Humoral theory
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Heart-Ravisher, Bird and Snare by Snowgrouse
Fandoms: Thief of Bagdad (1940), Original Work, كتاب ألف ليلة وليلة | Kitaab 'alf layla wa-layla | One Thousand and One Nights
13 Mar 2016
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Summary
The melancholy humours of the womb overwhelm Yassamin once more; Jaffar exorcises them with a thorough, loving ravishment.
"Lift up your skirt."
She trembles as she does--how he can still genuinely frighten her, she does not know. Perhaps it is the demons--they plague her day and night with fears rational and irrational, of the worst things that could happen. Vile, poisonous fears of him starting to hate her, him having finally grown sick of her caprices; that, or him dying, leaving her alone in the world with no one to assuage her grief. The blood-demons have made her believe worse things, so why should she not, for this moment, also believe that he merely wants to hurt her, to but use her body to sate his sadistic needs? That Jaffar the butcher, the torturer they had told her horror stories of had finally returned to his senses after these mellow, love-filled years, and would now treat her like he had treated the rest of his subjects: but pieces of meat to serve his bidding?
Somewhere deep inside of her, where the blood roils darkest, stickiest and her madness laughs at its most unhinged, she is aroused by this.
Series
- Part 4 of The King's White Falcon
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Plot a Course by jaegerbomb (unclearatypicality)
Fandoms: Shingeki no Kyojin | Attack on Titan
07 Feb 2023
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Summary
Levi Ackerman and his ship, the Magnolia Knave, have something of a reputation among seafarers, for better or for worse. When Eren is found adrift at sea, badly beaten, and taken in by Levi and his crew, Eren learns what's behind the reputation. It's not exactly what he expected.
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Tags
Summary
Thirteen years after the fall of Skalitz, Henry returns to a world changed—and to Hans Capon, who has changed even more, a shadow of the man Henry once knew. What begins as a quiet reunion becomes a slow, painful reckoning: of choices made, futures lost, and the kind of love that never truly dies.
It is a story of quiet devotion, of one man returning not to reclaim, but to remind. Together they help each other find meaning again—not through grand gestures, but through presence, memory, and the courage to mourn.
