This is a short work of erotic fiction containing furry, or anthropomorphic, characters, which are animals that either demonstrate human intelligence or walk on two legs, for the purposes of these tales. It is a thriving and growing fandom in which creators are prevalent in art and writing especially.
Please note that all characters are clearly over eighteen and written as such in all stories.
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While Ropes enjoyed his time with his new wife, Holly, and his sexy dragoness daughter...life elsewhere still had to go on.
Fyr sighed, cradling her cup of coffee between her paws, though living in the city, well, it just wasn't for her. Looking out of his apartment window, she only saw skyscrapers, the scope of the city stretching out as far as the eye could see - which was not far at all with so many buildings to block the way. The dragoness curled her tail unhappily around her ankle, though it was, at the very least, a relief to be somewhere else. She had scored a work from home data admin (data entry mostly) job that kept her fingers busy, though it seemed that her brother and Hiss' uncle was still making a good living for himself.
However, she could not stay there for much longer, wanting to head out to somewhere that better suited her - besides, she couldn't make Hiss sleep on the sofa for much longer. The poor cat had had so much to deal with, considering that he had found his girlfriend cheating on him and, well...Hiss did not know the extent of it. She'd left to stay with Kao for a while, if only to get out of that chaotic idiocy, what Holly...
Fyr swallowed hard. No. No, that was not for her to think about. She'd left the godforsaken demon long behind and he didn't deserve the space in her head anymore, regardless of the life they'd shared together. All that simply showed her how little he'd cared for her.
But Hiss... Oh, her son had so much healing to do, her heart pulling for him, a sigh on her lips.
"I'm sorry I couldn't protect you, Hiss."
She'd always known what Ropes was like, though Hiss was half-demon too, something dark in him that she hoped could be turned to light, in time, though only time would tell. All could have been avoided, if only she had not fallen head over heels for Ropes, but that time was long past too, just like her relationship to him.
Her fingers tried to dig into the coffee cup, the hard surface unyielding. She'd only wanted to protect him. And, at that, she'd failed.
If only she could say that to his face.
*
Hiss didn't quite know what to make of the new world that he'd felt forced into, taking university classes at a distance, though it was quite likely, if Kao would have him there for longer, that he would swap to a university in the city itself. It seemed better, a chance of life and most certainly a change of pace, though everything that the young cat had left behind nipped at his heels most days.
Holly... He hissed, tail lashing the air as the cougar washed the dishes. Chores did not seem that bad anymore, considering what his ex-girlfriend had done to him, but that did not stop the cutting pain, how it cut through his gut and chest. He had to stay busy, distracted, yet even the tentacles, just the two, sprouting from his shoulder blades made it such that he could not forget his father.
The demon. Hiss turned away, the weeks having passed on living there, autumn semester upon him. He was doing well enough at his studies, but he much preferred the time he spent with his uncle than his mother flapping and fussing around him when she was there. In a way, he was glad that Fyr had turned up, though that meant that something, back home, had escalated in a way that he was not yet ready to learn.
A break-up? A break? Sometimes, it could all be the same when a couple of his parents' age were simply apart. But that was not his battle to fight, Kao smiling, clapping him on the shoulder, the blue drake younger than his mother and yet sometimes seeming closer in age to Hiss than he was Fyr.
"Hey! You studying or working today?"
"Neither," Hiss answered quickly, as if he had had the answer ready on the tip of his tongue. "Day off. You keep telling me that I need to take those."
Kao's lips twisted. That his nephew was lazy by nature had been a given for many years, but the feline had been forced to grow up far too quickly, only within the last few weeks. Although Hiss had been there for some time, there had not been that much of a change in the cougar, Hiss melancholy, though he was more studious and hardworking than ever. Only working at the coffee shop down the road, it was the perfect little place to earn a little extra money at, though Kao felt strange in himself to encourage Hiss to focus on his studies as much as possible. Heaven knew that he'd never bothered at all with that sort of thing.
"That's good, you don't need to work all the time."
"Yeah, but they did offer me an extra shift at the coffee shop, I might take it still..."
Kao frowned. Another distraction for Hiss, but one that would leave him more tired than ever. There was a droop to the cougar's whiskers, even then, but he didn't want to pry. It wasn't what he did, not considering who he was as a person, and he wasn't all that sure either that Hiss was into that kind of deep talk.
"Oh, no..." Kao frowned, pressing a paw to the side of his head, his tail twitching in feigned annoyance. "I just realised that I've got a deadline."
"What, in travel writing? Doesn't that sort of thing come with that flexibility?"
Kao laughed.
"Yeah, you could say, but there are still some pieces that I've got to get in on time. If you're not heading out, do you mind doing a bit around here, cleaning up and bits?"
Hiss looked around. It wasn't that much of a mess in there, just some light cleaning, but he was not quick enough on the mark to work out what Kao was doing. For his uncle had little ways to get him to take a break, even if he was not so inclined to do that anymore, giving him a little work to do and then...
Hiss didn't think about that, didn't know about it, cleaning off the counters, brushing crumbs onto the floor to be swept up. He'd never really done that sort of work before, but it felt more satisfying, especially when he could see the results of what he'd done. Kao's cleaning lady had not been able to come that week, so that was why he'd supposed that Kao had asked him to help. There was even a little bit of the cat that felt bad for not doing it without being asked, though that was not entirely his fault. He did have work and did have studies, though he had an inkling that it had been Kao who had helped him get that job too. Something about him knowing one of the baristas in there?
Kao smirked, pleased with himself. He faffed around on the computer in the office for a reasonable amount of time before emerging, for it was all a ploy to see Hiss having some fun again. And a cat like him was easy to persuade back onto the games console, a first-person shooter game, set in space with no plot to speak of, dangled in Hiss' face like a prize that he had not even known was coming to him.
Eyes wide, Hiss laughed shortly.
"What, you're trying to tempt me away from helping out with a game?"
Oh, but it was working. There was no way for it not to work as he chuckled and joined in, the system set up so that they could play together, though co-op mode was still difficult on the newer consoles when sitting together. They were better designed for playing remotely with others, but the two of them didn't care about that as, finally, Hiss allowed himself to be swayed from work, from grinding through everything, taking something of the day off that he had entered into all with the best of intentions.
Still... Hiss could not have been sure that his intentions were one hundred per cent honest there. Sure, he didn't really want to work, except for what he needed to do, and it was good to do something mindless, yet it proved to be just a little too mindless for him.
His eyes slipped to the side, looking, the dragon's figure cutting a strong silhouette. His dark horns drew the eye and Hiss could not help a stab of jealousy over them, how his guts twisted. He would have much rather have looked like that, when he had to consider that his tentacles would always remind him of his father, a frown darkening his face and turning his expression sour.
Boom!
He blew off the head of an alien enemy in the game, Kao laughing out loud.
"Damn, dude!"
But stealing looks at Kao and wondering if, maybe one day, he could be a little more like him, could not go on forever. His distraction was obvious and his old skill at that type of game slipping and lacking, focus flitting back and forth. He didn't know what he wanted to do, what he wanted to focus on, grunting in the back of his throat as he lost, again, and frustration boiled over inside him, clawing at his heart.
"You okay?"
"Yeah..." Hiss rubbed the back of his head, setting the controller aside. "I think... I'm just going to get some air."
He didn't explain what he could not explain, his head all over the place, though he didn't need to bother shrugging into a coat. In the autumn months, there was a freshness to the air (as much so as there ever could be in the city) that cooled his fur, hind paws tucked into loose shoes, the laces barely tied. He always would be lazy about that.
Walking. Walking helped a little. Maybe that was one reason that he kept himself so distracted, but the problem with the distraction that day was that there were a lot of dragons about. Not only dragons, however, but blue-scaled dragons that looked surprisingly like Kao. The cougar blinked, staring too much, even with his head tucked down a little, back hunched to better hide the tentacles under his T-shirt. What was up with that?
Kao...
It had been kind of his uncle to let him stay, though no one had expected him to stay for that long. He hoped he was not overstaying his welcome, but it felt more and more comfortable to be there, to say there, when he was cut off from the life where he thought that it had all been planned out for him.
Maybe Kao was different. Maybe he was the male figure and role model that he'd been looking for all along, even if he had not realised early on that his father was not the role model that he'd wanted originally. Things changed. Hiss couldn't change that.