The Laughing Pact of Mossroot Hollow

The Laughing Pact of Mossroot Hollow

When a dragon meant to inspire terror discovers that laughter is far more powerful, Mossroot Hollow is changed forever. The Laughing Pact of Mossroot Hollow is a whimsical, heartfelt fantasy tale about accidental legends, forbidden joy, and the kind of friendship that makes elders nervous. It’s a story where chaos grins, fire behaves badly, and nobody regrets it.

The Dragon Who Was Supposed to Be Fearsome

No one in Mossroot Hollow had ever written down the rules for how a dragon was supposed to arrive.

This was mostly because everyone assumed the rules were obvious.

A dragon should arrive with smoke. With screaming. With at least one unfortunate goat learning a valuable lesson about being near cliffs. The ground should tremble. Trees should reconsider their career choices. Someone—preferably a brave idiot—should shout, “RUN!” several seconds too late.

What a dragon should not do is giggle.

Yet here they were.

The forest path—normally a respectable stretch of moss, leaves, and polite silence—had become the site of something profoundly incorrect. A small golden dragon stood on its hind legs, wings half-unfurled, chest puffed out with all the ferocity it could muster… while failing spectacularly not to laugh.

Opposite it knelt a gnome.

His name was Thimblewick Mossroot, which explained quite a lot about why he was not running.

Thimblewick was short even by gnome standards, round in the middle like someone who treated snacks as a moral philosophy, and dressed in the layered, patched garments of a wanderer who collected both tools and bad decisions. His white beard spilled down his chest like it had given up trying to be neat decades ago. His pointed hat—slightly crooked, permanently—had survived fire, rain, and one unfortunate incident involving fermented berries.

At this moment, Thimblewick was kneeling on the forest path with his hands clasped together, eyes wide, mouth open in pure, unfiltered delight.

He looked like someone who had just discovered that the universe was better than advertised.

“You’re doing it again,” Thimblewick said, breathless with joy.

The dragon tried to snarl.

It truly did.

The dragon inhaled deeply, puffed up its chest, opened its mouth—and let out a sound that was meant to be a terrifying roar.

What emerged instead was something between a hiccup and a laugh.

They both froze.

Then the dragon covered its mouth with one claw, eyes wide in horror.

Thimblewick lost it.

He clapped his hands together once—loudly—and laughed so hard he nearly tipped over.

“I’m sorry,” he wheezed, wiping his eyes. “I know you’re probably very new at this, but that was… oh, that was spectacular.”

The dragon’s golden scales shimmered brighter, which was either embarrassment or an involuntary magic response. It lowered its head, feathers along its mane bristling.

“I am supposed to be fearsome,” the dragon said.

Its voice was surprisingly melodic, like fire learning to sing. Young, but not small in ambition.

“Oh!” Thimblewick said immediately. “Absolutely. Terrifying. I nearly dropped my good spoon.”

He patted his belt pouch protectively.

The dragon squinted.

“You are mocking me.”

“No, no,” Thimblewick said, holding up his hands. “Well. A little. But in the friendly way. Like when your boots betray you in public.”

The dragon blinked.

“…What are boots?”

“Never mind,” Thimblewick said cheerfully. “Listen, you’re doing great. You’ve got the stance. The wings. Lovely horns, by the way. Very distinguished. You just need… confidence.”

“I have confidence,” the dragon said quickly.

It immediately tripped over its own tail.

There was a brief, awkward silence.

Thimblewick leaned forward, eyes sparkling.

“I think,” he said carefully, “that you might be trying too hard to be scary.”

The dragon frowned. “That is my entire purpose.”

“Ah,” Thimblewick said. “There’s your problem.”

The dragon tilted its head. “Explain.”

“Well,” Thimblewick said, settling back on his heels like a storyteller preparing for a long evening, “if you’re only trying to be one thing, you miss all the other things you’re accidentally excellent at.”

The dragon considered this.

“I accidentally set a pinecone on fire earlier,” it offered.

“See?” Thimblewick said. “Talents.”

The dragon’s tail flicked. “The elders said I must inspire terror.”

“Elders say lots of things,” Thimblewick replied. “Mine once said fermented beet sap was ‘harmless.’ Lost a shed to that advice.”

The dragon hesitated.

“What if I fail?” it asked softly.

Thimblewick’s laughter faded just a little—not gone, but gentler now.

“Then you’ll have failed at being what someone else wanted,” he said. “Which leaves you free to succeed at being yourself.”

The dragon stared at him.

Something in the forest shifted.

Not dramatically. No lightning. No music. Just a quiet sense that something important had been said where it could be heard.

The dragon straightened.

“Watch this,” it said.

It inhaled deeply again. Flames gathered behind its teeth, glowing amber and gold. The air warmed. Leaves stirred.

It opened its mouth and released a controlled burst of fire that danced upward—not destructive, not wild, but playful, curling into the shape of a spiraling ribbon before dissipating harmlessly.

Thimblewick gasped.

“Oh that is beautiful,” he said reverently. “Absolutely stunning. Have you tried that with mushrooms?”

The dragon snorted.

Then laughed.

This time, neither of them tried to stop it.

The laughter echoed through Mossroot Hollow, bouncing off trees and stones, slipping into burrows and branches. Somewhere, a squirrel paused mid-acorn and felt inexplicably happier.

Neither the gnome nor the dragon noticed.

They were too busy realizing—without quite saying it—that something had just gone very, very wrong.

Or very, very right.

The Problem With Being Adorable on Purpose

The first rule of unintended legends is this:

You never notice them starting.

If you did, you’d probably stop them. Or at least put on better shoes.

Thimblewick Mossroot did neither.

By the time the laughter faded and the warmth of the dragon’s fire settled back into the cool green hush of Mossroot Hollow, the forest had already begun adjusting its expectations.

This was not something forests did lightly.

Forests were old. Forests were patient. Forests remembered things like axes and boots and promises broken centuries ago. But forests also noticed joy—especially when it arrived loud, unplanned, and carrying a faint smell of smoke.

“So,” Thimblewick said, pushing himself up from the path and brushing leaf bits off his knees, “do you have a name?”

The dragon blinked.

“I… was not given one,” it said.

Thimblewick froze.

“Well that simply won’t do,” he said firmly. “Everyone needs a name. Otherwise how do you know when someone is talking about you fondly behind your back?”

The dragon considered this. “The elders refer to me as ‘Potential.’”

Thimblewick grimaced. “Oh no. Absolutely not. That’s not a name, that’s a burden.”

“They also call me ‘Disappointing,’” the dragon added helpfully.

“We are fixing this immediately,” Thimblewick said.

He paced in a small circle, muttering to himself. The dragon watched, tail flicking back and forth like a cat who had just discovered a new kind of furniture.

“You’re golden,” Thimblewick said. “But not in a shiny, showy way. More like… warm. Comforting. Like fire that knows when to stop.”

The dragon’s chest puffed slightly.

“You laugh,” Thimblewick continued. “Which is rare in dragons, I assume, and frankly a waste not to lean into. And you have antler-horns, which gives you a sort of… festive menace.”

The dragon tilted its head. “Menace?”

“Decorative menace,” Thimblewick clarified. “Very important distinction.”

He snapped his fingers.

“Fizzwick,” he said.

The dragon stared.

“Fizzwick?” it repeated.

“Yes,” Thimblewick said, beaming. “It sounds like trouble that apologizes afterward.”

Fizzwick the dragon tested the name, rolling it around like a new flavor.

“Fizz… wick,” it said slowly.

The forest seemed to approve. A breeze stirred. A branch creaked. Somewhere, a mushroom leaned slightly toward them, as if listening.

“I like it,” Fizzwick said.

Thimblewick bowed. “You’re welcome.”

That should have been the end of it.

They should have parted ways. The dragon should have gone off to practice roaring into storms. Thimblewick should have continued his wanderings, telling people about the time he met a dragon who couldn’t stop laughing.

But then Fizzwick sneezed.

The sneeze was small. Polite, even. A tiny burst of sparks popped harmlessly into the air.

The mushrooms nearby burst into glowing rings.

They pulsed once.

Then twice.

Then began humming.

Fizzwick stared. “I didn’t mean to do that.”

Thimblewick’s eyes widened with professional curiosity.

“Oh,” he said softly. “Oh that’s new.”

The hum spread. Leaves vibrated. The ground felt… lighter. As if the earth itself was holding in a laugh.

“That,” Thimblewick said, “felt like joy magic.”

Fizzwick’s wings twitched. “Is that… bad?”

“Historically?” Thimblewick said. “Yes.”

The humming stopped.

They looked at each other.

Fizzwick swallowed. “The elders warned me about emotional leakage.”

“Of course they did,” Thimblewick sighed. “Elders hate when feelings get results.”

He knelt beside the mushrooms, examining them closely.

“You see,” he said, “most magic requires intent. Focus. Sacrifice. Yours appears to require… delight.”

Fizzwick brightened. The mushrooms glowed again.

“Stop that,” Thimblewick said quickly. “Not because it’s wrong. Because we’re not ready.”

“Ready for what?” Fizzwick asked.

Thimblewick stood slowly.

“For the attention,” he said.

As if summoned by the word, a bird burst from the canopy overhead, shrieking with excitement. Another followed. Then another.

Within moments, Mossroot Hollow was alive with movement.

Creatures emerged cautiously at first—squirrels, badgers, deer—then less cautiously. They watched. They listened. They felt something warm settle into their bones.

Fizzwick’s tail curled inward. “They’re staring.”

“Yes,” Thimblewick said. “That’s usually the moment before consequences.”

A badger waddled forward and sat down.

A deer bowed its head.

A squirrel laughed.

Fizzwick panicked.

“I don’t know how to be fearsome like this!” it whispered.

Thimblewick put a hand on Fizzwick’s chest. It was warm. Steady.

“You don’t need to be fearsome,” he said. “You need to be honest.”

Fizzwick inhaled.

Then it laughed.

The laughter rolled out, bright and ringing, carrying heat and happiness and something wild and new. The forest responded instantly.

Flowers bloomed out of season.

A stone cracked—not broken, just relieved.

Somewhere far away, an elder dragon paused mid-lecture and frowned.

Fizzwick’s laughter faded, replaced by stunned silence.

Thimblewick wiped his brow.

“Well,” he said. “You’ve officially done it now.”

“Done what?” Fizzwick asked.

Thimblewick smiled—a little nervous, a lot proud.

“You’ve become memorable.”

From the far edge of Mossroot Hollow came a sound that was definitely not laughter.

It was the low, ancient rumble of something very important clearing its throat.

The Legend Nobody Asked For

The sound rolled through Mossroot Hollow like a judgment.

Deep. Old. Patient in the way only something that had watched mountains grow tired could be. Leaves stilled. Birds went silent mid-flap. Even the mushrooms dimmed, as if embarrassed to be glowing without permission.

Fizzwick froze.

“That,” it whispered, “is an elder.”

Thimblewick squinted toward the far end of the forest path, where the air itself seemed heavier.

“I assumed as much,” he said. “Joy magic always attracts bureaucracy.”

The ground trembled—not violently, but with the controlled weight of something that knew exactly how much power it had and preferred everyone else to notice.

From the shadowed trees emerged a dragon unlike Fizzwick in every way.

Its scales were dark and matte, absorbing light rather than reflecting it. Its wings folded neatly against its body, disciplined and scarred with age. Its eyes burned with the steady glow of long-held fire—no flicker, no laughter. Authority, rendered in bone and breath.

It did not roar.

It did not need to.

“Potential,” the elder dragon said.

Fizzwick winced.

“Fizzwick,” Thimblewick corrected immediately.

The elder’s gaze snapped to him.

Thimblewick straightened his hat.

“Names matter,” he added, as if explaining something obvious to a very large cat.

Silence stretched.

Then, impossibly, the elder dragon inclined its head.

“Very well,” it said. “Fizzwick.”

Fizzwick’s chest swelled.

“You were sent to inspire fear,” the elder continued. “Instead, you inspire… this.”

It gestured with one wing. The forest responded immediately—flowers brightened, animals leaned in, the air hummed with leftover laughter.

“I tried,” Fizzwick said, voice small but steady. “But this happened instead.”

The elder studied the scene.

For a long time.

“Fear is easy,” the elder said at last. “It breaks. It scatters. It obeys.”

It stepped closer. The ground did not dare resist.

“Joy,” it continued, “is dangerous.”

Thimblewick nodded. “Oh extremely.”

Fizzwick braced itself. “Am I… wrong?”

The elder dragon exhaled. Not fire—just breath.

“You are inconvenient,” it said.

Fizzwick’s heart sank.

“And necessary.”

The forest exhaled with it.

The elder turned its gaze outward, toward the unseen edges of the world.

“There are places where fear has ruled too long,” it said. “Where laughter has been starved.”

It looked back at Fizzwick.

“You will go there.”

Fizzwick’s eyes widened. “I don’t know how.”

“You will,” the elder said. “Because you cannot help it.”

It turned to Thimblewick.

“And you,” it said, “will walk beside this dragon.”

Thimblewick blinked. “Oh no.”

The elder raised a brow ridge.

“I mean—oh yes,” Thimblewick corrected quickly. “Terrible for my schedule, but excellent for my soul.”

The elder dragon stepped back.

“Remember this place,” it said. “This was where the Laughing Pact began.”

At the words, something sealed.

Not with fire. Not with blood. With shared breath and memory.

Fizzwick looked at Thimblewick.

“Are we legends now?” it asked.

Thimblewick smiled.

“No,” he said. “Legends are what happen when people stop paying attention to the details.”

He extended his hand.

“We’re just two fools who met on a path and decided not to be afraid.”

Fizzwick placed its claw gently in his palm.

The forest remembered.

And from that day on, whenever laughter echoed through Mossroot Hollow—whenever joy arrived unannounced and refused to behave—someone would whisper the same explanation:

That’s just the Laughing Pact, still doing its work.

 


 

The Laughing Pact of Mossroot Hollow didn’t just become a legend — it became something you can hang on a wall, puzzle over on a quiet night, or quietly mail to someone who needs a reminder that joy is allowed. This artwork is available as a framed print, a bold and luminous metal print, and a richly textured canvas print that lets the warmth and whimsy live right in your space. For hands-on believers in chaos, there’s a puzzle that assembles the pact piece by piece, and a greeting card perfect for gifting a little sanctioned mischief. However you choose it, this is one of those stories that doesn’t sit quietly — it grins back.

The Laughing Pact of Mossroot Hollow

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