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The Punk Pixie Manifesto

by Bill Tiepelman

The Punk Pixie Manifesto

Wing Maintenance & Other Threats I was elbow-deep in wing glue and bad decisions when the messenger hit my window like a drunk moth. Shattered glass. Confetti of regret. Typical Monday. My left wing was molting in an express-yourself pattern that looked like an oil spill, and the glue fumes were the only thing in the room with a better attitude than me. I yanked the latch, hauled the messenger inside by his collar, and clocked the insignia on his jacket—brass thimble with a crown of needles. Seelie Post. Royal. Oh good. The kind of trouble you can smell before it sues you. “Delivery for Zaz,” he wheezed, which was interesting because my legal name is the length of a violin solo and rhymes with nothing. People who know me call me Zaz. People who don’t know me end up paying for new windows. He handed me a wax-sealed envelope that vibrated like a guilty conscience. The seal was etched with needlework filigree and the faintest suggestion of a smirk—Queen Morwen’s court style. I broke it open with a thumbnail I keep sharpened for statements and citrus. The letter unfolded into calligraphy sharp enough to shave with. Dearest Zazariah Thorn,A delicate item has been misplaced by persons of no consequence. Retrieve it discreetly. Compensation is generous. Consequences for failure are… educational.—Her Grace, Morwen of the Tailors, Keeper of the Thimble Crown Attached was a sketch of the item: a thimble wrought from moonsteel, with a ring of needle points angling inward. A crown for thumbs—or for kings stupid enough to touch it. I’d heard of the Thimble Crown. You wear it, you stitch oaths into reality. One prick and suddenly your promises show up with teeth. It was supposed to live under three veils and an angry aunt, not out where goblins could pawn it for concert tickets. “What’s the generous part?” I asked the messenger. He responded by dying on my floor, which felt melodramatic. He wasn’t stabbed; he was unraveled, threads of glamor popping like overworked seams. Someone had pulled on him from the other side, the way you tug a sweater until it becomes a scarf and bad news. I lit a clove, cracked the window wider, and stared down at the alley. The city was doing its usual impression of a headache: neon bruises, rain blown sideways, a bus groaning like a cursed whale. Humans were out there pretending not to believe in us while buying crystals in bulk. Cute. I looked back at the corpse. “Okay, sweetheart,” I muttered, “who tugged your thread?” I looted his satchel because I’m not a cop, I’m a professional. Inside: a ticket stub from the Rusted Lark (a dive bar with live music and several health code violations), a tin of wing polish (rude), and a matchbook stamped with an orange daisy and the words Tell Daisy You Owe Her. I did, in fact, owe Daisy. Two drinks, a favor, and an explanation for why her ex now only speaks in limericks. Wing glue wasn’t going to fix this day. I strapped on my teal jacket—the one with studs that say “approach with snacks”—and laced my corset tight enough to squeeze the truth out of liars. The mirror offered up the usual: orange mohawk at war with gravity, tattoos like a roadmap to poor decisions, and that face my mother said could curdle milk. I kissed it anyway. “Let’s go make questionable choices.”     The Rusted Lark smelled like beer, ozone, and apologies. I sidestepped a brawl between a pair of brownies arguing about union dues and slid onto a barstool that still had its original curses. Daisy clocked me immediately. She’s a nymph with shoulders like a threat and eyeliner that could cut rope, a saint who once dated me and forgave the experience. Barely. “Zaz,” she purred, wiping a glass that had seen things. “You look like a lawsuit. What do you want besides attention?” “Information. And, I guess, attention.” I flipped the matchbook onto the bar. “Your calling card is making the rounds attached to corpses. You working nights for the Royal haberdashery now?” She didn’t flinch, which told me she already knew the tune. “Not my card. Counterfeit. Cute, though.” She poured me something that smelled like burnt sugar and lightning bugs. “You’re here about the Thimble, aren’t you.” Not a question. “I’m here about the messenger who arrived pre-ruined and bled thread on my floor. But yes, apparently there’s a fashion accessory threatening reality.” I sipped. It tasted like kissing a socket. “Who lifted it?” Daisy tilted her head toward the back booth where a man sat alone, human on the outside, trouble on the inside. Trench coat, cheekbones, smile like a rumor. He was shuffling cards with fingers that knew better. The air around him crackled with low-budget magic. “That’s Arlo Crane,” she said. “Conjurer, con man, crowd-pleaser. He’s been asking very specific questions about moonsteel and needlework. Also he tips well, so don’t kill him in here.” I swiveled toward him and flashed my most professional grin, which looks like a shark rethinking vegetarianism. “If he’s got the Crown, why is he still breathing?” “Because somebody scarier is protecting him,” Daisy said. “And because he’s useful. The Crown changed hands last night, twice. First from the Tailors to the Smilers—” “Ugh.” The Smilers are a cult that replaced their mouths with embroidery. Helpful if you hate conversation and love nightmares. “—then from the Smilers to whoever Arlo’s working for,” Daisy finished. “He’s running an old trick with new thread. And Zaz? There’s a rumor the Crown isn’t just binding oaths anymore. It’s rewriting definitions. Somebody pricked the dictionary.” I felt my stomach try to unionize. Words are dangerous at the best of times; give them sharp accessories and cities fall. “What’s the going rate for apocalypse couture?” “Enough to make you say please.” Daisy slid me a napkin with a name written in lipstick: Madame Nettles. “She’s hosting a couture séance in the Needle Market after midnight. You’ll find Arlo there, if you can pay the cover in secrets.” “I brought plenty,” I said, and we both knew I meant knives.     I drifted toward Arlo’s booth, letting my wings catch the neon. He looked up, blinked once, and folded his cards. “You’re Zaz,” he said, like he was naming a problem. “I was told you’d be taller.” “I was told you’d be smarter,” I shot back, sliding into the seat across from him. Up close, he smelled like cedar and bad ideas. “Let’s make this efficient. You show me where the Crown is. I don’t collapse your lungs into origami cranes.” He smiled—the smug kind, the kind that gets people poetic at funerals. “You don’t want the Crown, Zaz. You want the thread it’s carrying. The pattern underneath the city. Someone tugged it loose. Everybody’s teeth are on edge because deep down we can feel the stitch slipping.” He tapped the deck. “I’m not your thief. I’m your map.” “Terrific,” I said. “Fold yourself into my pocket and be quiet until I need exposition.” “You’ll need more than exposition.” He slid a card across the table. The artwork showed an orange-winged fairy in a teal jacket scowling at destiny. Cute. “You’re being written, Zaz. And whoever’s doing the writing is getting sloppy.” The card warmed under my fingertip—then burned. I hissed, jerking back. On my thumb, a perfect ring of pinpricks. Needle teeth. Somewhere, very far and very near, a chorus of thimbles hummed like a beehive full of lawyers. Arlo’s smile died. “Oh. They’ve already crowned you.” “No one crowns me without dinner first,” I said, but my voice sounded two sizes too small. The bar’s lights flickered. Conversations hiccuped. A dozen patrons turned to look at me in eerie, synchronized curiosity—as if someone had just underlined my name. From the doorway came a rustle like silk over bone. A figure stepped inside, tall, immaculate, face veiled in lace so fine it could cut you with a sentence. Madame Nettles. Beside her walked two Smilers, mouth-threads taut, hands holding silver bobbins that spun on their own. The room fell into the kind of silence that makes choices heavy. Madame Nettles raised a gloved hand and pointed—so politely it felt like an insult—straight at my bleeding thumb. “There,” she murmured, voice like pins in velvet. “The seamstress of our undoing.” Arlo whispered, “We should leave.” “We?” I said. Then the bobbins sang, and the world around me puckered like fabric about to be cut. Look, I’m not scared of much: cops, commitment, self-reflection. But when reality starts to pleat itself, I get respectful. I flipped the table (classic), kicked the nearest Smiler (therapeutic), and grabbed Arlo by the lapels. “Congratulations, map,” I snarled. “You’re now also a shield.” We crashed through the kitchen. A pot of stew tried to negotiate peace and failed. Daisy pointed at the back exit with her bar rag, then at me, then at the ceiling—code for you owe me. We burst into the alley. Rain, sirens, our breath like cigarette ghosts. Behind us, the bar door bulged inward as the Smilers pushed reality through it like dough. Arlo coughed, blinking neon out of his eyes. “The Crown wants you because you talk like a weapon,” he said. “Every insult you’ve ever thrown could become law.” “Great,” I said. “Fetch me City Hall and a megaphone.” “I’m serious,” he said. “If they stitch your tongue to the Crown, the rest of us will spend eternity living inside your punchlines.” I stared at my thumb. The ring of punctures gleamed. Somewhere, far above the clouds, I felt the throb of machinery: looms at the size of weather, knitting fate into a sweater no one requested. I swallowed. “Fine. Map me, Crane. Where’s the next move?” He jerked his chin toward the rooftops. “Needle Market’s closed to groundwalkers tonight. We take the high road.” “I fly ugly when I’m mad,” I warned. “Then the night is about to get beautiful.” We launched, wings chopping rain into glitter. Below, the city stretched like a sullen dragon. Above, the clouds stitched themselves shut behind us. My thumb pulsed in time with a crown I didn’t own. And somewhere between the two, a voice I didn’t recognize cleared its throat and, in my own timbre, said: Rewrite. I didn’t scream. I never scream. I swore very poetically. And then we aimed for the market where secrets are priced by how much they hurt. The Needle Market Says Ouch The Needle Market doesn’t technically exist. It happens. Like a rash or a bad decision, it blooms wherever enough desire and guilt rub together. Tonight, it’s stitched into the rooftops over Sector Nine, a whole carnival of awnings and lanterns balanced on the city’s bones. From the air it looks like someone spilled embroidery across the skyline. Up close, it smells like wax, perfume, and secrets burning to stay warm. We landed behind a row of charm stalls where a dryad in a smoking jacket was selling love potions that came with non-refundable side effects. Arlo folded his trench coat collar up and moved like he was afraid of being recognized—which, in my experience, is how you get recognized. I didn’t bother hiding. My wings were flaring mood-light, my hair was a warning sign, and my boots squeaked like a threat. The Market parted around me like gossip around royalty. “You’re glowing,” Arlo muttered, eyes darting. “That’s not good.” “I’m always glowing,” I said. “Sometimes it’s rage, sometimes it’s crime.” We wove past stalls selling thread spun from siren hair, pocket universes in glass jars, curses priced by the syllable. Everyone was smiling too much. Not happy—just stretched, like they’d forgotten the muscle movements for frowning. The Smilers had been here recently. You could taste the antiseptic of their devotion in the air. Somewhere, someone was humming the same three notes on repeat. It made the hairs on my wings stand up. “Keep your head down,” Arlo whispered. “Sure,” I said. “Right after I tattoo subtle on my forehead.” He sighed. “You’re going to get us—” “Attention? Already did that.” From the crowd stepped a woman with a hat shaped like a dagger and a smile sharp enough to cut fabric. “Zazariah Thorn,” she said, dragging my full name across her teeth like floss. “The Queen’s unlikeliest errand girl.” Her outfit was all velvet menace, her voice a lazy stretch of honey and hooks. Madame Nettles. She’d followed us up—or she’d been waiting. Either way, my day was about to itch. “Madame,” I said, bowing just enough to mock. “Love the lace. I was hoping for a more dramatic entrance, though—maybe thunder, or a scream track.” She chuckled, the kind of sound that ends marriages. “No need for theatrics, darling. You’ve brought enough noise of your own.” She flicked her gaze toward my thumb. “May I?” “You may not,” I said. “The Crown marks you. You understand what that means?” “It means I should start charging rent to the voices in my head?” Arlo tried diplomacy, poor bastard. “Madame, the mark was accidental. We only want to return the Crown to its rightful custodian.” She tilted her head. “Oh, sweet conjurer, no. The Crown has already chosen its custodian. It’s rewriting her as we speak.” Her eyes found mine, pupils like black buttons. “How does it feel, Zazariah, to have the world sewing itself to your opinions?” “About as fun as a corset made of bees.” She smiled wider. “Every word you say now is binding. Every insult is architecture. Careful—you could manifest a slur into a city ordinance.” “Then I’ll start with ‘no solicitors.’” I flexed my wings. “And maybe ‘no veiled creeps with bad metaphors.’” The air around us shivered. A pair of her attendants stumbled backward as an invisible line carved itself into the cobblestone between us—neat, perfect, humming. My words had literally made a border. “Well,” Arlo muttered, “that’s new.” Madame Nettles’ smile didn’t waver, but her fingers twitched. “You’re dangerous, fairy. Untrained power is such a nuisance.” She gestured to her Smilers. “Take her tongue. Politely.” “Oh, now it’s a party,” I said, and pulled the first knife I’d ever stolen. (It’s sentimental; it hums when it’s happy.) The Smilers advanced, silent, silver needles flashing in their fingers. I moved first—because I always do—and for a few ecstatic seconds it was just metal, sweat, and the sound of fabric screaming. I kicked one into a stall of bottled daydreams; he popped like a balloon full of confetti. The other got close enough to snag my sleeve, but the jacket bit back—literally. I heard him yelp as the spikes sank in. Arlo muttered a spell that sounded like cheating and turned his deck of cards into a swarm of glowing paper wasps. They dive-bombed Madame Nettles’ veil, distracting her long enough for me to vault over a table and grab her wrist. “Why me?” I hissed. “Why mark me?” She leaned close enough for me to smell rosewater and something metallic. “Because, dear Zaz, you don’t believe in destiny. And that makes you the perfect author for one.” “You want me to rewrite fate?” “We want you to finish it.” That’s when the ground dropped. Literally. The Market, the stalls, the crowd—all unraveled beneath our feet like someone had tugged the wrong thread. Arlo grabbed me mid-fall, wings snapping open as the whole rooftop bazaar collapsed into glowing strands. We fell through a tapestry of color and sound until we hit another surface—a new Market, deeper, darker, stitched from shadows and half-finished ideas. “Where the hell—” I started. “Below the pattern,” Arlo said grimly. “The place stories go when they’re edited out.” Great. I’d always wanted to vacation in the dumpster of reality. We landed on a platform made of patchwork light. Around us, the air was thick with half-spoken words and the ghosts of metaphors too shy to finish. Figures watched from the edges—discarded characters, unfinished poems, jokes that had lost their punchlines. One of them shuffled forward, headless but polite. “You shouldn’t be here,” it rasped. “Join the club,” I said. “We meet Thursdays.” “They’re trying to stitch the end,” it wheezed. “But the thread is alive now. It remembers what it was meant to sew.” “Which is?” I asked. “Freedom,” it said, before unraveling into punctuation marks. Arlo crouched beside me, eyes scanning the flickering ground. “If the Crown is rewriting definitions, it must be using this place as its loom. Everything that doesn’t fit gets dumped here. We find the anchor, we can cut the stitch.” “And if we can’t?” He glanced at me. “Then you talk the universe to death.” “Oh, honey,” I said, drawing my knife again. “That’s my second-best skill.” From above, a new light bled through the ceiling of threads—cold, white, royal. Madame Nettles was following. Her voice slithered down like silk. “Run if you like, my little swearword. But every sentence ends in a period.” “Yeah?” I yelled. “Then I’ll be a semicolon, bitch!” The ground trembled in laughter—or maybe it was mine. Either way, reality cracked open again, and Arlo dragged me through the tear into somewhere worse. Threadbare Gods & Other Lies We landed in a cathedral made of thread. Not stone, not glass—just miles of woven silk that flexed when you breathed. Every sound was muffled, like the air was holding its breath. Somewhere above, gears turned lazily, winding the universe one loop at a time. Beneath us, the fabric pulsed faintly. Alive. Hungry. I checked my knife; it whispered something obscene. I whispered back. Arlo stumbled to his feet, brushing glitter off his coat. “Okay, no big deal, just a divine sewing machine running on cosmic anxiety. Totally normal Thursday.” “If this thing starts singing, I’m burning it down,” I said, and meant it. At the center of the cathedral stood a dais. On it: the Thimble Crown, glowing like moonlight trapped in a migraine. Threads ran from it in every direction, connecting to the ceiling, the floor, the air itself. It was beautiful—if you like your beauty armed and unstable. Each pulse it sent rippled through reality, and I felt my pulse respond, in time, like it had found its drummer. “That’s not supposed to happen,” Arlo muttered. “It’s syncing with you.” “Figures,” I said. “The first time something syncs with me, it’s a cursed relic.” Madame Nettles appeared behind us like a rumor too proud to die. Her lace veil trailed across the threads without snagging—a neat trick in physics and malice. “Welcome to the Loom,” she said, voice echoing through the weave. “Every world has one. Most just pretend they don’t.” “You’re late,” I said. “I was about to start redecorating.” She smiled behind the lace. “You misunderstand. This place isn’t for decorating. It’s for editing.” Arlo stepped between us, because he has the suicidal impulse of a saint. “If she keeps the Crown,” he said, “she’ll overwrite existence with sarcasm and spite.” “Oh, please,” I said. “That’s an improvement.” Madame Nettles gestured toward the Crown. “Put it on, Zazariah. Finish the Manifesto. Write the final stitch. Unmake the lie of destiny.” “And what’s in it for you?” “Freedom. Chaos. An end to all patterns.” “Sounds exhausting.” Arlo hissed, “Don’t do it.” But the Crown was already singing to me, a perfect pitch between fury and temptation. I stepped closer, drawn by the pull of something that finally got me. Every insult, every eye roll, every stubborn refusal—it had all been leading to this: a job offer from entropy. I reached out, fingers trembling. And then, because I am who I am, I stopped. “You know what?” I said. “I’m not your protagonist. I’m not your thread. And I definitely don’t take fashion advice from ghosts in lace.” Madame Nettles’ expression tightened. “You can’t refuse destiny.” “Watch me.” I pulled my knife, sliced open my palm, and let my blood drip across the weave. The Loom convulsed, threads snapping like nerves. “If the world’s going to stitch itself to my words,” I said, “then here’s a new one: Undo.” The word hit like a detonation. Light flared, colors inverted, and for a moment everything—everything—laughed. Madame Nettles screamed as her veil shredded, revealing not a face but a gaping spool of thread that shrieked itself out of existence. The Crown trembled, cracked, and then melted into molten silver that poured itself into my wounds, sealing them with a hiss. When the light died, we were standing in the ruins of the Loom. The air was quiet. The threads were gone, replaced by stars arranged in no particular order—finally, beautifully random. “Did we win?” Arlo asked, eyes wide. “I don’t do winning,” I said. “I do surviving with flair.” He laughed, shaky. “So what now?” I looked down at my hands. The silver scars pulsed faintly, spelling something out in Morse: Write carefully. “Now,” I said, “we go home. I’m opening a bar.” “A bar?” “Sure. Call it The Punctuated Equilibrium. Drinks named after grammar crimes. Half-price shots for anyone who swears creatively.” He grinned. “And if the Queen comes looking for her Crown?” I smiled, sharp as scissors. “I’ll tell her I’m editing.” We climbed back through the wreckage, wings beating against the dawn. The city spread below us—chaotic, patched, real. I breathed in its smoke and music, the scent of rebellion and rain. The sky cracked pink, and for the first time in centuries, nobody was writing the ending but me. And I wasn’t planning to finish it anytime soon. Epilogue — The Manifesto Never trust a tidy story.Never iron your wings.And never, ever, let anyone else hold the needle.     🛒 Bring “The Punk Pixie Manifesto” Home Love a little rebellion with your décor? The Punk Pixie Manifesto refuses to behave on the wall, desk, or anywhere else you put it. Celebrate her attitude — half chaos, half charm — with these bold, high-quality creations. Framed Print — Add fierce elegance to your favorite space with museum-grade clarity and texture. Perfect for anyone who decorates with conviction (and sarcasm). Tapestry — Let her wings spread across your wall. Soft, vibrant, unapologetic — a centerpiece for the rule-breaker’s lair. Greeting Card — When “thinking of you” needs extra voltage. Perfect for birthdays, apologies, or unapologetic statements. Spiral Notebook — Jot down dangerous ideas and divine mischief. Every page whispers, “Make it better. Or at least make it louder.” Sticker — Slap some punk magic wherever you need attitude — laptops, journals, broom handles, or boring authority. Each product is printed with archival-quality inks to capture every spark of rebellion, every shimmer of wingbeat, and every whisper of “don’t tell me what to do.” Because art should do more than decorate — it should talk back. Shop the collection now: The Punk Pixie Manifesto Collection

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Lullaby in a Leafdrop

by Bill Tiepelman

Lullaby in a Leafdrop

It’s a little-known fact—scrupulously left out of most fairy tales because of its messiness and alarming wetness—that fairies are not born in the traditional sense. They are brewed. Yes, brewed. Like tea or poor decisions. At precisely 4:42 a.m., before the first robin even thinks about coughing out a chirp, the dew collects on the tip of a heart-shaped leaf deep within the forests of Slumbrook Hollow. If the temperature is just cold enough to make a spider wear socks, but warm enough that a squirrel can scratch itself lazily without shivering, the brewing begins. The recipe? Simple: one drop of moonlight that missed its target, two specks of laughter from a sleeping child, a dash of forest gossip (usually about raccoons behaving inappropriately), and one blade of grass that’s been kissed by lightning at least once. Stir gently with the breeze of a forgotten wish, and voilà—you have the beginning of a fairy. Now, these aren’t fairies as you might imagine them. They don’t pop out fluttering with tiaras and purpose. No, the first stage of fairy development is embryonic sass in a gelatinous mood sac. They’re mostly wing, attitude, and napping. Their first instinct upon "waking" is to sigh dramatically and roll over, which often causes the entire dewdrop to tilt dangerously, sending everyone into a panic except the fairy, who mutters “Five more minutes,” and promptly passes out again. The fairy in question this particular morning was named **Plink**. Not because anyone named her, but because that’s the sound her dewdrop made when it formed, and the forest takes naming conventions quite literally. Plink was already a bit of a diva, her wings shimmering with the subtle arrogance of someone who knows she was born glittery. She curled up inside her liquid leaf hammock, tiny hands tucked beneath a chin that had never known the touch of responsibility. Outside the dewdrop, however, chaos brewed. A beetle patrol was out on morning rounds and had spotted Plink’s nursery hanging precariously from a twig targeted by a particularly aggressive blue jay. The forest had rules: no jay traffic before dawn, no unnecessary loud flapping, and absolutely no pooping near the dew nurseries. Unfortunately, the blue jay had a reputation for violating all three. Enter Sir Grumblethorpe, a retired mole-knight in tweed armor, wearing a monocle that didn’t improve his vision so much as his self-esteem. He’d taken it upon himself to ensure Plink’s survival. “No fairy’s going to get scrambled on my watch,” he declared, thumping the ground with his walking acorn staff, which was mostly ceremonial and partially rotten. What no one had realized yet—not even Plink in her blissfully gelatinous snooze—was that today was the last viable dew-day of the season. If she didn’t hatch before sundown, the drop would evaporate, and she'd become a memory, drifting off into the realm of nearly-made-things, like diets and honest politicians. But right now? Right now, Plink drooled a little, one wing flopping gently against the inside curve of the drop, dreaming of sugar plums, existential dread, and an itch on her foot she didn’t yet know how to scratch. And the blue jay? Oh, he was circling. Sir Grumblethorpe adjusted his monocle with the dramatic flair of someone who felt very important and, frankly, wasn’t going to let a little thing like scale stop him from acting like it. After all, it took tremendous courage to be one-nineteenth of the size of the threat and still shout orders like you owned the shrub. “Battle stations!” he declared, though precisely what that meant in a forest that had never seen a battle was left vague. A centipede scurried by with two pencils and a wine cork for armor, shouting, “Where’s the fire?!” and tripped over a snail who’d been asleep for most of the decade. Meanwhile, Plink dreamt she was the Queen of Marmalade Kingdom, riding a honeybee into battle against a horde of breakfast crumbs. She had no idea her leafdrop was now the central focus of a multi-species emergency council convening beneath her on a mossy stump. “Let’s be rational,” said Professor Thistlehump, a weasel with spectacles thick enough to burn ants in winter. “If we just ask the jay politely—” “You want to negotiate with an airborne fart with feathers?” snapped Madame Spritzy, a disgraced hummingbird opera singer turned tactical screecher. “This is war, darling. War with feathers, guano, and beady-eyed doom.” Sir Grumblethorpe agreed. Or rather, he didn’t disagree fast enough, which was close enough. “We need air support,” he muttered, stroking his chin thoughtfully. “Spritzy, can you still fly the Pattern of Mirthful Panic?” “Please,” she scoffed, fluffing her feathers. “I invented it. Watch the skies.” Above them, the blue jay—named **Kevin** (because of course his name was Kevin)—began his final descent. Kevin had a simple mind, mostly composed of shiny objects, food, and a belief that screaming as loud as possible was a form of communication. He spotted the glint of the dewdrop and squawked with what could only be described as delight or rage, or perhaps both simultaneously. Spritzy launched like a caffeinated firework. She zig-zagged wildly, shrieking an aria from “Pond Pirates: The Musical” at a pitch that made several worms explode from stress alone. Kevin flapped midair, confused and mildly aroused, then backpedaled with surprising grace for something that once ate a frog for fun. Meanwhile, deep inside the dewdrop, Plink finally stirred. Her dreams had turned into gentle nudges—stirrings from the realm of waking. Her translucent wings began to twitch like radio signals tuning into the frequency of reality. The warmth of the day was starting to tickle the base of the dewdrop, and somewhere, instinct began to whisper: Hatch now. Or don’t. Your call. But hatch now if you’d prefer not to be steam. But Plink was groggy. And let’s be honest, if you’ve never tried waking up from a dream where you were being serenaded by a choir of marshmallows, you don’t know how hard it is to give that up. She rolled over, pressed her face to the dewdrop’s inner surface, and muttered something that sounded suspiciously like, “Shhh. Five more eternities.” Sir Grumblethorpe stomped his foot. “She’s not hatching! Why isn’t she hatching?!” He looked up toward the treetop, where Kevin had now found a shiny gum wrapper and was momentarily distracted. The emergency council reconvened in a panic. “We need something powerful! Something symbolic!” hissed Madame Spritzy as she divebombed into the meeting. “I have an old kazoo,” offered a squirrel who had never been invited to anything before and was just thrilled to be included. “Use it!” barked Grumblethorpe. “Wake her up! Play the Song of the First Flight!” “No one knows the tune!” cried Thistlehump. “Well then,” Grumblethorpe said grimly, “we wing it.” And so they did. The kazoo howled. The forest cringed. Even Kevin stopped mid-flap, beak agape, unsure if he was under attack or witnessing interpretive art. Inside the dewdrop, Plink twitched violently. Her eyes snapped open. The air trembled. Her wings exploded into light, catching the sun like a disco ball made of dreams and backtalk. The dewdrop shimmered, vibrated, and with a sound like a bubble giggling, it popped. And there she was—hovering. Tiny, wet, blinking at the world, and already looking unimpressed by the fact that she was awake at all. “You’re all very loud,” she said with the kind of disdain only a newborn fairy could muster while dripping with celestial goo. Kevin tried one last dive, but was immediately hit in the face by an angry badger with a slingshot. He retreated into the sky with a squawk of defeat and one of Madame Spritzy’s feathers stuck to his tail. Below, the forest held its breath. Plink looked around. She slowly raised one eyebrow. “So… where’s my welcome brunch?” Sir Grumblethorpe fell to his knees. “She speaks!” “No,” Plink corrected with a shrug, “I sass.” And that was the first moment anyone in Slumbrook Hollow realized what kind of fairy she was going to be. Next up? Flight school. Possibly sabotage. And definitely brunch. If you're expecting a tale of rapid character development, noble quests, and tidy emotional closure, I regret to inform you: Plink was not that kind of fairy. The first hour of her conscious existence was spent trying to eat the petals off a daisy, attempting to seduce a bumblebee (“Call me when you’re done pollinating”), and announcing, loudly, that she would never be doing chores unless those chores involved dramatic exits or glitter-based warfare. Still, for all her sass and damp sparkles, Plink was, in a deeply peculiar way, hopeful. Not the gentle, passive sort of hope. No, her hope had teeth. It snarled. It strutted. It demanded brunch before diplomacy. The kind of hope that said: “The world is probably terrible, but I will look fabulous while surviving it.” Madame Spritzy took her under-wing (literally), beginning an unlicensed and highly irregular crash course in flying. “Flap like your enemies are watching,” she barked, circling Plink who spun midair, spiraled downward, and crash-landed in a patch of moss with all the grace of a fallen blueberry. “You said I was born to fly!” Plink wheezed, spitting out a beetle. “I said you were born in a droplet. The rest is up to you.” Flight school continued for three chaotic days, during which Plink broke two twigs, dive-bombed a fungus, and accidentally invented a new type of aerial swear gesture. Her wings grew stronger. Her sarcasm sharpened. By the fourth morning, she could hover in place long enough to sneer convincingly, which was considered a graduation requirement. But the forest was changing. The dew was thinning. The weather warming. Plink’s own birth had been the season’s final droplet—meaning she wasn’t just the last fairy of spring. She was the only fairy of this bloom cycle. The last tiny miracle before the long, dry season ahead. No pressure. Naturally, when she found out, her first response was to fall dramatically onto a mushroom and yell, “Why meeeeeee?” which startled a hedgehog into fainting. But after several exasperated lectures from Professor Thistlehump and one extremely caffeinated pep talk from Sir Grumblethorpe involving the phrase “legacy of luminous lineage,” she relented. Sort of. Plink decided to become the kind of fairy who didn’t wait for fate. She would build her own kind. Not in a creepy lab way. In a fairy godmother-meets-contractor kind of way. She would whisper magic into seedpods. She’d bottle dreams and tuck them into acorns. She’d snatch laughter from moonlit lovers and tuck it into pinecones. She didn’t need to be the last. She could be the first of the next wave. “I’m going to teach squirrels to make hope bombs,” she announced one morning, inexplicably wearing a cape made of moss and attitude. “Hope bombs?” asked Grumblethorpe, adjusting his monocle. “Little spells wrapped in berries. If you bite one, you get five seconds of unreasonable optimism. Like thinking your ex was a good idea. Or that you can fit back into your pre-winter leggings.” And so it began: Plink’s odd campaign of mischief, magic, and emotional disruption. She buzzed from leaf to leaf, whispering weirdness into the world. Lonely mushrooms woke up giggling. Wilted flowers perked up and requested dance music. Even Kevin the blue jay started carrying shiny twigs to other birds, no longer dive-bombing hatchlings but (awkwardly) babysitting them. The forest adapted to her chaos. Grew brighter in places. Stranger in others. Where Plink had passed, you could always tell. A leaf might glitter for no reason. A puddle might hum. A tree might tell a joke that made no sense but made you laugh anyway. And Plink? Well, she grew. Not bigger—she was still the size of a hiccup. But deeper. Wiser. And somehow, more Plink than ever. One twilight, many seasons later, a tiny dewdrop formed on a new leaf. Inside it, curled in soft sleep, a fairy fluttered its brand-new wings. Around the drop, the forest held its breath again, waiting, wondering. From above, a streak of mischievous light circled the branch. Plink peered down, smiled, and whispered: “You’ve got this, sparklebutt.” Then she zipped away into the stars, leaving behind a single echo of laughter, a speck of glitter, and a world forever changed by one loud, brilliant drop of hope.     Bring the magic home. If Plink's tale stirred your imagination or made you laugh-snort tea, you can carry a piece of that enchantment into your own space. "Lullaby in a Leafdrop" is available as a canvas print, metal print, acrylic print, and even a dreamy tapestry to turn your wall into a window to Slumbrook Hollow. Perfect for lovers of fantasy decor, fairy tale fans, and anyone who believes a little glitter and grit can change the world.

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Cranky Wings & Cabernet Things

by Bill Tiepelman

Cranky Wings & Cabernet Things

The Root of All Sass The forest hadn’t always been this irritating. Once upon a century or three ago, it was a quiet, dewy glade where deer pranced, squirrels politely asked to borrow acorns, and the mushrooms didn’t have delusions of poetry. Then came the influencers. The elf-folk with their glittery yoga mats. The centaur DJs thumping trance beats into the soil. And worst of all—gentrification by unicorns. Just because they crap rainbows doesn’t mean they belong on every enchanted hillside selling kombucha out of crystal flasks. She had had it. Her name was Fernetta D'Vine—though the locals just called her “That Wine Bitch in the Thicket.” And she was fine with that. Titles were for royalty and real estate agents. Fernetta was far more interested in her own domains: the mossy log she ruled from, her deep collection of fermented potions, and the daily ritual of glaring disapprovingly at every twit who dared prance past her glade without a permit—or pants. Today was a Tuesday. And Tuesdays were for Cabernet and contempt. Fernetta adjusted her wings with a groan. The years had left them creaky, like an old screen door that screamed when you opened it at 2 a.m. to sneak out for questionable decisions. Her dress, a glorious tangle of ivy and attitude, brushed the ground with a stately rustle as she lifted her goblet—no stemless nonsense here, thank you—and took a sip of what she called “Bitch Blood Vintage 436.” “Mm,” she muttered, eyes narrowing like a hawk spotting a tourist. “Tastes like regret and someone else's poor planning.” Just then, a chirpy little sprite buzzed into view, high on pollen and bad decisions. She wore a sunflower bra and had glitter in places that clearly hadn't been cleaned in days. “Hi Auntie Fernetta!” she squealed. “Guess what? I’m starting an herbal side hustle and wanted to gift you my new line of detox beetle-water enemas!” Fernetta blinked slowly. “Child, the only thing I detox is joy,” she said. “And if you flutter one wing closer with that fermented insect filth, I will personally shove that potion up your nectar hole and call it aromatherapy.” The sprite’s smile faltered. “Okayyy…well…namast-eeeeee!” she buzzed, zooming off to terrorize a willow tree. Fernetta took another sip, savoring the silence. It tasted like power. And maybe a little like last week’s berries soaked in disappointment, but still—power. “Fairies these days,” she muttered. “All glitter, no grit. No wonder the gnomes have gone into hiding. Hell, I’d hide too if my neighbors were lighting sage to align their chakra while farting through recycled leaves.” Just then, the rustling of bushes drew her attention. She slowly turned her head and muttered, “Oh look. Another woodland dumbass. If it’s one more damn bard looking for ‘inspiration,’ I swear by the crust in my wings I’ll hex his lute so it plays only Nickelback covers.” And from the underbrush stepped someone... unexpected. A man. Human. Middle-aged. Balding. Slightly confused and definitely in the wrong fairytale. He blinked. She blinked. A crow cawed. Somewhere in the distance, a mushroom wilted from secondhand embarrassment. “...Well,” Fernetta drawled, slowly standing. “This should be good.” Man Meat and Mossy Mayhem He stood there, mouth slightly ajar, looking like a half-baked biscuit who’d wandered into a renaissance faire after taking the wrong turn at a Cracker Barrel. Fernetta sized him up like a wolf eyeing a microwaved ham. He was wearing cargo shorts, a “World’s Best Dad” T-shirt that had clearly surrendered to time and coffee stains, and a confused expression that suggested he thought this was the line for the gift shop. In one hand he held a phone, blinking red with 3% battery. In the other, a laminated trail map. Upside down. “Oh,” she sighed, swirling her cabernet. “You’re one of those. Lost, divorced, definitely on your third midlife crisis. Lemme guess—you signed up for a ‘healing hike’ with your yoga instructor-slash-girlfriend named Amethyst and got ditched at the crystal cairn?” He blinked. “Uh… is this part of the nature tour?” She took one long, slow sip. “Oh sweetheart. This is the of your dignity tour.” He stepped forward. “Look, I’m just trying to get back to the parking lot, okay? My phone’s dead, and I haven’t had coffee in six hours. Also, I may have accidentally eaten a mushroom that was… glowy.” Fernetta chuckled, low and wicked, like a storm cloud amused at the idea of a picnic. “Well then. Congratulations, dumbass. You just licked the universe’s glitter cannon. That was a dreamcap. The next three hours are going to feel like you're being spiritually exfoliated by a raccoon wearing a therapist’s pants.” He swayed slightly. “I think I saw a talking chipmunk that said I was a disappointment to my ancestors.” “Well,” she said, slapping a mosquito off her shoulder with the grace of a drunk ballerina, “at least your hallucinations are honest.” She turned away, refilling her wine from a nearby stump that was—improbably—tapped like a keg. “So what’s your name, forest trespasser?” “Uh. Brent.” “Of course it is,” she muttered. “Every lost man who stumbles into my part of the woods is either named Brent, Chad, or Gary. You boys just roll off the production line with a six-pack of poor decisions and one good college memory you won’t shut up about.” He frowned. “Look, lady—fairy—whatever. I’m not trying to cause trouble. I just need to find the exit. If you could point me to the trailhead, I’d be—” “Oh, honey,” she interrupted, “the only head you’re getting is the one from the hallucination beaver who thinks you’re his ex-wife. You’re in my glade now. And we don’t just offer directions. We offer... lessons.” Brent paled. “Like... riddles?” “No. Like unsolicited life advice wrapped in sarcasm and aged in shame,” she said, raising her glass. “Now sit your crusty behind on that toadstool and brace yourself for an aggressive fairy intervention.” He hesitated. The toadstool made a suspicious farting noise as he lowered himself onto it. “What… kind of intervention?” Fernetta cracked her knuckles and summoned a cloud of wine vapor and attitude. “We’re gonna unpack your issues like a suitcase at a nudist colony. First of all: why the hell do you still wear socks with sandals?” “I—” “Don’t answer. I already know. It’s because you fear vulnerability. And fashion.” Brent blinked. “This feels… deeply personal.” “Welcome to the glade,” she smirked. “Now, tell me: who hurt you? Was it your ex-wife? Your daddy? A failed podcast about cryptocurrency?” “I… I don’t know anymore.” “That’s step one, Brent,” she said, standing tall, her wings shimmering with drunken menace. “Admit that you’re not lost in the woods. You are the woods. Dense. Confused. Filled with raccoons stealing your lunch.” Somewhere in the distance, a tree spontaneously caught fire out of sheer secondhand embarrassment. Brent looked like he was about to cry. Or pee. Or both. “And while we’re at it,” Fernetta snapped, “when did you stop doing things that made you happy? When did you trade wonder for spreadsheets and excitement for microwave burritos? Huh? You had magic once. I can smell it under your armpits, right between the regret and Axe body spray.” Brent whimpered. “Can I go now?” “No,” she said firmly. “Not until you’ve purged all the bro energy from your soul. Now repeat after me: I am not a productivity robot.” “…I am not a productivity robot.” “I deserve joy, even if that joy is weird and sparkly.” “…even if that joy is weird and sparkly.” “I will stop asking to ‘circle back’ during Zoom calls unless I’m literally chasing my own tail.” “…That one’s… hard.” “Try harder. You’re almost healed.” And just like that, the glade shimmered. The trees sighed. A chorus of frogs sang the opening bars of a Lizzo song. Brent’s third eye blinked open just long enough to witness a vision of himself as a disco lizard dancing on a tax return. He passed out cold. Fernetta poured the rest of her wine into the moss and said, “Another one converted. Praise Dionysus.” She sat back on her log, exhaled deeply, and added, “And that’s why you never ignore a fairy with wine and unresolved emotional bandwidth.” Hangover of the Fey Brent awoke face-down in moss, his cheek pressed lovingly against what may or may not have been a mushroom with opinions. The sun filtered through the treetops like judgmental fingers poking a sleeping shame sandwich. His head throbbed with the kind of ancient drumbeat usually reserved for tribal exorcisms and EDM festivals in abandoned warehouses. He groaned. The moss squelched back. Everything hurt—including some existential parts of him that had been long dormant, like hope, ambition, and the idea of ordering something other than chicken tenders at restaurants. Somewhere behind him, a teacup-sized voice chirped, “He lives! The human rises!” He rolled over to see a hedgehog. A talking hedgehog. Wearing a monocle. Smoking what was clearly a cinnamon stick fashioned into a pipe. “What fresh hell…” he muttered. “Oh, you’re awake,” came Fernetta’s voice, laced with her usual brand of sarcasm and sage-like disdain. “For a minute I thought you’d gone fully feral and joined the bark nymphs. Which, by the way, never do. They’ll braid your chest hair into dreamcatchers and call it a vibe.” Brent blinked. “I had… dreams.” “Hallucinations,” corrected the hedgehog, who offered him a shot glass of something that smelled like peppermint and regret. “Drink this. It’ll balance your aura and possibly reset your digestive tract. No promises.” Brent drank it. He instantly regretted it. His tongue recoiled, his toes curled, and he sneezed his deepest shame into a nearby fern. “Perfect,” said Fernetta, clapping. “You’ve completed the cleanse.” “Cleanse?” “The Spiritual Audit, darling,” she said, fluttering down from a branch like a disillusioned angel of sarcasm. “You’ve been assessed, emotionally undressed, and gently smacked with the stick of self-awareness.” Brent looked down at himself. He was wearing a crown made of twigs, a tunic fashioned from moss and squirrel fur, and a necklace of... teeth? “What the hell happened?” Fernetta smirked, taking another languid sip from her ever-present wine glass. “You got fairy drunk, emotionally baptized in pond water, told a fox your deepest fears, slow-danced with a sentient daffodil, and yelled ‘I AM THE STORM’ while peeing on a rune stone. Honestly, I’ve seen worse Tuesdays.” The hedgehog nodded solemnly. “You also tried to start a commune for divorced dads called ‘Dadbodonia.’ It lasted fourteen minutes and ended in a heated debate about chili recipes.” Brent groaned into his hands. “I was just trying to go on a hike.” “No one just hikes into my glade,” Fernetta said, poking him with her wine glass. “You were summoned. This place finds you when you’re on the brink. Teetering on the edge of becoming a motivational meme. I saved you from dad jokes and sports metaphors for feelings.” Brent looked around. The forest suddenly felt different. The light warmer. The colors sharper. The air thick with mischief and mossy wisdom. “So… what now?” “Now you leave,” Fernetta said, “but you leave better. Slightly less of a tool. Maybe even worthy of brunch conversation. Go forth into the world, Brent. And remember what you’ve learned.” “Which was…?” “Stop dimming your weird. Stop apologizing for being tired. Stop saying ‘let’s touch base’ unless you mean physically, with someone hot. And never—ever—bring boxed wine into a sacred grove again or I’ll hex your plumbing.” The hedgehog saluted. “May your midlife crisis be mystical.” Brent, still blinking in disbelief, took a few tentative steps. A squirrel waved him goodbye. A pinecone winked. A raccoon dropped a single acorn at his feet in symbolic solidarity. He turned once more to look at Fernetta. She raised her glass. “Now go. And if you get lost again, make it interesting.” And with that, Brent stumbled out of the glade and back into the world, smelling of moss, magic, and a hint of Cabernet. Somewhere deep inside, something had changed. Maybe not enough to make him wise. But enough to make him weird. And that, in fairy terms, was progress. Back in her glade, Fernetta sighed, stretched, and settled back on her mossy throne. “Well,” she muttered, sipping again. “Guess I’ll do mushrooms for dinner. Hope they don’t talk back this time.” And somewhere in the trees, the forest whispered, laughed, and poured another round.     🍷 Feeling personally attacked by Fernetta's sass? Well, now you can hang her grumpy face on your wall like a badge of chaotic enlightenment. Click here to see the full image in our Fantasy Characters Archive and grab your very own print, framed masterpiece, or license-worthy download. Perfect for wine witches, forest freaks, or anyone whose soul runs on sarcasm and Cabernet. Because let’s be honest—you either know a Fernetta… or you are one.

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Aged Like Fine Wine and Dark Magic

by Bill Tiepelman

Aged Like Fine Wine and Dark Magic

The problem with being an immortal fae wasn’t the magic, the wings, or even the centuries of unpaid taxes. No, the real issue was the hangovers. The kind that lasted decades. Madra of the Withered Vale had once been a sprightly little thing, flitting through the moonlit woods, enchanting mushrooms, cursing ex-boyfriends, and generally making a nuisance of herself. That was a long time ago. Now, she was what the younger fae rudely referred to as “vintage,” and she had no patience for their nonsense. She took a long, deliberate sip from her goblet of Deepwood Red, a cursed wine so potent it had ended kingdoms. The glass was chipped, but so was she. “You’re staring again,” she muttered. There was, of course, no one around. Except for a particularly nosy squirrel perched nearby, watching her with its beady little eyes. It had been doing this for weeks. “I swear, if you don’t scram, I’ll turn you into an acorn. Permanently.” The squirrel chittered something obscene and darted up a tree. Good. She had enough problems without dealing with judgmental rodents. The Golden Age of Poor Decisions Once upon a time (which, in fae terms, meant somewhere between fifty years and five hundred, she had stopped counting), Madra had been at the center of every enchanted revelry. She had danced on tables, cast spells of questionable legality, and made absolutely terrible choices involving attractive strangers who later turned out to be cursed frogs. Or worse—princes. Then one fateful evening, she had challenged the wrong elf to a drinking contest. Elves, being the smug little tree-huggers they were, rarely drank anything stronger than honeyed mead. But this one had been different. He had a wicked grin, a suspiciously high alcohol tolerance, and the kind of bone structure that suggested he’d never known true hardship. “I bet I can drink you under the table,” she had declared. “I bet you can’t,” he had replied. Madra had won. And lost. Because the elf, in a spectacularly petty move, had cast a drunken curse upon her before passing out in a puddle of his own hubris. She would never, ever be able to get properly drunk again. “May your tolerance be eternal,” he had slurred. “May your liver be unbreakable.” And that was that. Decades of drinking and nothing. She could chug a bottle of fae whiskey without so much as a dizzy spell. All the joy, all the chaos, all the questionable decision-making? Gone. And now she sat here, on her usual branch, drinking out of pure spite. Visitors are the Worst She was midway through her fourth glass of sulk-wine when she heard the distinct sound of footsteps. Not the light, careful steps of an animal or the sneaky little scurrying of goblins trying to steal her socks. No, this was a person. She groaned. Loudly. “If you’re here to ask for a love potion, the answer is no,” she called out. “If you’re here to complain about a love potion, the answer is still no. And if you’re here to steal my wine, I’ll turn your kneecaps into mushrooms.” There was a pause. Then a voice, deep and annoyingly smooth, called back. “I assure you, I have no interest in your wine.” “Then you’re an idiot.” The owner of the voice stepped into view. Tall. Dark hair. The kind of smirk that suggested he either had a death wish or was a professional seducer. “Madra of the Withered Vale,” he said, with the kind of dramatic flair that made her want to throw her goblet at his head. “I have come to seek your wisdom.” Madra sighed and took another sip. “Oh, stars help me.” She had a feeling this was about to be one of those days.     Some People Just Don’t Listen Madra stared at the mysterious visitor over the rim of her goblet, debating whether she was sober enough to deal with this nonsense. Unfortunately, thanks to the elf’s curse, she was always sober enough. “Listen, Pretty Boy,” she said, swirling her wine in a way that suggested she was this close to throwing it at him. “I don’t do ‘wisdom.’ I do sarcasm, mild threats, and occasionally, revenge-fueled spellcraft. If you’re looking for a wise old fae to give you a heartwarming prophecy, try the next forest over.” “You wound me,” he said, placing a hand on his chest like some kind of tragic bard. “Not yet, but I’m seriously considering it.” He chuckled, entirely too at ease for a man standing in front of a clearly irritated fae with questionable morals. “I need your help.” “Oh, for the love of the Moon.” She pinched the bridge of her nose. “Fine. What exactly do you want?” He stepped closer, and Madra immediately pointed a clawed finger at him. “If you’re about to ask for a love spell, I swear—” “No love spells,” he said, holding up his hands. “I need something much more serious. There’s a dragon.” She sighed so hard it rattled the leaves. “There’s always a dragon.” Why is it Always a Dragon? Madra took a long, slow sip of her wine, staring at him over the rim of her goblet. “Let me guess. You need a magic sword. A fireproof cloak. A blessing from an ancient fae so you can fulfill some ridiculous prophecy about slaying the beast and reclaiming your lost honor.” He blinked. “...No.” “Oh. Well, that’s disappointing.” He shifted on his feet. “I need to steal something from the dragon.” She snorted. “So, what you’re saying is, you don’t just want to get yourself killed—you want to do it in the most spectacularly bad way possible.” “Exactly.” “I like you.” She took another sip. “You’re an idiot.” “Thank you.” Madra sighed and finally set down her goblet. “Alright, fine. I’ll help. But not because I care. It’s just been a while since I’ve watched someone make absolutely terrible decisions, and frankly, I miss it.” Bad Plans and Worse Ideas “First things first,” she said, sliding off the branch with surprising grace for someone who looked like she’d been through at least three wars and a questionable marriage. “What, exactly, are you trying to steal?” He hesitated. “Oh, no.” She pointed a gnarled finger at him. “If you say ‘the dragon’s heart’ or some other romantic nonsense, I am leaving.” “It’s… uh… a bottle.” She narrowed her eyes. “A bottle of what?” He cleared his throat. “A very old, very magical bottle of enchanted liquor.” Madra went completely still. “You mean to tell me,” she said, voice dangerously low, “that there exists a drink strong enough to be locked away in a dragon’s hoard, and I have been suffering through this for centuries?” She waved at herself, meaning the curse, her sobriety, and possibly her entire life. “...Yes?” Madra’s wings twitched. “Alright,” she said, cracking her knuckles. “New plan. We’re stealing that bottle, and you are my new favorite human.” He grinned. “So, you’ll help?” She grabbed her staff, took a final sip of wine, and flashed a wicked, too-sharp smile. “Darling, I’ll do more than help. I’ll make sure we don’t just survive this—we’ll make it look good.” And with that, Madra of the Withered Vale set off to do what she did best. Cause absolute, spectacular chaos.     Take a Piece of the Magic Home Did Madra’s snarky wisdom and thirst for chaos resonate with you? Perhaps you, too, appreciate a fine wine, a terrible decision, or the idea of an ancient fae who’s just so over it. If so, you can bring a little of her enchanted, slightly tipsy magic into your own world! 🏰 Enchant Your Walls with a Tapestry – Let Madra’s unimpressed gaze remind you daily that life is short, but wine is forever. 🌲 A Rustic Wood Print for Your Lair – The perfect addition to any home, office, or mysterious forest dwelling. 🧩 A Puzzle for the Cursed and the Cunning – Because assembling a thousand tiny pieces is still easier than dealing with adventurers before coffee. 💌 A Greeting Card for Fellow Mischief Makers – Share Madra’s unimpressed expression with friends and let them know you care—just, you know, in a fae kind of way. Whether you're decorating your walls, sending a snarky note, or testing your patience with a puzzle, these magical creations are the perfect way to celebrate fae mischief and questionable life choices. Shop the collection now and bring a little enchanted attitude into your world. Just... don’t challenge an elf to a drinking contest. Trust us.

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Dancing with the Breeze

by Bill Tiepelman

Dancing with the Breeze

Dancing with the Breeze: A Fairy’s Guide to Chaos and Confidence In the heart of the Meadow of Improbable Wonders, where wildflowers whispered secrets and dragonflies gossiped like suburban moms, lived a fairy named Calla. And Calla? Well, Calla was a *lot*. Not in a *causing-the-downfall-of-a-kingdom* way—though, let’s be honest, she’d probably be excellent at that, too. No, Calla was simply a walking, flying, glittering embodiment of “extra.” She didn’t just exist. She *thrived.* Loudly. And sometimes at the expense of other people’s patience. “It’s not my fault,” she would say, tossing her golden curls. “I was born fabulous. Some of us are just built different.” Most fairies in the Meadow had sensible jobs—pollinating flowers, controlling the weather, guiding lost travelers. Calla, on the other hand, had a self-assigned role: *Chief Enthusiasm Officer of General Nonsense.* Which is why, on this particularly sunny morning, she was standing on a toadstool, dramatically monologuing to a crowd of deeply uninterested insects. The Art of Waking Up Fabulous Let’s get one thing straight—Calla was *not* a morning person. In fact, she considered mornings to be a personal attack. They arrived uninvited, they were unnecessarily bright, and worst of all—they required her to function. She had perfected a strict wake-up routine: Groan dramatically and refuse to move for at least fifteen minutes. Knock over her jar of stardust (every. single. morning.). Complain loudly that life was unfair and that she needed a personal assistant. Finally drag herself out of bed and look in the mirror. Admire herself. More admiration. Okay, *one more minute* of admiration. Start the day. Today was no different. She stretched luxuriously, let out a satisfied sigh, and blinked blearily at the world. “Another day of being perfect. Exhausting, honestly.” After throwing on her *signature* fairy outfit—a tiny cropped top, shredded green shorts (courtesy of an unfortunate incident with a hedgehog), and a sprinkling of moon-dust highlighter—she fluttered out of her tree-hollow home, ready to cause *just a little* chaos. The Wind Selection Process Calla had one simple mission today: Find the *perfect* breeze and dance with it. Not just *any* wind would do. No, no, no. This was an art form. A science. A spiritual experience. The breeze had to be just right—strong enough to lift her, soft enough to keep her floating, and ideally infused with just a little magic. She tested the Morning Dew Drift—too damp. Nobody likes soggy wings. The Midday Gust of Disappointment—too aggressive. Almost yeeted her into a tree. The Afternoon Swirl of Indecision—too unpredictable. It nearly carried her into an awkward conversation with Harold the socially anxious squirrel. Finally, just as she was about to give up, the Sunset Whisper arrived. Warm, golden, playful. “Oh yes,” she purred. “This is the one.” Flying, Flailing, and Unexpected Lessons With a running start, Calla leapt into the air and let the wind carry her. She twirled, flipped, let herself get lost in the rhythm of the sky. The world blurred in streaks of green and gold, and for a few perfect moments, she was weightless. Then, because life is rude, she lost control. One second she was soaring. The next, she was spiraling, heading directly for the *one* obstacle in an otherwise open field—Finn. Now, Finn was a fellow fairy, known mostly for his ability to sigh like an old man trapped in a young body. He was a realist, a planner, a problem-solver. He was also, unfortunately, standing exactly where Calla was about to crash. “MOVE!” she yelled. Finn looked up, blinked, and said, “Oh, no.” And then she collided with him, sending them both tumbling into a cluster of wildflowers. Debriefing the Disaster “Calla,” Finn wheezed from beneath her. “Why?” She rolled off him dramatically. “Oh, please. That was at least 70% your fault.” Finn sat up, picking daisies out of his hair. “How, exactly?” “Standing. In my way. Not moving. Existing too solidly.” Finn sighed the sigh of someone who had made poor life choices by knowing her. “So,” he said, “what was today’s lesson? Aside from the fact that you need to work on your landings.” Calla stretched her arms, smiling at the setting sun. “Life is like a breeze. Sometimes you fly, sometimes you crash, but the important thing is—you go for it.” Finn considered this. “Huh. Not bad.” “Obviously.” She flipped her hair. “Now, come on. Let’s go throw rocks into the pond dramatically.” Finn groaned, but followed. Because Calla? Calla made life interesting.     Take the Magic Home Want to bring a little fairy mischief and whimsy into your life? Whether you’re looking to add a touch of enchantment to your walls, snuggle up with cozy magic, or carry a piece of the fairy realm with you—these handpicked products are the perfect way to capture the spirit of Calla’s adventures. ✨ Canvas Print: Elevate your space with the stunning "Dancing with the Breeze" Canvas Print. Let Calla’s carefree energy inspire you daily. 🧚 Throw Pillow: Add a sprinkle of fairy dust to your home with this magical Throw Pillow, perfect for daydreaming and dramatic sighing. 🌙 Fleece Blanket: Wrap yourself in cozy fairy magic with the ultra-soft Fleece Blanket. Ideal for chilly nights or plotting your next mischief. 👜 Tote Bag: Carry a little fairy sass wherever you go with this enchanting Tote Bag. Perfect for magical errands and spontaneous adventures. Life is short—surround yourself with things that make you smile. And remember, when the breeze is right, always dance. 🧚✨

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Cup of Frosted Magic

by Bill Tiepelman

Cup of Frosted Magic

Once upon a snowy morning in the enchanted woods of Glimmergrove, a very tiny and very annoyed fairy named Zephyra found herself in a rather undignified position. She had been minding her own business—by which she meant napping in her favorite rose petal hammock—when a freak gust of winter wind catapulted her into an oversized red mug. The mug, left behind by some careless human, was now her unwelcome residence. “Great,” she muttered, blowing a strand of silver hair out of her face. “This is exactly what I needed—an icy prison disguised as bad pottery.” She crossed her arms and gave her wings a disgruntled flutter, sending a small flurry of frost into the air. “If I wanted to freeze my butt off, I’d have taken that modeling gig for the Snow Queen’s stupid ice sculpture garden.” Zephyra’s wings were glittering icicles, her hair was tangled into a messy bun that screamed “overworked sprite,” and her freckled nose was bright red from the cold. She stared up at the towering rim of the mug. To her dismay, it was coated in a slick layer of frost, making any escape attempt a slippery disaster waiting to happen. “Perfect. Just perfect,” she said, throwing her hands up dramatically. “I’m a centuries-old fairy with magical powers, and I’m stuck in a coffee mug like some kind of winged garnish.” Enter the Fox As she plotted her escape, a curious fox padded into view, its fluffy tail swishing through the snow. The fox paused, sniffed the air, and then locked eyes with Zephyra. A slow grin spread across its face—or at least as much of a grin as a fox could manage. “Oh no,” Zephyra groaned. “Don’t even think about it, furball.” The fox tilted its head, clearly considering how best to knock the mug over and claim its new fairy snack. With a sassy flick of her wrist, Zephyra conjured a small snowball and lobbed it at the fox’s nose. It yelped and scampered back a few steps, glaring at her with wounded pride. “That’s right!” she shouted, standing up in the mug with as much authority as her two-inch stature could muster. “I’m not some appetizer for your winter buffet. Shoo!” The fox gave a disdainful snort and trotted away, clearly deciding she wasn’t worth the effort. Zephyra plopped back down into the mug, her tiny fists resting on her hips. “I scare off predators, I survive snowstorms, and yet I’m still stuck in this stupid thing,” she muttered. “What’s next? A squirrel trying to use me as a tree ornament?” The Coffee Wizard As if on cue, the sound of crunching footsteps reached her frostbitten ears. A tall figure emerged from the trees, bundled in layers of robes and scarves. The newcomer carried a steaming thermos and was humming a cheerful tune that made Zephyra’s wings twitch in irritation. “A wizard,” she muttered. “Of course. Because my day couldn’t get any weirder.” The wizard, oblivious to the fairy glaring daggers at him from inside the mug, approached with a look of delight. “Well, what have we here?” he said, his voice booming and warm. “A wee fairy in a cup! What a delightful surprise!” Zephyra arched an eyebrow. “Delightful for who, exactly? Because I’m not feeling particularly whimsical right now.” The wizard squinted down at her. “Oh, you’re a feisty one, aren’t you?” “Feisty? Listen here, Gandalf knockoff, I’ve had a rough morning, and unless you’ve got a ladder, a teleportation spell, or at least a decent cappuccino, I suggest you keep walking.” The wizard chuckled. “Fair enough, little one. But how did you end up in there?” Zephyra rolled her eyes. “Do I look like I know? One minute I’m napping, and the next I’m a popsicle in this monstrosity.” The wizard nodded sagely, as if this were a perfectly reasonable explanation. “Well, fret not, for I shall free you from your porcelain prison.” “Oh, finally! Someone with some common sense,” Zephyra said. “And maybe throw in a blanket while you’re at it. I’m freezing my wings off here.” The Great Escape With a flick of his wrist, the wizard cast a gentle spell, and the mug began to warm. Steam rose from the rim, melting the frost and allowing Zephyra to spread her wings. She flitted up into the air, doing a little spin just to shake off the cold. “About time,” she said, brushing imaginary dust from her shimmering dress. “Thanks, I guess.” The wizard grinned. “You’re welcome, little one. Though I must say, you’re quite the character.” “Yeah, well, when you’re this tiny, you’ve got to have a big personality,” she said, giving him a cheeky wink. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got a nap to finish—and if another mug gets in my way, I’m setting it on fire.” With that, Zephyra zipped off into the forest, leaving the wizard chuckling and shaking his head. And so, the frosted mug sat empty in the snow, a monument to one very sassy fairy’s determination to never let winter—or bad ceramics—get the best of her.    Bring the Magic Home If Zephyra’s frosty adventure left you enchanted, why not bring a piece of her world into your own? Explore our exclusive collection featuring "Cup of Frosted Magic" on a variety of products: Beautiful Tapestry: Transform your walls into a magical winter wonderland. Canvas Prints: Capture the ethereal charm of Zephyra in vibrant detail. Challenging Puzzle: Piece together the whimsical magic, one frosty detail at a time. Spiral Notebook: Jot down your own magical tales in a notebook as enchanting as Zephyra’s story. Click on the links above to shop now and add a touch of frosted whimsy to your life!

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