by Bill Tiepelman
Sass Meets Scales
How Not to Kidnap a Dragon It all started on a perfectly average Tuesdayβwhich in Twizzlethorn Wood meant mushroom hail, upside-down rain, and a raccoon wearing a monocle selling bootleg love potions out of a canoe. The forest was, as usual, minding its own business. Unfortunately, Calliope Thistlewhip was not. Calliope was a fairy, though not one of those syrupy types who weep glitter and tend flowers with a song. No, she was more the "accidentally-on-purpose" type. She once caused a diplomatic incident between the pixies and the mole folk by replacing a peace treaty with a drawing of a very explicit toad. Her wings shimmered gold, her smirk had been legally declared a menace, and she had a plan. A very bad one. "I need a dragon," she announced to no one in particular, hands on hips, standing atop a tree stump like it owed her rent. From a nearby bramble, a squirrel peeked out and immediately retreated. Even they knew not to get involved. The target of her latest scheme? A surly, fire-breathing recluse named Barnaby, who spent his days avoiding social interaction and his nights sighing heavily while staring at lakes. Dragons werenβt rare in Twizzlethorn, but dragons with boundaries were. And Barnaby had themβfirm ones, wrapped in sarcasm and dragon-scale therapy journals. Calliope's approach to boundaries was simple: break them like a piΓ±ata and hope for candy. With a lasso made of sugared vine and a face full of audacity, she set out to find her new unwilling bestie. βYou look like you hate everything,β Calliope beamed as she emerged from behind a tree, already mid-stride toward Barnaby, who was sitting in the mud next to a boulder, sipping melancholia like it was tea. βI was hoping that would ward off strangers,β he replied without looking up. βClearly, not strong enough.β βPerfect! Youβre gonna be my plus-one for the Fairy Queenβs βFire and Fizzβ party this weekend. It's BYOB. And I donβt mean bottle.β She winked. βNo,β Barnaby said flatly. Calliope tilted her head. βYou say that like itβs an option.β It wasnβt, as it turned out. She hugged him like a glittered barnacle, ignoring the growl vibrating his ribcage. One might assume she had a death wish. One would be wrong. Calliope simply had the unshakeable belief that everyone secretly adored her. Including dragons. Especially dragons. Even if their eyebrows were stuck in a permanent state of βjudging you.β βI have anxiety and a very specific skincare routine that doesnβt allow for fairy entanglement,β Barnaby mumbled, mostly into his claw. βYou have texture, darling,β she cooed, clinging tighter. βYouβll be the belle of the volcano.β He exhaled. Smoke drifted lazily out of his nose like the sigh of someone who knew exactly how bad things were about to getβand how entirely powerless he was to stop it. Thus began the unholy alliance of sparkle and sulk. Of cheek and scale. Of one fairy who knew no shame and one dragon who no longer had the energy to resist it. Somewhere deep in Twizzlethorn, a butterfly flapped its wings and whispered, βWhat the actual hell?β The Volcano Gala Disaster (And Other Socially Traumatic Events) In the days that followed, Barnaby the dragon endured what can only be described as a glitter-based hostage situation. Calliope had turned his peaceful lairβpreviously decorated with ash, moss, and deeply repressed feelingsβinto something resembling a bedazzled disaster zone. Gold tulle hung from stalactites. Fairy lightsβactual shrieking fairies trapped in jarsβblazed like disco strobes. His lava pool now featured floating candles and confetti. The ambiance wasβ¦ deeply upsetting. βYouβve desecrated my sacred brooding zone,β Barnaby groaned, staring at a pink velvet pillow that had somehow ended up embroidered with the words βSlay, Donβt Sprayβ. βYou mean improved it,β Calliope chirped, strutting past in a sequined robe and gladiator sandals. βYou are now ready for society, darling.β βI hate society.β βWhich is exactly why youβll be the most interesting guest at the Queenβs Gala. Everyone loves a moody icon. Youβre practically trending already.β Barnaby attempted to crawl under a boulder and fake his own death, but Calliope had already bedazzled it with hot glue and rhinestones. βPlease let me die with dignity,β he mumbled. βDignity is for people who didnβt agree to be my plus-one.β βI never agreed.β She didnβt hear him over the sound of a marching band made entirely of beetles playing a triumphant entrance tune. The day of the gala arrived like a punch to the face. The Fairy Queenβs infamous Fire and Fizz Volcano Gala was a high-pressure, low-sanity affair where creatures from every corner of the magical realm gathered to sip sparkling nettle wine, judge each otherβs plumage, and start emotionally devastating rumors in the punch line. Calliope arrived on Barnabyβs back like a warlord of sass. She wore a golden jumpsuit that defied physics and eyebrows that could slice glass. Barnaby had been brushed, buffed, and begrudgingly sprinkled with βvolcanic shimmer dust,β which he later discovered was just crushed mica and lies. βSmile,β she hissed through clenched teeth as they made their entrance. βI am,β he replied, deadpan. βOn the inside. Very deep inside. So deep itβs imaginary.β The room went silent as they descended the obsidian steps. Elves paused mid-gossip. Satyrs spilled wine. One particularly sensitive unicorn fainted directly into a cheese fountain. Calliope held her head high. βBehold! The last emotionally available dragon in the entire kingdom!β Barnaby muttered, βIβm not emotionally available. Iβm emotionally on airplane mode.β The Fairy Queen, a six-foot-tall hummingbird in a dress made entirely of spider silk and compliments she didnβt mean, fluttered over. βDarling Calliope. Andβ¦ whatever this is. I assume it breathes fire and hates itself?β βAccurate,β Barnaby said, blinking slowly. βPerfect. Do stay away from the tapestry room; the last dragon set it on fire with his trauma.β The night devolved quickly. First, Barnaby was cornered by a gnome with a podcast. βWhatβs it like being exploited as a metaphor for untamed masculinity in childrenβs literature?β Then someone tried to ride him like a party pony. There was glitter in places glitter should never be. Calliope, meanwhile, was in her elementβcrashing conversations, starting rumors (βDid you know that elf is 412 and still lives with his goblin mom?β), and turning every social slight into a dramatic one-act play. But it wasnβt until Barnaby overheard a dryad whisper, βIs he her pet, or her plus-one? Unclear,β that he hit his limit. βI am not her pet,β he roared, accidentally singeing the punch table. βAnd I have a name! Barnaby Thistlebane the Seventeenth! Slayer of Existential Dread and Collector of Rejected Tea Mugs!β The room went still. Calliope blinked. βWell. Someone finally found his roar. Took you long enough.β Barnaby narrowed his eyes. βYou did this on purpose.β She smirked. βOf course. Nothing gets a dragonβs scales flaring like a little public humiliation.β He looked around at the stunned party guests. βI feel... weirdly alive. Also slightly aroused. Is that normal?β βFor a Tuesday? Absolutely.β And just like that, something shifted. Not in the airβthere were still rumors hanging like mistβbut in Barnaby. Somewhere between the dryad shade and the third attempted selfie, he stopped caring quite so much about what everyone thought. He was a dragon. He was weird. And maybe, just maybe, he had fun tonight. Though heβd never admit that out loud, obviously. As they exited the volcanoβCalliope riding sidesaddle, sipping leftover punch from a stolen gobletβshe leaned against his neck. βYou know,β she said, βyou make a halfway decent social monster.β βAnd you make a better parasite than most.β She grinned. βWeβre gonna be best friends forever.β He didnβt disagree. But he did quietly burp up a fireball that scorched the Queenβs rose garden. And it felt amazing. The Accidental Rodeo and the Weaponized Hug Three days after the Volcano Gala incident (officially dubbed "The Event That Singed Lady Brambleton's Eyebrows"), Calliope and Barnaby were fugitives. Not serious fugitives, mind you. Just the whimsical kind. The kind who are banned from royal gardens, three reputable taverns, and one very particular cheese emporium where Barnaby may or may not have sat on the gouda wheel. He claimed it was a tactical retreat. Calliope claimed she was proud of him. Both were true. But trouble, as always, was Calliopeβs favorite breakfast cereal. So naturally, she dragged Barnaby to the Twizzlethorn Midnight Rodeo of Unlicensed Creatures, an underground fairy event so illegal it was technically held inside the stomach of a sentient tree. You had to whisper the passwordββmoist glitter picklesββinto a fungus and then backflip into a hollow knot while swearing on a legally questionable wombat. βWhy are we here?β Barnaby asked, hovering reluctantly near the treeβs gaping maw. βTo compete, obviously,β Calliope grinned, tightening her ponytail like she was about to punch fate in the face. βThereβs a cash prize, bragging rights, and a cursed toaster oven up for grabs.β β...You had me at toaster oven.β Inside, the scene was chaos dipped in glitter and fried in outlaw vibes. Glowshrooms lit the arena. Banshees sold snacks. Pixies in leather rode miniature manticores into walls while betting on which organ would rupture first. It was beautiful. Calliope signed them up for the main event: Wrangle and Ride the Wild Emotion Beast. βThatβs not a real event,β Barnaby said, as a goblin stapled a number to his tail. βIt is now.β What followed was a tornado of feelings, sparkles, and mild brain injury. Barnaby was forced to lasso a literal manifestation of fearβwhich looked like a cloud of black licorice with teethβwhile Calliope rode rage, a squealing, flaming piglet with hooves made of passive-aggression. They failed spectacularly. Calliope was ejected into a cotton candy stand. Barnaby crashed through a wall of enchanted beanbags. The crowd went bananas. Later, bruised and inexplicably covered in peanut butter, they sat on a log behind the arena while fairy paramedics offered unhelpful brochures like βSo You Got Emotionally Gored!β and βGlitter Rash and You.β Calliope leaned her chin on her knees, still smiling through split lip gloss. βThat was the most fun Iβve had since I swapped the Queenβs shampoo with truth serum.β Barnaby didnβt reply. Not right away. βYou ever thinkβ¦β he started, then trailed off, staring into the middle distance like a dragon with unresolved poetry. Calliope turned to him. βWhat? Think what?β He took a breath. βMaybe I donβt hate everything. Just most things. Except you. And maybe rodeo snacks. And when people stop pretending they're not a complete mess.β She blinked. βWell damn, Thistlebane. Thatβs dangerously close to a real feeling. You okay?β βNo. I think Iβve been emotionally compromised.β Calliope smirked, then softly, dramatically, like she was starring in a musical only she could hear, opened her arms. βBring it in, big guy.β He hesitated. Then sighed. Then, with the reluctant grace of a creature born to nap alone in dark caves, Barnaby leaned in for what became known (and feared) as the Weaponized Hug. It lasted approximately six seconds. At second four, someone exploded in the background. At second five, Barnaby let out a tiny, happy growl. And at second six, Calliope whispered, βSee? You love me.β He pulled back. βI tolerate you with less resistance than most.β βSame thing.β They stood up, brushed off the dirt, and limped toward the cursed toaster oven prize they did not technically win, but no one felt like stopping them from stealing. The crowd parted. Someone slow clapped. Somewhere, a unicorn wept into a corn dog. Back at Barnabyβs lairβstill half bedazzled, still homeβCalliope sprawled across a beanbag and declared, βWe should write a book. βHow to Befriend a Dragon Without Dying or Getting Sued.ββ βNo one would believe it,β Barnaby said, curling his tail around a mug that read, βWorldβs Least Enthusiastic Snuggle Beast.β βThatβs the beauty of it.β And so, in the land of Twizzlethorn, where logic curled up and died ages ago, a fairy and a dragon built something inexplicable: a friendship forged in sass, sarcasm, rodeo trauma, and absolutely no personal boundaries. It was loud. It was messy. It was surprisingly healing. And for reasons no one could explain, it actually worked. Β Β Want to take the chaos home? Celebrate the delightfully dysfunctional duo of Calliope and Barnaby with framed art prints worthy of your sassiest wall, or snag a metal print that radiates fairy mischief and dragon moodiness. Need a portable dose of snark? Grab a spiral notebook for your own terrible ideas, or a sticker to slap on whatever needs more attitude. Itβs not just artβitβs emotional support glitter, scaled and ready for adventure.