That about sums it up! đ
Fanfiction writers be like:
"here's the immensely time consuming 100K word novel-length passion project I'm working on between my real life job and family! It eats up hundreds of hours of my one and only life, causes me emotional harm, and I gain basically nothing from it! Also I put it on the internet for free so anyone can read if they want. Hope you love it!" :)
This short rest takes place between chapters 6 and 7 of The Embrace of Love and Death! Catch the full fanfic here
Laeâzel had been glaring at them from across camp all afternoon, Miss Fortune noticed. That wasnât unusual by itself, but her facial expression was what caught their eye. In place of the usual disdain, she seemed to be trying to dissect them, as if they were a mystery she was trying to solve.
They suspected it had something to do with how easily theyâd gotten out of her rope bindings yesterday, as she had scowled when they remarked on her shoddy ties. Reveling in their growing confidence as a leader and fighter, they decided to give her a hard time.
âYouâre giving me a different grimace than usual, General,â they said with smug satisfaction as they ambled over to where she was whacking away at her training dummy. âIf I didnât know any better, Iâd say you canât stand the thought that Iâm better than you at something.â
âI have no idea what youâre talking about,â she said tersely without pausing in her maneuvers.
âItâs eating you up inside how quickly I got out of those ropes, isnât it? You want to know how this pathetic little soft boy did it.â
âChk. Perhaps,â she conceded.
âI could tell you, but it would be more effective to show you. Taking hostages hasnât been our style so far but any of us should be able to if the need arises.â
âYou speak sensibly.â Laeâzel lowered her fists and cocked her head, considering. âShow me.â
Miss Fortune knew that smiles didnât get far with Laeâzel, so the half-elf simply turned on their heel and walked off, beckoning her to follow with a wave.
âMeet me around the fire pit. Iâm going to see if the others would also like a demonstration.â
Shadowheart and Astarion both accepted the invitation, though Miss Fortune suspected their primary interest was to watch Laeâzel get humbled. Gale declined as if he found the whole idea of physically binding another human repulsive. Seeing as he could accomplish the same effect with magic they couldnât quite blame him.
âAll right, Iâm going to demonstrate on you first, Laeâzel. So you can see for yourself I know what Iâm doing. Hands behind your back,â Miss Fortune instructed once everyone had assembled.
Laeâzel crossed her arms in front of her chest, unmovable as a boulder.
âI guess you donât want to learn after all. False alarm, friends, letâs disperse,â they said to the others, fatigue creeping into their voice.
âChk. Fine,â Laeâzel relented.
âA wise choice, General.â Miss Fortune uncoiled the length of rope theyâd grabbed from their tent, silently lamenting that they didnât have silk cord. She would never be able to rip through that with brute strength. Instead, they had to make do with the limited bounty of what theyâd scavenged so far on their adventure.
The half-elf made quick work of cinching the rope around her wrists in a tight figure eight pattern. âThe trick - which you failed to do with me and Astarion - is to ensure the rope sits below the thumb joint,â they explained. Shadowheart and Astarion sidled over and leaned in to observe.
Miss Fortune continued wrapping the rope tightly before double-tying the knot higher up, well out of the reach of the Githyankiâs fingers. âYou donât want to leave any room for prying fingers to find purchase, or youâll come back to an empty chair, room, what have you. Normally Iâd bind the ankles too, but this will suffice for a beginnerâs demonstration. Now, try to get out.â
She tried grasping at the rope first with her fingers, then attempted to wriggle her wrists loose. Her face contorted with rage and she began to swear when she realized she could find no purchase with her bindings. Miss Fortune took several steps back, crossing their arms over their chest and grinning like a fox who had just snared a rabbit. They took sadistic pleasure watching her struggle for once.
âJust imagine if I had tied your arms behind a tree or perhaps to a chair,â Miss Fortune mused cruelly. They chose to mimic Astarionâs languid pose and bored expression, pretending to inspect their nails as they spoke. âIn that scenario I would have bound you at the waist and ankles as well, and youâd be a lost cause by that point. And if I really wanted to make sure you stayed put, Iâd gag you too. Maybe even tie your ankles and hands together. Can never be too careful, can we?â
âTskâva, youâve made your point,â Laeâzel spat, still wriggling wildly like a worm freshly dug up from the ground. âUntie me now!â
Miss Fortune drew closer, their expression darkening as they stared down their nose at her. âI donât think I have yet. Iâm tired of you calling me a âsoft boyâ like itâs something I should be ashamed of. Keep it up and next time I tie you up, Iâll leave you like that. Do we have an understanding?â
Loathing danced in the Githyankiâs eyes as she glowered up at them. Her shoulder looked about ready to dislocate as she continued to struggle to make progress with the ropes, as if popping her arm out of its socket were preferable to conceding defeat. Knowing her, it probably was.
âRemember I donât heal stupidity, Laeâzel,â Shadowheart called out.
Miss Fortune looked over their shoulder to shoot a grin Shadowheartâs way. Their eyes locked and she nodded, returning the grin with a wicked smile of her own. The half-elf rogue glimpsed over at Astarion as well, and their chest felt a touch lighter when they saw approval in his ruby gaze.
âWe have an understanding,â Laeâzel rasped at last, tearing Miss Fortuneâs attention away from the vampire.
âWonderful!â Miss Fortune made quick work of untying her, making sure to step back quickly with the rope stretched between their hands to create a barrier in case her anger got the best of her. The warrior stretched her arms and rubbed her sore wrists but otherwise made no move to lunge for her antagonist.
With the demonstration-turned-warning complete, Miss Fortune spent a while longer showing everyone how to replicate what they did to Laeâzel on each other until everyone felt confident they could remember how to do it on their own.
âClass dismissed,â Miss Fortune announced. âI hope you all enjoyed rope play for beginners. Now I believe Astarion and I have a date in the woods with whatever animal is unlucky enough to encounter us. See you later, ladies,â Miss Fortune added with a wave as they casually sauntered off. Astarion followed close behind.
When they were out of earshot, the half-elf leaned in and murmured mischievously to the vampire âIf you play your cards right, someday I might give you the more advanced lesson.â
Astarion guffawed in delight. âIs that a promise or a threat, little bird?â
âBoth.â
Chapter summary: Laeâzel puts Astarion and Miss Fortune through the paces, training them relentlessly until they learn to work together better. Things get flirtatious between the rogues as they get to know each other better, and Shadowheart puts Miss Fortune on the spot to reveal their past.
Read the full chapter on AO3! https://archiveofourown.org/works/64221298/chapters/166716742
Excerpt:
âItâs time for the two of you to start warming up,â the warrior commanded as soon as she noticed Miss Fortune was done eating. There was no room for bargaining or arguing in her tone. âYou will go to the clearing, you will stretch every muscle, do push-ups, sit-ups, and squats to exhaustion twice, and lastly you will run until I decide to come stop you. Then, I will train you until I am satisfied that youâve learned the lesson at hand.â
Miss Fortune could hear Astarion complaining under his breath the whole way to the clearing, and when they arrived he turned on them with a huff.
âWhy donât you just leave me at camp to watch the cook pot?â He demanded, waving his hands wildly. âWhy put us through all this just to keep me on the road with you?â
âIs that what you want? To stay in camp?â They asked as they began to stretch their arms and shoulders.
âWhaâI didnât say that,â the vampire countered, beginning his own stretches. âItâs just, wouldnât that be easier?â
âAnd miss out on your witty banter and gorgeous face all day? Doesnât sound easier to me,â Miss Fortune grinned.
âOh, well in that caseâŚâ Astarion feigned sheepishness, brushing a curl behind his pointy ear. âGlad to see someone around here has good taste.â
âAnd you would know after last night, wouldnât you? How good my taste is?â Miss Fortune dropped to the ground to begin stretching the lower half of their body. They chanced a quick glance up at the vampire and noticed an almost imperceptible shudder of ecstasy as he presumably recalled the taste of their blood. The half-elf had to look away quickly, hoping he didnât catch sight of the hot blush razing across their cheeks.
âAha! How delightful. Yes, you were scrumptious, my sweet. But to whom am I speaking today? Because itâs certainly not the same sad little bird who was ready to curl up and die last night.â Astarion followed suit, practically bending himself in half with seemingly no effort. Miss Fortune tried unsuccessfully not to let their eyes - or mind - drift too much at the sight. There was no denying that he had a great body, and the incredible flexibility had them feeling some type of way.
I don't know how else to be with someone. No matter how much I'd like to.
I used the photomode mod to take a look at Astarion's love confession scene. Normally, the camera is focused on Tav when choosing what to say.
These are the expressions Astarion is making off-screen while you are hovering over dialogue options.
Hey there! I hadnât shared this illustration yet, and I was super excited to finally show it to youđâ¨đŽđâ¤ď¸
*struggles while writing* i suck and writing is hard
*remembers some ppl use ai* i am a creative force. i am uncorrupted by theft and indolence. i am on a journey to excellence. it is my duty to keep taking joy in creating.
You can also read it on AO3
The overgrown ruins near the nautiloid crash site had nearly become home to five fresh corpses seeing as Miss Fortune and their companions had barely survived the encounter with the bandits occupying it. The worst of their injuries belonged to Gale, who had been practically been snapped in two by a barbarian. It was another defeat in the half-elfâs recent losing streak, and Laeâzelâs words from the previous evening about them being weak and a liability eviscerated their confidence.
The mood was tense at supper; nobody seemed willing to break the sullen silence as they tore into the turkey Laeâzel had killed on their way back to camp. As usual, Miss Fortune noted that Astarion, seated next to them, was merely pushing the food around on his plate. At one point he seemed to take the tiniest of bites, yet didnât seem to chew or swallow. He appeared more focused on the raw gash splitting Miss Fortuneâs lip than on his supper, and they resolved to ask about it someday soon. Despite the throbbing pain in their mouth, the half-elf forced themselves to eat double helpings lest they provoke the Gith into giving another lecture.
As it turned out, the extra meat wasnât enough to earn them a silent retreat. When they finished up and stood to go lick their emotional wounds and rest their sore, freshly healed body in the comfort of their tent, they heard Laeâzel clear her throat from where she sat.
âYouâre not going anywhere,â she barked. âThat goes for you too, Astarion,â she added as the pale elf attempted to sneak away unnoticed.
âAnd why is that, Gith?â Miss Fortune sighed, world-weary.
âWe all nearly died in that disastrous skirmish today, and the blame rests on both your shoulders.â The warrior rose, stalking over to where the pair of them stood. âNeither of you think before you act. You both rush in, daggers flailing, without a single plan in your vacant skulls.â
âOuch, you wound me, Laeâzel,â Astarion sneered. âI do have a plan: to murder everyone and everything that needs killing.â
She pointed a finger into his chest. âThatâs the kind of plan that gets you killed. And us along with you.â She turned her attention to Miss Fortune. âAnd you. Youâre a pretty face with a silver tongue dripping sweet words. People like you. You can talk your way into and out of situations with ease, which is why I havenât gutted you and taken over as leader yet.â
âUh, thanks?â Miss Fortune said, rubbing the back of their head in confusion.
âIâm not finished. Your fighting style lacks discipline, and a freshly hatched Gith has a better head for battle tactics than you. We donât need two rogues skulking around everywhere. If you had half a brain, you would leave the pale one at camp to watch the cook pot.â
âNow you wait just a-â Astarion began to object, but Miss Fortune cut in.
âThatâs not an option!â they shouted, their stomach twisting itself into knots. They couldnât begin to explain why, but Astarion had become an indispensable presence for them in these short few days. They didnât always see eye to eye, but the half-elf enjoyed his witty banter as they slogged around, and for whatever reason he was a calming presence for them. The view from behind was nothing to complain about either.
Taking a deep breath, they continued in a quieter voice: âOne surprise attack can cause grievous injury to a foe; two could be lethal. Thereâs strength in numbers, so why should we throw the advantage of two stealthy fighters away? We can slit peopleâs throats before they even notice weâre there. Surely you see how valuable that could be, âGeneral.ââ
Laeâzel must have noticed the steely resolve in Miss Fortuneâs body language and realized they wouldnât budge on the issue. And if she bristled at the âGeneralâ jab she didnât let on. âHe stays, then. But you must learn to work together. You speak of two rogues felling opponents before they can raise alarm? That doesnât happen by chance, istik. You must get to know each other on and off the battlefield. You must think and move as one.â
âIf I may,â Shadowheart interjected. âAlthough I mended the worst of his broken spine, Gale should rest for a few days before I would consider him fit to fight again.â
âAnd although I cannot explain the phenomenon at this juncture, it would appear that our parasites remain in some sort of state of stasis,â Gale added from where he rested at an incline, his face pained and glistening with sweat. âBy all of the extensive accounts Iâve read on the matter we should be mind flayers by now, and yet none of us have experienced a single symptom to indicate that such a fate is on the horizon. Of course haste is still of the utmost importance, but with nary a tentacle sprouted between the pack of us Iâd say we could spare a few days.â
âSo it would seem,â Laeâzel considered. âIt is settled then. We remain at camp until Gale is recovered, and I will train you two relentlessly. It begins now. Unsheathe your daggers.â
Astarion and Miss Fortune exchanged glances, each daring the other to protest. Neither did. Instead, they did as instructed.
âFirst, you must watch what the other is capable of. Learn each otherâs strengths and weaknesses. Miss Fortune, you will begin.â She gestured to the practice dummy they had found in an abandoned merchantâs cart along the road. âYou will initiate combat repeatedly. Astarion, you will note hi-â she paused, correcting herself âtheir speed, their mannerisms, everything you can. And then, you will switch. I will merely watch tonight, but tomorrow I will instruct. Do you understand?â
âSounds simple enough, but are you sure this is necessary?â Astarion asked coolly.
âIf you like your guts inside your body, it is.â
âWhen you put it that way, letâs begin!â Astarion laughed nervously.
The pale elf stood watching with his hands on his hips as Miss Fortune ran through the exercise over and over. Tonight, they practiced a stealthy approach where they crouched down and drew closer to the practice dummy as quietly as possible before delivering a swift, sudden strike.
The sun was beginning to set, leaving pockets of darkness Miss Fortune could step or roll between to stay obscured. Fresh as theyâd been to the thieves guild, theyâd done several jobs for them working the streets. It was those experiences they tried to conjure memories of to guide their movements. But even so, those jobs were mostly to cut purse strings or extract information. Prior to being kidnapped theyâd only killed one person before. And that first kill had been left with so many stab wounds the detectives hadnât been able to identify the body. So while theyâd excelled at stealth, their sneak attacks were guesswork at best. They had no idea where to stab a body to do the most damage in one go.
Over and over again Miss Fortune retreated, snuck their way over to the practice dummy, and jabbed. They tried to ignore the nerves that came with being assessed as they realized Astarion and Laeâzelâs eyes never left them. When sweat began to drench their shirt they simply removed it. Goose flesh dimpled their skin and a shiver went down their spine from the sudden cold. It wasnât until about five rounds after the half-elf thought they couldnât take it anymore that Laeâzel told them to stop.
âEnough. Astarion, report. What are their strengths and weaknesses?â Laeâzel demanded.
Astarion crossed his arms over his chest. âYouâre nimble, darling, and you have a good eye for keeping to the shadows. But you have no idea where to aim your blade,â he said, sounding bored.
âThatâs not what Iâm used to hearing,â Miss Fortune smirked, flicking their gaze briefly downwards toward their crotch and back.
âOh ha ha, what a time to develop a sense of humor.â Astarion rolled his eyes, then sauntered over to where the half-elf stood. âAllow me to show you.â He stood right behind them, his breath in their ear as he drew a sharp finger across their throat. âIâm sure youâre acquainted with every rogueâs favorite spot, the throat slit.â
Miss Fortune became aware of his scent for the first time - a combination of earth, citrus, and something else they couldnât quite place. They found it utterly alluring. âYou smell good,â was all they could think to say.
âI know, darling, I missed my calling as a perfumer. Do try not to let my aroma distract you,â the pale elf chided as he moved his hand slightly to the left, nearing the side of their neck. Miss Fortune visibly tensed, waiting. He mimed a stab-and-jerk motion to the side of their Adamâs apple. âA jab like this and theyâll bleed out in moments, gurgling helplessly on their own blood.â He moved again, now hovering a hand over their eyes. âA quick stab through the eye will render a brain quite useless. You could achieve a similar effect jabbing through the back of their neck, though your blade is more likely to get stuck if you donât know what youâre doing - and you clearly donât, not yet.â Next his hand went to their ribs, and as his fingertips brushed against their exposed skin Miss Fortune shivered; was Astarion cold to the touch, or was their sweat-soaked body merely playing tricks on them?
âA quick jab between the ribs will puncture a lung and theyâll be unable to call for help,â Astarion continued. Even talking about murder, the manâs voice was so sensual and calming, somehow soft and gravelly at the same time. Miss Fortune realized it would take a great deal of willpower to not just agree to anything he asked for when he used that voice. The pale elfâs hands traced along their ribs down to their lower back before miming another double jab. âThose darling kidneys back here donât like to be prodded either; while this wonât bring as swift a death as other places, rest assured your target will not be long for this world without those organs.â
The cold feeling dissipated as Astarion stopped touching them and continued the demonstration elsewhere on their body. âNobody expects a thrust to the armpit, yet you can get a lovely bloodletting from that most unguarded place,â he said as he once again moved his hand to mime thrusting into the crook of their arm. âAnd of course, darling, thereâs always a good stab upwards at the crotch. But weâre not on intimate enough terms yet for me to show you that one,â he teased, stepping away.
âIf youâre done with your demonstration, itâs your turn Astarion,â Laeâzel interjected.
The pair of rogues switched places. Miss Fortune felt ill at ease standing with Laeâzel. They blocked her presence out of their mind, instead putting all their focus on watching Astarion run through the same maneuvers theyâd just finished. The half-elf noted with approval how gracefully he moved as he flitted across the clearing. Almost like a cat, his feet hardly seemed to touch the ground at times. They were certain his stealthiness surpassed theirs. When it came time to strike, however, Miss Fortune noticed two things: he seemed to hesitate for a split moment deciding where to strike, and his strikes were surprisingly weak given his athletic physique. His build was slighter than theirs but his muscles were better defined, so the revelation was baffling. They relayed these thoughts to both Laeâzel and Astarion when it came time to report their findings.
âIâm merely holding back, darling, wouldnât want to intimidate you if weâre going to be forced to work together,â Astarion sniffed, though his eyes darted to the side as he spoke.
âEnough,â Laeâzel cut in. âI agree with your assessments of each other. Youâre dismissed for the night. Rest up, I wonât go easy on you tomorrow.â She left without waiting for a response, leaving the rogues alone in the clearing at the edge of camp.
âWell, this is an interesting development,â Miss Fortune tested the waters.
âMm, yes, I suppose it is,â Astarion drawled, once again sounding bored.
âIâm gonna go wash up in the river; care to join me?â
âIâll pass, little bird. Iâve got my own needs to see to.â
âUnderstandable,â Miss Fortune said with a smile, trying to mask their disappointment. âPerhaps Iâll catch you around the fire after?â
âPerhaps,â Astarion said with a noncommittal wave of his hand as he turned to leave.
The first thing Miss Fortune did when they got back from the river was stop by Galeâs tent to see how he was feeling. They felt a pang of guilt when they realized heâd already turned in for the night. It had been a jolt to their nervous system watching the barbarian bandit smash his back against their knee. They could still hear the sickening snap of his spine, feel the erratic racing of their heart as they feared for their new friendâs life. Laeâzel had been right. They had bickered with Astarion over their approach and wound up alerting the group to their presence, effectively handing over the advantage. Gale was in this sorry state because of them, and now theyâd have to stew in their guilt a little longer before they could properly apologize.
Miss Fortune recognized that familiar dark, heavy fog rolling through their brain, and they thought of the other night when Astarion barged in on them furiously jerking off in order to earn enough peace for a night of sleep. Remembered his words of how so-called normal people handled insomnia and decided to try reading the book theyâd nabbed from the ruins that day.
And so it was that Astarion returned to camp to find Miss Fortune stretched out on their stomach by the fire, brow furrowed as they stared down at a mildewy tome.
âAh, I see youâre picking up a new hobby,â the pale elf interrupted smugly. âBorrowed a book from Gale, did you? This one has seen better days. I would have thought the wizard would take better care of his most prized possessions.â
Miss Fortune looked up from the ancient text. âI grabbed this from the ruins today - it looked cool, butâŚIâm having a hard time reading it. Seems like the writing is very old.â
âHmm, mind if I have a look?â He asked as he glided down to sit beside them. Miss Fortune pushed themselves up and handed the book over. He snapped the book shut to observe the cover and looked as if someone had doused him with icy cold water. âThe Curse of the Vampyr?! What in the hells possessed you to pick up a book like this?â
âIâŚwhatâs wrong with it?â
Within moments the calm, charming mask was back in place. âOh, nothing really, this is just much too advanced for a novice reader like yourself. Tell you what: why donât I take this off your hands, and you can borrow one of my storybooks? Iâm sure I have something more suitable. I might even have one with pictures.â
ââŚSure, sounds great,â Miss Fortune said suspiciously. They could tell something was off about this situation, they just couldnât tell what. âThank you.â
âOf course, of course, anything for my favorite traveling companion.â His face was too perfectly composed, only deepening the half-elfâs unease. They decided to change the subject. âOn another note, Astarion, Iâve noticed that you havenât really eaten much of anything the last few days.â
âHave you now?â
âI struggle with that, too. Growing up I sometimes was purposely not given food for days at a time so I could be thinner, and even now it can be difficult not to do it to myself.â
ââŚI see.â His face was unreadable, as if resolved to give nothing away.
âYou donât have to share anything you donât want to. Just know that I get it and Iâm here if you want to talk. But keeping our strength up is more important right now than a thin waist. Thatâs what I keep trying to tell myself, anyway.â
âHeh, youâre sweet. Thank you. Iâm sure Iâll be up for sharing in due time, little bird. But for now, let me fetch you a new book.â
He rose, taking The Curse of the Vampyr with him into his tent. He returned moments later, a fresher, smaller text in his hand. âHere,â he said, holding it out. âThis oneâs got dashing knights and the like, should be far easier to get through.â
âHopefully it will help quiet my mind,â Miss Fortune sighed as they took the offered book.
âWell, I suppose youâve always got your old fallback plan if it doesnât, hmm?â His grin was nearly predatory.
âHey, whatever works, right?â Miss Fortune shot back, refusing once again to give him leverage over them for that. âThanks again for the book. Iâd better get to quieting my mind one way or another. Sweet dreams,â they said as they got up, rolling their bedroll back up. They spared one last backward glance on their way to the tent to find Astarion watching them go. In the glow of the fire, they noticed a deep sadness in his eyes that matched the brokenness Miss Fortune felt inside. They felt an invisible tug to go back over to him but ignored it - it was too soon, they reminded themselves.
âSweet dreams,â Astarion replied before he, too, got up to put out the fire and return to his tent.
Sweet dreams were not in the cards for Miss Fortune, however. That night they thrashed wildly in their bedroll, sweaty and afraid, as visions flitted through their mind. They dreamt they were stuck in a bird cage with nothing but a bed clad in the finest silk sheets. As the scene panned out they were one of hundreds of people trapped in a field of birdcages. A pair of giant hands methodically opened each cage, removed the person, and either choked the life out of them or outright snapped their necks. The walls of Miss Fortuneâs mind reverberated with the sickening sounds of bones snapping and people gurgling, fighting for breath. As each one died the giant discarded them unceremoniously into a pile until they had to crane their neck to see to the top of the pile of corpses. Their dream self searched the whole cage for a secret exit, finding none. Next they tried to pick the lock of their cage but their fingers didnât work right and they kept dropping their lockpick. The hands reached their cage and the half-elf tried to flee only to find the silk bedsheets had come to life, wrapping themselves around their wrists and ankles. They were bound tight as the hand reached in for them, the giantâs rumbling laugh shaking through their whole skeleton.
âDo you want a quick death or a slow one?â it boomed.
âQuick!â Miss Fortune shouted, eliciting more peals of booming thunderous laughter.
âYou donât deserve a quick death. Request denied.â And a hand closed around their windpipe.
Read the full chapter on AO3: https://archiveofourown.org/works/64221298/chapters/166132147
âWere you about to-â they cried out.
âShhh! Keep your voice down. Itâs not what it looks like,â he pleaded. There was a haunted look on his face as he shuffled back from where he crouched, his hands held up in a placating gesture. âI wasnât going to hurt you! I just needed - well, blood.â
âSo you came to cull the weakest of us first. I understand. I didnât realize you were a vampire, but in hindsight the signs were all there.â They hugged their knees, resigned to their fate. After all, what hope did they have of fighting off a vampire at night in such a tight space?
âYou find a vampire in your tent and your first reaction is numb resignation?!â He asked, incredulous.
âDid you want me to be mad?â
âYes! No! I-I donât know!â He paused for a few moments. âThere is a lot to unpack here. You and I are going to have a long talk later about your lack of regard for your own life. I need you alive, you know. We all do,â he said with a huff. âSecondly, I didnât come to you because youâre the weakest but because I thought youâd be the most understanding. The least likely to stake me on sight.
âAnd lastly: What do you mean you didnât know?!â Astarion whisper-shouted, gesturing wildly. âAfter you made a big show about reading that book about âvampyrsâ where you knew Iâd spot you? Or the hint you dropped about how I havenât been eating? You shivered at my cold, undead touch earlier. I thought for sure Iâd been found out and you were working your way up to blackmailing me o-orâŚdriving me out.â
âPure coincidence,â they shrugged. âWhy didnât you just tell me if you thought Iâd understand?â
âIt was still a big risk to take, you know, when a wrong guess would spell my demise.â He shook his head. âNo, I needed you to trust me. And you can trust me.â
Miss Fortune considered his words for several moments. Studied his face. The arch of his white eyebrows, raised in concern. The deep set eyes, wide with fear. The way his nostrils flared and his mouth hung slightly agape. The man was terrified, ready to flee at a momentâs notice and never return.
ââŚI do,â they said at last. âI trust you.â
Astarionâs simple plan
Welcome to the first chapter of my fanfic, âThe Embrace of Love and Deathâ! When rogues Astarion and Miss Fortune (OC) get abducted from Baldurâs Gate and infected with mind flayer tadpoles, they both become âconveniently lostâ from their troubled homes. As they grapple with their past traumas they find companionship, healing, and eventually love and renewed purpose in each other. Will getting a mind flayer parasite inserted into their eyes wind up being the best thing that ever happened to them? This slow burn tale of romance, sex, and healing will reveal the answer to that in due time.
Prefer to read on AO3? Gotchu covered right here:
https://archiveofourown.org/works/64221298#main
The sun was beginning to set on a day so bad that calling it a nightmare would be about as euphemistic as calling a raging owlbear a hungry house cat. One moment Miss Fortune had been trailing their mark through an alley in the slums of Baldurâs Gate, and the next they were abducted into a nautiloid, strapped in a mind flayer pod with a tadpole burrowing into their brain. Theyâd met that green woman, rescued a cleric named Shadowheart from her mind flayer pod, fought screeching imps, and then crashed the whole damned ship into who-knows-where. They had no idea how they survived the ordeal, but the screaming pain in their head didnât give them much hope that their luck would last.
Theyâd never even been outside of Baldurâs Gate before, and now they were lost in the wilderness with two strangers. Theyâd lost sight of the green woman after the crash, found Shadowheart outside, and met a handsome, effeminate high elf with blindingly pale skin whoâd tried to slit their throat on sight. The elfâs name was Astarion, and while theyâd talked him down from violence and convinced him their odds of survival were better together, the half-elf rogue resolved to keep an eye on him. Not that they could fully blame him for the attempted murder; had the roles been reversed, they probably would have done the same. But still, they much preferred their blood inside their body.
Miss Fortune couldnât for the life of them understand why their new companions were already looking to them like some kind of leader. While they were used to people gravitating to them in more mundane settings due to their good looks and charismatic persona, those skills hardly felt useful out here. What the hells did they know about anything real? Theyâd have to fake it, they realized.
âSunâs going down, and this spot looks as safe as any to set up camp,â they said with feigned confidence. The companions nodded, set down their packs. Still they looked at Miss Fortune, waiting for instructions. âErrâŚdo either of you know how to start a fire?â
âGods, this is hopeless!â cried Shadowheart. âHave you never camped before?! No matter, Iâve done it plenty. Watch and learn, gentlemen, because I wonât be doing this by myself every night. Iâm not your camp mother.â
Shadowheart walked the others through the process of setting up camp, showed them how to catch fish from the river and impale them on sticks to cook over the fire she started. Miss Fortune stumbled over their actions, and Astarion was even more helpless - but they managed, and they had places to sleep and food to eat by the time the sun winked out of the sky.
âSo, Miss Fortune is an interesting name,â Shadowheart said cautiously between bites of fish and the other rations in their packs. âDid you come up with that on your own?â
âI did,â they replied. âI donât like to take myself too seriously.â
Astarion snorted. âReally? I never would have guessed.â
âWhy âMiss Fortuneâ if youâreâŚwell, you know,â Shadowheart pressed, gesturing to their masculine body.
The half-elf was about 185 centimeters tall and lanky to the point of looking underfed, but their lean frame had the buds of muscles beginning to form from the last couple moons theyâd spent running with the cityâs thieves guild. Their tan skin was sprinkled with freckles over the slight bent of their nose and high, prominent cheekbones. They had raven-black hair with violet highlights that was shaved at the sides while the long top was pulled into a tight bun at the back of their head. A purple-inked tattoo of three swallows swooped out of their hairline, fluttering across their left temple, and despite the harrowing day theyâd had, the berry-colored lip stain and angled purple eyeshadow they donned each morning remained fairly well intact.
Miss Fortune worked hard to cut a visage that danced the line between masculine and feminine, though they often found themselves shackled with the ill-fitting label of âmanâ by strangers who could only see the world in terms of this or that. All of which was more than the rogue was willing to explain to someone theyâd just met.
âIt suits me,â they said instead. âTo my foes, an encounter with me spells their misfortune. And to my friends, wellâŚI can only hope they feel fortunate to know me. And besides, everyone knows luck is a lady.â
âI can go with that,â Shadowheart agreed. âIf not for you, I would have had the misfortune of staying stuck in that mind flayer pod. Though I hope you and our pale friend here will be able to hold your own out here. You both strike me as pampered city boys, judging by your lack of survival skills and soft hands.â
âIâm a city person, yes, but I would hardly consider myself pampered,â Miss Fortune replied. âNot everyone works with their hands, you know.â
âYes, some of us work with our minds,â Astarion chimed in. âIâm a magistrate back in the city. All terribly boring work I assure you, though I can handle myself with a dagger.â
Having finished their fish and rations, Miss Fortune looked over at Astarion as he spoke and noticed him slowly pushing his food around the plate without eating.
âFood not up to your standards, your honor?â Miss Fortune jabbed. âIâll take whatever you donât want.â
âOh, by all means enjoy,â Astarion said, handing the plate over. âThis is hardly the fare Iâm used to.â
âSo, how about you, Shadowheart?â Miss Fortune changed the subject while shoveling Astarionâs food into their mouth. âYou mentioned youâre a cleric - you from The Gate?â
âI am, and Iâll be headed back not a moment after we find a cure. Iâve something very important waiting for me back home.â Shadowheartâs facial expression darkened; Miss Fortune sensed it was a touchy subject and wondered if it had anything to do with that strange artifact she carried. Sheâd been dodgy when they asked her about it after they reunited on land.
âImpatient to get back to a lover, perhaps?â they jested.
âI donât see how thatâs your business, but no, and weâll leave it at thatâ she replied.
âAll right, all right, we girls all have our secrets,â they said, crossing their legs and miming tucking an invisible strand of hair behind their ear. âAnyway, thanks for showing us how to set up camp. Iâve got cleanup.â
The trio each went their separate ways after dinner; Shadowheart and Astarion heading to their respective tents, Miss Fortune down to the river bank with the dirty dishes and a rag. As the half-elf knelt by the river scrubbing away, their senses were assaulted by all the unusual sounds and smells surrounding them. They were used to the din of pedestrians day and night, the hawking of vendors and clopping of horse hooves on cobblestones. There were always sounds and scents in the city, and even when they were unpleasant their presence was oddly comforting. Out here in the dark with all these new sensations, they found themselves feeling utterly alone and insignificant.
Another familiar and unwelcome sensation began to coalesce at the edges of their consciousness, as if their head were filling up with a swarm of angry bees. It happened often enough that the half-elf knew they didnât have long before their mind assaulted them and robbed them of rational thought. They quickly finished their cleanup duties and rushed back to camp, placing everything in a neat stack by their packs. By this point, Miss Fortuneâs lips and the tip of their nose had started to tingle, their chest felt tight, and the buzzing feeling in their head had intensified to a dull roar.
This canât be happening right now, they thought to themselves. Please, please not now. For a devout person this would have been the time to begin praying, but Miss Fortune knew it was pointless; no god had ever deigned to answer before.
Perceived danger lurked in every corner, every shadow of the camp. Frantic and woozy, the half-elf began to search for a place that would be out of both Astarion and Shadowheartâs line of sight. They ducked behind a large rock that seemed to fit the bill and let their trembling legs give out beneath them. Crumpled into a ball, their breath grew shallow and ragged as a world of nightmares clawed into their thoughts.
Everything is terrible. Iâm going to die out here, Miss Fortuneâs thoughts screamed at them. I canât do this, I canât survive whatever those monsters did to me on the ship. Weâll never find a cure. Iâm going to turn into a grotesque mind flayer, and thereâs nothing I can do to stop it. My life is over. Iâm going to die. Iâm going to die. Iâm going to die! And I canât do anything to stop itâŚIâm too weakâŚIâm going to die all alone. Utterly unloved. And nobody will miss me. Worst of all, I deserve this. Iâve never done anything worthwhile with this pathetic life of mine, not once in these miserable 28 years.
Tears rushed out and streamed down their face in an ugly, snotty mess as the panic fully gripped their mind. A gulping cry escaped their lips in defiance of their efforts to fall apart quietly, which only made them wish to hide somewhere further away from their new acquaintances.
âIsâŚsomething the matter?â they barely heard a cautious manâs voice call out. âWhy, youâre positively shaking!â
Miss Fortune buried their face in their knees. âPlease, donât look at me,â they sobbed.
âIâŚshould I leave?â Astarion asked.
âGo ahead. IâmâŚfine,â the half-elf lied.
âIâm not stupid, you are clearly not fine.â
âThe Maâmy old boss always told me Iâm just overly dramatic. Iâm having a dramatic episode, as she used to call it.â
Heâs going to hate you now too, the negative thoughts intruded. Not even a full day in and youâve shown just how weak and pathetic you are.
Astarion stood there in dumbfounded silence as he watched Miss Fortune gulp for air, seemingly unsure whether to approach or wipe his hands of the whole situation and return to his tent.
âYou should try this thing called breathing,â he called out eventually. âIn, outâŚin, outâŚsurely you know how it works.â
While the tone was condescending, it struck a cord. Miss Fortune focused on their breath between sobs, inhaling slowly through their nose and exhaling through their mouth. It took several long moments, but the angry bees began to fade and the maelstrom of negative thoughts receded along with them. Their chest still felt tight, their eyes ached, and as the last of the panic ebbed they were left with the usual crushing exhaustion; the usual collateral damage when they lost a war with their mind. Their body posture slackened as they heaved a deep sigh.
âIâm sorry you had to see me like this,â they mumbled into their knees. âIâm not usually this weak, I swear. Itâs just been a hell of a day.â
ââŚyou should get some rest,â Astarion replied, his voice deadpan and unreadable. âIâm not feeling tired just yet, so Iâll keep watch over you and the camp.â
Miss Fortune rose unsteadily to their feet, lurching to the side as their knees threatened to buckle. They recalled the flash of steel against their throat hours earlier; were they less drained from their mindâs attack they would have laughed at the irony of his offer.
âThank you, Iâll feel better knowing youâre watching over us,â they lied instead. âGoodnight, Astarion.â
âGoodnight, Miss Fortune,â he replied coolly.
It was all the half-elf could do to keep from hurting themselves as they collapsed onto their bedroll. Despite their misgivings about Astarion, they were too tired to keep their eyes open. And if he slit their throat in the night, well, they probably deserved it anyway.
Baldurâs Gate 3 content | Astarion/Miss Fortune (OC) fanfic | occasional spooky witchy queer stuff
23 posts