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#sweet pea the gnoll
c-rowlesdraws · 1 year
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started sketching this comic for Day 13 of @thebeardlyben’s “Gnollvember” prompt list... decided to use it to practice a more casual sort of inking style, and finished yesterday in between working on art people are actually waiting on me for.
Day 13 - “Think Twice”! Sweet Pea knows what money is, but Nettle wishes she'd be more mindful of their food budget.
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dorkphoenyx · 2 years
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I've been obsessed with @c-rowlesdraws and gnoll cuisine all day, so here's my quick sketch of a few ideas.
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Clockwise from top left:
Cross-cut shank is a standard breakfast dish. One leg provides many servings, depending on the specific prey and thickness of cut. The bit of marrow in the bone is a bit like a carnivore's butter - the shank is usually warmed just enough to make the marrow spreadable.
Candy doesn't have the same irresistible draw to carnivores, even if they do enjoy some sweets now and then. Instead of a piñata, gnoll parties usually feature an aged leg of - something. Between the thickness of the skin and the toughness of the dried meat, gnoll kids like to compete to see who can bite through first.
Are there any cultures that don't have some form of meat on a stick?
Strips of roasted meat wrapped in spicy leaves is an occasional snack, but these mixed meat/veg dishes are more commonly featured during meals where they are hosting omnivores. (Carnivores and herbivores can totally be friends! ...but sharing a meal is usually uncomfortable for both parties.)
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lonepower · 8 months
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BARNABUS IS HELPING US
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kittysune2000 · 1 year
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Blacksmith gnoll I had a dream about. It is my first time drawing anything hyena or gnoll and I am happy with how they turned out.
Shout out to c-rowlesdraws for making the lovely Sweet Pea. Great inspiration for the art direction to take for this piece and they deserve much more love.
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lusifernocturne · 7 months
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The Lazy Bowl tavern and inn
A smaller building with three floors; one for the tavern, two for the guest rooms(4 small single rooms[5sp], 2 small rooms with double beds[1gp], and 4 moderate rooms with 2 double beds[8cp]). The innkeeper lives in a moderate room on the first floor. The food is made with local produce, spices, and meat.
Innkeeper: Pyre(earth genesi woman)
Menu (or average price of a room/meal): Fish stew(10cp), Buckwheat Porridge(3 cp), Mug of Cider (3 cp), Stewed Pork and Mushrooms with a Tankard of Cider (7 cp), Boiled Mutton and Rye Bread with a Tankard of Beer (9 cp), Boiled Eggs and Dried Beetroot with Tankard of Bitter (11 cp), Tankard of any drinks on the menu(2cp), Fresh salad and Boiled Mutton(2sp), Fresh salad(12cp), Tea(2cp), coffee(2cp), sweet rolls (4 for 7cp), crab cakes(2 good sized for 5cp), and a dish of the day.
Dish of the day by day of the week-
Monday: Atolla sea chili; made with crabmeat, shrimp, and sea scallops, tomatoes, celery, corn, green onions, kidney beans, and colorful bell peppers. It's a very spicy dish with a hint of sweetness at the end. It's served with sweet rolls and a drink of your choice.(5sp)
Tuesday: Grilled bass or trout and mixed vegetables(made up of mushrooms, beets, yellow squash, brussels sprouts, and asparagus). Served with either Rye Bread or a side salad and a drink of your choice.(10cp)
Wednesday: Fish of the day(up to you) with garlic sauce and noodles. Served with mixed fruit(also up to you) and a drink of your choice.(6cp)
Thursday: Fish and chips or Rum-Glazed Shrimp, batter scraps , and rye bread and butter. Served with a drink of your choice, and if wanted lemon wedges and/or a sauce(Tartare, Salt and vinegar, or curry). (3sp)
Friday: Baked Salmon with lemon and garlic, cabbage and rutabaga Slaw, and mixed berry salad. Server with rolls and a drink of your choice.(3sp)
Saturday: Beef stir-fry made with bell peppers, snap peas, carrots, water chestnuts, and green onions. It has a delicious scent and taste combination.  Served with a drink of your choice and either sweet rolls or crab cakes.(5sp)
Sunday: 1. Garlicky Lemon Mahi Mahi, seared scallops, ruby red beet & apple salad, and baked potato. Served with a drink of your choice and either sweet rolls or rye bread & butter.(8sp)
2. Seafood Jambalaya made with shrimp, two buttermilk cornbread muffins, collard greens, and corn on the cob. Served with a drink of your choice and either crab balls, hush puppies, or rolls.(6sp)
Rumors: Small jobs, gnoll attacks, places that may need help, crime, and local gossip.
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thetravelerwrites · 3 years
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Alexei (Satyr) Part 1
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Rating: Mature Relationships: Female Human/Male Satyr Additional Tags: Exophilia, Monster Boyfriend, Satyr, Arranged Marriage, Fake Marriage, Strangers to Lovers, Reader Insert Words: 5834
A commission for @thebimess​! A woman escaping an arranged marriage proposes an unusual agreement with a man she just met: marry her for six months to get out of the marriage contract. Please reblog and leave feedback!
The Traveler's Masterlist
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Being on the road was rather terrifying for a woman traveling on her own, but you weren’t wavering in your intent. You had to get to Dunmountain and disappear. You didn’t care if you lived in a hovel shoveling shit for a living, you weren’t marrying that man. Not in a million years.
A few days on the road sleeping rough hadn’t done much to deter you, though it was cold and uncomfortable. You managed to get to Chesterfield long enough to buy road provisions and get rid of your old clothes, but you didn’t want to stay there too long. You didn’t know if they’d have people out looking for you.
You ached for a bath and a bed. You didn’t realize how much you’d taken being clean and comfortable for granted. And it looked like rain tonight. You figured the horses wouldn’t mind a bunk mate.
As you were coming around to go into the stables, it began to rain rather hard. As you ducked in, the stablehand shouted at you.
“Oy! Get out of here! No homeless wenches sleeping in here for free. Go get a room or sleep in a gutter!”
“Oh, but sir--”
“No buts! Out with you!”
You had no choice but to duck back out of the stable and into the pouring rain. You went around the back, praying that there was a cart you could sleep under.
Instead of a cart, there was a lovely lavender vardo parked there. The front and rear doors were locked, but there was a window. It was small, but you thought you could squeeze through. And if you got stuck, at least half of you would be dry.
The shutters had a latch on the inside, but it was easy enough to open with a hair stick. Using the wheel as a boost, you threw your bag inside and jumped up. Getting your shoulders through was the hardest part, and your hips were a bit of a struggle, but finally you fell to the floor of the vardo like a spilled sack of potatoes. Slightly bruised, you re-latched the shutter windows and looked around.
It was fairly neat and tidy, looking a bit larger on the inside that it did on the outside, with things secured safely to the walls and inside trunks. The walls had beautiful filigree scrolling all the way up and the roof had a lovely fresco of a countryside near a body of water, the field full of flowers. There were things that hung along the ceiling, making gentle jingling noises as the vardo moved.
There was a small cot latched up against the wall that would fold down. Wearily, you folded it down, pulled out your cloak, which was still dry in your bag, and laid it over the cot to prevent the wet from your clothes from seeping through, and settled down on it. You’d deal with the owner in the morning. If you weren’t arrested for trespassing, that is.
Once you were horizontal, you fell asleep immediately.
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You were awakened rudely when you felt water being poured on your face. You sputtered and shielded your face, sitting up abruptly.
“Ah, the stowaway is awake at last,” You heard a masculine voice say. “Since you seem to have had a nice rest, you can get out now.”
You wiped the water out of your eyes and looked up. Standing there was a satyr with deep brown fur on his legs and tan skin. With his short, black horns jutting up just behind his hairline, you thought he might be only slightly shorter than you. He had hair the same dark color as his fur and bright blue eyes, a closely trimmed beard and mustache, and dimples you could see even with the beard. He wore no trousers, covered by his fur, but had on an off-white tunic and a buttoned-up brick red vest with gold embroidery. His cloven hooves were shiny black and dainty.
“I’m sorry,” You said, coughing and sniff the water out of your nose. “I’m sorry, I just needed a dry place to sleep.”
“And so you did,” He said, putting his water skin aside and folding his arms. “I’ve been on the road for hours now, and I didn’t know you were back here until I stopped for lunch. So, you’ve had your sleep. Get out.”
“Which way have you traveled?”
“I’m halfway to Red Landing,” He said.
“No!” You moaned, your head in your hands. “It took me so long to get to Chesterfield from Red Landing. That’s almost a full day backwards!”
“That’s not my problem,” He huffed. “You’re the one who trespassed in what is ostensibly my home.”
“Can I pay you to take me back to Chesterfield? I’ll give you ten gold. That has to be enough to ferry me for a few hours.”
He sighed sharply. “I mean… I guess? I don’t owe you any favors, you know.”
“No, I know,” You replied, fishing around in your bag. “Here,” You pressed ten coins into his hand. “It’s not much for inconveniencing you, I know, but I don’t have much as it is.”
He bounced the coins in his hand, frowning down at them.
“What’s so important in Chesterfield?” He asked.
“I’m not going to Chesterfield, I’m going to Dunmountain,” You replied. “Do you really care why?”
He snorted. “I guess not. Fine, fine. You’ve already taken up too much of my time, I might as well get paid for it.” He snatched up your bag and began looking through it.
“Hey!” You said, grabbing the bag back. “What are you doing?”
“I’m making sure you didn’t steal anything of mine while you were in here,” He retorted. “Let me see or I’ll dump you off right here.”
You scoffed, but held open your bag so that he could see inside, refusing to let it go. He shuffled things around and you waited anxiously until he was satisfied and straightened up.
“You’re not riding in here,” He said. “Get up in the driver’s box. I want to be able to watch you.”
“Alright,” You said, standing and following him out of the back of the vardo and led you to the front. “What’s your name?”
“You don’t need to know my name and I don’t need to know yours,” He said, vaulting up and not offering his hand. You were forced to clamor up the opposite side. “Once we get to Chesterfield, I expect to never see you again.”
“Fair enough,” You said, hunkering down in the driver’s box, sitting as far away from him as you could, and fell silent as the carriage lurched forward.
He pulled out a small bag of puffed grains and dried fruits and began to munch on them as the vardo trundled on, the lone mule’s head bobbing up and down as it took each step. You took out a small amount of hard cheese and nibbled on it.
“I’ll trade you a bite of cheese for a handful of your trail snacks,” You told him.
He shrugged. “Sure,” He replied, taking the morsel of cheese you offered him and pouring some of the grains and fruits in your palm.
“What were you going to Red Landing for?” You asked him.
He looked at you sidelong before answering. “I was going to buy some shells to make paint.”
“Are you a painter?” You asked.
“Yes,” He replied.
“Did you do the scrollwork and the fresco in the vardo?”
“I did.”
“Wow,” You replied, impressed. “It’s really good work. I mean, I’m not an expert, but I enjoyed it very much.”
“I don’t know what weight the praise of a trespasser might carry, but thank you all the same.”
You bristled. “I said I was sorry. And I’ve paid you. There’s no reason to be rude.”
That effectively killed conversation and your appetite. You put your food back in your bag and sat still and quiet, staring at the trees as they passed.
After an hour, the vardo stopped, and you looked at the satyr for the first time since his quip.
“Why have we stopped?” You asked.
“Shh,” He replied. “Listen. Do you hear that?”
You strained your hearing. “I just hear birds and the trees rustling.”
“Stay here,” He said, throwing down the reins and jumping down. “If you run off with my stuff, I’ll hunt you down.”
“I’m not going to run off, relax,” You said in annoyance.
He sniffed and walked into the trees and out of sight. You waited nervously for him to return, clutching your bag against your body, until eventually you heard a sniffling and whimpering. The satyr emerged from the trees carrying what you thought was a dog at first, but on closer inspection, it was wearing a shirt and pants.
“Oh, my goodness!” You cried, putting down your bag and hopping down. “Are you alright, little one!”
He whined much like a puppy. You reached from him, and he crawled into your arms, hiding his snout in your hair.
“I haven’t been able to get much out of him,” The satyr said. “But I remember the sheriff in Willowridge is a gnoll and has a couple of young sons. The crossroads to Willowridge is nearby. We may be making a detour.”
“That’s just fine, isn’t it?” You cooed to the little gnoll boy. “That’s no problem, eh? Let’s get you home, sweet pea. I’ve got some jerky in my bag. Are you hungry?”
“Yeah,” The boy said watery.
“Alright, sweetie pie, let’s get you some food, then.” You popped back up into the driver’s box with the boy clinging to you like a baby possum. The satyr got back up and snapped the reins, pushing the mule to movement.
After he ate, he seemed a bit more calm, and you were able to get him to talk to you. You learned that his name was Declan and he was indeed the youngest son of Willowridge’s sheriff, Feera. He was three years old and apparently a sleepwalker, having woken up in the forest a little while before the satyr heard him crying. How he managed to cross so much land in his sleep was unimaginable, but at least he was heading home now.
It didn’t take long for him to become rambunctious, and the satyr pulled Declan into his lap and let him take the reins. Declan squealed happily as he wiggled the reins back and forth. The mule was patient and didn’t take off when he felt the slapping on his back.
After a while, he fell asleep in the satyr’s arms. The satyr cradled him while still keeping a firm hand on the reins.
“You’re good with kids,” You remarked.
He shrugged. “I grew up around a bunch of kids, so I’m used to handling them.”
“Do you have a lot of younger siblings?”
“Something like that,” He replied.
As you rounded the bend, Willowridge came into view. You’d only been there once when you were ten when your father was still a builder. He’d retired from construction just afterward.
“Hey, Declan!” You said, tickling him awake. “Look, you’re home!”
Declan woke up in the satyr’s arms and looked around, his ears perking up. He yipped excitedly.
“Oy!” The satyr called out. “Anyone missing a kid?”
“Oh, thank goodness!” An older woman said, running out from a nearby trail. She was wearing trousers and had long brown hair with wisps of white in it. “Where have you been, you naughty thing! We’ve been looking for you everywhere! You come to Gramma right this instant!” She took the little boy from the satyr’s arms and hugged him tight. She turned and called to a large centaur that was next to her. “Can you go and fetch Eris and Feera?”
“Yes, Mama,” He said, and he dashed off with a flick of his tail.
“Thank you two so much,” She said, reaching up to shake your hand.
“Oh, it was all him,” You said. “He heard Declan crying in the forest.”
“Keen hearing,” The satyr said, flicking his long ears. “Alexei, pleasure to meet you, madam.” You introduced yourself as well.
“My name is Ryel. Let me buy you folks dinner and a bed for the evening. It’s the least I can do. Who knows what might have happened to Declan if you two hadn’t found him.
As you were about to answer, a large gnoll and a woman with a river of golden hair flying behind her sprinted toward you. The gnoll was on all fours and much faster than the woman, who was clutching her skirts in her fists so she didn’t trip on them as she ran. Running at her side was another gnoll child, slightly bigger than Declan.
“Declan!” The gnoll cried out, and Ryel handed the boy off to his father as soon as he skidded to a stop and reared up on his hind legs. “By the gods, son, you scared the life out of me!”
The woman, Eris, stopped next to her husband, her face wet with tears, and she took the boy without a word, squeezing him tight and crying silently. Feera encircled both of them in his arms and held them for a moment. The other gnoll boy stood with his grandmother, holding her hand and biting at one of his claws in wide-eyed confusion.
After a moment, Feera let go of his wife and approached you.
“Thank you, strangers,” He said, reaching up to shake your hands like his mother had.
“It’s my pleasure, sir,” Alexei replied, shaking firmly.
“Please, let me buy the two of you a drink,” Feera said, waving over a stable boy from the nearby tavern. “We’ll take your mule and cart and make sure they’re both taken care of. Are you folks hungry?”
The family ushered you and Alexei into the inn and sat you down at a table, ordering ale and a meal for everyone. Eris had a firm grip on her youngest son and an arm around her oldest. Declan now seemed to be completely over his sojourn into the woods by himself, though his parents still seemed slightly traumatized by it.
“That’s the farthest he’s ever gone,” Eris said. She was a taciturn woman who didn’t smile much, which made her appear rather stern. “We’re usually good about keeping everything locked up tight. I still don’t know how he got out. We’ve even nailed the windows closed.”
“Who knows?” Feera said, rubbing his wife’s back soothingly. “He could have shimmied out of the slats in the attic. Looks like I’ll have to nail that shut too.”
“Here you go, dearies,” The innkeeper said, laying a key on the table. “Here’s your room for the night. The bed is nice and big, so you’ll both be comfortable.”
“Oh,” Alexei said. “No, we’re not together. I was giving her a ride. I hadn’t met her before today.”
“Oh,” The innkeeper said, dismayed. “I’m afraid I only have the one room available right now.”
“That’s alright, we’ll take it. Thank you for your generosity,” You said, taking the key and smiling. In an undertone, you said to Alexei, “It’s fine, I’ll sleep on the floor, it’s no big deal.”
He grimaced but said nothing.
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That night, you unrolled your bedroll and got ready to lay down. He had taken the bed, since you offered it, and was already half asleep. He had taken off his vest but left his tunic on. You stared at him thoughtfully, debating with yourself.
“Alexei,” You called.
He snorted and opened his eyes, looking over at you blearily. “What?”
“I wanted to ask you something.”
“What is it? I’m trying to sleep.”
“Would you marry me?”
His eyes shot open and he stared at the ceiling for a full minute before sitting up to glare at you.
“What?”
“Look, I know it’s a weird thing to ask--”
“It’s a crazy thing to ask!”
“Can I just explain myself before you think I’m crazy?”
“It’s too late for that, but please, go ahead.” He sat with his legs dangling over the edge of the bed and his hands clasped in his lap, looking at you expectantly.
“I’m escaping an arranged marriage,” You began bluntly. “I was only told of the engagement three days prior to leaving home. I met him at a dinner the night before what was to be our wedding day for the first time. You could not imagine a more boorish, rude, inept man.”
“I bet I could.”
You snorted. “He did nothing but drink wine during the dinner, leering at both me and the serving staff and making rather unseemly comments about my face and body, considering he’d only just met me. His parents just shushed him, but in a dismissive, boys-will-be-boys kind of way that made me want to tear my hair out.”
“When was this whole thing set up?”
“I’d apparently been promised to him since I was five years old. His family is rich from textile money, but they have a less that immaculate reputation. His parents need the respectability that my family’s name offers in order to regain many of their clients and trade routes.”
“Why’s that?”
“It’s the son’s, my so-called husband-to-be’s, fault. I learned through conversation with his parents that he didn’t work in his family business at all and traveled quite often on his parent’s dime. After they had gotten rather drunk, his parents admitted that he had already fathered two children out of wedlock that they knew of.”
His head rocked back. “That’s concerning. Are your parents still on board with the wedding?”
“Yes. Part of the deal is a large investment from my fiance’s parents; my parents need the money to retire.”
“So you decided to escape in the middle of the night, is that it?”
You nodded. “Thankfully, my parents hadn’t paid the officiant yet, and therefore the wedding hadn’t been formally recorded with the county as a done-deal, so I decided to leave until the contract ran its course. I knew where my parents kept their money and only took what I thought I would need to get to Dunmountain. They aren’t exactly rich, after all, just well-respected. I plan to pay them back at some point. I just pray they understand.”
“So, you’re asking me to marry you to get out of the engagement?”
“Yes,” You said. “The contract is void if I turn twenty five before the wedding or if I have been married to someone else for a minimum of six months with verifiable proof. Meaning I have to have both my husband and the marriage certificate in hand and meet with a mediator to authenticate it. And since twenty five is three years away, the only hope I have of freedom is to marry someone else.”
He folded his arms. “And exactly what do I get out of this? Six months is a long time to be stuck with a stranger, you know.”
“I know. I’ll give you every penny I have. Wherever we end up, I’ll pick up jobs. I’ll pay for everything. I’ll cook and clean. You won’t have to lift a finger. I’ll do whatever I can to make this as painless for you as possible, and then when it’s over, we can have the marriage annulled and you never have to see me again.”
He considered you for a long moment, chewing his lip.
“I know it’s sudden and out of the blue,” You continued. “But I’m desperate and willing to put my trust, and money, in a stranger.”
He sighed and raked his fingers through his beard. “Look, give me a day to consider it. This is a lot for me to process.”
“Alright,” You said. “Thank you for even entertaining the idea. I haven’t done much to endear myself to you, so I appreciate that you didn’t turn me down outright.”
He flopped back down on the bed. “Go to sleep.”
“You still don’t know my name,” You said, lying down.
“If I accept, you can tell me. Just go to sleep. Or don’t, I don’t care.” He rolled over toward the wall, facing away from you, clearly indicating the conversation was over. You covered yourself with your cloak, your thoughts in a roil, and eventually fell into an uneasy sleep.
The next morning, Alexei was gone. After a moment of panic, you packed up your things and rushed downstairs, hoping to ask after him, only to find him sitting and eating breakfast. He looked up when you came stumbling down, but made no gesture of greeting, simply continued to eat. You almost went to go sit with him, but thought, why? You don’t know him, after all. Instead, you went to sit at the bar.
“Getcha anythin’, darlin’?” The barmaid asked. She had a friendly north-eastern Scottish accent.
“You folks offer a breakfast plate or something like that?” You asked.
“Sure do. Mulled cider to go with?”
“Sounds great, thank you.”
She went off to get your food and drink and you sat there, feeling anxious.
“Pardon me,” A voice said to your right. It was Eris, the young mother of the gnoll child. Despite her somber face, she was actually rather lovely when she wasn’t crying.
“Oh, yes, ma’am, what can I do for you?”
“Take this, please,” She said, holding out a small drawstring sack. “It’s not much, but I wouldn’t feel right if you walked away with no reward for what you did for my family.”
“Oh, ma’am, no, you don’t have to do this,” You protested, but she held up a hand to stop you.
“Please, it would mean a lot to me. I don’t know what I would have done if something had happened to him,” She said. She scratched her neck self-consciously. Though she wore a high collared dress, you could see a scar peeking out of the neckline.
“Really, Alexei should get this, he’s the one who found him,” You told her.
“He’s already been given his share,” She said. “Take it, please.”
You smiled and sighed. “Thank you, ma’am.”
“Thank you,” Her normally reserved, neutral expression lightened into a smile. “I hope we meet again.” And she took her leave.
The barmaid laid a plate of scrambled eggs and a fried potato hash in front of you along with a large tankard of cider.
You’d eaten half of it when Alexei sidled up and sat on the stool next to you. He didn’t look at you, but set his tankard in front of him and flagged down the barmaid, who refilled it.
“Do you get on with your folks? Are they good parents?”
“Yeah,” You replied, stunned by the sudden question. “They’re nice parents, they’ve never been cruel to me. I supposed I’m closer to my mother than my father, but we all get along well. I’ve never had to doubt if they loved me, if that’s what you mean.”
“But they’re okay with you marrying this pissant, though?”
You sighed. “Their marriage was arranged, and they were fine with it. I suppose they think that my fiance, Gregory, will settle down when we marry, but I doubt it. I don’t see how being married to a stranger is supposed to make someone like him straighten up.” You set down your fork and leaned your elbows on the bar. “Besides, even good parents may not always do what’s best for their kids. Sometimes they do what’s best for themselves. They’re just as capable of being selfish at the expense of others as any other person can be.” You took a gulp of cider and blew out a breath of frustration.
“Do you hate them?”
“No,” You said slowly. “I’m angry at them, but that doesn’t mean I hate them.”
He took a drink and huffed. “It’s all so confusing.”
“How do you mean?” You asked.
He shook his head. “Nothing. What were you going to do once you got to Dunmountain?”
“Hide. Get a job somewhere, anywhere. Sleep in a shed, if I have to. Lie low until I turned twenty five. Maybe go back when the contract runs out. Maybe.”
“You don’t want to see your parents again?”
“It’s not that,” You said, poking at your food. “I didn’t want to leave in the first place. If it wasn’t for the engagement, I wouldn’t have had to. I don’t know what they’ll do if I ever go back. Maybe they’ll disown me. Maybe they’ll force me to work or write up another marriage contract with Gregory or someone else to get the money they need. I don’t know.”
“Don’t you have a say?”
You scoffed. “Of course not. Women are the property of their fathers until they get married, and then they’re the property of their husbands. Property doesn’t get a say.”
He was silent for a long time, every so often reaching over to pick an onion off of your plate.
“I guess I just have one thing left to ask you, then,” He said.
“Which is?”
He turned to you and clicked his tongue. “What’s your name, pet?”
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The two of you left Willowridge heading for Dunmountain, stopping for a few days in Chesterfield to have a quick courthouse wedding. He managed to find a simple iron ring in his belongings to use as a wedding band. After the wedding, you gave him half of your money, telling him he’d get the other half after the annulment.
Once in Dunmountain, you left Alexei to handle the mule and vardo, and immediately began to look for work. The bathhouses were your best bet; there was always laundry that needed doing.
You also found a small apartment at an inn made up of a single room with a fireplace one could cook over. It wasn’t furnished with anything, not even a bed, but you figured you could make do with a bedroll and a simple table and chairs. You paid the rent for the next month and got the keys, rushing back to Alexei to tell him where you’d be living.
He drove you back to the apartment on his carriage, and the two of you began hauling your belongings up the stairs to your room.
“I’ll buy furnishings tomorrow,” You told him. “We’re not staying here long, so we won’t need much.”
“Didn’t you say you’d see to my every comfort?” He teased. “I want a canopy bed with feather down and a lounging sofa and--”
You shushed him. “I said I’d cook and clean and pay the necessary expenses. You want anything else, you can pay for it yourself.”
He chuckled. “Did you find a job?”
“I start at the bathhouse adjacent to the inn in two days. I’ll leave you food for the day and cook when I get home. That’ll have to do.” You opened the door to the room and stepped inside. “I have enough provisions to make a simple stew, unless you’d like something else.”
“Stew sounds fine,” He said, setting down a small trunk. “I think I’ll go out tomorrow and look for paint supplies. I sold all of my paintings on my trip and I need to create some new ones. If I go too long without painting, I get irritable.”
“I’d hate to see what that looks like,” You said snidely. The only thing in the room provided by the inn was a bucket for drawing water from the nearby fountain. “I’ll fetch some water for dinner.”
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A few months passed awkwardly but uneventfully. Alexei was companionable enough, but the two of you hadn’t made any attempts to bond or become close. You exchanged passing pleasantries, but the two of you didn’t converse much. He sometimes teased you by asking if your “wifely duties” extended to sharing the marital bed, seeing as how your bedrolls had been placed on opposite sides of the room. You merely smacked his backside with a hand towel and told him to get back to his paintings.
“Would you ever consider sitting for a painting, pet?” He asked you once as you were cleaning dishes.
You snorted. “I expected you’d want me to model nude for you or some nonsense.”
He laughed. “Only if that’s what you’d like, dear wife of mine.”
“Don’t call me that,” You said, lobbing a crumb of bread at his head. He didn’t duck, just let it hit him and caught it, popping it in his mouth. “And I will do no such thing.”
“Offer is open, if you ever change your mind.”
“If the earth opened and the devil himself ordered me to do it, I’d still refuse.”
Alexei laughed full-throated. “That’d be a sight worth seeing.”
As annoying as he could be, he wasn’t an unpleasant man to live with. He didn’t do any of the washing or cooking, but you didn’t care since you promised to do it yourself. Even still, he was fairly tidy and didn’t make much of a mess. He liked to joke and tease, but he was mostly harmless. For all his teasing, he never once made a move on you or gave you any reason to fear he might take advantage of you.
You also had to admit, he was very talented. He sold his paintings just as fast as he made them, which was a little bit of a shame, you thought: your room was a little plain and dour, and you’d have liked one or two of them to hang on the wall to brighten the place up. You never asked, though. You couldn’t go asking for favors from the man who’d already promised six months of his life to you.
On your birthday, you got permission to finish work early and decided to go and buy the ingredients to make an apple and honey pot pie to go with dinner that night. Since you didn’t have a stove, you’d have to bake it in a pan over the fire, but you knew how to do it. It was one of the first treats your mother had ever taught you to make.
Apples were in season and would be cheap enough--the cheapest of the fruits available anyway--but honey would be quite expensive. A single spoonful cost several days worth of work. But you figured, you’d been working hard. You’d earned it.
When you arrived back at the apartment, he stood up from his painting stool to take your shopping basket.
“Is that honey I smell?” He said, sniffing. “That’s pricey. What’s the occasion, pet?”
“It’s my birthday,” You told him. “I was going to make a pie.”
“Is it!” He said, smiling. “That certainly is reason for celebration. Why didn’t you say anything?”
“It’s not like we have regular conversations, you know,” You said, unpacking the shopping. “Besides, I didn’t think it would matter to you.”
“Well, that’s a bit unfair,” He said, frowning. “Are we not friends?”
“Are we?” You asked, stopping to quirk an eyebrow at him. “Out of the way, please. I need to start the crust now or I’ll be cooking all night.”
He frowned at you still but said nothing, taking two steps back so you could bustle about making dinner.
“What would you want as a gift?” He asked, leaning against the wall and watching you work.
“I don’t want anything,” You replied, not looking up. “If I did, I’d get it myself.”  
“Oh, come now,” He said, tsking. “You may not think of us as friends, but after four months, I would assume we’d have developed some kind of rapport. What would you ask of a friend?”
“I wouldn’t ask anything of a friend,” You said. “I’m not the type of person who expects gifts.”
“Didn’t your parents ever give you gifts?”
“That’s different, they’re my parents.”
“Family, right?”
“Yes.”
“Well, I’m family now, aren’t I?” He asked.
“I will throw a plate at you.”
“Just tell me,” He said, his voice a little wheedling. “There must be one thing I can get you that you’d allow.”
You sighed forcefully and stopped kneading the dough, turning to him and looking him up and down. “Are you serious about this?”
“Have you ever known me not to be serious?” He asked, grinning.
You rolled your eyes and when back to work, and he stuttered a retraction.
“No, no, I am, I’m serious. Please, tell me, what would you like?”
You stopped again and wiped your hands on your apron, and then crossed them over your chest. “Well… I’d like a painting.”
He looked like you’d hit him in the head with your baking pan. “What?”
“It doesn’t have to be anything grand, just a little painting of anything, flowers or trees or something like that, to brighten up the room. It’s a bit drab here.” You waved around vaguely. “There isn’t even a window. Just… some color. That’s all.”
“You want me to paint for you?” He asked, incredulous. “That’s all?”
“Well… I know painting supplies are expensive and I didn’t want to ask for anything, seeing as I promised to take care of everything myself. Like I said, I’m not the type to expect presents or things like that.”
“You don’t like to ask for things for yourself, do you, pet?” He asked shrewdly. “Not just from me, huh? In general.”
You turned your back to him and started kneading again. “My parents were both born peasants. Peasants don’t get gifts. When they married, they lived in a one-room cruck house that my father built them as a wedding gift. A house of straw and dirt was all my father could offer my mother, and it was good enough. They both worked their hands to the bone to get where they are. They live in a much nicer house now and don’t have to work as hard as they used to, but they raised me to appreciate what I could do with my own hands and not to rely on gifts. ‘A gift is never free,’ they’d always say.” You stopped working again and stared at your hands. “They used to tell me that I was ‘a gift’ to them. I wonder now if that meant they always saw me as a means to an end.”
“I always thought parents were supposed to put their children above everything else,” He said softly from behind you, continuing to watch you.
“Is that what your parents were like?” You asked in return. He didn’t answer and you looked over your shoulder at him.
“I wouldn’t know,” He said eventually, sitting down at the table and taking an apple from the basket. “Never met them. I grew up in an orphanage.” He took a knife from his pocket and began to peel and slice the apples.
“You know you don’t have to do that,” You remarked.
“Hush,” He said, not looking at you. “It’s your birthday.”
Dinner was pleasant, and the pie was delicious. There was enough left over to to have for breakfast the next morning. Alexei even helped you tidy up. The day had been rather nice.
So why, when you lay down for bed, did it suddenly feel like you couldn’t breathe?
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My Masterlist
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c-rowlesdraws · 2 years
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Sweet Pea’s sister tells this story all the time and both of them think it’s really funny
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c-rowlesdraws · 11 months
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As much as Snowpea is great I do wanna throw some love out there for Nettle too. She's got great goblin design and everything I've seen with her in it has been real fun.
thank you! I have fun drawing her.
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(shirt inspired by a real one seen on @shiftythrifting, one of the best blogs on this website)
(also her gnoll friend's name is Sweet Pea, not Snow Pea, but that's ok Snow Pea could be a cute nickname)
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c-rowlesdraws · 1 year
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lil evening drawing... sleepy Sweet Pea
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c-rowlesdraws · 1 year
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❌ dogs playing poker ✅ gnolls playing blackjack
(Sweet Pea with some new friends (other people’s characters)-- based on a picture drawn by @ Zinthings on twitter for Day 9, “Deal”, from @thebeardlyben’s Gnollvember prompt list)
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c-rowlesdraws · 1 year
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little sketch from late last nite/early this morning-- a reminder from Sweet Pea that "nice and friendly" and "ready to bite people who deserve it" don't have to contradict each other.
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c-rowlesdraws · 5 months
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I recently learned that hyenas still have their winter coat gene. So kept in cold areas they will grow a thick winter coat. Has sweetpea ever been surprises by a winter coat growing in?
(Image for example)
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Yesss I love the winter coat gene! I wouldn’t say Sweet Pea has ever been surprised by growing one— she was born and raised in a temperate climate, so one’s fur getting thicker in winter and thinner in summer is just something that’s always been part of life for her and her community. Springtime means lots of brushing.
A number of my drawings of her actually were drawn with a winter/cooler-weather coat in mind— I love how it makes the mane sort of blend in with the rest of the fur, and the fluff factor makes her look even friendlier.
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c-rowlesdraws · 2 years
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@geryuthetzakandi and @wynterwulf7 -- I wound up combining your asks lol
Sweet Pea occasionally wears her mane differently-- this style, with the fur gathered into little pigtails, is associated with hunting or fighting, and she is outfitted accordingly. The paint she’s wearing is a traditional design that’s meant to look intimidating and scary, evoking having shoved one’s entire face inside a fresh kill (subtle symbolism is for other people), but she’s giving her look a friendlier touch with some nice flowers.
She’s headed for a diplomatic meeting with the community leaders of the new human village at the edge of her clan’s territory. The humans always seem a bit more willing to agree to the gnolls’ terms when they dress like this, for some reason...
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c-rowlesdraws · 2 years
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shorter answer: not really.
(dialogue transcription below)
“Oh I’ll bite them, sure, if the fighting’s close-up, but never eat one. 
Too much magic in them. It’s not healthy.
And if they’ve been sitting around awhile, they’re awfully dry. And dusty. And splintery.
Much better to eat something that’s the good, ordinary kind of dead.”
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c-rowlesdraws · 1 year
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a drawing from yesterday-- Sweet Pea meeting Muun (big fluffy commissioned boy from the other day) under the mistletoe! Original Add-Your-OC-Here meme by @ Zinthings on twitter.
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c-rowlesdraws · 9 months
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someone tagged one of my Sweet Pea comics with "Gnolls don't need shirts like most mammals in real life do" (as part of a very courteous image description) and Im like.. I'm obsessed with the phrasing. Most mammals, objectively, do not wear shirts, much less need them... like even if they have breasts on the upper torso, most mammals just let that shit swang, humans are the only mammals (and even then, not all humans by any means) who wear shirts for modesty reasons lmao
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