lycanthropelahey:

iamthefirechild:

“Ha! I am completely proportional in every way.” He cracked an eye to look down at Isaac again. “What are you on about? Again what? I just like you kneeling.”

“Yes, you are,” he murmured admiringly and kissed along his legs, before resuming his cleaning of his boyfriend, chuckling away softly to himself.

Summer leaned back against the wall again, smiling faintly, and gave himself into his boyfriend’s hands. Anything Isaac wanted to do right now, he’d be fine with. Just to egg him on a little, the redhead moaned and growled softly, shifting his hips.

the Tale of Sir Isaac

lycanthropelahey:

iamthefirechild:

She held her head high, pretending to be arrogant, and placed her fingertips in his palm. “Shall we be great nobles?” she murmured, eyes twinkling with a mischievous light long missing.

“I think we could be whatever we wanted to be.” He grinned, trying to keep up the presence of being someone he wasn’t, but the smiles just kept on coming with ease now that he was with her once more.

With him bearing her hand, they processed toward the door, pretending to be regal — until she tripped on the hem of her dress and almost fell over. Giggling, she reeled into him, and one of the guards at the door hurried to catch her, only stepping back when it was clear Isaac had her. The guard gave Isaac a grave nod and said, “Take care of our lady, milord.”

Smashing Pots

ursulavernon:

Every now and then, people ask me if I should go to art school, and I usually say something like “Do you want to go to art school?” and if they say “Yes,” then I say “Yes,” and if they say “No,” then I say “Don’t.” This is why I am a crappy source of career advice.

However.

There is ONE class that I think nearly every writer, artist, and creative type out there would benefit from, and as it happens, it’s ceramics. Preferably with a strong wheel-throwing component.

No, really.

Back in ceramics class, in college, at the end of the year we would gather up all our dishes and pots and sculptures that we had labored over for weeks—and you really do labor for weeks, because you’re sculpting and drying and firing and glazing and firing again—and we would look at them.

And what we generally realized was that we had created a lot of things that sucked. There is just a point where you hold this lumpy-ass thing in your hand and you realize that it has not added to the sum total of awesome in the universe—and that you don’t have to keep it.

And then you wind up and fling it into the massive dumpster behind the ceramics studio and it smashes against the bottom and a demented exhilaration surges through you and you grab the next one and smash it and it is glorious.

Now, there are people who do not smash their failed work, who cannot bear to do it, and so there was always a shelf full of sad lumpy clay things with a little “free to good home” sign on it. Some of them possibly were adopted eventually. Mostly, though, we learned to smash.

Pottery, particularly wheel-throwing, is wonderful for this, incidentally. You fail over and over and you fail fast and you are creating quantity to lead to quality. You throw and throw and throw and things die on the wheel and things die when you take them off the wheel and things explode in the kiln and after you have made a dozen or two dozen or a thousand, none of them are precious any more. There is always more clay.

It breaks you of preciousness and perfectionism. You can’t fiddle for two hours with wet clay on the wheel getting it perfect. It’ll be an over-saturated lump of mud long before then. If the walls are thrown too thin, they are too thin. It’s not worth fixing. Start over. Do it again. Finish, don’t fiddle.

I can’t do pottery any more because if I tried to hunch over a wheel these days, my back would go out so hard that I would never walk upright again. But I still think it was one of the most valuable classes I ever took, because it taught me to acknowledge failure, not to fear it, and then smash the hell out of it.

lycanthropelahey:

iamthefirechild:

“I like being taller than you, it’s a unique situation. I want to enjoy it while I can.. He closed his eyes, smiling faintly. “I kinda like you being subservient, too. Kneeling in front of me … ” Thinking about the other things Isaac could do down there was turning him on yet again.

“You’d be all out of proportion if you were this tall normally, I think,” he murmured and smiled against his knees, before chuckling and gazing up at him with an awed exasperation. “Again? Really? You’re worse than me! But maybe I can be persuaded…”

“Ha! I am completely proportional in every way.” He cracked an eye to look down at Isaac again. “What are you on about? Again what? I just like you kneeling.”

the Tale of Sir Isaac

lycanthropelahey:

iamthefirechild:

The shadows shifting through the glass eventually brought her head up, seeking out his eyes in the falling dusk. At the edge of the glass room, a servant fixed a torch to the wall by the entrance. “Will you dine with me, my lord?” Summer asked softly, a slight smile on her mouth, remembering their first meeting. She was sure he would object, as usual, to the term she insisted on using.

“Of course I will, My Lady.” Isaac chuckled softly, although the slight twitch to his nose betrayed his discomfort over that term, but he would eagerly play along with her if it made her smile. He held out his hand for her to take, palm upturned as he teasingly wriggled his fingers, back straight as he cast her an encouraging smile, head tilting just a little bit to the side.

She held her head high, pretending to be arrogant, and placed her fingertips in his palm. “Shall we be great nobles?” she murmured, eyes twinkling with a mischievous light long missing.