Original Works
In a war-torn land where kings make oaths and gods stay silent, a thief’s only crime is trying to keep her child alive.
Alessia steals from the Aurean army to feed her feverish daughter — until the night she’s caught by Odrian, a weary king whose mercy is rarer than victory. But when he finds not a spy, only a desperate mother, duty twists into something more complicated.
Brought into his camp as a prisoner and healer’s assistant, Alessia and her daughter Stella become entangled in Odrian’s small, stubborn circle — where survival demands trust between enemies and tenderness becomes a rebellion of its own
As wounds fester, both seen and unseen, the lines between captor and protector blur. What begins as punishment becomes refuge. What begins as necessity becomes family.
All These Broken Things is a story of compassion in the ruins of war — a quiet, aching tale of survival, mercy, and the fragile hope that even in a dying world, people can still choose kindness.or.
Themes: Found family, trauma recovery, cunning strategy, OT3: MMF romance.

Charli Stone makes her living chasing monsters for her cryptid-hunting vlog, Bump in the Night. But behind the camera, she’s one of the few who knows the truth — that the monsters are real, and that she’s their mediator, charged with keeping the fragile peace between humanity and the fae. Her only partner is Dmitri, a telepathic direwolf bound to her by blood and magic.
When her witch friend Izzy has a vision of something ancient and hungry stirring in a small Idaho mining town, Charli hits the road.
Mineral Grove looks picture-perfect — mountain air, friendly smiles, nothing strange in sight. But something is very wrong. The mine that built the town runs on blood, and the locals have been feeding a demon four people a year to keep it that way.
Now Charli’s investigation has made her the next sacrifice. To survive, she’ll have to summon every ounce of her power — and every ally she’s ever bound — to face the thing beneath the mountain.
But the deeper she digs, the clearer it becomes: the real evil isn’t what’s chained in the dark. It’s the people who keep feeding it.
Themes: Moral courage, environmental justice, faith vs. exploitation, modern folklore, trauma and survival, human–fae coexistence, sapphic slow-burn romance.


Chimera Sands
Fanworks
Five years ago, monsters walked out of the mountain and into the light. Humanity promised peace. Instead, it built collars.
Terra Navarro was one of the first to fight for monster rights — and one of the first to watch that dream die. Now, monsters are slaves, stripped of names, voices, and futures. Terra works herself numb, surviving in a world that traded justice for convenience.
Then one afternoon, she sees a skeleton being beaten in the street. She intervenes. And in the aftermath, with blood on her cheek and paperwork in her hand, she realizes she’s just been made his owner.
Sans doesn’t trust her. He shouldn’t. But neither of them can undo what’s been done — and in a city that’s forgotten how to be kind, two broken souls are forced to share a home, a silence, and the unbearable weight of survival.
Blood and Marrow is a story about complicity, courage, and the fragile, dangerous act of trying to be good in a world that no longer believes in goodness.
Themes: Found family, moral awakening, systemic oppression, trauma recovery, love as resistance, post-revolution decay.
Frisk never dared dream she would see anything but the white halls of the Cloister. That her days would be filled with anything but the prodding of researchers and the pain of experimental science. It was all she had ever known.
But then … A crack appeared in the Cloister’s walls – and Frisk leapt at the chance of escape. Outside the facility, on her own for the first time in her life, Frisk is exhilarated – and terrified. The Cloister won’t just forget about her. Not when she’s one of only a handful of test subjects to survive for as long as she has. The Cloister will stop at nothing to regain control of her.
If only to rip the super-intelligent AI, Chara, from her head.
With few choices available, Frisk stows away on the Stargazer, a ship she has little information about, but hopes will prove a safe haven – at least to the next port.
Slowburn (like slowest of slowburn) Frans, Not Outertale.
Themes: Found family, identity and reinvention, loneliness and belonging, hope as rebellion, freedom vs. control, ghosts of the past.

Five years after Frisk freed the monsters, the multiverse began to collapse — merging every version of the Underground into one fragile, uneasy peace.
The Sanses and Papyruses of those worlds have learned to coexist. All except one.
The original Sans keeps his distance, isolated and withdrawn, haunted by something no one talks about — least of all his brother.
When Underfell Sans (“Red”) loses a drunken bet, he’s forced to ask the other Sans on a “date.” What starts as a joke turns into something much more complicated. The quiet, nervous skeleton he meets isn’t cruel or bitter — he’s broken, polite to a fault, terrified of making anyone angry.
Red can’t stop thinking about him. About what could make someone so kind so afraid. And about why Sans flinches every time his brother’s name comes up.
As Red digs deeper, the truth he uncovers will test every assumption he’s ever made about family, love, and the kind of monsters they’ve all become.
Themes: trauma recovery, found family, abuse and healing, love as redemption, identity across multiverses, breaking cycles of violence.

After coming face to face with an anomaly from outside of time and space, Dr W.D. Gaster can no longer bring himself to experiment with subjects 1-S and 2-P. Uncertain how to go forward, he finds himself looking over his notes again, edging on career suicide.
Then he has an idea. A new experiment, one that he will have no emotional bond with. An abomination.
A monster with a human SOUL.


