn’t hurt to have an extra level of protection. “Stake.” They weren’t vampire hunters… but they’d hunted vampires. “Okay. Door.”

Via swung the door open… and Baram shifted the sword into a guard position.

“Oh, come on, is that any way to greet an old classmate?” Ardell and Delaney stood on his stoop, leaning on each other’s shoulders and looking like they’d stepped out of a leather magazine.

Barm shifted his feet a bit further apart. “Yes.”

Continued: http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/675139.html

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/628825.html. You can comment here or there.