fantasy satire

Captured Tales

View

Wizard of the Four Realms

by Bill Tiepelman

Wizard of the Four Realms

Embers of the Pact In the lands before clocks, before kings, before carpets that flew or taxes that didn't, there lived a wizard known only as Calvax. Not a wizard — the wizard. Calvax the Boundless. Calvax the Irredeemable. Calvax, He Who Made the Elements Cry “Uncle.” Titles were easy to collect when you lived long enough to slap thunder across the face and drain a volcano like a fine scotch. He wasn’t born so much as assembled — carved by the roots of elder trees, tempered by the hiss of midwinter geysers, and given breath by a gust stolen from the lungs of a dying hurricane. No mother, no father, just the Four: Earth, Water, Fire, Air. They each took a piece of themselves and jammed them into the wrinkled hide of an old man-shaped golem, hoping he’d be wise, maybe helpful. Instead, they got a cranky old bastard with a god complex and a flair for sarcasm. He spent centuries pretending to protect the Realms. Planting forests here, flooding tyrants there, occasionally setting noblemen ablaze "by accident" when they strutted too close. But that was before the humans — oh, the humans — turned him into a bedtime story. They called him a myth, a fable, a “cautionary tale.” Imagine being cosmically handcrafted by nature itself only to be reduced to the narrative equivalent of a PSA about staying in school. That might’ve been the end of it. Calvax, still grumpy but dormant. Until one day, he stirred. Not because of duty. Not because the elements called him. No, he woke up because some arrogant little prince with too much cologne and not enough brain matter decided to dynamite a sacred grove… for a golf course. It wasn’t even a good one. Nine holes. Artificial turf. A margarita drone. Calvax stood at the edge of the smoldering grove, face cracked with fresh rage. Lava veins pulsed under one cheek, rain hissed down his beard, and moss reanimated across his temple like a slow curse. He hadn't looked this alive in 200 years. “Guess who's back, back again?” he muttered, voice gravel and thunder. “Tell your friends.” The elements whispered in his bones: **Vengeance. Fire. Reclamation. Snark.** He smiled, the kind of smile that made birds drop dead mid-air and made gods feel a little nervous. Because when Calvax gets mad, continents shift. And when he gets even? Oh honey, they rename maps. The Vile Vineyard of Varron Dax There are few things in life more dangerous than an immortal wizard with time on his hands. Especially one with a grudge. Calvax didn’t just want to punish the idiot prince who torched the sacred grove — he wanted to annihilate his legacy, humiliate his bloodline, and make his ancestors spin in their graves fast enough to generate clean energy. The target of his elemental vendetta was Prince Varron Dax, heir to the wine-bloated, scandal-riddled House Daxleford. A walking ego with a six-pack sculpted by court mages, teeth too perfect to be real, and a jawline that had ruined more peace treaties than plague. His offenses were many — wars for profit, deforestation for “aesthetic hunting grounds,” and the worst offense of all: he once tried to rebrand the moon. Called it “The Dax Pearl” and had it trademarked. He was an icon of mediocrity propped up by wealth, vanity, and an inner circle that doubled as a harem, a weapons cartel, and a PR agency. He lived in a palace made of white quartz and glass imported from shattered temples. A man who believed elemental shrines were just old rocks in need of explosives and a Pinterest board. So Calvax didn’t send a lightning bolt or erupt a volcano under his villa. That would be too fast. Too clean. No, he brewed something petty. Vile. Deliciously drawn-out. The kind of revenge that requires charts, enchanted ink, and a sarcasm-fueled ritual on a Tuesday. It began with the Vineyard Curse. Prince Varron’s favorite pastime was his exclusive “Apocalypse Rosé,” a wine harvested only once every lunar eclipse, made from grapes grown in the ash of sacred forest groves — including the one he’d destroyed. His private label had a six-year waiting list and came with a certificate of divine smugness. So Calvax hexed the soil under it. Not to kill the vines. No — to make them sentient. And moody. The vines woke screaming at sunrise. They wrapped around workers’ ankles, whipped at butlers, and demanded rights. Some started quoting existential philosophers. Others whispered gossip they shouldn’t know. One was overheard telling a noblewoman that her husband was cheating and had a wart “shaped like betrayal.” Within days, the vineyard was overrun with emotionally unstable flora, wailing about abandonment and wine exploitation. A rare breed of grape attempted to unionize. Bottles began to ferment into vinegar overnight. The most expensive casks turned to gelatinous goo with notes of regret and elderflower. Naturally, Prince Varron called in mages. Twelve of them. Expensive ones with silk robes and hollow morals. Calvax laughed. Then he sent them dreams — dreams of drowning in barrels of rosé, being strangled by grapevines whispering their childhood insecurities. By week’s end, three renounced magic. Two joined a monastery. One tried to marry a potted plant. But Calvax wasn’t finished. Oh, no. The vineyard was just Act One in his slow-motion destruction of House Daxleford. Next came The Wailing Well. Hidden under the palace’s west wing, it once whispered ancient truths to those who dared lean in. Varron, of course, had it converted into a cocktail well. Magic-infused rum. Sigh. So Calvax tweaked it. Now, anyone who drank from it would speak only in their darkest regrets for twenty-four hours. Court meetings turned into confessions. Daxleford guards admitted to stealing pants off dead enemies. Nobles sobbed over failed affairs, bribes, and unresolved issues with their childhood ponies. At a banquet, Varron himself took a shot of “Haunted Hibiscus” and, to the horror of every ambassador present, blurted out that he had forged his entire military record and once cried when he broke a nail during a duel he didn’t show up to. Foreign dignitaries left in disgust. Treaties were annulled. A wedding between Varron’s cousin and the Frost King’s son was called off due to "unrelenting douchebaggery." Then came the dreams. Not just for the prince. For everyone. At night, the skies over Daxleford turned cloudy with faces — elemental, glowing, sneering. Each peasant and noble alike saw visions of Calvax’s return: the bearded wrath of Earth, Water, Fire, and Air, laughing with wild-eyed delight. People began fleeing the kingdom in droves. Carts were loaded, palaces abandoned. Even the rats packed up and left letters of resignation. Still, Prince Varron remained. Or rather, hid. In his panic chamber. Surrounded by velvet and perfumed walls. Waiting. Hoping this was all a bad trip brought on by too much spiced mead and not enough moral fiber. But Calvax was just getting started. Revenge wasn't a moment. It was an arc. And the next chapter was not just about humiliation. It was about ruin. The Crown of Cinders The final blow was not a scream or a fireball. It wasn’t even a flood or a landslide — though Calvax toyed with all those options during a particularly satisfying bath in molten basalt. No, the fall of Prince Varron Dax came on the wings of a whisper. A name. Spoken softly. Carried on the wind like gossip with fangs. “He knows.” No one knew who said it first. Perhaps a maid. Perhaps a goat. Perhaps the breeze itself, now loyal to the ancient wizard who once seduced a thunderstorm into loyalty and made a hurricane blush. But once those words spread, the court unravelled like a badly tied corset at an orgy. He knows. He knows what you did. Where you hid it. Who you paid. Who you slept with. Who you had executed on a dare. He knows. And he’s coming. Not for justice. Not for peace. But for entertainment. Calvax was no longer just a wizard. He was inevitability with a beard. The prince’s inner circle fell first — not by sword or spell, but by fear-induced dumbassery. The Minister of Coin set the treasury on fire to “hide the evidence.” The Royal General shaved her head, put on a robe, and fled to live with the badgers. The High Priest tried to exorcise himself. Twice. One noble tried to bribe Calvax with enchanted silk sheets. Calvax turned him into a perfectly folded napkin that weeps during dinner. Even the prince’s famed pleasure dome — a rotating carousel of glass and moonlight — simply shattered under the weight of anxiety and unpaid elemental debts. Apparently the air spirits don’t take late fees lightly. And where was Varron Dax, during this crumbling, flaming, totally-earned disaster? Cowering. Beneath the palace. In the Chamber of Forgotten Bones. Wrapped in mink and mead-stained shame. He hadn’t shaved in weeks. His jawline, once insured by seven different kingdoms, was now hidden behind the tragic fuzz of existential dread. He whispered to himself in the dark: “He’s just a myth. A scary story. A bedtime tale for peasants and druids.” Then the stones began to weep. Real tears. Granite sobbing, ancient marble moaning. And through the cracks in the chamber ceiling, a vine pushed through — not green, but blackened with fury and wet with ancient memory. Calvax entered the chamber without opening a door. The air folded around him like it owed him money. His robes moved as if stitched by weather itself — lightning hemming the cuffs, rainwater rolling off the folds, embers dancing across the seams. His eyes gleamed — one burning coal, the other a drop of ocean so cold it ached to look at. Varron stood. Or tried. His knees, having been raised on velvet and cowardice, gave out. “You… you can’t,” Varron stammered, pointing a ring-clad finger. “You’re not real. I outlawed you. I made a decree. You’re obsolete!” Calvax snorted. “You also decreed that water could be flammable and that pigs could vote. How’d that work out?” “You’re a relic,” Varron spat, grasping for any kind of leverage. “No one believes in you anymore.” Calvax stepped forward. The air chilled. Flames in the prince’s panic-lanterns died mid-flicker. Even the stone bones embedded in the walls turned to look. “I don’t require belief,” Calvax said. “I require consequences.” With one wave of his hand, the ground trembled, then bloomed — not with roses, but with the ghosts of trees. The sacred grove returned, if only in spirit, growing through the cracks, roots of memory twisting around marble columns, wrapping the prince in vines of remorse and poetic justice. “You destroyed what you didn’t understand,” Calvax whispered. “You mocked what you couldn’t master. And now… you face the only thing left: me.” Varron opened his mouth to scream — but no sound came. His voice, Calvax decided, would be put to better use elsewhere. When the people of Daxleford returned months later, the palace was gone. In its place stood a massive tree — towering, ancient, and humming with elemental power. From one gnarled branch, a face-shaped knot wept mead. And in the wind, sometimes, you could hear a voice mutter: “I should’ve just planted a stupid orchard.” Calvax? He vanished. Or perhaps he simply moved on. Legends said he wandered north, where the ice moans and the auroras whisper dirty jokes. Others say he became the mountain itself. But one thing is certain: if you hear the trees laugh, if the wind chuckles, if your wine tastes a little judgmental — he’s watching. And if you’re very, very lucky… he’s only amused.     Bring the Magic Home Feeling a strange urge to hex your living room? Want to carry a little elemental vengeance to the farmer’s market? Or maybe you just want to wrap yourself in the smoldering wrath of an ancient wizard while binge-watching morally questionable TV? You're in luck. The legendary artwork behind Wizard of the Four Realms is available in enchanted object form — no arcane training required. Whether you're a lover of fantasy art, a chaos gremlin with good taste, or someone just tired of blank walls and boring blankets, there’s something here for you: 🔥 Metal Print – Give your space a bold, elemental glow with a high-gloss finish that practically radiates power. 🌊 Acrylic Print – Crystal-clear depth and mesmerizing vibrance — as if Calvax himself enchanted your walls. 🌿 Tote Bag – Carry the power of all four realms with you, whether you’re grocery shopping or cursing exes from afar. 🌬️ Fleece Blanket – Cozy up with elemental fury. Warning: may provoke dreams of vengeance and excellent snark. Honor the grove. Hug the magic. Decorate with wrath. Shop the full collection now and turn your realm into something truly unforgettable.

Read more

Grumpy Rain Sprite

by Bill Tiepelman

Grumpy Rain Sprite

A Sprite's Soggy Misery It had been a perfectly pleasant morning in the enchanted forest—until, of course, the sky decided to have a breakdown. One moment, the birds were singing, the mushrooms were gossiping, and the sun was doing its usual “Look at me, I’m glorious” routine. The next? A torrential downpour turned the world into a damp, sloshing nightmare. And no one was more annoyed than Thistle, the resident rain sprite with a temperament as stormy as the weather. She sat in a growing puddle, wings sagging under the weight of a thousand raindrops, her favorite moss dress clinging to her like a soggy tea bag. Her silver hair, normally a wild halo of untamed curls, was now a limp, rain-drenched disaster. “Unbelievable,” she muttered, hugging her arms tightly against her chest. “Absolutely ridiculous.” She yanked her massive leaf-umbrella lower over her head, scowling as another rivulet of water dripped off the edge and splattered onto her nose. The universe clearly had a vendetta against her today. Probably because of that whole "convincing the fireflies to unionize" incident last week. The elders had warned her about the consequences of mischief, but seriously, who even enforces karma these days? A rustling sound made her glance up, her pointed ears twitching. Emerging from behind a cluster of mushrooms was a familiar figure—Twig, the local mischief-maker and general pain in her leafy backside. Of course, he would show up now, probably just to mock her. “Well, well, well,” he drawled, his wings twitching with amusement. “If it isn’t Queen Soggy of Puddleland. Shall I fetch you a throne made of mud, or are you still holding court in your personal swamp?” Thistle fixed him with a withering glare. “If you value your wings, Twig, you will remove yourself from my miserable presence before I hex you into a slug.” Twig gasped dramatically, placing a hand over his heart. “A slug! Oh no! Whatever shall I do? It’s not like it’s already so wet I’d probably thrive as a slimy, wriggling creature.” He smirked, then plucked a dripping mushroom from the ground. “But honestly, Thistle, why the tragic act? You’re a rain sprite. This is literally your element.” “I control rain, I don’t enjoy being waterboarded by it,” she snapped. “There’s a difference.” “Ah, so it’s the ‘do as I say, not as I do’ approach. Very powerful leadership strategy.” Twig leaned on her leaf umbrella, making it droop dangerously close to collapsing entirely. “But hey, if you hate it so much, why not stop the rain?” Thistle let out a long, slow breath, resisting the urge to throttle him. “Because,” she gritted out, “that would require effort. And right now, I am choosing to marinate in my suffering like a dignified and tragic figure.” “Uh-huh. Super dignified,” Twig said, tilting his head at the way her damp dress clung to her legs. “You look like a particularly upset swamp rat.” Thistle reached out and shoved him into the nearest puddle. “That was uncalled for!” he sputtered, sitting up, now as drenched as she was. “You know what else is uncalled for? This entire rainstorm!” she barked, throwing her hands up, sending a gust of wind through the trees. “I had plans today, Twig. Plans. I was going to nap in a sunbeam, bother some butterflies, maybe even steal a honey drop from the pixie hive. And instead? Instead, I am here. In this puddle. Soaking. Suffering.” “Truly tragic,” Twig said, flopping backward into the puddle dramatically. “Someone should write a song about your struggle.” Thistle growled. She was going to kill him. Or, at the very least, strongly inconvenience him. A Sprite’s Revenge is Best Served Soggy Thistle took a deep breath, inhaling the damp, earthy scent of the rain-soaked forest. She needed to calm down. Committing sprite-on-sprite violence would only get her in trouble with the elders again, and honestly, their lectures were worse than Twig’s face. Twig, still sprawled in the puddle like some kind of lazy river nymph, smirked up at her. “You know, if you stopped sulking long enough, you might realize something.” Thistle narrowed her eyes. “Oh, this should be good. Enlighten me, oh wise and irritating one.” “You love chaos, right?” He flicked some water at her, and she barely resisted the urge to fry him with a well-aimed lightning bolt. “So why not embrace the storm? Make everyone else just as miserable as you?” Her scowl twitched. “Go on…” He sat up, grinning now, sensing he had her attention. “Think about it. The dryads just put up their new moss tapestries—imagine the heartbreak when they find them soggy and ruined.” He gestured wildly. “The mushroom folk? I hear they just finished harvesting their prized sun-dried spores. And the pixies? Ha! They’ve been preening their wings all week for the Solstice Ball. One extra gust of wind and—” Thistle’s face split into a wicked grin. “—frizz city.” “Exactly.” Twig leaned in conspiratorially. “You have the power to turn a minor inconvenience into a full-blown disaster. You could make this the most memorable storm of the decade.” Thistle tapped her fingers against her arm, considering. The elders would frown upon it. Then again, the elders frowned upon pretty much everything she did, and honestly, at this point, she was just collecting their disapproval like rare artifacts. Slowly, a plan began to form. She stood, shaking the rain from her wings with an air of purpose. “Alright, Twig. You’ve convinced me. But if we’re doing this, we’re going all in.” His grin widened. “Oh, I wouldn’t expect anything less.” Thistle cracked her knuckles. The sky rumbled in response. The first thing she did was kick up the wind—not enough to be dangerous, but just enough to make all the well-groomed pixies regret their life choices. Delicate curls frizzed instantly. Dresses caught in the wind, wings flapped uselessly, and the air was filled with high-pitched shrieks of horror. Next, she turned her attention to the dryads. Oh, their moss tapestries had been beautiful. Key word: had. Now? Now they were nothing more than damp, sagging clumps of regret. “This is delightful,” Twig sighed happily, watching a group of mushroom folk scramble to cover their precious spores. “I haven’t had this much fun since I convinced the fireflies that blinking in Morse code was a revolutionary act.” Thistle let the rain surge for one last dramatic flourish, sending a final gust of wind to scatter the pixies like irate confetti. Then, just as suddenly as it had started, she stopped it. The rain ceased. The wind died. The forest was left in a state of soggy, chaotic despair. And in the middle of it all, Thistle stood, looking very pleased with herself. “Well,” she said, stretching lazily. “That was satisfying.” Twig clapped her on the back. “You, my dear, are a menace. And I respect that.” She smirked. “I do try.” From somewhere deep in the forest, a furious elder’s voice rang out. “THISTLE!” Twig winced. “Oof. That’s got some real ‘disappointed parent’ energy.” Thistle sighed dramatically. “Ugh. Consequences. So tedious.” “Run?” Twig suggested. “Run,” she agreed. And with that, the two sprites vanished into the drenched, chaotic forest, cackling like the absolute menaces they were. Bring Thistle’s Mischief Home! Love the sass, the storm, and the sheer chaotic energy of our favorite rain sprite? Now you can capture her brooding brilliance in a variety of stunning formats! Whether you want to add a touch of whimsical rebellion to your walls, solve a puzzle as tricky as Thistle herself, or jot down your own mischievous plans, we’ve got you covered. ✨ Tapestry – Let Thistle reign over your space with fabric as dramatic as her attitude. 🖼️ Canvas Print – Museum-quality snark for your walls. 🧩 Jigsaw Puzzle – Because piecing together chaos is surprisingly therapeutic. 💌 Greeting Card – Share the moody magic with your fellow mischief-makers. 📓 Spiral Notebook – Perfect for plotting pranks, poetry, or your next escape plan. Don’t just admire Thistle—invite her into your world. She promises to bring charm, attitude, and possibly a little rain.    

Read more

Riding the Rainbow Hummingbird

by Bill Tiepelman

Riding the Rainbow Hummingbird

Deep in the heart of the Enchanted Forest, where the sunlight filtered through the dense canopy like golden syrup and the air was thick with the hum of unseen magic, a certain gnome named Grimble Fizzwhistle was up to no good. Again. “Hold still, you sparkling chicken!” Grimble hollered, clutching at the reins of his highly questionable steed, a giant, iridescent hummingbird named Zuzu. Zuzu, for her part, was not thrilled to have a gnome-sized jockey attempting to direct her aerial maneuvers. She buzzed furiously, her wings a glittering blur, threatening to eject Grimble from her feathery back. “I swear, Zuzu,” Grimble muttered under his breath, “if you dump me in another patch of those stinging nettles, I’ll—well, I’ll…probably just cry again.” Despite his grumbling, Grimble held on tight, his tiny hands gripping the braided spider-silk reins with surprising tenacity. The Plan (Or Lack Thereof) Grimble was on a mission. At least, that’s what he kept telling himself. The truth was, he had very little idea where he was going or why. All he knew was that he had made a slightly drunken wager with his old frenemy, Tibbles Nockbottom, at the Giggling Toadstool Tavern the night before. Tibbles had bet him a month’s worth of honey-mead that Grimble couldn’t find the mythical Golden Nectar—a legendary elixir said to grant the drinker eternal youth and an impeccable singing voice. Grimble had, naturally, accepted the challenge without hesitation. Mostly because he was already three pints in and thought eternal youth sounded like a great way to avoid paying his back taxes. Now, as he soared above the forest, clutching Zuzu’s reins and trying not to look down at the dizzying drop below, he was starting to question his life choices. “All right, Zuzu,” he said, patting her neck with a trembling hand. “Let’s just find this Golden Nectar quickly, and then we can both go home and pretend none of this ever happened. Deal?” Zuzu chirped in response, which Grimble chose to interpret as a begrudging agreement. In reality, Zuzu was plotting the fastest route to the nearest patch of wild orchids, where she could throw Grimble off and snack on some nectar in peace. Enter the Feathered Bandits Just as Grimble was beginning to feel slightly more secure in the saddle, a screeching caw shattered the tranquility of the forest. He looked up to see a gang of magpies swooping toward them, their beady eyes glinting with malice. The leader, a particularly large and scruffy specimen with a missing tail feather, squawked loudly. “Oi! Fancy bird you got there, gnome! Hand her over, and we might let you keep your hat!” “Over my dead body!” Grimble yelled, shaking a tiny fist. “This hat cost me a week’s worth of turnip farming!” The magpies didn’t look impressed. They dove toward him en masse, their wings flapping like a thousand pieces of angry parchment. Zuzu, sensing trouble, let out an indignant chirp and banked hard to the left, narrowly avoiding the dive-bombing birds. Grimble clung on for dear life, his hat flying off in the process. “Not the hat!” he screamed, watching it flutter down into the forest below. “That was my lucky hat!” “Looks like you’re out of luck, short stuff!” the magpie leader cackled, snatching the hat mid-air. “Now scram, or we’ll pluck you bald!” Zuzu, clearly offended by the magpies’ lack of decorum, decided to take matters into her own wings. With a sudden burst of speed, she shot straight up into the sky, leaving the magpies floundering in her wake. Grimble let out a whoop of exhilaration—and then promptly swallowed a bug. “Blasted forest,” he coughed. “Why is everything here out to get me?” The Golden Nectar (Sort Of) After what felt like hours of frantic flying and several near-death experiences, Zuzu finally brought them to a halt in a secluded glade. At the center of the glade stood a single, ancient tree with shimmering golden leaves. At its base was a pool of honey-like liquid that sparkled in the sunlight. “The Golden Nectar!” Grimble exclaimed, sliding off Zuzu’s back and sprinting toward the pool. He dropped to his knees and scooped up a handful of the liquid, his eyes gleaming with triumph. “Tibbles is going to eat his stupid hat when he sees this!” He raised the nectar to his lips—but before he could take a sip, a deep, rumbling voice echoed through the glade. “Who dares disturb my sacred pool?” Grimble froze. Slowly, he turned to see a massive, grumpy-looking toad sitting on a nearby rock. The toad’s eyes glowed with an otherworldly light, and his warty skin shimmered with flecks of gold. “Uh…hello there,” Grimble said, hiding the handful of nectar behind his back. “Lovely weather we’re having, isn’t it?” “Leave,” the toad intoned, “or face my wrath.” “Right, right, of course,” Grimble said, inching backward. “No need for wrath. I’ll just, uh, be on my way…” Before the toad could respond, Zuzu swooped down, grabbed Grimble by the back of his tunic, and hauled him into the air. “Hey!” Grimble protested. “I wasn’t done groveling yet!” The Aftermath By the time they returned to the Giggling Toadstool Tavern, Grimble was exhausted, hatless, and completely nectar-less. Tibbles took one look at him and burst out laughing. “Well, well, well,” he said, clinking his mug of mead against Grimble’s empty one. “Looks like someone owes me a month’s worth of drinks!” Grimble groaned. “Next time,” he muttered, “I’m betting on something sensible. Like a snail race.” But as he glanced at Zuzu, who was perched on the bar and happily sipping a thimbleful of nectar, he couldn’t help but smile. After all, it wasn’t every day you got to ride a rainbow hummingbird.    Bring the Magic Home If Grimble’s mischievous adventure and Zuzu’s dazzling wings brought a little wonder to your day, why not make it a permanent part of your space? Explore our collection of high-quality prints featuring this magical moment: Canvas Prints: Perfect for bringing warmth and whimsy to your walls. Metal Prints: For a sleek, modern display of vibrant color and detail. Acrylic Prints: A glossy finish to make Zuzu’s iridescence truly pop. Tapestries: Add a cozy, magical touch to any room. Start your collection today and let Grimble and Zuzu’s tale inspire your own adventures!

Read more

Explore Our Blogs, News and FAQ

Still looking for something?