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#birth mention
mychlapci · 2 days
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TFP Ratchet being pregnant at the same time as TFP Megatron. He hates it and loves comparing how he'll be the better mommy. Showing off his belly bump and how perfect it is. Showing off his boobs which as leaking breast milk. Constantly bragging about how much he can produce and how his baby will never be hungry.
Megatron walks in on Ratchet riding Optimus and reading a book about sparklings. Talking about his prepared he is.
oOOh they’re Optimus’ competitive little wives <3
Ratchet finds out he’s carrying first and then a couple weeks later, it turns out Megatron must have coincidentally gotten pregnant around the same time. Ratchet is low-key convinced Megatron had planned it this way just so that Optimus has to decide which one of his carriers to tend to first. It was probably actually a coincidence, but Megatron won’t lose this opportunity to mess with Ratchet any chance he gets.
Of course Optimus is doing a good job being diplomatic, Megatron and Ratchet… not so much. Ratchet’s gotta do everything he can to ensure perfect development for his sparkling. He’s gonna be a good mommy, even to Megatron’s brat once it comes out. He’s so proud of himself when he starts making milk so early – just further proof that he’s gonna do great. Of course Megatron’s boobs start leaking shortly after…
Optimus is just blissfully ignoring their rivalry because he’s just far too lost in the elation of having two pregnant bots nudging their baby-bumps against him to try and get his attention, and two pairs of leaky titties to suck on. He’s very happy to have two swollen bellies pressing against him when he sleeps, and two squelching wet valves to fill with transfluid.
mhmm they even give birth on the same day, probably. Ratchet’s water breaks first and he immediately tells Megatron to not even think about it. But it’s too late…
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theotherhappyplace · 5 months
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i bet kangaroos would be really freaked out with how we give birth.
"WHAT. WHEN ITS THAT BIG??? WHAT???? AND THEN YOU JUST...HOLD IT IN YOUR ARMS??? WHAT IF YOU NEED TO DO SOMETHING WITH YOUR ARMS?!"
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tum-bakery · 8 months
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Okay okay, THIS.
I'm genuinely struggling to draw the image in my brain, but this shapeshifting parent having hid their pregnancy for MONTHS from everyone around them finally getting that urge. They've been slowly feeling weaker and weaker from hiding their pregnancy, they're sore, they're exhausted from keeping up a form that conceals them.
Then suddenly their body starts to warn them that something is coming. Their body wants to shift to accommodate and it's a struggle to maintain how they're supposed to be looking. They're feeling contractions, and as their body tenses they can feel the way that fur and feathers prickle across their skin wherever the muscles are the most tense. Before they know it's not just contractions, their brain is SCREAMING at them that the life inside them needs OUT.
They finally find a spot to be alone, somewhere they can relax and look like themselves. Their body shifts into multiple forms trying to make the process easier, possibly settling on a true form before actually bringing their little life into the world.
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frownyalfred · 4 months
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Please hear me out please
Please
Pregnant bruce being kidnapped and having to give birth all alone
anon are you okay? this is so sad! I mean, I get it, but ouch. it would be so awful to be away from your nest and pack at such a vulnerable time. the instincts would be insane. Bruce would be insane.
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pencilscratchins · 2 years
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every once in a while someone will put in tags of my art “omg rebecca’s getting in star trek!” as if thats a new development, or like my parents gave me a choice in the matter instead of asking the nurse to play journey to babel in my birthing suite
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wannabepapa · 1 year
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the dangers of thinking about magical pregnancies is 💦💦
just a novice magic user accidentally stumbling upon a fertility spell that not only gets them pregnant, but gets them so impossibly pregnant in such rapid succession they can't even get their clothes off quick enough when they're already pushing through contractions
a couple decides they want to look into fertility magic because their fertility comes into question and they don't want to spend all that money on treatments. it's only been a few weeks when their first pregnancy test comes positive with the line appearing immediately. everything seems normal but the fertility magic may have been too potent because at their 25 week ultrasound the tech spots a second, much smaller fetus in front of the original fetus. guess they'll need to be careful so no more surprise babies come along
hot potato with pregnancy where both (or more cause polycule) transfer the baby/babies whenever they need a break or have to do something important. everything is always safe and it's all talked about beforehand so whoever gets the baby is prepared. the due date is coming up quick and everyone has been deal with braxton hicks so it's literally a waiting game to see who has to go through labor and birth
a naughty fae finds an unsuspecting human to play around with and accidentally becomes pregnant. it never crossed their mind that they could reproduce with one but now they have to deal with the consequences now that this will be the first fae born in six hundred years and they have twelve months (if they don't pop before then human babies are huge) to figure out how to explain that to the consul.
werewolf shenanigans are always great BUT a polycule that is made up of a werewolf and two humans that don't pay attention to the wolf's "time of the month" and now they have to prepare for two litters in less than 5 months because both humans are extremely gravid with their very fertile partner's pups
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minty-mumbles · 9 months
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And the Universe Said I Love You (Ch. 2)
Summary: Late one summer night, a half fae child being hunted for their magical blood stumbled into the temple of the gods and claimed sanctuary. Years later, Hyrule is still living in the temple, working to keep it tidy and operating smoothly. And for some reason, the gods have taken a keen interest in them.
AN: Thank you to @breannasfluff for being a huge help with this chapter! I also have a list of the gods/ their domains at the end of this fic
TW: Child sacrifice is discussed in this chapter
(Read on AO3)
~~~
The temple always got eerily dark at night. After the worshippers had left and the sun went down, Hyrule would snuff out all the lanterns that hung along the walls. The only remaining light came from where the moon shone through the windows and the two torches outside Wild’s shrine room that burned with strange teal flames. Hyrule knew better than to try and snuff out the holy flames of the wild god. It wouldn’t work, and would only serve to irritate Wild. 
Back at the beginning of Hyrule’s stay in the temple, they’d been afraid to wander at night. That was before they’d been given a permanent position as the temple's tender, and they were simply a child looking for sanctuary. The temple at night had seemed dark and cold back then. It had been too strange, too foreign to see the halls silent and empty. 
During the nights, Hyrule would do their best to hide away in the windowless storeroom they’d claimed as their sleeping chamber. With no moonlight to illuminate the room, it had still been dark, but at least it hadn’t been the cavernous hallways that felt like they would swallow Hyrule whole.
Even after the gods had given Hyrule their job, they’d tried their best not to wander after the sun went down. They’d snuff out the lights as quickly as they could and scurry back to their room, which by then had been filled with a simple bed and chest to store their clothing.
Now, after two years of living and working in the temple, that uncomfortable feeling Hyrule got at night had long since faded. The darkness of the temple at night was comfortable, and the silence gave them time to reflect on the day. The nights were peaceful and serene, now, no longer haunted by bad memories. 
Even the cold flickering light of the Wild’s holy fire served to remind Hyrule that even if Wild- who Hyrule now considered a friend- preferred to remain out of the city, he was a constant presence in the temple just as the other gods were. 
When Hyrule couldn't sleep, they often took to wandering the halls. That was what they were doing tonight. It had been a slow day at the temple. Nothing exciting had happened and Hyrule hadn’t needed to do much physical work, so they weren’t tired yet. 
The wind was strong tonight, blowing in through the windows. It came from the north, and if Hyrule concentrated enough, they swore they could smell the scent of the Lost Woods carried on the breeze. They breathed in deeply, letting the familiar smell soothe away their worries.
‘Hyrule.’ The sound of someone’s voice startled them. Barring a few special rituals dedicated to Twilight, people didn’t come to the temple in the middle of the night. As it wasn’t the full moon or new moon tonight, they hadn’t expected anyone to be here. 
They whirled around, half expecting to see someone who had come to ask for sanctuary, just as they themself had. But no. It wasn’t even a Hylian- or any other kind of mortal. 
The figure that towered in front of them was monstrous in a beautiful kind of way. It would’ve been difficult to see them in the dim light, if not for the faint white glow that the figure emitted. 
Distantly, Hyrule noticed the blue flames of Wild’s torches spluttering and going out as the night wind picked up speed, blowing clouds over the moon. In response to the newfound darkness, the creature began to glow brighter, its shine lighting up the whole hallway.
The figure was tall, towering so far above Hyrule that its head nearly brushed the ceiling. It had two pairs of arms, each held neatly in front of the creature, folded as if in prayer. From the knees down, its legs gradually faded from tanned skin to white feathers, and instead of feet, the legs ended in the golden talons of a bird of prey. 
A large red bird of a species Hyrule didn’t recognize was perched atop the figure's head. Its wings were stretched forward, covering the majority of the figure’s face from Hyrule’s view. 
The bird tilted its head, eyes locked onto Hyrule as if it were inspecting them. They wondered, briefly, if the figure was seeing through the bird’s eyes instead of whatever was hidden beneath the bird's wings
The figure was clothed in draped pastel robes that were cinched at the waist with a belt of gold studded with opals. Around the figure’s knees, the fabric of the robes faded into swirling clouds, filling the hallway with a sweet-smelling mist. The belt wasn't the only piece of jewelry that adorned the figure. It was practically dripping in gold, with a thick gold band around its throat, and its ears adorned with delicate chains. Clutched in the bottom pair of its hands, a necklace with the symbol of the triforce swung slowly in the breeze.
Hyrule should have been frightened by such a creature appearing suddenly behind them, but they knew who this was. They’d never seen him appear in such a form, but they’d heard of it and seen drawings in books held in the ancient library that filled most of the second floor of the temple. 
This was Sky, appearing in a form usually reserved for when he showed himself at royal ceremonies or when he decided to bless someone personally. None of the gods had ever appeared before Hyrule like this, in a form that was so obviously Hylian yet not at the same time. Sometimes things seemed off about the forms they took, like Twilight’s eyes, which remained the eyes of a wolf no matter what shape he took. (And sometimes Twilight appeared as an animal, But an animal was much different than this)
Sky’s presence was oppressive and although Hyrule wasn’t afraid, they couldn’t help but take a stumbling step backwards.
Sky’s lips turned downward for a moment. Hyrule couldn’t figure out what the god was thinking without being able to see his eyes. The thought that they might’ve displeased Sky enough for him to appear like this before them sent a bolt of terror through their heart. 
‘Be Not Afraid.’ Sky’s mouth did not move as he spoke, but his voice rang through Hyrule's head like a bell.
“I’m not afraid.” Hyrule managed to speak without stuttering even as they lied. They knew that anyone else would have fallen to their knees in reverence by now. Their familiarity with the god was the only thing keeping them on their feet. 
Sky did not answer, but he continued to frown down at Hyrule. After a moment, Hyrule felt compelled to speak to fill the silence. 
“I just didn’t expect you- you're very large, that’s all.” Hyrule cringed. Why did they say that? Gods, they were an idiot. They didn’t even know why Sky was here, but they were already saying things that the god could very easily take offense to. 
At least they managed to stop themself from mentioning how unnatural it looked for something shaped like a Hylian to possess two pairs of arms and bird-like talons instead of feet, and that it also didn’t help that Hyrule couldn’t see their eyes which prevented them from gaining a better understanding of what the god was thinking. Saying that probably would not have gone over well, no matter how much Hyrule was in Sky’s good graces.
Sky tilted his head slowly as if considering something, and Hyrule waited with bated breath for him to make his next move. Their heart pounded as they gazed up at the gigantic figure, and their body remained tense as if they had any hope of outrunning the god.
Suddenly, a strong wind howled through the temple. It was fierce enough that Hyrule instinctively brought their arms up to cover their face, stumbling back another few steps. When the wind had died down, and they gained the courage to peek out from behind their arms, they saw that the towering figure of the god was gone, replaced by a much more reasonably sized person.
Sky was still tall, nearly seven feet, but he could no longer pick Hyrule up in one hand if he so desired. It did help Hyrule relax a little. The bird had shrunk too, and as Hyrule watched it seemed to come to life, withdrawing its wings from where they were stretched in front of Sky’s eyes and ruffling its feathers. 
The bird’s movement revealed Sky’s eyes. They were a piercing blue, the exact same shade as the morning sky on a clear summer’s day. His eyes held such fondness as he looked at Hyrule that the breath stuttered in their chest. 
Knowing that Sky wasn’t angry at them made the last bit of tension bleed out of Hyrule’s shoulders, but the affection shown just made them blush in embarrassment. Despite their embarrassment, they didn't dare turn their eyes away from the god.
In a burst of movement that drew Hyrule’s attention away from studying Sky’s face, the bird atop the god’s head took flight. As it flew, it seemed to shift, changing midair. Its size diminished so rapidly that for a moment Hyrule thought it was going to disappear completely, but by the time the bird landed on Sky’s shoulder, it had stopped shrinking. Its form was more familiar now. It looked like a little songbird, although Hyrule was still unable to identify its species. 
They realized that it must be Crimson, Sky’s.... pet? Hyrule had never asked what Crimson was exactly, but they knew that the bird was very precious to Sky. 
Sky reached up a hand to his shoulder, letting Crimson hop onto his fingers. He absently pet the top of the bird's head, all while continuing to stare at Hyrule. His gaze was no less affectionate than it was before, but now there was an undercurrent of contemplation. 
‘Hyrule, do you know how gods are made?’
The question that rang through their mind caught Hyrule completely off guard. That was one of the last things they would expect a god to ask them, let alone Sky after he showed up in such an imposing form. 
“No more than most mortals do. I-” Hyrule cut themself off, not knowing if Sky would want to hear the specifics. Sky tilted his head curiously, an action that made him look remarkably bird-like, and Hyrule felt compelled to continue. 
“You made most of them? Except for Wild and Wind. They used to be mortals, and you turned them into gods.” Hyrule hesitated to say anything more, as that was all the information they had on the subject. How gods were made was knowledge that had been kept away from the minds of mortals, and Hyrule had, for once, not been an exception in this. 
‘Do you know how I made Wind and Wild into Gods?’
Hyrule shakes his head slowly. Where was Sky going with this series of questions? Why was he here in the first place? Although Hyrule had told Sky they weren’t afraid, and Sky shrinking to a more reasonable size had elevated his more primal fears, Hyrule was still uneasy. What had prompted the god to appear to them in such a form?
 ‘The world is full of magic, Hyrule. Gods depend on that magic to survive. It is what makes us what we are. Sometimes, magic starts to build up in the world and when this happens I can, if I choose, create a godling. Something that is not a god yet, but has the potential to be.”
Hyrule knew their mouth was hanging open, but they couldn't help it. Why on earth was Sky telling them this?
A frown came over Sky’s face. Crimson chirped, nudging at Sky’s fingers, and attempting to comfort its master. ‘Godlings… they do not always survive long enough to become full-fledged gods.’ 
Hyrule sucked in a deep breath, surprised. They’d had no idea that gods could die. This was something deeply personal, more invasive than anything the gods had ever told them before. They reached out hesitantly, wanting to comfort the god, but thinking better of it at the last second and withdrawing their hand. “Sky, I’m so sorry. I never knew…”
Sky sent him a sad smile. ‘You have nothing to be sorry for. It is the way of things. One of these godlings was named Spirit. I intended for him to watch over the dead. He did not live long enough to even make his first physical form.’ 
For the first time since he had revealed his eyes, Sky broke eye contact with Hyule. He looked away, and Hyrule was horrified to see that tears were gathering in the god’s eyes. 
The entire hallway grew darker as the glow Sky emitted dimmed. Even the light from the moon outside seemed to weaken, as if Twilight had been listening to what Sky was saying and was also reliving the anguish of losing a sibling. 
Crimson screeched, flying off Sky’s fingers and disappearing out a window as the atmosphere grew more oppressive by the second. 
In a split-second decision, Hyrule moved forward, throwing his arms around Sky’s waist. They doubted they could offer much comfort to a god, but they couldn’t let someone who they thought of as a friend stand there crying from grief and not do anything.
Sky made a startled noise- still in that strange echo in Hyrule’s head that wasn’t truly speaking- before relaxing into the hug, and returning it. It was a bit awkward with Sky being two feet taller than Hyrule and having an extra set of arms, but Sky didn’t pull away so Hyrule didn’t either.
After a while, Sky’s glow returned to normal, and he drew back, so Hyrule followed his lead.  
‘You’re so sweet, Hyrule.’ Hyrule blushed.
Sky sighed, deciding to continue his story. “Spirit didn't have time to absorb much of the magic I had gathered for him. Soon after that was when we met Wind. He was such a sweet boy, so lively and mischievous. At first, he simply reminded us of Spirit, but as he grew, he quickly became his own person in our eyes, and the thought of losing yet another person we cared for so soon- We just couldn’t stand it. What happened to him is Wind’s tale to tell, but suffice to say we found out that gathered magic can also be fed to mortals to make them into godlings.”
It was strange to hear someone talk about magic as if it were a physical, tangible thing that could be eaten but Hyrule supposed, to a god, magic would be very different. “So after you figured that out, you met Wild, grew fond of him, and…” They tilted their head. 
Sky smiled. ‘And I made him a godling too, yes. I’m sure you already know most of the story of how he died. Wild is more open to speaking about it than Wind. I think mortals know the tale?’ 
Hyrule nodded, but they were growing more and more curious. “Why are you telling me this?” 
Sky didn’t respond, but continued to look down at them with soft eyes. Hyrule realized rather abruptly that during the course of their conversation, Sky’s eyes had shifted from a soft summer’s-day blue to a lovely pastel purple. 
The god sighed again, but this time, it was less heavy and more affectionate. Leaning down, Sky gently cupped Hyrule's cheek and smiled at them. His touch was gentle and warm, but his skin was rough with callouses covering his fingers. Hyrule couldn’t help but lean into the touch just slightly. 
Between one moment and the next, just as quickly as he had appeared, Sky was gone. In an instant, there was no trace of him anywhere. The moon was just as bright as it should be outside, and Wild’s torches were lit again as if they had never gone out.
The temple was silent once again. The only sound was the distant yells of people in town who had taken more than their share of ale. 
Later that night, Hyrule lay in their bed, ears pinned back in a show of discomfort as a headache pounded against their skull. Apparently, listening to the voice of a god echo inside your head for an extended period of time could be bad for you. Who knew?  
It didn’t escape Hyrule that Sky had never answered them when they’d asked why he’d told Hyrule all that he had. It didn’t make any sense. Why would Sky feel the need to offer up that information voluntarily? It wasn’t like Hyrule had asked him. Sky had just appeared in the middle of the night and told Hyrule of his own free will.
It didn’t make any sense. Why would Sky tell them about how mortals could become gods? That seemed like something that would be a carefully kept secret.
Hyrule’s swirling thoughts mixed with the throbbing pain in their skull until there weren’t any coherent thoughts left. They hovered on the brink of sleep, unable to rest while their brain still sent shockwaves of pain through their head. 
It could have been their imagination, but suddenly they feel a hand brushing their hair aside. 
A gentle palm feeling their forehead. 
A soft voice, and instant relief as the pain subsided all at once.
As they slipped out of consciousness, they could have sworn they heard a familiar voice softly singing a strange melody. 
The strange conversation with Sky didn’t leave their head for weeks. They don’t see Sky again for a while, and the absence of the god is more noticeable than Hyrule thought it would be. They missed seeing him around. When had Hyrule gotten so attached, they wondered?  
The other gods continued to visit, and nothing seemed out of the ordinary, but every so often Hyrule caught one of them shooting them a strange look when they thought Hyrule wasn't watching.
~~~
Not all weather could be attributed to the actions of a god. Most of it was simply due to nature acting the way it had been designed to act by the gods when they’d first created the rain and snow and sun. 
But even Hyrule was starting to suspect that this wasn’t a natural storm. The rain had been lashing fiercely against the sides of the temple since morning, and not a single person had been brave enough to venture out into the weather to come pray.
Never in their time living in Castle Town had Hyrule seen it rain so hard. Thunder seemed to echo through the temple every thirty seconds, and the downpour was unrelenting. Hyrule could hear it pounding on the roof of the temple from inside his small room.
Hyrule sat on their bed, a blanket spread over their lap, and a book laid open over that. Lit candles were scattered around their room, giving them enough light to read by. The book they were inspecting was one that was usually kept in the temple's library, but Hyrule hadn’t felt bad about squirreling it away to his room today. It wasn’t like there was anyone else there who would need it.
When Hyrule first came to the temple, they didn't know how to read. Their mother hadn’t seen any value in teaching them and hadn’t known Hylian letters anyways. Legend had been personally offended when he’d discovered this and had made it his mission to teach Hyrule how to read. After two years, Hyrule had advanced greatly. They were able to read most things without help now. 
The book spread across their lap was a collection of ancient fairy tales. It wasn’t the most engaging thing Hyrule had ever read. It had been written for a child to read and was simple in its word choice, but it was something to take their mind off the howling winds outside, so Hyrule couldn’t complain. 
They twitched as a crack of thunder echoed through the temple. Their eyes didn’t leave the page but they were no longer paying any attention to the words. That was the loudest thunder they’d heard from the storm so far. Hyrule wondered briefly if lightning had struck the temple itself. 
That would be a very bad omen.
Hyrule wondered which god was angry. Realistically, it could only be a few of them, only those who had domain over the sky and storms. Sky, perhaps, or Wind, maybe even Wild.
Right as Hyrule bought their attention back to the book on their lap, they became aware of a quiet dripping sound. Was there a leak in the roof? Hyrule frowned, twisting around to find the source of the noise.
What they saw startled them so badly that they let out a small yelp and slammed their book closed. 
A soulful-looking child stood behind them. He looked so bedraggled that Hyrule almost didn’t recognize him as Wind. 
He wasn't wearing the blue tunic he usually favored, instead dressed in the typical garb one would find in some of the poorer villages along the coast. The god was barefoot, not even wearing sandals. His golden hair was slicked down and turned a duller color from the water that plastered it to his head.  
Water dripped from Wind’s clothes and air, creating a pool at his feet which grew too quickly for the amount that was dripping off of him. His head was tilted down, and Hyrule couldn’t make out his face, but his skin had an unhealthy blue tinge to it. He looked like a drowned ghost, coming back to haunt the living.
Hyrule suppressed a shudder. Now they knew which god was causing the storm.
They waited patiently for Wind to speak, but minutes dragged by and Wind didn’t move his eyes up from the ground to look at them. 
After a while, Hyrule hesitantly set their book and blanket aside, slowly scooching their way off the bed. They planned to approach the god slowly, just in case, but the first step they took towards the god made Wind’s head snap up to face him.
Wind’s lips had a purple tinge to them, and his eyes were sunken in. Tears dripped continuously from his eyes, faster than any Hylian should be able to produce tears. 
Hyrule shivered. “Wind, I can't help you if I don't know what’s wrong.”
Wind stared at them soulfully for a moment, and Hyrule started to think he wasn’t going to say anything before the god spoke. “You can’t help. Not unless you're able to beat some sense into every single mortal who thinks that they know the will of the gods.” Wind's voice was quiet, but filled with boiling anger. 
His voice grew louder as he continued. “What gives them the right? What makes them think they know what I want!” The god gave a short, wordless yell, his hand flying up to tug on his hair. 
Instinctively, Hyrule reached out, gently trying to remove Wind’s hands from where they were tangled in his wet tresses. Tugging on his hair like that can’t feel pleasant, god or no. Wind allowed Hyrule to take his hands into theirs, but he didn’t look calmed in the slightest. Wind seemed to be working himself up into a true temper, and it made a sliver of fear appear in the back of Hyrule’s mind. 
They knew by now that Wind would never hurt them on purpose, but a god’s anger could be destructive. 
“When has that ever been okay? Why did no one stop her? Why, why, WHY?” Wind was screaming by the last word, and a chorus of thunder echoed from outside to accompany his cries. His anger had morphed into hurt.
Hyrule didn’t know what had happened, or who “she” was, but they could see it was time to do some damage control before Wind summoned a storm inside Hyrule’s bedroom and accidentally fried them with a lightning bolt.
With a sharp tug on Wind’s hands, Hyrule drew the young god into a hug starting a mantra of soft reassurances and soothing words. Wind, who wasn’t paying attention to Hyrule by this point, was taken off guard. He fell into the hug with a wheeze, his next yell stolen from him.
It took a while for Wind to calm, for water to stop pouring from his eyes, and for color to start to return to his skin, washing away the unhealthy pallor he’d had before. As Wind’s cries grew quieter so too did the storm outside, being reduced to a steady but much less forceful patter of rain on the Temple’s roof. Hyrule managed to draw Wind over to his bed and sat the both of them down, not minding how wet the god would make their blankets. 
When Wind has been reduced to quietly sniffling at irregular intervals, Hyrule finally felt like they could ask what happened. What could cause a god to become so upset? And why would he come to Hyrule for comfort instead of any of the other gods? It baffled them.
Hyrule asked, but Wind simply shook his head into Hyrule’s chest, obviously not wanting to speak about it. But by then, Hyrule's curiosity has been thoroughly roused, along with their concern and no small amount of protectiveness over the child clinging to them. 
Wind was a god. He could protect himself, and he certainly didn’t need protection from Hyrule. Knowing that didn’t soothe Hyrule’s anxieties. “Come on, you don’t have to say much, just let me know what’s going on, okay?”
Wind eventually pulled back from the embrace, wiping away the last of his tears. He looked much better than before, no longer looking like a dead body at least. He looked more like a sick child who fell in a puddle
Wind looked up at Hyrule with fresh tears welling in his eyes. “One of the fishing villages along the coast was going through a rough spot- the fishing was just getting worse and worse. People were going hungry. There was a woman, who had just given birth to a baby girl. The woman wasn’t… well. Something went wrong with her birth, and she nearly died. Wanted nothing to do with her daughter after that.”
Hyrule nodded along with the story but was no closer to understanding what had caused Wind to become so upset. It was a sad tale, yes, but it happened sometimes- mothers falling into agony, trapped in their own minds after they give birth. There must be more to the story than that if it made Wind so upset.
And indeed, Wind carried on. “When the famine started, she got it into her mind that we had sent her child to her as a test of some sort. She became convinced the only way to end the starvation was to kill the child. She waded out into the water and held her baby under until she stopped moving. She just- didn’t stop. And she kept praying to me the who- whole t- time.” 
Wind’s voice started hitching like he was about to cry again. “Everyone sa- aw her. There was a whole crowd there. No one stopped her. Why did no one stop her?” 
Despite the waver in Wind’s voice and his hitching breath, he didn’t start crying again. Instead, he simply leaned forward, burying his head in Hyrule’s chest and returning to their positions from earlier. He sounded so defeated.
“Oh,” was all Hyrule could force out. That was worse than he was expecting. They shuddered, suppressing the urge to make noise in reaction to that, but they were sure Wind could feel their shiver. 
When times got hard, people got desperate. If they got desperate enough, they would be willing to try anything to gain the gods’ favor, even Hylian sacrifice. It was illegal, of course, and doubly so if the victim was unwilling, but people still did it occasionally
But child sacrifice? That was beyond cruel, and even people who weren’t as well acquainted with the gods as Hyrule was would know they wouldn’t approve of that. Mentally, Hyrule offered up a prayer that the child’s soul would find peace.
“She will. I made sure of it.” Wind spoke, startling Hyrule when it seemed he had replied to their thoughts. Then they realized that was exactly what they’d done. Hyrule hadn’t directed the prayer to Wind specifically but the spirits of the dead, afterlife, and reincarnation was Wind’s purview. Of course he’d heard Hyrule’s prayer. 
“And the mother?” Hyrule inquired hesitantly. They couldn’t imagine that Wind had granted the woman’s prayer for more food, not after she had killed her child in Wind’s name. Especially not when he seemed so distressed by it.
“They killed her.” Wind spoke softly, and monotone, all emotions leaching out of his voice. 
Hyrule tightened their grip on Wind. They weren't surprised she was dead. Not really. The courts would never be kind to someone who killed their child, especially when it was indisputable that they had done it. Hylian justice was strict in that regard. 
“I didn’t save her.” Still, his voice was flat, unusual for the overly expressive god.
Hyrule was left floundering at that. “Ah, did you want to save her?” The woman had offered Wind a sacrifice, after all. Had Hyrule misunderstood why Wind was so upset? Maybe he had accepted the sacrifice, and he was upset the woman had been punished so severely.
The thought of Wind accepting Hylian sacrifices made Hyrule’s blood chill, and for a split second, Hyrule felt more fear than he ever had around Wind. They were also insignificant to the gods. Half fae they may be, but they were still mortal.
Wind shook his head into Hyrule’s chest. Relief flooded Hyrule, and they barely managed to keep their voice from shaking as they asked, “Then why are you upset?”
“Because I didn’t want to save her. I thought she deserved to die.” Wind looked up at Hyrule with wide mournful eyes. “Did she?” 
 It was as if he was waiting for Hyrule to cast judgment- as if Hyrule was in any position to judge a god for their actions, let alone their thoughts. When Hyrule didn’t speak one way or the other, Wind continued. “I should have stopped them, but I didn’t.” 
Wind sounded so defeated. “Why is murder the answer to murder? Why do Hylians take others' lives? We gave Hylians free will. We try not to interfere. But sometimes it just goes so badly… And to do things like that in our names, as if we told them to...” Wind trails off, seemingly at a loss for words. 
Hyrule could have said something about Hylian law listing death as a suitable punishment for the murder of a child, that by the judgment of a Hylian court, what had happened to the mother had been lawful. 
They didn’t, though. They were sure Wind was already well aware of that and didn’t need a reminder. 
Wind seemed to go slack in Hyrule’s arms, allowing them to support him. It was as if he was waiting for them to cast judgment- as if Hyrule was in any position to judge a god for their actions. When Hyrule didn’t speak one way or the other, Wind looked up at them. “She could have gotten help. She might have gotten better.” 
Hyrule wondered again why Wind had come to them for this. Why hadn’t he gone to one of the older gods? They would no doubt be better equipped to deal with this. But Wind hadn’t. He’d gone to Hyrule, so they would just have to help the best they could. “Maybe, but you can’t control what other people do.” Wind probably could but that wasn’t the point.
Neither of them spoke anymore after that, simply sitting on Hyrule’s bed in silence. Wind’s hiccups slowly pestered out until his breathing was even, and after a while, Hyrule realized he was asleep. It was strange- sleep seemed like the last thing a god would require but here they were, cradling a teenage god who was dead to the world. 
On the upside, Wind no longer looked like a sickly child who had fallen into a puddle. He looked more or less like himself again, even if he was rather damp. Paying no mind to the moisture soaking into their blankets, Hyrule laid Wind down so he would be more comfortable. Tucking him in, Hyrule hesitated, realizing this meant they would have nowhere to sleep. 
They considered it. Their bed would be big enough for both of them, yes, but it might be more cozy that was strictly comfortable. Shaking their head, Hyrule climbed into bed next to Wind. The boy had already cried in their embrace for at least an hour. Hyrule doubted he would mind them sleeping in the same bed.
Hyrule soon followed Wind into unconsciousness. When they woke in the morning Wind was already gone, but to Hyrule’s relief, when they stepped out of the temple, they found the morning had dawned bright and sunny. 
~~~
Hyrule had only stepped outside for a few moments to go to the market to get something to eat for lunch. They returned with a meat pie wrapped in wax paper and a few apples tucked into their basket. There was a pep in their step as they looked forward to finding a quiet place to take a break and eat lunch. 
Maybe they could head up to the roof? They thought about it as they entered the building, quickly bypassing all the shrine rooms as they headed towards the staircase in the back of the building. The roof of the temple was accessible by a small staircase tucked away in the back of the library on the second floor, but Hyrule was convinced that most people didn’t even know you could access the roof. They’d never seen anyone but themself and the gods up there
Hyrule spent a lot of time on the roof. It was a nice private place to take in some fresh air and get some sun, but they also spent time tending to the rooftop garden.
About a year and a half ago, when it had become obvious that Hyrule would be staying in the temple permanently, a large section of the rooftop had been transformed into a garden for them to tend to and harvest from.
Twilight had been the one to give Hyrule the garden, although Hyrule suspected that Time was also involved in the making of it. The god had woken them one early morning, demanding they accompany him to the rooftop. Hyrule, who at the time was much more cautious around the gods than they were now, had agreed hesitantly. 
They had worried slightly that Twilight was going to push them off the roof but followed him obediently up the staircase anyways. When they’d reached the top of the stairs, Hyrule was shocked to discover that the rooftop had been transformed overnight. There were now several large planting beds in the middle of the roof, each already filled with rich black soil. Twilight had handed them a shovel and a handful of seeds- both of which had appeared out of thin air- and instructed them to get to work. 
Twilight had handed them handful after handful of seeds and sprouts, all the while talking their ear off about proper growing techniques. It had slowly dawned on Hyrule that Twilight was expecting them to tend to this garden and harvest it when the time came. 
When they’d asked what the food was for, Twilight had looked at them like they’d grown a second head, and said “It’s for you, of course. Ya don’t think we expect you to live just off the salary we give ya, do ya?” At that, Twilight knelt down in the dirt next to Hyrule and helped them finish planting. 
So taking care of the garden had become part of their daily chores. The garden wasn’t large, nothing that would take Hyrule’s whole day to tend to, but it was nice to have something else to do besides clean.
Between the garden- which Hyrule suspected was producing more food than the amount of space allowed, but what did they know? They weren’t a farmer- and with the occasional rabbit or pheasant that Twilight or Wild would give him, Hyrule was less reliant on the markets for his food. 
After Wild had seen the garden for the first time, he’d perked up like an excited puppy. The next thing Hyrule knew, the roof also had a hearth, cooking pots, and a stack of firewood that never seemed to grow any smaller. Retroactively, Hyrule was grateful Wild had the foresight to give them a place to cook. The temple wasn’t designed to be lived in permanently and therefore lacked even a basic kitchen. 
(More often than not, Wild would take pity on them and cook for them. He said they were dismal at cooking, and Hyrule didn’t know enough about cooking to disagree.)
But some days, like today, Hyrule preferred to get out of the Temple and find something to eat in the marketplace. It's not like they lacked the money to do so. Twilight had said that he didn’t expect Hyrule to live off the money that the gods gave them, but in truth, Hyrule could easily do so. Some months he wasn’t even able to spend it all before he was given more.
Just as Hyrule reached the bottom of the stairs that led up to the second floor, their thoughts were abruptly cut off as a scream sounded from behind them. Someone was wailing in terror inside one of the shrine rooms. Hyrule turned on their heel and sprinted back in that direction.
A group of worshippers had already clustered around the door to Time’s shrine, so it was easy to locate where the scream had come from. People parted like water around a rock as Hyrule approached, recognizing him as the temple’s keeper and letting him through. Those who didn’t were grabbed by the people who stood next to them and hauled out of the way. Hyrule didn't spend any time reflecting on the authority they now held when it came to the temple and the gods, but it was definitely a weird feeling. 
Besides, it was probably less that the crowd respected them, and more likely that no one else wanted to be the first to enter the room. Firstly because whatever was that had caused the room’s inhabitant to scream like that couldn’t be good, and secondly because it was rude to enter a shrine while someone else was praying. Hyrule was mostly exempt from the second point, meaning it would be better to let them deal with the danger, whatever it was.
Before Hyrule could even reach the door, it burst open. A young man dressed in typical farmer’s garb came barreling out of the room in a flat sprint. The man was down the hall and out the door before any of the onlookers, including Hyrule, could get a word out.
The crowd around them murmured uneasily, but the sight eased Hyrule‘s worries a little. They’d been afraid that they might walk into the shrine to find a dead body. Thankfully, it seemed like that wouldn’t happen now.
The man had left the door to the shrine- a solid oak door carved with harvest motifs- open, not bothering to close it in his haste. It swung back and forth gently with the force the man had slammed it open with. Hyrule caught the door with a hand, steadying it. Steeling their nerves for whatever they would find inside, Hyrule entered the room. 
The first thing to hit them was the smell of the room, as it always did when they entered Time’s shrine room. It smelled like freshly grown grass, and deep dark forests, and if they concentrated it even smelled a bit like their mother’s fairy fountain. In short, it smelled like home and it always made some of the tension in their shoulders seep away 
The second thing they noticed was the towering figure standing in the middle of the room. For a second, Hyrule was reminded of the time, months ago, when Sky had appeared before Hyrule in a gigantic inhuman form. At least in this case, the figure had the correct number of limbs and was a more reasonable height. 
It was obviously Time- there was no one else it could be. Even if this form was different from what he usually took, it still looked remarkably like him. He wore silver armor, and a great double helix sword was strapped to his back. His hair was pure white, as were his eyes. The marks on his face remained, but they seemed brighter than usual, the only streak of color on the man’s body.
Both of his eyes were open, which was usual. Time preferred forms that had a large scar over one of his eyes. Hyrule had never heard the tale of how he’d gotten the scar, but it must have been a fight to boast of, if the god willingly kept the scar in all his forms.  
Hyrule could see why such a sight would frighten someone who was not accustomed to seeing the gods, even if this appearance was very similar to a Hylian’s. The god’s pupil-less eyes seemed to bore into your very soul as he looked at you.
“Lord of the Seasons,” Hyrule greeted, using one of the god’s many formal titles. They bowed low and didn’t rise from the bow or dare look up at the god before they were told to. Their basket tumbled out of their hands as they did so, but they let it
For perhaps the hundredth time since Hyrule had come to the temple, Hyrule thanked their mother for teaching them proper manners. Fae were notorious for their politeness, and their mother wasn’t going to send Hyrule off into the world without teaching them manners, whether they were only half fae or not. 
That meant that they had fit in quite well at the temple, back when they still maintained proper decorum with all the gods. Most others, unless they were nobility and had been raised in such environments, wouldn’t have known proper behavior.
Of course, those manners weren’t really needed anymore, but they still served Hyrule well in situations like these. They may have gained respect from the people of Castle Town by being the caretaker of the temple and they may be regarded as an authority on the will of the gods, but even then they couldn’t go around acting so casually toward them in public. 
Time’s voice responded to his greeting, albeit deeper than it normally was. ”Rise, supplicant,” He ordered.
Thankfully, it seemed Time also recognized the need to keep a formal distance between them. Hyrule pushed down a feeling of hurt that Time would call them a supplicant, as if they had been reduced to simply a worshiper at his shrine. There was no need to take it personally. Time was playing a part, just as Hyrule was. 
Hyrule rose, meeting Time’s eyes. (At least they were pretty sure they were meeting Time’s eyes. With no pupils, it was impossible to tell where the god was looking.)
With a wave of Time’s hand, the door to the room slammed shut in the faces of all the onlookers. It might have been Hyrule’s imagination, but they could have sworn that Time’s shoulders relaxed when they no longer had an audience. 
Hyrule knew Time hadn’t come here for them. If Time had wanted to speak to Hyrule, he could have appeared before them directly. Which meant that the god couldn’t be angry at them for some slight Hyrule hadn't realized they had committed. 
That and the fact Hyrule had gotten over being fearful of the strange forms they took. After being espoused to it for so long, the novelty of it had worn off. It took something very shocking- like Sky’s gigantic form- to startle them. 
Lacking any fear, Hyrule said, “Didn’t expect to see you here.” It was a casual greeting, one that you might give to a friend you met in the market. It seemed absurd to give such a greeting to a god, but a lot of things in Hyrule’s life were absurd and they had learned to live with it. 
 “He wanted advice.” Time spoke. Time’s face remained impassive and completely still. Hyrule yet to see any movement on the god’s face. It was as if the god were wearing a mask carved of wood. Time had an excellent poker face and rarely let emotions show, but he was usually a bit more expressive than this.
Hyrule blinked in confusion. “Who- oh, the young man who was in here before me?”
Time sighed, voice slightly irritated. “Yes.”
Hyrule knew that many people sought out the gods to ask for advice on a whole range of topics. Still, it was very rare for any of the gods to answer in person, let alone Time. Out of all the gods, he was the most seclusive, preferring to keep to himself and do his work from a distance. 
“What did he want advice about?” Hyrule said, wondering what would have drawn Time to visit.
Time lifted a hand to rub over his face, sounding exhausted when he spoke. “He wanted love advice. He said that since I was the only one of the gods who was married, I might have some wisdom for him.”
That certainly wasn't what Hyrule had been expecting. It was true- Time was the only married god, as far as Hyrule knew- but he wasn’t known as a god of love or anything like that. If you wanted advice on the softer aspects of things, you were better off praying to Sky, or perhaps even Four or Warriors.
Time nodded, perhaps seeing confusion on Hyrule’s face. “It’s unusual that I get a supplicant asking for romantic advice. I wanted to answer him in person, but it seems he was too much of a coward for that.” Time’s face remained as impassive as ever, but Hyrule heard scorn in Time’s voice. 
Courage was something that all the gods valued, and Time was no exception. All of the gods were warriors of some kind, and none of them took kindly to cowardice, so it didn't surprise them that Time was displeased that the man had run. ”But I think I might stay for a while longer and hear more supplications from those who are brave enough to face me.” 
Not wanting to offend, but also slightly amused by the whole situation, Hyrule said. “Maybe you could take on a less frightening form? Other people aren't as used to seeing gods as I am. He was just scared of that, I think.” 
There was a long pause as Time seemed to consider this. While he did, Hyrule turned to gather their basket off the floor. The basket and meat pie had stayed where they had dropped them, but the apples had rolled away. Hyrule found one of them easily, but the other was nowhere to be seen. 
Most likely it had rolled into a corner or under an offering table. Hyrule could find it later, after the worshippers had left the temple and this whole situation had died down.
But when they turned back to Time, they were pleasantly surprised. Hyrule hadn’t thought that Time had moved when they’d turned their back on him, but they found that the god was standing closer than he had been, and holding out the apple Hyrule had lost. 
He had also changed his appearance. Time looked more like he usually did, now. He still wore the armor, but it was no longer unearthly silver, but a normal iron. His hair was no longer white, but a bright blonde, and he stood at a more reasonable height. If Hyrule had seen him out in the city, they would have assumed that he was a knight, and wouldn’t have looked twice at him.
At least, if it hadn’t been for the mask the man now wore. It was white and pearlescent, with a swirling symbol Hyrule didn't recognize carved into it. It also had no eye holes, but Hyrule got the unnerving feeling Time was still staring at them.
With a smile, Hyrule took the second apple from Time’s outstretched hand and tucked it into their basket. “That’s better,” They agreed to Time’s unspoken question. “Much less intimidating, I think.” Then they hesitated. “But, if you still wanted to speak with that young man, I’m afraid that he’s, um, already gone.”
Time snorted at that. “No need to be delicate about it. I know he ran away like a child.“ 
Hyrule nodded, not bothering to defend the young man. He had run away, after all. 
They would have to warn those who were gathered outside that the god would still be there if they entered his shrine, and then they would have to prepare for a flood of people coming to see the god in person. Hyrule would probably seclude themself in their room. No need for them to get caught up in that mess.
“I’ll leave you to it, then.” Hyrule sighed. “Here’s hoping I won't have to fight through a hoard of people all asking questions the second I step out of this room.” It was a fruitless hope, they already knew. News of the god’s presence would have already spread, drawing even more people to crowd around the door.
Time said nothing, but patted them on the shoulder consolingly before they headed towards the door, leaving the god where he stood. 
~~~
The Pantheon:
Sky: God of the sky, divinity, sleep, and children (The first god, Mother of the gods)
Four: (They/Them) God of the four elemental spirits, and the forge. (They created the world out of the endless cloudy void Sky had been living in. The void is now the realm of the gods, the world is now the realm of the mortals)
Time: God of time, the seasons, the harvest/farming (He began the turning of the seasons)
Twilight: God of the night/day, animals, and the sun/moon/stars (He created the stars, planets, moon, and sun, and helped populate the world with animals)
Legend: God of myths, adventure, and music (He worked together with Twilight to create mortals. He also helped create the constellations)
Wind: God of the ocean and the dead (He helped deal with the overpopulation of mortals. Psychopomp. Started out as a mortal)
Warriors: (Xe/Xem/Xyr) God of war, strategy, and battle, (Also a psychopomp, but only to the effect that xe delivers souls of those who die in battle to Wind. “Battle” is very widely defined. Lots of things can be battles Ie: childbirth, battle with sickness)
Wild: God of the hearth, hunting, and the wilds (He moderates how much Hyians encroach on nature. Started out as a mortal)
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scientistservant · 5 months
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One of my favourites and possibly my darkest OC: Szavir the moth demon king.
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He was actually an extremely canon-divergent AU version of Insector Haga from YuGiOh I came up with during my years in the YGO rp community right here on Tumblr. I ended up liking the AU so much that I took him with me after leaving the community and gave him a new name and a somewhat updated look.
More info under the cut, along with the full art. Warning for mentions of ovipostion, larvae/insects, and descriptions of pregnancy and birth.
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Being the lord of insects, Szavir's name translates to “bearer” in his language. Fitting for one who literally bears (carries) his army.
The demon's offspring are live births, hatching within him and eating the soft, jelly-like shell for energy and nutrients. The eggs are the size of golf balls, but because the eggs are so soft, Szavir's large abdomen can carry about a hundred of them at a time, perhaps even more. After gaining the proper nutrients, the larvae begin to move more frequently before it’s time for them to exit the abdomen.
The babies look like small white worms, similar to fly larvae. As they age (and they age fast) their bodies grow more limbs and segmented parts, transforming into insects that range in size from scavengers, scouts, and security (Bumblebees, ants, cicadas) to soldiers/guards (mantids, hornets, “lesser” beetles) and huge tanks/muscle and transport the size of trucks and cars (arachnids, centipedes/millipedes, beetles).
All of Szavir’s bugs are feral and cannot talk. Yet the moth demon can understand them, and establish an emotional link/hive-mind to every single one.
No one knows how Szavir’s offspring get to be such a size, not even him.
Those Szavir takes as brood-mothers can be of any gender, as long as they are adults and strong enough to bear his many children.
He has some abilities to keep them in line, such as pheromones that work on any species, mortal or demon, and a powerful natural aphrodisiac in his bodily fluids (penis/ovipositor, eggs, cum, abdomen) used for pleasure. Some of his offspring have venom to use to numb the body, but Szavir doesn't tend to use it much, if at all, as he sadistically enjoys seeing his brood-mothers react to being impregnated.
Non-fertilised eggs are already stored in his abdomen, and are created naturally by energy from food and the like. During impregnation, the eggs pump through his ovipositor, the segmented sections helping push the multiple eggs through one at a time.
Because many of his brood-mothers are mortal, they're in constant need of support and sustenance due to the many, many eggs inside them. The pregnancy is the same as Szavir's, live birth and all.
Szavir can impregnate himself, but that's not as much fun.
If he ever gets bored of a brood-mother, Szavir will have them be devoured by his offspring.
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i'm on day 2 of my induction (started on thursday night at 10pm) and i am so glad this hospital/birthing center has tubs in the bathrooms. it is instant relief for the contractions. doesn't take them completely away but it lessens the intensity.
things are going slow though. hopefully today things pick up. i'm just ready to meet little man and also not be in pain from the contractions lol
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mychlapci · 2 days
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I'd do it on anon, but I've sent asks more cursed than this.
So, usually, Ratchet of Dratchet is the one carrying in these. However, imagine if it was Drift in his Dreadlock days that is carrying a sparkling, but genuinely does not realize it. This is both fuel for angst and (at least for me) comedy because I can imagine Deadlock just pulling weird shenanigans to avoid telling anyone about why he feels weird like jumping out a window. I imagine that the sparkling is very smol in him, so he doesn't visibly notice.
Eventually, on a solo mission, Deadlock begins getting contractions. He immediately scuttles off to a cave to give birth, which wasn't as painful given that the sparkling turned out to be the size of his palm at birth. Except now he has a whole-ass child to take care of, and the red on them reminds Deadlock of a certain medic.
(Feel free to go ham on this. I'd add more, but it's 1:30 in the morning and I gotta go to bed. Enjoy the crumbs)
WoOh little sparklings, i've seen little sparklings around, it's kind of adorable.
I love pregnant Deadlock so much actually. Since he doesn't show, he has no idea he's pregnant until he starts to give birth. mhmmm the little sparklet slips out of him easily, which would've been a relief if that wasn't a sparkling in his hand, holy shit. Deadlock has no choice but to come back with a sparkling cradled a little too close to his chest, trying to hide it from the others for as long as he can.
He now has to set off on a mission to hand the sparkling off to its sire because there is no way Deadlock can keep it around for too long. Though I can imagine Deadlock doing pretty well caring for it, all things considered. Or at least, it's alive and doesn't cry all the time anymore, that means he's doing something right.
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dawngen · 11 months
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Suntuft, as promised, orchestrated an elaborate plan to ensure that no one were to suspect her sister was pregnant. Over the moons, as they drifted like snowfall into leaf-bare, she demanded more and more of Brightstorm's time, firm and adamant on needing her assistance with every little thing. From fetching moss for her to drink from, to needing a warm body to cuddle, Suntuft insisted that since she was a single parent without a mate's assistance, it only made sense that Brightstorm helped her as her only sister.
For moons, Brightstorm battled gratefulness and jealousy, paw-in-paw.
Why could she have not been smarter? How could she not have thought twice about getting so close to Eagleburn? He was so kind, gentle, considerate--but he was not her mate. He was not Bayspots, who remained distant and cool in conversation to her.
Even Eagleburn noticed first when her pregnancy began to really develop and sensed something amiss. The sickness of her last pregnancy came back with vengeance, and it took every last bit of effort from her and Suntuft to avoid Eagleburn's keen sense for detail. Hunting patrols were performed alone, on the excuse that she would be hunting longer and for her sister. Border patrols were politely turned down by Suntuft, who claimed Brightstorm was more valued in camp, and that they had plenty of other warriors to take her place.
Eventually, she began to simply hide in the nursery.
Until it was time.
"Suntuft--"
Moons had been long, and much as she had yearned for this day, anxiety spiked through her blood as the familiar contractions tightened her gut and sent stabbing pain through her. Nudging Suntuft with a paw, her sister, sound asleep with her two bundles nestled close, instantly roused.
"I'm up, I'm up--"
Shaking sleep out of her head, when her kits began to mewl, Suntuft calmed them with a quick lick to each of them. They were only a week old, but already full of energy. Envy lanced through Brightstorm as she looked at them, feeling the loss of this precious privilege already. This would be the last time her kits would be so close to her.
"Go." Jolting from her melancholy when Suntuft bumped her backend with her head, Brightstorm stepped away. "Just as we practiced, go to the hollow oak, and I'll meet you there."
Suntuft lifted her head, peering out the nursery. It was only her and her sister, the other expectant queens still in the warriors' den.
"StarClan must have blessed us this moon to have the kits come now," murmured Suntuft, gazing appreciatively at the moon in the sky, and silently thanking it for keeping their clanmates unaware.
"Now," she hissed, headbutting Brightstorm again, "Go! You can make it."
Uncertain and afraid, so many emotions competing to rise to the surface, Brightstorm tucked back her ears and lowered her tail as another contraction sent her scurrying off, darting through the camp shadows. Behind her, she could distantly heard Suntuft digging up her collection of herbs from the back of the nursery, and as she ran, Brightstorm swore she felt something observing her.
Shaking off the feeling, she raced onward, praying fervently to StarClan to ensure the safety of her kits. She didn't care if this birth claimed her--that much felt deserved for bringing these kits in under such selfish circumstances.
***
"They're beautiful, Brightstorm."
Barely had Brightstorm managed to stay awake. Exhaustion--mental, physical, emotional, all of it--threatened her ability to remain conscious, but for this precious moment, she endured. Blinking weariness out of her eyes and forcing her mind to focus, with tired fondness, she peered down to her belly.
Four kits, healthy as could be, nuzzled and drank from her wellspring of milk, and sweet as the bonding moment was, it was bittersweet. Soon, she would have to eat the herbs Suntuft brought to stop her supply of milk, and help her carry the kits back to camp under the pretense of finding them. They were hers only here and now, under the gaze of StarClan, but soon...
Brightstorm closed her eyes, trying to keep tears at bay. Sensing her sister's distress, Suntuft, who laid against her back, comfortingly groomed her.
"We don't have to go back yet," she murmured, nuzzling her, "The night is still young and we have time."
Brightstorm nodded, and carefully settled her chin down on her paws, watching her kits squeak and squeal as they nursed from her.
"I'll be sure they stay in your life, however possible," Suntuft continued, settling her cheek against Brightstorm's shoulder, studying the bundles of fur. "We'll figure something out... Maybe one day, we can tell them the truth."
Brightstorm's heart squeezed. What truth? That her mother was disloyal, and fed them lies about their heritage to hide her shame? While she knew this was a far, distant concept, still did she already feel sick from worry, wondering what these kits would think of her if they were to ever know.
"We'll see," Brightstorm whispered, unwilling to speak ill of Suntuft's positive thinking. Drowsiness overcoming her again, nearly did she manage to nod off--until the sound of a branch splitting sent both she-cats into high alert, the kits squealing as Brightstorm jolted.
Squinting at the shadows, Brightstorm bristled, Suntuft at her back lifting up her hackles as she stood, ready to defend the nursing queen, only for both she-cats to freeze. Brightstorm felt her stomach plummet deep into the earth as a cat emerged slow from the moon-dappled shade, the scarred, black-furred tom revealing himself.
Eagleburn's sightless eyes trained upon the noisy kits.
"Those kits are mine, aren't they?"
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tum-bakery · 4 months
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I'm not much of a labor/birth kink poster, but I gotta say there's a lot of untapped potential for a character that is DEFINITELY in labor but just being very calm about it until it CANNOT BE IGNORED.
They're not really trying to hide it but no one believes that they're in labor. They're contracting, their body is NOT happy, but they don't seem like it, if they're around other people they probably even SAY "Hey... I'm pretty sure I'm in labor" but they get brushed off because they're not freaking the hell out about it.
Eventually the baby is like... coming out so it CANNOT BE IGNORED and everyone is like ":o.... why didn't you say something?"
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frownyalfred · 5 months
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Hi! This is my first time doing one of these, so I hope it's not too weird.
So I was out and about today and I was talking with my mother. She was telling me about her struggles with her stretch marks after having 4 kids. I just want to know how Bruce would feel about himself after giving birth in your fic " A Sky of Honey."
I really hope this wasn't too weird to ask. Thank you if you respond :)
That's a tough one! I know there's a lot of different approaches to stretch marks with varying levels of success (body neutrality vs "tiger stripes" vs self-hatred, etc) but I'm going to take an interesting route now on this post, if you'll humor me for a second.
Bruce absolutely already has stretch marks. Anyone carrying that much muscle (BVS Batfleck is insane) has likely done some bulking cycles where muscle growth = stretch marks, even in small quantities.
I don't think, with all of his scarring and injuries, Bruce is super insecure about how his body looks. He views it more as a tool. His face is maybe the only thing he's "vain" about (face and hair, let's say) but that's mostly for his cover.
Post-birth, I'm not certain how that will change for Bruce, or if it will at all. Does he want to look attractive for his alpha? does he value the stretch marks like any other scar? does it create some sort of gender/dynamic dysphoria for him? all good questions!!
I welcome anyone else's thoughts on this. I'm not entirely sure what will happen if/when the topic comes up in the fic.
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lazaruspiss · 1 year
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KON GOT WHAT NOW
Impregnated by a demon via stabwound. Also slade was there for smth. I dont remember that part bc he had like zero lines. Kon had both an oral birth scene and an abortion scene where he and beast boy nearly died it was wild
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cruwmo · 9 months
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new tdp season is so. well lets just say it is painfully visible when a team doesn't get enough time or money to finish something. and it's heartbreaking. i hope the strikes will be successful...
don't have much to say, just two more things
OUR CHILD????? OUR????????????? HE FUCKING DELIVERED THAT BABY VIA BLUETOOTH????????? MAGIC BABY?!?!?!?!?
AND WHY WAS THERE DEATH MULTIPLE TIMES EVERY EPISODE i gasped so loud every time like holy shit what is going on
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