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#who made me a princess jennete
lyomeii · 1 year
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kissing and running
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-> warnings: none! surprise :) only fluff.
-> request by anon! Ijekiel, Athanasia, Jennette, Lucas how they react when the reader kisses them and runs away
-> a/n: let’s make this time different, no yandere themes since i feeling to write something different from today’s post. So hope you all enjoy this one. the tags still referring to yandere just to reach more readers
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IJEKIEL
-> he is only giving you a small smile and a small perk of his red cheeks. he is holding himself from any extreme emotion that might scare you at first.
-> struggling to find the correct words to say something, he find it useless the moment you left him alone to think of what just happened.
-> the taste you left in his lips stay there for more few moments, ijekiel has to seat down and revive that’s moment over and over til he find courage enough for look after you.
-> he needs to know why you have done it.
ATHANASIA
-> shocked.
-> she has focusing so much on what do next that athy didn’t immediately notice the kiss on her cheeks nor that you left her by herself.
-> gaining her posture back, athy attempts to ran after you to get an answer of why you done that and in the end, didn’t work.
-> as much she dislike to do it, she will use the privilege as the heir to call you over to explain why you done that :) she will love to you in front of her, being the one to blush instead of her.
JENNETE
-> “ oh.”
-> she didn’t realize what’ve you done in the moment. took a few seconds to her to attempt to speak of what just happened. yet, when she finally gains the courage to speak up, you are already far gone from her.
-> her heart is so confusing now! Do you love her to kiss her like that? or you were just playing with her feelings? as much she wants to know the reason behind, jennete fears to know the true.
LUCAS
-> he smiles :) and that was the last thing you saw before running away from the scene.
-> a mixed of curiosity and anger, lucas want to know why you interrupt his studies. he might have liked the kiss you gave him, yet that none of your business to know.
-> he will let you roam free around you have ran, lucas needs to finish his studies and then, he will go after you and seek a reason for why you did such action on him.
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@lyomeii stuff || don’t repost
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amusedyan · 2 years
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Howdy! I was wondering if I could request Yandere Jennette from Who Made me a Princess. With a fem darling if not that is alright. Could I ask for a resistant darling as well? If not that is alright. Thank you in advance.
Okay, so this is an au of Jennette that won the throne; is it the novel? I don’t think so- novel Jennette didn’t have much agency in the grand scheme of things. So it’s an au.
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Everyone talked about the Empress’s spouse.
There had been talk of the Empress marrying Ijekial Alpheus. It had originally made sense; they had been raised together, the young Lord had been her escort to social functions, so clearly they were close.
But it hadn’t come to be.
Instead she’d married you, and astounded the court.
You spent your days at her side, the dutiful wife.
“My darling,” she called you, jeweled eyes shining.
She embroidered your dresses herself, it was whispered-truthfully- a sign of her devotion to you, her endless patience and love.
You were not popular with the court.
You didn’t want to be.
You would not love this creature of shining eyes and rosy smiles- the woman who cast such a spell on the people around her, bewitching even the emperor.
She had seen you and decided, she told you, that you were hers. You would never forget the way that her eyes had glimmered, or the fearsome grip that could have crushed your hands. You couldn’t say no- not to the crown princess, not to the one that everyone adored so.
Perfect Jennette.
And she ascended, dragging you along; dressing you in finery and jewels that weighed you down, and loving you with a force that should have moved mountains but instead disgusted you. 
“You look lovely, my darling,” Jennette sighs, pressing a kiss to your cheek.
“Thank you, your Majesty,” your rebellions are small, and pointed, but ultimately useless.
It would be better, you decided, if you could kill her.
Some days you dreamed of it, of strangling her one night and then throwing yourself out the window after- better to die than let the guard catch you.
She’d bound you with magic, shortly after assuming the throne. She’d had her magicians do it. You were bound to her, body and soul, unable to hurt her and unable to run, to hurt yourself. It was through the goodness of her heart that she allowed you your own words.
Did she know how much you loathed her? How her every touch made your flesh crawl and your stomach heave?
Sometimes her jubilant smile would...change, like a flicker of light on glass, into something not so sweet and just a little more snakelike.
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kunzoi-12 · 2 years
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wmmap but ...honkai impact au ?
read the tags please
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cinnamon-and-glass · 1 year
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yumeno-kyu13 · 3 years
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[Who made me a princess Jennete with different color eyes.]
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[Dark Blue Eyes]
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[Jeweled Blue Eyes]
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[Green Eyes]
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ijekiel-alpheus · 4 years
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→ wmmap's ijekiel alpheus.
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ichigowallpaper · 4 years
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☆Wallpaper: Jennete Margarita
☆Who made me a Princess
☆720x1280 | 720x1560
☆Like or reblog if u save ☆
☆My pinterest: https://br.pinterest.com/renichigo/
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meltingsnow-03 · 5 years
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I remember when Lucas said that Jennete was not a pure royal and what? A chimera? And look at her eyes now, different from Athy and Claude.
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reading-while-queer · 4 years
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This month on Reading While Queer, I’m doing something a little different! In order to try to direct more attention toward indie web fiction and short stories, I’ll be doing a series of Indie Spotlights like this one.  This month’s review covers two short stories, both queer retellings of folktales, both free to read online.  The first is “With Roses in Their Hair” by Ennis Bashe, a retelling of Tam Lin.  The second is “Tristan” by Lucy Hughes-Hallett, a retelling of Tristan and Isolde.
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Rating: Great Read Genre: Short Story, Fantasy, Science Fiction Representation: -Lesbian protagonist & love interest Trigger warnings: Violence, injury, body horror, parental abuse metaphor, colonialism metaphor Note: Just on the edge of being YA-appropriate, but on the sexual side.
“With Roses in Their Hair” is an f/f retelling of Tam Lin, the Scottish folktale about a woman who rescues her love from the Queen of the Fairies.  Bashe’s spin on the original tale takes place in an apocalyptic world which has been reorganized by the Visitors - aliens with a striking similarity to fae, both in nomenclature (even calling themselves changelings, etc) and in the fae-like laws they rule themselves by.  The Visitors control how many humans can enter a public place, issue identical clothing and rations to all, and are only opposed by the small resistance living underground in the subways.
I found this premise delightful, if confusing at first.  Reconciling the many names the Visitors have for themselves (Visitors, changelings, fairies) with the fact that humans can also have fairy wings (though mechanical), and differentiating clearly between the two factions, took some time.  I liked that Bashe didn’t hold the reader’s hand, which would have been more unpleasant than taking the time to untangle the threads of worldbuilding myself. 
The Visitors are one of the best visualizations of aliens that I have read - the fae interpretation is ingenious, and really drives home their fundamental difference, making the Visitors much more frightening. These aliens are so strange that they aren’t even governed by the same physical and chemical laws as humans are - rather, their version of the laws of physics are the laws of deal-keeping.  Shape-shifting and light-bending they can do, breaking a bargain they cannot. The magic-science of this world is accomplished beautifully, reminding me a little of Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer, but ultimately, all its own.
Sometimes Bashe’s worldbuilding, beautiful as it is, does not quite support its own weight - it is a very rich sci-fi world built on fragile stilts.  As much as I love how sparing the stilts are, the richer the world, the more stilts you need, or else the reader ends up having a decidedly Fantasia-like experience.  I was delighted by the style of the story, the on-the-page description of the Visitors, of Jennet, the human resistance fighter, and of Tamburlaine, the changeling she falls in love with.  The old subway car that Jennett calls home, the horses made from light-constructs - I could go on.  But we were missing a few stilts, and so I was never really sure of the rules, or why what I was reading was happening.  Part of this is a problem of adaptation.  Bashe sometimes leans on the reader’s prior familiarity with the Tam Lin folktale in order to patch issues of character motivation.  “Why does the Queen of the Fairies do x?” is not so much addressed by the story itself as by the context of being a retelling.  The Queen of the Fairies acts as she does because that’s what the Queen of the Fairies does in the original story.
Despite scattered motivation and worldbuilding issues, what makes the original Tam Lin a compelling and timeless story shines through in this retelling as well.  I wasn’t sure about the hard sci-fi pivot to an alien invasion story, but I came to really appreciate that angle and what it brings to the table.  Rather than humans and fae being two separate, parallel worlds which find themselves at odds over Tamburlaine, the alien invasion adds a colonial aspect to the story.  Fae-aliens with seemingly nonsensical laws, violations of which are punished swiftly and ruthlessly, make a brilliant allegory for settler colonialism.  A culturally strange group of invaders may as well be aliens - or the fae! Or both! The allegory is there if you choose to see it, but nothing more than a gentle undertone, which was accomplished well.  
The romance between Jennet and Tam is well-developed, with a natural-feeling progression that is difficult to accomplish in short form.  However, in a short story with so much ground to cover, it’s no surprise that it has taken me until the end of the review to even consider the romance.  There is so much to sink your teeth into, that “With Roses in Their Hair” hardly needs to be a romance at all.  In fact, my favorite parts of the story had nothing to do with Jennett and Tamburlaine’s growing feelings for each other.  The value in this story is multi-faceted: between the romance, the parental abuse metaphor of the relationship between the changelings and the Visitors, the colonialism metaphor of the alien invasion, and the retelling of Tam Lin, one could even say “With Roses in Their Hair” is a shape-shifter itself.
“With Roses in Their Hair” is free to read on Xanwest, here.
For more from Ennis Bashe, visit their website here. 
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Rating: Great Read Genre: Short Story, Literary Fiction Representation: -Bisexual leading characters Trigger warnings: Ableism & ableist slurs, drug abuse Note: Contains overt sexuality, not YA
“Tristan” is a short story billed as “Tristan and Isolde but make it queer” - that tagline is what got me to click the link to Electric Lit where the story is hosted.  However, “Tristan” is a lot more than a retelling.  Rather than a straightforward retelling of the medieval romance between the knight Tristan and the princess Isolde, “Tristan” takes a left turn into “She’s All That” territory.
Hughes-Hallett sets the tale in the modern day with quippy dialogue that brings to mind British romantic comedy of the early 00s.  This literary style makes an amount of sense, considering the 00s were well and truly laden with rom-com retellings of English literature, from George Bernard Shaw to Shakespeare.  “Tristan” slips easily into a “pop” style of storytelling without sacrificing any of its poetry, making for a very interesting read. The trimmings of the modern retelling - from Tristan doing a tab of acid in the park to his boss-slash-boyfriend Cornwall running a private museum of antiquities - were fun, and they provide a sharp complement to the meat of the story, which is more pensive study on the nature of love than rom-com.
As much as I liked “Tristan,” I had a bad first impression.  The story opens with an extended scene of expository dialogue between Tristan and Cornwall as they arrange for Tristan to pick up Cornwall’s wife-to-be, Isolde, from the airport.  Dialogue is “Tristan”’s Achilles heel, an obvious and fatal weakness that almost made me write off the whole story. There is an invasion of poetic (convoluted?) language in the dialogue that breaks suspension of disbelief, and between the poetry and the lack of any dialogue tags to offer tone cues, one is led to read the dialogue as stiffly-acted soliloquy.  What are the characters doing? How are they speaking? Do they exist in the world, or are they standing center stage? The real crème de la crème of my initial dislike of “Tristan” was not the style of dialogue, however, but the content.  Within the first page, Tristan questions why Isolde needs to be picked up from the airport - is she [insert ableist slur]? How about [other ableist slur]?  Some aspects of the quippy, sarcastic 00s I could do without.
I continued to be underwhelmed by Hughes-Hallett’s dialogue throughout “Tristan,” but this was almost entirely made up for by the remarkable writing of every other part of the story.  First, the premise itself defied my expectations for a queer retelling of Tristan and Isolde.  The passionate romance between Tristan and Isolde is not gender-bent to make it between two WLW or MLM; rather, Tristan himself is bisexual, and Cornwall’s casual lover before Isolde enters the picture.  Where our story begins, Cornwall doesn’t like how attached Tristan is getting to him, and is ready to settle down with Isolde, his email pen-pal who he’s never met.  I was genuinely delighted by this creative choice as an interpretation of the “how to queer medieval literature” exercise.  It doesn’t take the easy way out, and recognizes that the value of a bisexual character doesn’t lie only in stories of same-gender romance.
I also liked that “Tristan” wasn’t a romance, not really.  Despite the similarities one can draw to the 00s rom-com (for good and ill), the meat of the story is not feel-good fluff at all, but a discussion of passion versus love: a prolonged meditation on loving someone who ostensibly loves you back, but whose feelings do not compare.  This discussion peeks through Hughes-Hallett’s beautifully detailed work; from intriguing descriptions of the antiquities in Cornwall’s gallery, to the otherworldly presence of Isolde, to the skillful weave of one sentence to the next, “Tristan” is scattered with gems.  One must only sift through the sand.
As a retelling, “Tristan” more than accomplishes its goal of “Tristan and Isolde but make it queer” - it also asks the reader to think about the very genre of romance.  Tristan and Isolde being a 12th century romance that is so culturally ubiquitous as to have mothered the Arthurian tradition and captivated the imagination for centuries since, it was the perfect groundwork for the story about the nature of love that Hughes-Hallett wanted to tell, (with characters that just happened to be queer.)
“Tristan” is free to read on Electric Lit, here.
For more from Lucy Hughes-Hallett, visit her website here.
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lyomeii · 2 years
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Who made me a princess
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ANASTASIUS DE ALGER OBELIA
-> yandere headcanons
-> a reader who misses him
-> a sultan! reader
CLAUDE DE ALGER OBELIA
-> platonic! with daughter reincarnated
-> a darling who loves going out
-> darling doesn’t love him anymore
-> darling who hates loud noises
-> a dancer darling
-> a reader who misses him
-> hugging him from behind
-> a second daughter
-> a sultan! reader
IJEKIEL ALPHEUS
-> you look perfect tonight (oneshot)
-> yandere headcanons
-> kissing and running away
-> motherly figure
ATHANASIA DE ALGER OBELIA
-> kissing and running away
-> motherly figure
-> younger! sister
LUCAS
-> kissing and running away
-> motherly figure
JENNETE MARGARITA
-> kissing and running away
-> motherly figure
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@lyomeii stuff || don’t repost
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yumeno-kyu13 · 3 years
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Just them Smiling.✨
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yumeno-kyu13 · 2 years
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Happy Birthday To The most beautiful girl Princess Athy!🥳✨🎂💐
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ijekiel-alpheus · 4 years
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→ wmmap's ijekiel alpheus.
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