[If boredom is what ails him, give it thirty minutes or more into his jog.
Though it’s a story Mignon will have never heard of, nor the general populous; of strange entities that exist within and outside the world, on the other side of the veil. Things that usually have no business mingling with the drivel of humanity. Calling them “monsters” is an insult to both sides of the coin — humans have done much, much worse to themselves, and for less than pennies on the dollar — but in those moments where a cursed miracle steps from out the other side of the fog, gains a conscience, realizes it’s accidentally materialized in the mortal realm—
But of course there are organizations that are quick to take notice.
Of course the most sensible thing to do is to run.
If there’s any justice, is that the armed scientists fast on his heels learn that a cornered fae is far more unpleasant than any werewolf, vampire, or goblin combined. He doesn’t need raw strength — just rage and curses thrown with impunity. A finger snap, a promise of retribution, and their human minds bleed straight from their orifices, bodies collapsed on the sterile, tile flooring as he flees.
By all accounts, it’s a perfect escape… with his only mistake being unaware that humans are as petty as him. Weaving a spell that will materialize him out of the facility, a shock of metal lodges into his abdomen before the incantation is completed.
He disappears from his captors’ sights, voice a howl of pain and rage as he snaps out of existence—
— And then is unceremoniously dumped into a lone alleyway as Mignon takes a sharp corner on his afternoon jog.]
Though it’s a story Mignon will have never heard of, nor the general populous; of strange entities that exist within and outside the world, on the other side of the veil. Things that usually have no business mingling with the drivel of humanity. Calling them “monsters” is an insult to both sides of the coin — humans have done much, much worse to themselves, and for less than pennies on the dollar — but in those moments where a cursed miracle steps from out the other side of the fog, gains a conscience, realizes it’s accidentally materialized in the mortal realm—
But of course there are organizations that are quick to take notice.
Of course the most sensible thing to do is to run.
If there’s any justice, is that the armed scientists fast on his heels learn that a cornered fae is far more unpleasant than any werewolf, vampire, or goblin combined. He doesn’t need raw strength — just rage and curses thrown with impunity. A finger snap, a promise of retribution, and their human minds bleed straight from their orifices, bodies collapsed on the sterile, tile flooring as he flees.
By all accounts, it’s a perfect escape… with his only mistake being unaware that humans are as petty as him. Weaving a spell that will materialize him out of the facility, a shock of metal lodges into his abdomen before the incantation is completed.
He disappears from his captors’ sights, voice a howl of pain and rage as he snaps out of existence—
— And then is unceremoniously dumped into a lone alleyway as Mignon takes a sharp corner on his afternoon jog.]
[ it's a lot, this risk and taking mignon's word about being stealthy. jeoh isn't used to trusting people, but mignon makes it a lot easier than it should be. he doesn't think it'll be too much of a problem if they get caught anyway — if his boss tries to shake mignon down for payment, jeoh will just give him the money for it instead.
keeping his hood up, jeoh's stops are quick as he approaches the park, spotting mignon immediately thanks to how tall he is. at least the park isn't too busy, what with it being so late and all. with a dumb little wave and a grin on his part, he closes some of the distance between them. ]
Hey. You look pretty good for a guy who went a few rounds tonight. I'm impressed.
keeping his hood up, jeoh's stops are quick as he approaches the park, spotting mignon immediately thanks to how tall he is. at least the park isn't too busy, what with it being so late and all. with a dumb little wave and a grin on his part, he closes some of the distance between them. ]
Hey. You look pretty good for a guy who went a few rounds tonight. I'm impressed.
[The person is breathing — barely. Shallow, wheezing breaths of pain that inefficiently pull air into his lungs and keep the blood flowing. So disoriented, it takes a moment for the world to phase back into his fractured vision, and even then he feels the breeze on his clammy skin before he can bother comprehending where he is.
— Outside. He’s outside. Fine, alright; he can deal with that.
— But not alone, comes the next ugly realization, when he hones in on a presence by his side: a voice warm and low with concern knelt above him, blotting out the moonlight. Didn’t last but five seconds before some human discovered his body.
The fingers on his neck? Clawed aside like Mignon is forced to corral a mountain lion rather than an injured civilian. And the sharp flutter of large moth wings snapped open wide probably won’t help with the matter. His battered breath squeezes into a hiss, gathering up a curse to his lips, not so weak as to remain pliant while someone gets a good look at his face. The poor bastard chose the wrong time to take a run.
… And nothing happens.
The human doesn’t roll over dead on command.
— No, worse, he fears, when the recoil hits and there’s a pitiful wheeze of agony as he doubles over, clutching weakly at his abdomen and the wound still oozing copper. Those bastards at the facility did not strike him with a bullet; just insurance to make sure their quarry wouldn’t get too far with another spell, or leave a mountain of corpses in his wake.
… Well played, actually.]
Damn… it…
[The fight drains from him, body and wings sinking into the alleyway ground, face thoroughly exposed and pinched with pain - the only reason he isn’t glaring at Mignon like he committed some grave sin.]
— Outside. He’s outside. Fine, alright; he can deal with that.
— But not alone, comes the next ugly realization, when he hones in on a presence by his side: a voice warm and low with concern knelt above him, blotting out the moonlight. Didn’t last but five seconds before some human discovered his body.
The fingers on his neck? Clawed aside like Mignon is forced to corral a mountain lion rather than an injured civilian. And the sharp flutter of large moth wings snapped open wide probably won’t help with the matter. His battered breath squeezes into a hiss, gathering up a curse to his lips, not so weak as to remain pliant while someone gets a good look at his face. The poor bastard chose the wrong time to take a run.
… And nothing happens.
The human doesn’t roll over dead on command.
— No, worse, he fears, when the recoil hits and there’s a pitiful wheeze of agony as he doubles over, clutching weakly at his abdomen and the wound still oozing copper. Those bastards at the facility did not strike him with a bullet; just insurance to make sure their quarry wouldn’t get too far with another spell, or leave a mountain of corpses in his wake.
… Well played, actually.]
Damn… it…
[The fight drains from him, body and wings sinking into the alleyway ground, face thoroughly exposed and pinched with pain - the only reason he isn’t glaring at Mignon like he committed some grave sin.]
[From a botched summoning in a strange facility to being shot in the abdomen, and now manhandled by human hands; the injustices continue to pile on top of one another, and that he doesn’t kick at the man in defiance when touched is just a technicality. His lower half has shut down completely, and with his violent mystics locked inside his own body, so too goes any hope of escape.
Trapped again, at another’s mercy. Being sent back to the other side of the veil would probably be a kinder fate.]
— D-don’t—
[Seizing up as the word drags itself from his throat, expression pinched, and the glare he sends could freeze the earth twice over. Call who? Call what? And the fuck is an ambulance? Some pretty box to ship him in once his summoners find him, he bets. The fairy isn’t so stupid as to extend a moment of trust to this stranger. Already, he can imagine a price on his head, eagerly exchanged once his capture is arranged.
The sharp taste of bile and blood stings at his tongue as he grinds out another heaving breath, ignoring the call to remain still — shoving his arms underneath him in a bid to push, sit up, and crawl, if he must. But halfway up and the last of his strength gives.
Gravity slams him back into place. He doesn’t move again. Just gasps tightly and closes his eyes, and tries to plan for the inevitable.]
Trapped again, at another’s mercy. Being sent back to the other side of the veil would probably be a kinder fate.]
— D-don’t—
[Seizing up as the word drags itself from his throat, expression pinched, and the glare he sends could freeze the earth twice over. Call who? Call what? And the fuck is an ambulance? Some pretty box to ship him in once his summoners find him, he bets. The fairy isn’t so stupid as to extend a moment of trust to this stranger. Already, he can imagine a price on his head, eagerly exchanged once his capture is arranged.
The sharp taste of bile and blood stings at his tongue as he grinds out another heaving breath, ignoring the call to remain still — shoving his arms underneath him in a bid to push, sit up, and crawl, if he must. But halfway up and the last of his strength gives.
Gravity slams him back into place. He doesn’t move again. Just gasps tightly and closes his eyes, and tries to plan for the inevitable.]
[Rudely, the world lurches when he’s again moved, and his eyes fly open to lock with the human’s. The sharp color of lightning before it strikes the earth.
… And just like lightning it dulls quickly with the moment passed, color receding back into a normal hue once the pain resumes and he accepts his fate to dangle helpless in the other’s grip. He’s stopped counting the injustices at this point. Carry him directly into the sea and drown him, he doesn’t care. He’s too busy distracted by the strange weightlessness that floods his senses, wings uselessly bunched between his back and the human’s arms, but still.
Almost like flying. It isn’t unpleasant.
His head rocks back and forth, purposefully suspended away from the other’s shoulder in open defiance, until he tires with his own stubbornness and finally cedes - drops his temple against the human’s chest and sighs, irritable, forced to admit this is a fair bit more comfortable than concrete.]
As if I’d ever.
[— He’ll raze this earth before letting the mortal realm think they’ve bested him, make no mistake. All of this is a setback at worst. Give it time. Take him to this “home” so he can recuperate, and then he’ll be showing everyone why they would have been better off summoning the devil than an angry fae.
Eyes closing once more, the next breath he takes is not nearly as pained. More soft and exhausted, and carrying a casual warning in a honeyed tenor.]
You’ll be regretting this, human.
… And just like lightning it dulls quickly with the moment passed, color receding back into a normal hue once the pain resumes and he accepts his fate to dangle helpless in the other’s grip. He’s stopped counting the injustices at this point. Carry him directly into the sea and drown him, he doesn’t care. He’s too busy distracted by the strange weightlessness that floods his senses, wings uselessly bunched between his back and the human’s arms, but still.
Almost like flying. It isn’t unpleasant.
His head rocks back and forth, purposefully suspended away from the other’s shoulder in open defiance, until he tires with his own stubbornness and finally cedes - drops his temple against the human’s chest and sighs, irritable, forced to admit this is a fair bit more comfortable than concrete.]
As if I’d ever.
[— He’ll raze this earth before letting the mortal realm think they’ve bested him, make no mistake. All of this is a setback at worst. Give it time. Take him to this “home” so he can recuperate, and then he’ll be showing everyone why they would have been better off summoning the devil than an angry fae.
Eyes closing once more, the next breath he takes is not nearly as pained. More soft and exhausted, and carrying a casual warning in a honeyed tenor.]
You’ll be regretting this, human.
[Killing a fae is tricky. There are tales of pure iron to wound them, but in reality, it’s more akin to a terrible allergy than any real death. And for all his agony after having been shot, death is not what he fears — it’s the eventual capture, the subjugation, the threat of humans pawing at his clothes and skin, dissecting him to get a handle on his inner mystics. No matter how he might scream and spit, it’s unlikely he’d die.
But a fae who gives out their True Name is indeed a dead one; entirely too much power to be handing over to a human, even one who has been strangely amiable to the idea of sheltering him for the night.
— That nickname, though.
Absolutely the fuck not.
Eyes opening up for what feels like the fiftieth time, the fairy nails his savior with a look of utter disapproval.]
Call me that even once, and I will curse your entire family line, thank you.
[— Mm. Perhaps a little on the nose with his threat, he realizes, once his irritation is spent. They’ve yet to reach the human’s abode, and he isn’t sure if the man will abandon him if angered. Play it cool, then. At least attempt to seem frail. Disregard how acting like a weak insect makes him want to set fire to the city; the important part is to survive.
Chewing on his tongue, the fairy swallows down his pride and settles again, bundled neatly in the other’s arms — hears a heartbeat next to his ear and lets the rhythm keep his own voice steady.]
No, that was… uncalled for… I’m a bit… tired.
[Forgive me, is the unspoken demand. Only one of them is bleeding from the gut. Offer a little more grace, he asks.]
— Mignon, is it? I’m, ah… [Stalling, holding back a wince as his thoughts cartwheel. What throwaway name to give him? What passes as a fae’s name? It’s been eons since he was called to the human realm, and he can barely remember their twisted history.
…]
“Oberon.”
[Yes. He supposes that will do, for now.]
But a fae who gives out their True Name is indeed a dead one; entirely too much power to be handing over to a human, even one who has been strangely amiable to the idea of sheltering him for the night.
— That nickname, though.
Absolutely the fuck not.
Eyes opening up for what feels like the fiftieth time, the fairy nails his savior with a look of utter disapproval.]
Call me that even once, and I will curse your entire family line, thank you.
[— Mm. Perhaps a little on the nose with his threat, he realizes, once his irritation is spent. They’ve yet to reach the human’s abode, and he isn’t sure if the man will abandon him if angered. Play it cool, then. At least attempt to seem frail. Disregard how acting like a weak insect makes him want to set fire to the city; the important part is to survive.
Chewing on his tongue, the fairy swallows down his pride and settles again, bundled neatly in the other’s arms — hears a heartbeat next to his ear and lets the rhythm keep his own voice steady.]
No, that was… uncalled for… I’m a bit… tired.
[Forgive me, is the unspoken demand. Only one of them is bleeding from the gut. Offer a little more grace, he asks.]
— Mignon, is it? I’m, ah… [Stalling, holding back a wince as his thoughts cartwheel. What throwaway name to give him? What passes as a fae’s name? It’s been eons since he was called to the human realm, and he can barely remember their twisted history.
…]
“Oberon.”
[Yes. He supposes that will do, for now.]
[… Glancing to the side, folding in on himself by another inch, as if in an effort to shield his face from the blunder of cursing a family that doesn’t even exist. It fails — he is well aware — and realizing the human still has a good look at him causes his right eyelid to twitch]
“Drive-by”… some archaic weapon your lot uses?
[Sounding both put-out and flabbergasted. First off — how’s he to know the exact name of whatever was powerful enough to screw up his mystics? That would require admittance, and that’s the last thing Oberon feels like fessing up to.
— Damn, but if even the civilians can put a name to such acts, the humans have certainly leveled up since the last time he came to this realm. Just all manner of destruction. It makes the current one carrying him that much more of an oddity. A surprise.
He hates goddamn surprises.
Irritation still barely restrained, Oberon peers at the other from the cover of his lashes, on the hunt for slip-up]
Enough with your inquiries. If you’ve feel like interrogating me, call your a’cursed ambulance instead.
“Drive-by”… some archaic weapon your lot uses?
[Sounding both put-out and flabbergasted. First off — how’s he to know the exact name of whatever was powerful enough to screw up his mystics? That would require admittance, and that’s the last thing Oberon feels like fessing up to.
— Damn, but if even the civilians can put a name to such acts, the humans have certainly leveled up since the last time he came to this realm. Just all manner of destruction. It makes the current one carrying him that much more of an oddity. A surprise.
He hates goddamn surprises.
Irritation still barely restrained, Oberon peers at the other from the cover of his lashes, on the hunt for slip-up]
Enough with your inquiries. If you’ve feel like interrogating me, call your a’cursed ambulance instead.
[The silence is welcomed; a perfect excuse to sink further into his thoughts, teetering on the edge of unconsciousness. For whatever reason, Mignon doesn’t seem interested in using a fae as leverage for some greater plot — or maybe, perhaps, the human just doesn’t understand the good fortune in his arms. Strangely, they haven’t yet been followed — and that must mean the teleportation spell he weaved took him far from his summoners’ eyes.
… He can work with this, he decides, breathing slow and jaded their entire walk, not even fussing when Mignon needs to rummage for his keys, or when his back finds a cushioned surface. A bit more listless than he would have hoped, his head lulls to the side, murmuring a tired response:]
Of course not, I can just—
[Ah, wait… no he can’t. A simple snap of his fingers won’t remove his clothes. He can feel the spell hum underneath his skin, but it is as if locked behind a door, banging on the panels to be let out and erupting into his nerves when denied.
So with the same stubborn bullishness as in the alleyway, he grits his teeth, pushes up — swears in some language Mignon won’t understand before he just collides backwards on the couch again. With more venom than necessary, he starts pawing at the bloodied cloth tied over his abdomen, willing his fingers to do their jobs and somehow not tangle him further.
… Yes, he could just. ask for help. But fat shit that’s gonna happe—]
Oh, just get down here, already.
[— Whelp. Wonder of wonders, suddenly shooting a pointed glare at Mignon.]
… He can work with this, he decides, breathing slow and jaded their entire walk, not even fussing when Mignon needs to rummage for his keys, or when his back finds a cushioned surface. A bit more listless than he would have hoped, his head lulls to the side, murmuring a tired response:]
Of course not, I can just—
[Ah, wait… no he can’t. A simple snap of his fingers won’t remove his clothes. He can feel the spell hum underneath his skin, but it is as if locked behind a door, banging on the panels to be let out and erupting into his nerves when denied.
So with the same stubborn bullishness as in the alleyway, he grits his teeth, pushes up — swears in some language Mignon won’t understand before he just collides backwards on the couch again. With more venom than necessary, he starts pawing at the bloodied cloth tied over his abdomen, willing his fingers to do their jobs and somehow not tangle him further.
… Yes, he could just. ask for help. But fat shit that’s gonna happe—]
Oh, just get down here, already.
[— Whelp. Wonder of wonders, suddenly shooting a pointed glare at Mignon.]
[He doesn’t appreciate being touched in such a way without permission, and the disapproval turns steely with the promise of violence. Adrenaline is a beautiful thing; dulls the pain, sharpens the spirit, opens up many possibilities that would end the night with a corpse.
… He also isn’t so stupid as to challenge a human with his magic locked away and nursing a wound, especially not a human that looms a bit more like a boulder overhead. Oberon hadn’t noticed before in his previous agony, but — well, it makes sense why Mignon barely seemed winded by the prospect of carrying a full grown body to his home.
That’s a sheet of muscle he’s glaring at, and so the fae’s dissent ends as it usually does: with a faint snarl but little else, allowing Mignon to lead his hand away so the human can get a better look of him.
Dressed in a few layers of well-crafted fabric, impossibly light and breathing of cotton, it all takes a bit of undoing before Mignon can look at his wound: a bloody mess, is what it is, with the supposed bullet’s point of entry having torn at the surrounding pale skin. Thankfully, underneath all of that congealing blood, it’s the only part of him injured, though peeling the cloth back is its own agony, too. Oberon hisses, digs his heels into the couch and twists his head away with a pained snap, cursing again. The urge to shove Mignon away is only barely held in check.]
For your information, I’ll be healed in a day.
[Two days.
— Alright, maybe a week. It’s the tenacity that counts.]
… He also isn’t so stupid as to challenge a human with his magic locked away and nursing a wound, especially not a human that looms a bit more like a boulder overhead. Oberon hadn’t noticed before in his previous agony, but — well, it makes sense why Mignon barely seemed winded by the prospect of carrying a full grown body to his home.
That’s a sheet of muscle he’s glaring at, and so the fae’s dissent ends as it usually does: with a faint snarl but little else, allowing Mignon to lead his hand away so the human can get a better look of him.
Dressed in a few layers of well-crafted fabric, impossibly light and breathing of cotton, it all takes a bit of undoing before Mignon can look at his wound: a bloody mess, is what it is, with the supposed bullet’s point of entry having torn at the surrounding pale skin. Thankfully, underneath all of that congealing blood, it’s the only part of him injured, though peeling the cloth back is its own agony, too. Oberon hisses, digs his heels into the couch and twists his head away with a pained snap, cursing again. The urge to shove Mignon away is only barely held in check.]
For your information, I’ll be healed in a day.
[Two days.
— Alright, maybe a week. It’s the tenacity that counts.]
It’s not still in there, no — the damage is already done.
[Spoken cryptic, head lulling back into a more upright position once the human returns, fixing Mignon with a flat, vacant look as the man begins to mop away the blood from his torso with a gentle, attentive touch. Oh, if only life were so simple that removing a foreign object would fix his true ailment, but alas. Throw it on the ever-growing pile of grievances he’s forced to endure.
Though the image of the fool attempting to cox any bullet out of him with those lion-paws he calls hands warrants a faint snort, the closest to amusement that’s shown on Oberon’s expression so far. The corner of his lips twitch, unsure of which direction they should pull.
—Sure, the human ruins it not two seconds later with that quip about holding hands, but—]
— Hold your— give me that.
[Where is that bottle. Hand it over. And if denied, Oberon’s hand will dart out like a serpent on a cursed crusade, throwing all manner of propriety out the window again. Rage has taken the wheel. He will be uncapping and dousing his own wound in disinfectant unless Mignon is faster.]
Concern yourself with what manner of creature you’ve taken to your home instead of if I can handle another 30 seconds of discomfort!
[Spoken cryptic, head lulling back into a more upright position once the human returns, fixing Mignon with a flat, vacant look as the man begins to mop away the blood from his torso with a gentle, attentive touch. Oh, if only life were so simple that removing a foreign object would fix his true ailment, but alas. Throw it on the ever-growing pile of grievances he’s forced to endure.
Though the image of the fool attempting to cox any bullet out of him with those lion-paws he calls hands warrants a faint snort, the closest to amusement that’s shown on Oberon’s expression so far. The corner of his lips twitch, unsure of which direction they should pull.
—Sure, the human ruins it not two seconds later with that quip about holding hands, but—]
— Hold your— give me that.
[Where is that bottle. Hand it over. And if denied, Oberon’s hand will dart out like a serpent on a cursed crusade, throwing all manner of propriety out the window again. Rage has taken the wheel. He will be uncapping and dousing his own wound in disinfectant unless Mignon is faster.]
Concern yourself with what manner of creature you’ve taken to your home instead of if I can handle another 30 seconds of discomfort!
[…
Oberon expects — something. Perhaps disapproval, some bid to take away the bottle before he can accidentally harm himself. Chastisement. Any of which he would have met with an equal amount of spit and fire, his wound be damned.
Instead, Mignon stares at his petty show of stubbornness in full on wonderment, not a lie hiding behind those appreciative eyes. It eats at Oberon’s irritation like an acid, corroding it into an easily broken gate, and by the time the human makes to wrap the bandages ‘round Oberon’s torso, wings still carefully folded down by the man’s efforts, the fae has settled into a cautious silence, allowing the intrusion into his personal space.]
… What an odd fellow you are.
[Murmured at the corner of Mignon’s cheek when their faces are close. Just confusion remains — openly staring the human down like he’s the one with wings.]
Is this some ploy to gain my favor and have a wish granted?
[— It isn’t. The question is rhetorical. No human can easily lie to the fae, and Oberon would sooner eat his robe than assume this human has it in him to be secretly conniving… Which means that Mignon really might be a well-meaning giant who just happened to come across a fae in the night, took him into his home, and is content enough to bandage the wounded creature without payment.]
— Well, you’re mistaken. Pain causes me plenty of irritation. [Huffing, bending his back to give Mignon a bit of added space to finish off the last round of bandaging. Once he relaxes, his eyes return to their bright, pointed interest in staring the human down.] But I don’t have time to have you treat me of glass.
Oberon expects — something. Perhaps disapproval, some bid to take away the bottle before he can accidentally harm himself. Chastisement. Any of which he would have met with an equal amount of spit and fire, his wound be damned.
Instead, Mignon stares at his petty show of stubbornness in full on wonderment, not a lie hiding behind those appreciative eyes. It eats at Oberon’s irritation like an acid, corroding it into an easily broken gate, and by the time the human makes to wrap the bandages ‘round Oberon’s torso, wings still carefully folded down by the man’s efforts, the fae has settled into a cautious silence, allowing the intrusion into his personal space.]
… What an odd fellow you are.
[Murmured at the corner of Mignon’s cheek when their faces are close. Just confusion remains — openly staring the human down like he’s the one with wings.]
Is this some ploy to gain my favor and have a wish granted?
[— It isn’t. The question is rhetorical. No human can easily lie to the fae, and Oberon would sooner eat his robe than assume this human has it in him to be secretly conniving… Which means that Mignon really might be a well-meaning giant who just happened to come across a fae in the night, took him into his home, and is content enough to bandage the wounded creature without payment.]
— Well, you’re mistaken. Pain causes me plenty of irritation. [Huffing, bending his back to give Mignon a bit of added space to finish off the last round of bandaging. Once he relaxes, his eyes return to their bright, pointed interest in staring the human down.] But I don’t have time to have you treat me of glass.
[— Oh?
Has the lamb turned shy?
It’s the last reaction he expects — Mignon hastily retreating his stare elsewhere like the fae finally struck a cord — and at first Oberon watches on in narrowed assessment… At least until the warm heat mingled between their bodies picks up a familiar scent that reminds him of a thunderstorm, and there is a certain weight in how the human stalls those much larger hands on his hips.
Attraction really is such a funny thing. Easily ignored on his end, truth be told, it’s been eons since anyone could collar him, force him to bend the knee and sample some honey — yet it makes it all the more amusing watching his savior shift and adjust overtop, nearly brushing their chests together, distracted, either purposefully holding himself rigid or that hopelessly dense as to where his body’s demands are headed.
Does the man have a lover? The way he short-circuits suggests otherwise. And normally, Oberon would never bother with antics that won’t put him ahead of the game in some way. It’s only that… well, Mignon is not a blight upon his eyesight, he’ll admit it. Hard work and a benevolent god must have sculpted those biceps. Cruelly ignoring the question, Oberon allows his gaze to meander its way down that cut jaw, that thick neck, that barely-covered collarbone that could use a few well-placed bruises.
If it further convinced the man to give him a place to stay while he healed… Oberon cannot say he’d hate the idea of all that muscle bearing down on him.]
I’m not really in a position to resist, am I?
[Relaxing into the cushions, all of his foulness having disappeared for a flash of a smile, eyes narrowed into crescents. One of his hands strays close to Mignon’s face and taps at his chin]
Do as you please.
Has the lamb turned shy?
It’s the last reaction he expects — Mignon hastily retreating his stare elsewhere like the fae finally struck a cord — and at first Oberon watches on in narrowed assessment… At least until the warm heat mingled between their bodies picks up a familiar scent that reminds him of a thunderstorm, and there is a certain weight in how the human stalls those much larger hands on his hips.
Attraction really is such a funny thing. Easily ignored on his end, truth be told, it’s been eons since anyone could collar him, force him to bend the knee and sample some honey — yet it makes it all the more amusing watching his savior shift and adjust overtop, nearly brushing their chests together, distracted, either purposefully holding himself rigid or that hopelessly dense as to where his body’s demands are headed.
Does the man have a lover? The way he short-circuits suggests otherwise. And normally, Oberon would never bother with antics that won’t put him ahead of the game in some way. It’s only that… well, Mignon is not a blight upon his eyesight, he’ll admit it. Hard work and a benevolent god must have sculpted those biceps. Cruelly ignoring the question, Oberon allows his gaze to meander its way down that cut jaw, that thick neck, that barely-covered collarbone that could use a few well-placed bruises.
If it further convinced the man to give him a place to stay while he healed… Oberon cannot say he’d hate the idea of all that muscle bearing down on him.]
I’m not really in a position to resist, am I?
[Relaxing into the cushions, all of his foulness having disappeared for a flash of a smile, eyes narrowed into crescents. One of his hands strays close to Mignon’s face and taps at his chin]
Do as you please.

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