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    Winx Club Redesigns: Professor Avalon ⚖🌟 by @matbenetti17A Week Ago by @Luna150A Week Ago<i>Shhrckk shhrckk</i> The pestle ground softly against the mortar as Nanala worked, moving her mouth with great precision as she ground herbs for a poultice. Ordinarily, an herbalist would use their front paws to get the job done, but Nanala wasn’t an ordinary herbalist - she was born without front legs. It grew late. Candlelight licked the walls. The bunny-cat mix glanced over her shoulder at the hulk of a man taking up most of her floor. No change. Satisfied with her work, Nanala wrapped the poultice in a cloth and gathered the ends carefully in her mouth, bouncing over to the strange man. He was a dog, huge - maybe four feet tall, Nanala guessed, but she’d have to see him standing - with creamy fur and brown markings. He was covered in terrible wounds, not fresh, but certainly not healed, that had been poorly dressed to begin with; those dressings now wet and muddy. She didn’t recognize him. Nobody was a stranger in Alden. The little port town was on a peninsula, two mountains and a dangerous pass in and out closing them off from the rest of the continent. Nobody came in that way. Instead, they sailed in through the docks and never stayed for long. Yet, here he was - a stranger, half-dead in their little town. Yes, he was going to have a long road to recovery. But, recover he shall - Nanala’d make sure of that. Adjusting the bag resting on her chest with her nubs, Nanala pulled out a stick, the end tipped with cotton. She dabbed her poultice with it and set to work, starting with the large, x-shaped cut deep in the man’s shoulder. <i>A week ago, Goliath lunged forward, thrusting himself between The King and his would-be assassin. The attacker’s sword lodged deep into Goliath’s shoulder, the faithful knight’s staff the only thing preventing the blade from digging any deeper. The castle was under siege, revolutionaries looking for someone to blame out for blood. But, Goliath swore they would spill every drop of his before anyone touched the royal family. Finding an opening, Goliath shoved the attacker back. Sword now free, they slashed wildly, creating a second cut on Goliath’s shoulder.</i> The first wound cleaned and dressed, Nanala hopped around the stranger, inspecting the wound deep in his side. It didn’t look good. This was the one she was worried about most. <i>A week ago, Goliath hurried across the marble tile. There was no time to lose. He had to escort The King and Queen to safety. He heard The King tumble to the ground; the thump was audible. Pivoting on his heel, Goliath dove in front of The King, an attacker stabbing deep into the knight’s side.</i> Next, there was a long cut across the stranger’s rump. Nanala had to sit up on her haunches to reach it. <i>A week ago, Goliath thumped The King and Queen’s heels with his snout as he ran, roughly shoving them forward. He heard the blade pierce the air before he felt it slash his pelt, the knife only stopping when it lodged in the stone wall ahead of them. Nosing the royal family roughly up the stairs, Goliath yanked the knife from the stone, chucking it at the rope holding up the portcullis. There was a crash as the gate closed behind them.</i> Most strikingly, there was a large cut across the stranger’s snout, ending in a jagged line down his cheek. <i>A week ago, The Queen lunged at a man who’d grabbed her husband, Goliath yanking her out of harm’s way just in time for a gryphon claw to tear across his muzzle. Goliath jerked his head back as his blood splattered against the marble floor. His attacker, a trusted knight and someone Goliath had only just this morning considered a friend, pulled a sword from his belt. He hit Goliath’s staff hard enough to nearly snap it in two. There was a dull thump as an arrow lodged itself into Goliath’s bandolier. Snatching the arrow, Goliath tore it from the leather and lodged it deep into his enemy’s eye.</i> Nanala adjusted the tool in her mouth. “…Where did you come from?” She turned to the baby she’d found with him - long eared, blue and brown, with oversized wings and downy feathers - now comfortably asleep on one of her pillows, “and why doesn’t your ‘friend’ look anything like you?” <i>A week ago, the stone walls spit dust each time the door ground against them. “Go! I’ll hold them off! Get the prince to safety!” Goliath braced himself for the worst - they had minutes before that door broke, if they were lucky. He would buy them every extra second he could. “No…” Goliath rose to full height and slowly looked back over his shoulder. He found a conviction in The King’s eyes, a terrible finality as he stared straight ahead at his personal guard, most trusted knight, and oldest friend. In all their years, Goliath had never seen him like that. “Even if we snuck out, we wouldn’t get more than five feet from the castle.” “Sir-” <b>“We’re</b> what they want, Goliath. Take our son and get out of here. …You’re the only chance he has.” Goliath looked to The Queen. “…Please talk some sense into him.” But, The Queen stared out the window, her gaze fixed on nothing. Her snout wrinkled as she grimaced. “No sense in all of us dying…”</i> Her mystery patient taken care of, Nanala put her lathelwirt away with careful precision, adjusting her bag with her leg-stumps. Hours ago, she was picking it in the rain - rain was the best time to pick lathelwirt; anyone with sense knew that - and the leaves were still wet. But, she hadn’t managed to collect that many before… <i>Hours ago, Nanala’s ears perked at the sound of crying echoing through the forest. A baby. It was unmistakable. Shouldering aside bushes, she found a hulking body collapsed into the mud; curled protectively around something. Nanala could only be stunned over what, she could only assume, was a dead body for moments. The baby’s cries were louder and more distinct than ever. Hurrying to the other side of the body, she found the baby - rain-soaked, shivering, and sobbing. There was a blue, wing-shaped crest in the middle of his forehead. Her ears flicked back sympathetically. “I’m sure you’re miserable.” She pulled the baby into her cloak, shielding him from the rain, and the body beside them shifted. Whoever he was, he was, somehow, alive.</i> Hours later, Nanala eyed the strangers carefully as her kettle boiled. She decided she’d stay awake through the night to keep an eye on them. And a long, sleepless night like this one called for tea.trophyXG3 chloma by @articutionZX5 reference by @articutionthe eighth colour by @articutionE520 CG by @articutionPX1 CG by @articutionZX5 CG by @articutionMD XG3 by @articutionMD PX1 by @articutionMD E520 by @articutionMD ZX5 by @articutionXG3 CG test by @articutionZX5 CG test by @articution[DED] Solar Waltz by @chromieclipse
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