Horror Writing Comms (50% Off)

Foxofspades

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2 months, 26 days ago
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Foxofspades
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[Unavailable for now - anyone who inquired before this edit 3/3/2024 can still avail of the one-shot special and discounted prices for horror stories]

I. Intro

I've decided to scratch a specific writing itch: horror! I'm an avid fan of the genre, but haven't had much opportunities to write about the spooky-creepy-things that go bump in the night. Bring me your smalltown cultists, your obsessive slashers, your eldritch gods, and more. I would be thrilled to write about them   .

Currently doing a 50% discount on horror stories. I'm open to writing about darker themes, violence, gore, and the like.

Want to terrorize your OCs? Want to put your sweet cinnamon buns through hell? You've come to the right place   !


II. Samples 

🦊 Fox's Writing 

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person
  • GENRE: Angst, slice-of-life, modern day
  • Note/TW: Trigger warning suicidal thoughts and violence
  • This sample is composed of three excerpts from the same story

I. 

Abel often dreamed about dying. In the beginning, the recurring dreams had troubled him, but now he found comfort in those dreams—to be specific, he found comfort in endings, in the idea of simply ceasing to feel or exist. Clinically depressed, that was the term his psychiatrist had thrown at his mother. According to his doctor's diagnosis, he needed help; he needed pills, or something to alleviate his want for oblivion. They gave him medicine, things like Zoloft, Prozac, and Xanax. It didn't help.

Two months into treatment, he stopped taking the pills, abandoned all dreams of becoming a marine biologist, and applied for a job as a barista at the coffee shop nearby. It was a repetitive job Abel cared nothing about, and on the weekends, he would sleep all day and stay up reading books all night. He didn't remember any of the things he read; he simply allowed his eyes to scan over the words so he'd tire out his brain enough for another round of sleep. He was rotting as he lived, and this was the reason why he was lying on his back on the 18th floor of his apartment complex. His legs dangled over the edge of the rooftop and he kicked them back and forth as he stared up at the sky.

It would be so easy to just get on his feet, take a step forward, and fall to his death.

It would be over in a fraction of a second.

Abel imagined himself, wind whipping at his skin as he tore through the air—a moment of flight before the final fall. He imagined the stunned people, screaming as bones and flesh came into contact with concrete. And then he imagined himself, splayed across the pavement like a broken marionette, limbs bent at odd angles, bones protruding out of bloodied flesh, his skull shattered, blood seeping out of his head like a secret.

Abel could understand why people romanticized death. Really, he could. There was beauty in the broken.

Sammie's death in particular was a striking example of this literary trope.

One of the happiest people he knew had killed herself, and before she died, she'd sent flowers to her family and friends. Not even a note—just flowers. He'd received a single Rue and he didn't know what to make of it. Sammie had been into floriography, and he felt a weight on his chest when he finally got around to looking up the flower's meaning: regret, sorrow, grace. What did she regret? Not getting the help she needed? Her friendships? A spark of anger roared to life in his chest, but it died down as quickly as it had arrived. He was numb. Grey eyes focused on the vast emptiness of the night sky. Abel remained lying there for ten more minutes before he finally sat up and looked at the streets and the passing cars below. Not today. He was no stranger to loss, and he knew his decisions would affect others as well. His mother, his aunt... he couldn't do that to them. Abel inched away from the edge of the rooftop, tucked his feet back, and stood up. It was time to head downstairs.

II.

Icy apathy melted away into searing rage. He was a horrible person, yes, but Corey was an overly dramatic and incredibly annoying waste of goddamn space. Abel stood silent as the blonde unleashed a tearful tirade against him. In fact, Abel even endured the friendship-is-magic garbage Corey pulled out of his ass before he so much as made another move toward the other boy. Kenna and Joane were watching with worried glances, but he didn't care, this was between him and Corey.

"Are you finished? Did that little speech make you feel better?" He interrupted Kenna then, his eyes narrowing as he took in Corey's actions. If any of them looked hard enough they'd see the burning irritation beneath Abel's calm facade. Back when they were kids, they rarely ever got to see Abel angry, he'd always been shy and quiet and eager to please when he wasn't shrinking into the background. "Do you know the difference between you and me Corey? I can tell when things are an absolute fucking waste of time. Sammie is dead. Sammie has been dead for almost two years." Cruel words continued to spill from his lips like poison. "You playing ghost buster won't bring her back, and I know I'm a terrible person, I've been trying to be terrible to you for more than a year so you'd finally get the point through your thick skull and leave me alone. I don't want you here."

Abel's body seemed to tense as he took another step towards the teary blonde. "I don't want to talk to you or see your face. And just... just cut with the friendship is magic crap. I made a decision to leave you." What started out as fury shifted into something much crueler. "Didn't Joane and Kenna make the same decision too? You don't even have to answer that. You know what Corey, I may be fucking horrible, but you're fucking annoying, so annoying everyone left."

III.

Pain erupted across his cheek and his ears rang loudly, but amid the noise, Abel had found a semblance of peace. There was a finality to the blow, something that quietly said that ‘this was it’ that ‘eight years of friendship had finally come to an end.’ It was almost freeing—a mishmash of guilt and release.

His body pitched backward, but Abel caught himself and staggered forward instead, cheek a bright red from his friend’s angry blow. Corey was a statue, hatred practically carved onto his usually soft features. He had done this. He had pushed Corey and finally gotten what he wanted.

“If you’re gunna start something,” Abel slurred. “At least finish it. You’re a coward, Corey.” And then Abel was throwing his weight forward, his own arm swinging blindly until his fist collided with the bridge of Corey’s nose.

Everything came rushing out. Pain, guilt, hate.

Abel pulled his arm back and swung again, this time catching his friend in the stomach. Joane and Kenna were screaming, but all he could hear was the loud ringing in his ears and the judgmental voice that told him it was Corey’s fault. Fucking Corey who wouldn’t let the dead stay dead. “Hit back!” Abel screamed. “Hit back!”

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person
  • Genre: Romance, slice-of-life, fandom 
  • Note: Characters belong to Jellolas 
  • This is an excerpt. 

The pond was as beautiful as Cao Zixin said it would be—fluorescent flora, golden koi, and adorable turtles for as far as the eye could see. It was a peaceful little nook in Niujie Village, a magical corner tucked away from the rest of the world and perched on a hilltop away from view. Their own personal hideaway.

Cao Zixin and Wen Ning had been alone when they first arrived. The young lovers spent the first few moments simply sitting side by side (nestled against each other like a pair of lovebirds) as they stared up at the mesmerizing glow of the moon. The wind was chilly, but their proximity to each other allowed them to bask in the other’s warmth. It was innocent yet surprisingly intimate, and as they sat side by side, Cao Zixin took Wen Ning’s hand and intertwined his fingers with his.

It was a quiet moment between two new lovers until the cats came.

And the cats arrived—the cats arrived in droves.

Wen Ning immediately lit up at their arrival, pulling away from his place on the bench to greet them. He stood up (despite Cao Zixin’s hidden frown) and made his way toward the gaggle of cats that now surrounded their bench.

“Little saboteurs,” Cao Zixin huffed playfully as he feigned a sneer underneath his veil. “I swear, this happens every time we decide to go an outdoor date. Don’t you know it’s rude to interrupt? Where are your manners?” The young man joked, expertly adopting his father’s stern tone as he comically addressed the cats as if they were a crowd of rude children.

Wen Ning chuckled at Cao Zixin’s response, but even the silly display of feigned disappointment wasn’t enough to keep him by is boyfriend’s side. By the time Cao Zixin was pouting, Wen Ning was already seated on the grassy hill with a cat perched on his lap. Two other cats circled around him watchfully while the majority surrounded the bench Cao Zixin was sitting on.

However, Cao Zixin didn’t pay any attention to the cats. Instead, the entirety of his focus had shifted to Wen Ning and how utterly happy and content his boyfriend looked, as if the young man were a child enraptured by the lotus boats during the Zhongyuan Festival.

There was just something so soft about the way Wen Ning nestled the cat in his arms. He couldn’t put it into words, but the sight before him made Cao Zixin stare with utter adoration.

“You know,” Wen Ning laughed softly, beautiful underneath the luminescent light of the moon. “He k-kind of looks like you!” The young man lifted the black cat on his lap and held it up so Cao Zixin could look at its stoic and almost grumpy expression. The cat even sported a scar across his cheek from an altercation with another feline, and the more Cao Zixin stared, the more he realized his boyfriend was right. The cat did look like him. It looked a LOT like him.

“Surely, I’m cuter than that,” he retorted with a chuckle.

“Hmmm,” Wen Ning genuinely considered his boyfriend’s words. “Come here.” He patted the ground beside him. “I-I need to get a closer look, so I can give you a proper answer.”

Cao Zixin humored his boyfriend’s request and sat down beside Wen Ning on the grassy hilltop. A swarm of cats immediately surrounded them, but it didn’t matter because he was lost in Wen Ning’s cheeky smile, in the gentleness that seemed to radiate from his very being. The young man had always been enamored with Wen Ning, but right now, his boyfriend took his breath away.

There was something different in the air.

Cao Zixin noticed the slight blush that had crept up onto Wen Ning’s cheeks, and he wondered if his boyfriend felt it too—the odd tension that had fallen over them, the electricity in the air.

“I-I swear! You do look like him!” Wen Ning had released the cat, and had turned to face Cao Zixin. The young man spent a moment looking hesitant, before he reached for his boyfriend’s veil and lifted it off his face (unintentionally covering his eyes in the process). They’d always been touchy, but something about this interaction made Cao Zixin’s heart leap into his throat.

The young man who always had a LOT to say was utterly speechless.

Cao Zixin felt Wen Ning’s hand tremble as his boyfriend placed his thumb gently against his scar. Wen Ning traced the remnants of the wound up his cheek, and from behind his upturned veil, Cao Zixin wished he could stare into Wen Ning’s eyes.

“See,” Wen Ning whispered. “You’re similar, e-even down to y-your scars.”

Their faces were inches apart, but Cao Zixin didn’t have the brainpower to come up with a witty retort or a long-winded speech to hide how vulnerable he felt at the moment.

And then Wen Ning kissed him.

Wen Ning kissed him and he could have sworn his soul evacuated from its mortal shell and into some other plane of existence. It was a gentle, almost ghostly kiss—the kind young boys often gave to their first crushes underneath the shade of the gingko tree, but all the same, it made Cao Zixin’s heart leap into his throat, made whatever witty remark he wanted to say die on his lips.

It was the first time they’d ever kissed, and Cao Zixin finally understood what people meant when they said it felt like watching fireworks streak across the sky, like a jolt of lightning up one’s spine. He was swept away by the kiss, and in the heat of the moment, Cao Zixin wanted to tell Wen Ning he loved him. However, before he could blurt out such a weighty confession, he reeled in his emotions, pulled away, and hid how he truly felt behind a self-assured smile.

Cao Zixin pulled down his veil and chuckled. “I didn’t know you were this smooth, Wen Ning.”

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person
  • Genre: Angst, Hurt/Comfort, Vampires
  • Note/TW: Characters belong to Revelation, trigger warning blood and implied violence
    This is an excerpt

Blood tasted disgusting on most days—salty, metallic, the equivalent of watered-down mucus and mushed meat coating his tongue and dribbling down the back of his throat. Oliver had never enjoyed the taste or the texture, but today, the level of disgust he felt was unparalleled, enough to make his insides churn and his stomach heave.

He couldn’t get the taste of Benjamin’s blood off his tongue.

The bathroom had looked like a slaughterhouse as he crawled out of it on his hands and knees, and he was no better, Oliver had scrubbed and scratched at his skin until it started to hurt, until it turned red and blotchy underneath his fingernails. The vampire had changed his clothes twice, and still, he couldn’t get the stench of blood off him, couldn’t wash away his sins no matter how hard he tried, no matter how scalding the water.

So now he was here—sitting on the floor with his back against his bedframe, knees tucked up to his chest—dressed in an old shirt and sweats. He had his sketchbook propped on his knees and was doodling mindless, messy shapes onto the page. Oliver was a jumpy mess, and he flinched when the tip of his pencil broke against the angry, non-sensical spirals he’d etched into his sketch book.

“Oliver.”

The vampire bristled (like his heart was perpetually in his throat) when he heard a soft knocking against the door. A part of him wanted to ignore whoever was on the other side, but when he realized it was Louise, he seemed to soften just a little.

“Oliver,” Louise called out again. “May I come in?”

“Yes,” he exhaled. “You can… come in, Louise.”

Oliver sat up a little straighter, but it wasn’t enough to hide his mental state. The fledgling vampire’s eyes were puffy from crying, and the way his hand trembled as he tightened his grip around his pencil, was enough to show Louise his head was in shambles.

They locked eyes as Louise walked into the room. The woman carried herself with the same effortless poise as she always did—back straight, shoulders relaxed and level—but for the first time, Oliver couldn’t see the familiar spark of confidence in her eyes. The longer his gaze lingered, the more he realized that Louise looked a little lost too.

“Um, what do you want, Louise?”

There was a rare gleam of hesitance in her gaze. “I just wanted to check on you, Oliver.”

“I’m fine.” He lowered his hand to hide the trembling. “Anything else?”

“Listen Oliver,” her tone was soft, gentle. “I want to let you know; it wasn’t your fault.”

Something about that—wasn’t his fault—made anguish unlike anything Louise had ever seen before wash over Oliver’s usually somber features. The fledgling vampire’s eyebrows furrowed together, and he bit down onto his bottom lip until it stung. Suddenly, he threw out his arms (the sketch book falling to the floor). “Wasn’t my fault?” He sounded exasperated. “Louise, in what world is this not my fault?”

Oliver had never been the type to raise his voice (he knew all too well, what it felt like, cowering whenever his father’s deep baritone boomed through their household), but here he was, shouting and practically trembling with unbridled rage.

He was angry at himself, but Louise had given him an outlet for the outpouring of negative emotions. “I sunk my fangs into his neck.” Oliver paused to take in a shuddery breath, and a part of him thought it was ridiculous that even in the afterlife he knew how to recognize the beginnings of a panic attack. The young man clutched at the front of his shirt, like his heart was tightening in his chest and it was getting harder and harder to breathe. “I can still taste his blood on my tongue, Louise… so don’t—” Oliver looked like he was about to cry. “Don’t tell me it’s not my fault because… because that’s ridiculous!”

Oliver’s face twisted into a mask of pained horror, and while Louise wanted to offer him comfort, she took a step back to give him the space he needed.

“I’ll give you time to yourself, Oliver.”

“Louise,” his voice cracked. Even in his raged stupor, he could tell he’d hurt her feelings and somehow (seeing her face twist into one of subtle hurt) made Oliver feel even shittier. “I didn’t—” he stated. “I didn’t mean it.”

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person
  • Genre: Romance, fluff, character drabble
  • Note/TW: Characters belong to Minute

Mika had always been prone to bad dreams, so when the nightmares left in favor of more delightful dreamscapes, the Galatier was both relieved and pleasantly surprised. Mika’s nightmares varied vastly in severity, ranging from harmless dreams of monstrous slugs to more emotionally-taxing dreams involving Shiro. Sometimes, he would dream of alternate worlds where the rift between him and his brother had never been mended, of timelines where they said their goodbyes for good.

On those nights, Mika would awaken with a jolt—chest heaving and skin clammy and cold to the touch.

Sometimes, he’d awaken with tears in his eyes, sniffling as if he were a young boy who had just had vivid dreams about the monster underneath his bed, of childhood demons lurking in the darkness.

Mika had always been prone to bad dreams, but then he met Ezekiel.

It didn’t happen overnight, but slowly – the closer they grew – the more the nightmares began to subside. Instead, Mika would dream of family dinners with his husband and son, of a future filled with hope. He would awaken in the dead of night brimming with love for his family, tears of joy (and no longer of fear) prickling at his eyes as he lay awake in the darkness.

Tonight was one of those nights.

Mika dreamt he was cooking a meal for Ezekiel and Min. Their son was visiting for the holidays and everyone was dressed up in matching Christmas sweaters. There was a turkey in the oven and they were eating the fluffiest of mashed potatoes. Everyone had seconds (no food poisoning involved), and once dinner was over, they gathered around the fireplace to listen to Min talk about his life in the city – about his growing career as a singer and the friends he’d made along the way. Their son was happy and living life to the fullest, and nothing else in the world filled Mika’s heart with as much cheer and pride. Their little star had come a long way. Min was still the serious boy he always was, but he smiled a little brighter and laughed a little louder than he used to.

It was the perfect holiday dinner, but just like all dreams, it came to an abrupt end. The specifics were lost to the void – hazy in the way dreams often were when one emerged from a deep slumber. However, the feeling of immense joy and pride lingered, enveloping Mika like a warm blanket on a cold winter day. He was happy – his heart overflowing with love not just for his son, but for Ezekiel as well, for the Galatier who’d put an end to his lonely days of wandering the world.

The life of a nomad was certainly fun while it lasted, but there was a certain joy in knowing that he’d always have someone to come home to.

In the past, the road had been Mika’s home.

Now, Ezekiel was Mika’s home.

As the saying went, home is where the heart is. His heart was here. Unshed tears of joy lingered at the corners of his eyes, and Mika sniffled quietly as he wiped away at the wetness that trickled down his cheeks. He tried to be quiet, but Ezekiel – who was reading a book by his side – instantly noticed.

His husband flinched, his brows furrowing together in concern. He looked very much like a worried mother hen. “Bad dreams?” He whispered, his voice laced with tenderness and care.

Mika chuckled as he wiped away the last of his tears. “No, no, it’s not that,” Mika smiled, that same smile that made Ezekiel’s heart flutter in his chest – the same smile that could light up any room. “The opposite actually, I’m just so happy.”

Ezekiel looked absolutely perplexed, mild worry lingering in the way his brows came together, in the way the corners of his lips tugged ever-so-slightly downward.

“I used to have bad dreams, used to.” There was a slight pause. “But you know, ever since you came along, I’ve been… happier.”

Mika rolled onto his side, resting his head against Ezekiel’s chest. He could hear the steady beating of his husband’s heart and it brought a fond smile to his face. Mika draped an arm over Ezekiel’s torso. “Ever since you and Min came along,” he continued. “Life has been great. This is the happiest I’ve ever been,” Mika laughed. “Even in my dreams, I’m happy now.”

There was a pause before Mika playfully scrunched up his nose. “Though, Min really should visit us more. I miss him, I dreamt he was spending the night here.”

Ezekiel broke into a quiet chuckle. Back then, Mika had never been fond of children. In fact, his husband used to boldly declare that “all children are monsters.” However, Min came along and his opinion just changed – like a missing puzzle piece had finally fallen into place. Mika’s heart softened up and he warmed up to the child in no time.

“I agree, I miss him too.” Ezekiel placed the book he’d been reading on his nightstand then draped an arm around his husband’s body. He tilted his head downward, placing a gentle kiss on Mika’s forehead. “I’m glad.” The taller man had never been a wordsmith—people even thought he was the stoic and unapproachable type—but with Mika, he’d learned to express himself more. “This is the happiest I’ve ever been, and it’s all because of you.”

They basked in each other’s warmth, until Ezekiel broke the silence once more.

“Come closer, I want to whisper something in your ear.”

Mika obliged, giggling when Ezekiel’s warm breath tickled the nape of his neck. “What?”

“I love you,” Ezekiel whispered.

Mika broke into a cheeky grin. “That’s not a secret, silly. I love you too.”

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person
  • Genre: Horror, angst, hurt-comfort
  • NOTE/TW: Characters belong to dogstarlite, trigger warning gore 
  • This is an excerpt. 

Eddie could feel the bastard’s hands inside his chest cavity—could see his noodle-like insides spilling from the hollow tear in his abdomen as he bled crimson onto the makeshift gurney beneath him. The entire room smelled of iron and rotting meat that had been left under the sun for far too long, and for a terrifying moment, Eddie the Nail wondered if he’d died and found himself in hell.

The edges of reality blurred and folded inward, a blood-red moon peeking from behind the curtains. Something was wrong, something was terribly wrong. Every limb felt as heavy as lead, and the more Eddie struggled, the more aware he became of the sensation of a gloved hand caressing his internal organs. The motherfucker was inside him; the man’s scalpel grazing gently against the delicate twist and turns of Eddie’s intestines—fingers playing absentmindedly, almost tenderly, with the ridges of Eddie’s ribcage.

Eddie was going to break that motherfucker’s face.

Eddie was going to beat him black and blue until he was nothing more than a bloody smear on the pavement, until he was riddled with nails and gasping for breath like a fish out of water.

He was going to…

The realization hit him like a kick in the teeth. He wasn’t going to do shit, was he? He wasn’t going to do a goddamn thing because he was dying, wasn’t he? Eddie’s gaze followed the gloved hand. He couldn’t see jack shit from where he was lying, but he could make out the bastard’s hand as it moved within his chest—could feel it as the man traced along the vulnerable surface of his internal organs as if he were, as disturbing as it sounded, caressing a lover.

Eddie saw a glint of steel as the scalpel was raised above him—felt a searing, tearing pain spread across his chest like wildfire as the sharp end dug deep into his still-beating heart.

It was supposed to be a simple rescue mission. In and out. They were going to collect their guy, barge in guns blazing, scare their rivals shitless, then make it home in time to watch the game on TV over a couple of beers and microwavable pizza. The good shit. Simple shit.

It wasn’t supposed to end like this.

Fuck.

Eddie was screaming—hand to his chest, all out screaming like he was going to die of a heart attack. He was in the safety of his room, in bed with Adam. However, for a terrifying moment of unfiltered panic, Eddie believed he was going to die in a godforsaken shithole, unable to save not only himself but his own men as well. His breathing hitched in his throat, and as his heart pummeled away inside his chest, he sputtered and coughed like a drowning man.

“Baby,” Adam had dropped his usual accent, was shaking him gently by the shoulders. “Baby what’s wrong? Does your chest hurt? Tell me what’s wrong.”

Eddie took one look at Adam—heart still hammering in his chest like a spooked bird, hands tingling, chest stinging with the phantom pain of a botched flaying that had happened years ago.

“Charlie! Charlie! Bolt the doors,” he practically snarled. “Bar the windows, quick!”

It felt like he was having a heart attack, the way Eddie’s chest tightened with each breath, the way his vision blurred, and the way the room seemed to spin as an ungodly rush of panic washed over him like a wave. Eddie was a stoic man, but ever since that fateful night (flayed open and left to die on a gurney) he’d wrestled with night terrors and his own slew of inner demons.

He detested how vulnerable it made him feel, and on more than one occasion, he’d woken up out of breath and clutching helplessly at the air as he struggled to root himself in reality.

The panic would always pass, but in those brief moments where he was lost between the waking world and sleep, everything felt real—as if scalpels were digging into his organs, as if his chest was being carved open like a pumpkin during goddamn Halloween.

  • POINT OF VIEW: 3rd Person 
  • Genre: Slice-of-life, romance, fluff
  • Note: Characters belong to saintlapin
  • This is an excerpt 

If anyone else had said the same thing, Baptiste would have scowled.

But he couldn’t, not at her. Étude was (to put it lightly) his compass. She gave him a direction and fished him out of the depths of despair when he felt like he was drowning. She had shown him kindness and patience, much more than he felt he deserved.

Étude was…

Baptiste always had a way with the written word. In fact, he used to be known for eliciting emotions with both his songs and lyrics. But when it came to Étude, he didn’t know how to describe the way he felt for her - all he knew was that she made him feel seen and appreciated, and vulnerable in a way that wasn’t bad. She made him feel as if he’d swallowed a mouthful of butterflies, but it wasn’t a feeling he hated.

Baptiste was unsure about many things in his life, but he was sure of one thing, he wanted to make Étude happy.

“What?” Etude was smiling at him. “Cat got your tongue, mon loup? Don’t you want your nails to look as pretty as mine?” Daintily, she lifted a hand to show him her work. Her nails were a light purple with delicate streaks of yellow added in to represent shooting stars across the sky.

“Fine, for you.” Baptiste’s answer might have seemed terse to an outsider, but the moment he sat down on the floor beside her, his shoulders slackened and his perpetual frown turned into something gentler. He was at peace when he was with her and he loved her for it.

Oh no. 

Love. The word was foreign and out of the equation for someone like him. His more cynical side told him that Étude was too good for him, that he’d only weigh her down if something more than a friendship blossomed. Yet, another part of him wanted more.

He deserved to be happy too didn’t he? He deserved something more than strife and self-pity.

Baptiste’s eyes clouded over as he fought away the strange storm of emotions he felt in his chest. Étude was good at making him feel things he usually didn’t, and he didn’t know if he was terrified or thrilled. Ever since she appeared, he felt alive, more than he had in years.

Étude took him by the hand and it was nice. He didn’t crave human contact until she came waltzing in, and now a part of him wanted to just hold her hand. It made him sad that he couldn’t, not while she was painting his nails at least.

“You’re so serious, mon loup,” Etude’s voice was soft and exuded a quiet sort of concern.

“Hah, I’m always quiet.” It was an attempt to be cheeky and lessen the strange feeling he felt in his chest. “Haven’t you gotten used to it yet, ma belle?”

“I know when something’s on your mind, you can’t fool me.”

And she was right, Étude could read him like an open book. At first, the idea of someone delving deeper into his head upset Baptiste. Now though, it was comforting to know that someone understood - that he didn’t have to explain himself when the weight of the world felt exceptionally heavy on his shoulders.

“Come on, out with it, Baptiste.”

He really wanted to kiss her.

Perhaps he would regret it, but he already regretted so many things in life. What was there to lose really? Slowly, as Etude ran the cool brush over his nails, Baptiste shifted in place. His movements were stiff and awkward, but there was a rare glint of decisiveness in his eyes.

“Baptiste?”

He didn’t wait a second longer. Carefully, he leaned over and gave Etude a chaste kiss on the cheek. It was the kind of kiss young boys gave to their childhood crushes beneath the shadow of the playground slide, but Baptiste’s heart thudded in his chest all the same.

“Thank you,” his voice was soft and strained. “For everything.”

Nothing else needed to be said.



III. Prices 

50% discount for horror stories. If you're interested in a regular commission, check out my original thread.
Not going to be doing anything too lengthy, max of 1,000 words unless I get really inspired and go overboard. 

100 words 
2 USD
300 words
6 USD
500 words
10 USD
1,000 words
20 USD

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