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Tideborn Majesty

by Bill Tiepelman

Tideborn Majesty

The Splash Heard 'Round the Realms By the time the unicorn hit the water, the Kingdom of Larethia was already in trouble. Taxes were up, pants were down, and the High Chancellor had accidentally turned himself into a marzipan swan mid-speech at a war council. In short, things were spiraling. Then came the splash. Not just any splash, mind you. This was the sort of splash that made sirens clutch their pearls and krakens raise a brow. It came at twilightβ€”when the veil between realms wore thinβ€”and it was made by a creature so radiant, so unreasonably majestic, it seemed the gods had been holding out on the good stuff. From the ocean leapt a horned beast of impossible beauty. Wings like opalescent glass arched into the dying sun. Its mane flowed like moonlight drunk on champagne. And its horn? Let’s just say it looked like the sort of thing that could skewer both a dragon and your ex’s ego in a single thrust. β€œOh no,” muttered the wizard Argonath, sipping from a mug that read β€˜#1 Spellslinger’. β€œIt’s one of those.” β€œA flying unicorn?” asked Lady Cressida, princess by birth, chaos incarnate by choice. She was halfway through her third goblet of fermented starlight and already considering seducing the phenomenon for political leverageβ€”or for fun. Whichever came first. β€œNot just a unicorn,” Argonath said grimly. β€œThat’s a Tideborn. One of the First Five. Rumor says they show up only when realms are about to collapse or… begin anew.” The creature touched down on the shore in a spray of light and seafoam, hooves sizzling against the sand like divine frying pans. Every seagull in a three-mile radius passed out in unison. One exploded. No one talked about it. Lady Cressida stepped forward, tipsy but intrigued. β€œWell then. I suppose we ought to say hello to the end of the worldβ€”or the start of a rather exciting chapter.” She straightened her crown, adjusted her cleavage (always part of diplomacy), and began walking toward the Tideborn with the unshakable confidence of a woman who’d once won a duel using only a spoon and three insults. The unicorn stared back. Its eyes gleamed like galaxies having an argument. Time hiccuped. The waves paused. Somewhere, a bard fainted in anticipatory excitement. And just like that… destiny blinked first. Diplomacy by Firelight and Feral Sass The unicorn did not speakβ€”not in the usual sense. No lips moved. No vocal cords vibrated. Instead, words pressed directly into the minds of everyone present, like a silk-wrapped brick of pure intention. It was a telepathic voice, deep and resonant, with the seductive growl of thunder and the tactless honesty of a drunk philosopher. β€œYou smell like bad decisions and premature declarations of war,” it said bluntly to Lady Cressida. β€œI like you.” Cressida beamed. β€œLikewise. Are you available for a seasonal alliance or, perhaps, something slightly more carnal with a diplomatic twist?” The Tideborn blinked. Galaxies in its eyes collapsed and reformed into spirals of amused indifference. Argonath muttered into his beard. β€œOf course. She’s trying to seduce the doomsday horse.” The beach was now crowded. Word of the divine splash had spread like wildfire through the realm. Locals, nobles, spellcasters, and three absolutely feral bards arrived breathless, notebooks at the ready. The bards immediately began arguing over what key the unicorn’s hooves were clapping in. One claimed it was E minor; another swore it was the rhythm of heartbreak. The third burst into spontaneous song and was immediately punched by the other two. Meanwhile, the sky shifted. Stars began to shimmer more boldly, and the moon rose too fast, like it had just remembered it was late for something. The fabric of reality puckered slightly, like a bedsheet being sat on by a cosmic weight. β€œThis realm is on the cusp,” the unicorn said, pacing with the grace of a god doing yoga. β€œYou’ve abused its magic, ignored its tides, and scheduled war like it was a midweek brunch. But—” the beast paused dramatically, β€œthere is potential. Unruly. Unrefined. Unreasonably attractive.” Its eyes landed again on Cressida. β€œWell,” she purred, β€œI do exfoliate with dragon ash and self-belief.” Argonath rolled his eyes so hard a minor wind spell activated. β€œWhat the beast is saying, Princess, is that the realm might not be doomed if we pull our collective heads out of our collective rears.” β€œI know what it said,” Cressida snapped. β€œI’m fluent in ego.” The unicornβ€”whose name, it revealed, was something unpronounceable in mortal tongue but roughly translated to β€˜She Who Kicks Stagnation in the Teeth’—lowered its horn and drew a line in the sand. Literally. It was a glowing line, pulsing like a heartbeat. Everyone stepped back except Cressida, who approached with the energy of a woman about to declare civil war at a brunch buffet. β€œWhat is this?” she asked, heels crunching over the warm sand. β€œA challenge?” β€œA choice,” said the Tideborn. β€œStep across, and everything changes. Stay, and everything stays exactly the same until it all collapses under the weight of mediocrity and bureaucracy.” It was a hard sell for a realm built on red tape and unnecessarily fancy hats. But Cressida did not hesitate. She stepped over the line with one sandal, then the other, and for a brief, blinding moment, her silhouette exploded into celestial ribbons and dripping nebula. When the light faded, her armor had melted into something infinitely more badassβ€”dark silk wrapped in starlight, with shoulder pads that whispered ancient battle hymns. Everyone gasped, except for the wizard, who merely scribbled in his journal, β€œFashion: unholy but effective.” The unicorn reared and trumpeted a sound that cracked open a passing cloud. Lightning danced across the sky like drunk ballerinas. The earth trembled. And from beneath the waves, something else began to riseβ€”an ancient altar long buried beneath the tides, covered in barnacles, ambition, and salt-soaked secrets. β€œYou’ve chosen rebirth,” said the Tideborn, now glowing from within like an overachieving glow stick. β€œThe rest will come. Painful, ridiculous, glorious. But it will come.” And just like that, the unicorn turned. It walked back into the ocean without a backward glance, mane whipped by starwind, wings tucked tight. Each step shimmered with impossible possibility. By the time its tail disappeared into the surf, the crowd was silent. Spellbound. Terrified. Slightly aroused. Argonath turned to Cressida. β€œSo. What now?” She cracked her knuckles, eyes alight with the fire of new beginnings and scandalous potential. β€œNow?” She smiled like the morning after a political coup. β€œNow we wake the gods... and rewrite everything.” The Crownless Reign and Other Awkward Miracles The following weeks were not quiet. As Cressida crossed the Tideborn’s line, reality wobbled like a drunk noble at his sixth royal banquet. Prophecies updated themselves mid-sentence, magic surged through plumbing systems, and one particularly unfortunate palace hedge gave birth to sentient topiary who immediately unionized and demanded leaf conditioner. Lady Cressidaβ€”no longer just a ladyβ€”now carried herself like thunder dressed in lipstick. Her new title, whispered reverently (and sometimes fearfully) across the land, was Stormborne Sovereign. No coronation. No ceremony. Just a roaring shift in the very bones of the world and an unspoken understanding: she ruled now. Meanwhile, the council scrambled. The Grand Comptroller tried to ban metaphor. The Minister of Protocol fainted upon discovering Cressida had abolished dress codes in favor of β€œemotional layering.” Argonath quietly relocated his tower to a mountaintop just out of fireball range and began writing memoirs titled: β€œI Told You So: Volume I”. But Cressida wasn’t interested in power for the sake of it. She had something far more dangerous: vision. With the magic of the Tideborn humming in her veins like caffeinated destiny, she marched straight into the Temple of Refrained Divinitiesβ€”a grand dome of overly polite godsβ€”and kicked open the doors. β€œHello, pantheon,” she said, brushing starlight off her shoulders. β€œIt’s time we talked about accountability.” The gods stared, mid-nectar brunch, dumbfounded. A mortal. In their dining room. With that much cleavage and zero fear. β€œWho dares?” asked Solarkun, God of Controlled Fires and Bureaucratic Passion. β€œI do,” she replied. β€œI dare with excellent lighting and one hell of a thesis.” She laid it out. The cycle of rise, ruin, repeat. The apathy. The interference. The divine meddling disguised as fate. She talked of mortals tired of being the punchline to immortal whim. She demanded cooperation, balanceβ€”and a revised calendar because β€œMonday” was clearly cursed. There was stunned silence, followed by muffled applause from one of the lesser godsβ€”probably Elaris, Patron Deity of Misplaced Keys. It escalated, as these things do. There were trials of wit and will. Cressida debated the goddess of Paradox until time itself had to sit down for a drink. She wrestled the Avatar of Eternal Expectations in a ring of shifting realities and won by making him laugh so hard he fell through his own narrative loop. She even seducedβ€”then ghostedβ€”the demi-god of Seasonal Overthinking, leaving him writing poetry about why mortals always β€œruin everything beautifully.” Eventually, even the gods had to admit: this was not a woman you could put back in the boxβ€”or on a throne. She wasn’t ruling from above. She was already in the world. Walking barefoot through its contradictions. Dancing in its ruins. Kissing chaos on the mouth and asking it what it wanted to be when it grew up. And so, Cressida made the gods an offer: step down from the altar and step up as partners. Join the mortals in rebuilding. Help without dominating. Witness without warping. Incredibly, a few agreed. The others? She left them in the divine breakroom with a strong suggestion to β€œsort their existential kinks out before they tried meddling again.” Back on the beach where it all began, the tide rolled out to reveal something unexpected: a second line in the sand. Smaller, fainter, as though waiting for someone else to choose. Argonath stood staring at it. The wizard who had lived through five failed empires, one successful midlife crisis, and seven accidentally summoned demons (one of whom he’d dated). He sipped his tea, now permanently spiked with phoenix bitters, and sighed. β€œWell,” he muttered. β€œMight as well make things interesting.” He stepped across. In the weeks that followed, others would too. A baker with dreams of skyships. A warrior with anxiety and perfect hair. An old thief who missed being surprised. One by one, they crossedβ€”not to seize power, but to participate in something terrifying and spectacular: change. The realm didn’t fix overnight. It cracked. It shifted. It argued. It danced awkwardly and re-learned how to listen. But under moonlight and under starlight, something pulsed again. Something real. Not prophecy. Not fate. Just choice, messy and magnificent. And far across the water, beneath constellations no one had named yet, the Tideborn watchedβ€”half myth, half midwife to a reborn worldβ€”and smiled. Because new beginnings never arrive quietly. They crash like waves. They shimmer like madness. And they always, always, leave the sand forever changed. Β  Β  Bring the magic home. If β€œTideborn Majesty” stirred something wild, wistful, or wonderfully rebellious in you, don’t let it fade with the tide. Hang it in a framed print where dreams spark revolutions. Let it shimmer in acrylic like myth caught mid-flight. Challenge your mind with the jigsaw version and piece together magic at your pace. Toss the Tideborn onto your couch with a throw pillow that whispers rebellion between naps. Or send someone a greeting card infused with the spirit of transformation and winged sarcasm. Magic doesn’t have to stay in storiesβ€”it can live in your space too.

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The Grumpy Guardian of the Glade

by Bill Tiepelman

The Grumpy Guardian of the Glade

Deep in the heart of the Eldermoss Forest, where the trees whispered gossip about the birds and the mushrooms glowed suspiciously at night, there existed a tiny, winged creature with the disposition of a tax auditor during finals week. His name was Cragglethump, though most simply called him β€˜that pissed-off fairy’ or, if they were particularly unlucky, β€˜Agh, my face!’ Cragglethump had been the self-appointed (read: forcibly assigned by a drunken fairy council) Guardian of the Glade for over five centuries. His job? Ensure that no human, beast, or idiot goblin came trampling through, disrupting the delicate magic of the land. He did this mostly through a mixture of terrifying glares, creative insults, and, when necessary, strategic nut-punches. A Rude Awakening On this particularly fine morning, Cragglethump sat hunched on his favorite moss-covered branch, arms crossed, wings twitching in irritation. He had been rudely awoken by something truly horrificβ€”a bard. Not just any bard, but a lute-wielding, hair-too-perfect, teeth-too-white, likely-to-have-chlamydia bard. The kind that sang ballads about love and heroism while knowing full well he had run from the last fight he was in. He was strumming away at his lute like he was trying to seduce a particularly lonely oak tree. Cragglethump narrowed his eyes and let out a low growl. β€œOh, for the love of fungus-ridden troll bollocks.” The bard, blissfully unaware of his imminent demise, continued to butcher a song about some lost princess or whatever. Cragglethump sighed, cracked his knuckles, and stood. Fairy Diplomacy (aka Violence) With the grace of an elderly alley cat, Cragglethump launched himself off the branch and dive-bombed straight for the bard’s stupid face. The moment of impact was exquisiteβ€”a perfect combination of tiny fairy foot to nasal bridge. The bard shrieked and flailed, his lute slipping from his fingers and landing with a tragic *twang* against a rock. β€œGODS ABOVE, WHAT THE—” β€œYOU!” Cragglethump roared, flitting up to hover directly in front of the bard’s very confused and rapidly swelling nose. β€œDo you have any idea what time it is? What the hell do you think you’re doing polluting my glade with your noise pollution?” β€œIβ€”I was just—” β€œNo. No, no, no. You were NOT β€˜just.’ You were warbling like a dying squirrel and expecting someone to be impressed. Spoiler alert: No one is impressed.” The bard’s lower lip trembled. β€œThat’s a bit harsh.” Cragglethump smirked. β€œOh, sweet summer twat, I haven’t even gotten started.” With that, he plucked a small handful of dust from his tattered sleeve, muttered an incantation under his breath, and blew it straight into the bard’s face. Instantly, the young man’s hair turned a spectacular shade of bright green, his teeth lengthened into miniature tusks, and a mysterious but persistent farting noise began emanating from his boots. The bard screamed. β€œWhat did you DO?!” β€œCursed you.” Cragglethump dusted his hands off and turned away. β€œEnjoy your new look, dipshit. Now get out before I do something permanent.” As the bard ran wailing from the forest, Cragglethump landed back on his branch with a satisfied sigh. β€œAnother successful morning,” he muttered. But his satisfaction was short-lived. Because that’s when the unicorn arrived. Β  Β  The Unicorn from Hell Cragglethump had seen some shit in his timeβ€”goblins trying to cook with rocks, witches attempting to seduce trees, even an elf trying to smoke an entire beehive (long story). But nothing had prepared him for this. Standing in the middle of his glade was a unicorn. And not the graceful, shimmering, poetic kind. No, this one had the dead-eyed stare of a creature who had seen things. Things that had changed it. Its once-pristine white coat was covered in what looked suspiciously like bloodstains. Its horn, instead of a delicate spiral of magic, was cracked and jagged like it had been used as a prison shiv. It chewed on what appeared to be an old boot, its jaw working methodically as it stared Cragglethump down. β€œβ€¦The fuck?” Cragglethump whispered. Regret in Equine Form The unicorn spat out the boot and took a step forward. β€œYo,” it said. Cragglethump’s brain short-circuited. β€œUnicorns don’t talk.” β€œYeah? And fairies don’t look like my grandpa’s angry hemorrhoid, but here we are.” Cragglethump’s eye twitched. β€œExcuse me?” β€œName’s Stabsy,” the unicorn said, rolling its massive shoulders. β€œBeen on the run. Shit went south in the Enchanted Plains.” β€œDefine β€˜shit,’” Cragglethump said slowly. β€œWell.” Stabsy licked his teeth. β€œTurns out, if you gore a prince, people tend to take offense.” Cragglethump groaned and dragged a hand down his face. β€œWhat. The. Actual. Hell.” The Absolute Worst Idea Stabsy clomped forward until he was nose-to-nose with Cragglethump. β€œLook, you seem like a guy who gets things done. I need a place to lay low. You got a nice setup here.” Cragglethump opened his mouth to say absolutely not, but Stabsy cut him off. β€œAlso, I may have pissed off a warlock, and there’s a small but nonzero chance they’re tracking me.” β€œOf course there is.” Cragglethump rubbed his temples. β€œAnd what, pray tell, did you do to this warlock?” β€œYou ever play blackjack?” Cragglethump stared at him. Stabsy grinned. β€œTurns out, warlocks really don’t like losing.” Before Cragglethump could start screaming, the first fireball hit. Β  Β  It is a universally acknowledged truth that if you curse a bard, they will absolutely, without a doubt, try to get revenge in the most dramatic and inconvenient way possible. Cragglethump should have known. He did know. And yet, when the first note of an all-too-familiar lute twanged through the trees, he still nearly choked on the acorn he’d been chewing. β€œOh, for the love of—” He spun around, wings twitching furiously. There, standing at the edge of the glade, was the bard he had cursed earlier that morning. His once luscious brown locks were still an aggressive shade of green, his tusked teeth gave him the aesthetic of a failed orc cosplayer, and his eyes burned with the kind of melodramatic vengeance only a bard could summon. He had changed clothes, though. Which was a shame, because his new outfit was worse. β€œYOU!” the bard bellowed, pointing dramatically at Cragglethump. Cragglethump sighed, rubbing his temples. β€œWhat, dipshit?” β€œI, Alaric the Harmonious, have returned to reclaim my honor!” Stabsy the Unicorn, still lounging nearby and gnawing on a suspiciously human-looking bone, glanced up. β€œYou look like an enchanted swamp farted you out, bud.” Alaric ignored him, instead launching into what was clearly a rehearsed monologue. β€œYou thought you could humiliate me? Curse me?! Reduce me to some… some grotesque green-haired monster?!” β€œTo be fair,” Cragglethump interjected, β€œyou look like that one elf nobody invites to parties because he keeps talking about his beard-care routine.” Alaric’s eye twitched. β€œI have come to take my revenge.” The Power of Passive-Aggressive Music The bard reached into his bag and pulled out his lute. Cragglethump tensed, preparing for an attack, but instead of a fireball or some nonsense, the bard just started… playing. Badly. It wasn’t just out of tuneβ€”it was aggressively, maliciously out of tune. A truly diabolical combination of sour notes and over-exaggerated strumming. And worst of all, he was singing. β€œOhhh, in the woods there is a beast, Whose old ass hair has never been greased, He curses bards and smells like mold, And probably has a shriveled-up—” β€œHEY!” Cragglethump barked. β€œYou little shit.” Alaric smirked, strumming harder. β€œOhhh, his wings are weak, his heart is small, And I bet he’s got no balls at all!” Cragglethump’s wings flared in pure rage. β€œI swear on my ancestors, if you don’t shut up—” But then, something truly horrifying happened. The plants started wilting. Leaves drooped. Mushrooms let out tiny, pitiful sighs before shriveling into dust. A rabbit hopped by, took one whiff of the melody, and immediately keeled over. β€œOh, shit,” Cragglethump muttered. Stabsy took a step back. β€œThat’s not normal.” Bardic Black Magic Alaric’s smirk widened. β€œOh, did I forget to mention?” He plucked a particularly heinous chord. β€œI made a deal with a hag.” Cragglethump groaned. β€œOf course you did.” β€œTurns out, my curse wasn’t just cosmetic.” Alaric leaned forward, eyes gleaming. β€œThe hag gave me a little bonus. Now, whenever I play, magic dies.” Silence settled over the glade. Then Stabsy burst out laughing. β€œHA! You made a deal with a hag over a bad haircut? That’s peak bard energy.” β€œLaugh all you want,” Alaric said. β€œBut if I keep playing? This whole glade is going to be nothing but dirt.” Cragglethump clenched his fists. β€œYou little shitweasel.” β€œBeg me for mercy,” Alaric said, smug. Cragglethump narrowed his eyes. β€œI’ll do you one better.” He grabbed a handful of dust from his sleeve and, with a flick of his wrist, blew it straight into Alaric’s face. The bard staggered back, coughing. β€œWhat the hell did you—” Then he froze. The Curse Upgrade Alaric’s eyes went wide. His face paled. Then, slowly, his lips began to tremble. Cragglethump grinned. β€œEnjoy your new curse, dumbass.” Alaric opened his mouth to screamβ€”but no sound came out. His lips moved, but his voice was gone. Gone. The bard let out a silent wail, his hands clutching at his throat. He looked at Cragglethump with pure, unfiltered horror. β€œOh, what’s that?” Cragglethump said, all fake concern. β€œYou got something to say? A song, perhaps? A little ballad?” Alaric made a series of frantic, inaudible noises. β€œOh, you poor thing.” Cragglethump smirked. β€œMust be awful. A bard with no voice? Tragic.” Alaric let out another silent scream and took off running. Stabsy shook his head, chuckling. β€œDamn. Remind me to never piss you off.” Cragglethump sighed, stretching his arms. β€œWell, that’s enough bullshit for one day.” Unfortunately, fate had other plans. Because that’s when the warlock arrived. Β  Β  The Absolutely Stupid Final Chapter There was something deeply, cosmically unfair about the fact that Cragglethump couldn’t get through a single godsdamned day without some new brand of magical bullshit showing up to ruin his life. First, the bard. Then, the sociopathic unicorn. And now? A warlock. And not just any warlock. This one looked like he’d crawled straight out of a bad fantasy novel. Robes too long, dramatic staff, glowing eyes, and an aura that screamed, Yes, I have sacrificed something alive today. The warlock stood at the edge of the glade, silhouetted by the eerie blue glow of his own sinister magic. He raised a single hand. β€œWHO,” he boomed, β€œHAS HARB—” β€œHold that thought,” Cragglethump interrupted. β€œI need a drink.” The Best Worst Idea Ever The warlock blinked. β€œWhat?” β€œYou heard me.” Cragglethump dusted himself off, fluttering to a nearby stump. β€œLook, I don’t know what this is about, but I already wasted most of my patience dealing with a bard’s revenge arc and a unicorn with murder issues. So before you monologue, I propose an alternative: a drinking contest.” There was a long, stunned silence. Stabsy’s ears perked up. β€œOh, hell yes.” The warlock scowled. β€œI am here to avenge my honor! That thing—” he jabbed a finger at Stabsy β€œβ€”cheated me out of a fortune, and I—” β€œBlah, blah, blah,” Cragglethump interrupted, yawning. β€œDrinking contest or shut the hell up.” The warlock frowned. β€œThat’s not how vengeance works.” β€œOh, I’m sorry, I didn’t realize you were a coward.” Stabsy gasped dramatically. β€œOhhhhh shit, he called you a bitch.” The warlock’s eye twitched. β€œI accept,” he growled. Rules Are for Losers Within minutes, a crude wooden table was set up in the middle of the glade, covered in an alarming variety of alcoholic substances. Fairy mead. Dwarven stout. Goblin moonshine (which was technically illegal, but Cragglethump had connections). Cragglethump, Stabsy, and the warlock all took their seats. β€œRules are simple,” Cragglethump said, pouring the first round. β€œWe drink until someone passes out, vomits, or admits defeat.” β€œI should warn you,” the warlock said, gripping his tankard. β€œI have imbibed the elixirs of the darkest realms.” β€œYeah, yeah,” Cragglethump muttered. β€œLess talking, more drinking.” Round One: Fairy Mead The first round went down smooth. Fairy mead was deceptively strong, but Cragglethump was built different. Stabsy barely reacted. The warlock took his with a slight grimace. β€œThis is... sweet,” he muttered. Cragglethump snorted. β€œYeah, well, enjoy it while you can.” Round Two: Dwarven Stout By the second round, things started getting fuzzy. Dwarven stout had the unique property of making everything seem both hilarious and imminently dangerous. Stabsy was now laughing uncontrollably at a nearby rock. The warlock looked oddly thoughtful. β€œYou know,” he slurred, β€œI came here to incinerate you all, but I’m feeling kinda... warm.” β€œThat’s the stout,” Cragglethump said. β€œAnd also the early stages of bad decision-making.” Round Three: Goblin Moonshine This was where things got serious. Goblin moonshine was not meant for civilized consumption. It was technically closer to weaponized alchemy than a drink. Cragglethump took his shot like a champion. Stabsy gagged, then hiccupped so hard he momentarily teleported. The warlock, meanwhile, turned an unsettling shade of green. β€œThis is... ungodly.” Cragglethump grinned. β€œYou tapping out, big guy?” The warlock narrowed his eyes. β€œNever.” Round Four: ??? At this point, no one knew what they were drinking. Some ancient, unlabeled bottle had appeared, and no one was sober enough to question it. Cragglethump took a swig. So did Stabsy. The warlock followed suit. Then everything went to shit. The Aftermath The next morning, Cragglethump woke up sprawled on his back, wings twitching, head pounding. There were scorch marks in the grass. The table was missing. Stabsy was asleep in a tree. The warlock lay face-down in the dirt, snoring softly. Cragglethump groaned. β€œWhat... the fuck happened?” Stabsy rolled over. β€œI think we bonded.” The warlock stirred, slowly sitting up. His robes were singed, and he was missing a boot. β€œI... no longer remember why I was angry.” Cragglethump smirked. β€œSee? Drinking contest. Solves everything.” The warlock blinked at him, then sighed. β€œYou know what? Fine. The unicorn lives. But I’m taking a nap first.” Cragglethump stretched. β€œGood talk.” And with that, he flopped back onto the moss, vowing to never deal with another idiot ever again. (Spoiler: He absolutely would.) Β  Β  Bring the Grumpy Guardian Home Loved this ridiculous tale of magical misadventures? Why not bring a little of that cranky fairy energy into your own home? The Grumpy Guardian of the Glade is available on a variety of products, so you can enjoy his grumpy little face wherever you go! Wood Print – Perfect for adding a touch of fantasy (and attitude) to your walls. Tote Bag – Carry your essentials with a side of grump. Throw Pillow – Because even the crankiest fairy deserves a soft place to rest. Fleece Blanket – Stay cozy while channeling your inner tiny, winged menace. Check out the full collection at Unfocussed Shop and bring a piece of the Glade to your world!

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Glitterhoof's Glare of Justice

by Bill Tiepelman

Glitterhoof's Glare of Justice

In the glittering expanse of the Cosmic Meadow, where stardust twinkled in every blade of astral grass, a tiny unicorn with wings and a bad attitude ruled supreme. Glitterhoof, as they called him, was no ordinary magical creature. Oh no, Glitterhoof wasn’t prancing around rainbows or cuddling with woodland animals like the rest of his fluff-brained kin. He was far too busy for such trivial nonsense. Someone had to manage the chaos of the universe, and clearly, it was going to be him. Today was no exception. Glitterhoof stood in his usual spot: the Great Cosmic Plateau, a glowing, star-speckled stage where lost travelers sought wisdom. His silvery mane shimmered like liquid moonlight, and his hooves clicked on the crystalline surface as he paced back and forth. His tiny wings fluttered with frustration. β€œLet me get this straight,” Glitterhoof said, narrowing his piercing blue eyes at a trembling elf who stood before him. β€œYou accidentally opened a portal to the Nether Void because you forgot the incantation?!” The elf nodded sheepishly, his pointed ears drooping. β€œY-yes, Your Luminescent Majesty...” β€œFirst of all,” Glitterhoof snapped, stomping his sparkling hoof. β€œI didn’t get this title for free. I earned it. So don’t throw it around like some cheap glitter glue, okay?” He flared his wings for dramatic effect. β€œSecond, who forgets an incantation? You write it down! You think I don’t have my own spellbook? It’s literally bedazzled, and I carry it everywhere.” He rolled his eyes so hard the stars seemed to dim for a moment. β€œNext time, use a Post-it. Or better yet, don’t dabble in interdimensional chaos if you can’t remember your spells. Dismissed!” The elf scurried off, muttering apologies, as Glitterhoof muttered to himself, β€œWhy do I always get the amateurs? What is this, β€˜Adventures for Dummies’?” The Chaos Continues As the elf disappeared into the starlit horizon, Glitterhoof turned to face his assistant, a celestial hedgehog named Spiny. Spiny wore a tiny bow tie made of dark matter and carried a clipboard that always seemed on the verge of imploding. β€œWhat’s next on the agenda?” Glitterhoof asked, flipping his mane with an air of exasperation. Spiny adjusted his glasses. β€œWe’ve got a siren complaining about mermaids encroaching on her lagoon, a dragon who’s lost his favorite hoard sock, andβ€”oh, there’s a petition from the Moon Pixies to ban karaoke in the Nebula Lounge.” β€œUgh, I can’t,” Glitterhoof groaned. β€œDo these creatures not understand that I’m a celestial being and not their personal grievance counselor?!” Spiny hesitated. β€œTechnically, your title does include β€˜Mediator of Mystical Conflicts.’” β€œA title I regret every single day of my life,” Glitterhoof snapped, glancing at his perfectly manicured hooves. β€œFine. I’ll deal with the siren, but I am NOT touching the karaoke situation. The last time I got involved, a pixie tried to sing Bohemian Rhapsody, and it nearly collapsed the Andromeda Galaxy.” A Siren’s Complaint Moments later, Glitterhoof was hoveringβ€”yes, hoveringβ€”over a lagoon that shimmered with bioluminescent algae. The siren in question lounged dramatically on a rock, her aquamarine hair cascading into the water. β€œOh, Glitterhoof, thank goodness you’ve come!” she wailed, batting her glitter-drenched eyelashes. β€œThose wretched mermaids are stealing all my spotlight! This lagoon used to be my stage, and now it’s a—” β€œSave it,” Glitterhoof interrupted, landing with a delicate but authoritative thud. β€œFirst of all, you don’t own the lagoon. It’s a public water feature, and your permit literally expired 200 years ago.” The siren gasped. β€œExpired? That can’t be!” β€œIt can and it did,” Glitterhoof said with a smirk. β€œSecond, have you tried collaborating with the mermaids? You know, a duet? Maybe they’ll harmonize with your off-key screeching.” β€œOff-key screeching?!” the siren shrieked. β€œI said what I said,” Glitterhoof replied, turning to leave. β€œOh, and tell your cousin Lorelei she still owes me for that enchanted comb. I don’t work for free.” Glitterhoof's Day Off After dealing with the siren (and side-eyeing the mermaids on the way out), Glitterhoof finally made it back to his starlit lairβ€”a chic cave outfitted with crystal chandeliers, plush nebula cushions, and a bathtub the size of a meteorite. He sank into the warm, glitter-infused water with a dramatic sigh. β€œWhy is it always me?” he muttered to himself, blowing bubbles. β€œDo they think Zeus is out here dealing with lost socks and lagoon disputes? No! He’s busy throwing lightning bolts and looking fabulous. But me? I get the sock dragon.” Just as Glitterhoof began to relax, Spiny appeared at the edge of the tub, clipboard in hand. β€œWhat now?” Glitterhoof groaned. β€œThe Moon Pixies are threatening to sue over noise pollution,” Spiny said. β€œApparently, the sirens have started karaoke nights in the lagoon.” Glitterhoof sank lower into the water until only his horn was visible. β€œI’m done. The universe can fend for itself.” And with that, Glitterhoof declared his first-ever day off, leaving the cosmos to sort out its own problems. Because even the tiniest, sassiest guardians need a break sometimes. Or at least until the dragon lost another sock. Β  Β  Glitterhoof-Inspired Products Love the sass, sparkle, and cosmic charm of Glitterhoof? Bring home the magic with these exclusive products: Tapestry: Transform your space with a dazzling Glitterhoof tapestry, perfect for adding a cosmic flair to any room. Canvas Print: A gallery-quality canvas of Glitterhoof's iconic glare, ideal for art lovers with a sense of humor. Puzzle: Piece together the majesty of Glitterhoof with this whimsical and challenging jigsaw puzzle. Tote Bag: Carry Glitterhoof’s attitude and style wherever you go with this chic and durable tote bag. Visit our shop for more Glitterhoof-inspired merchandise and let this feisty little unicorn bring some cosmic sass to your life!

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