Dillon (21 years old, cisgender male, straight-leaning but open-minded and bicurious) was brought up in the reservations around
Nightmare Mountain National Park, and like most of the werewolves that had been resettled there over the last couple centuries, he imagined for most of his life that he would wind up working in the Park in one way or another—handling guests, ripping apart Anomalies, doing research, managing the environment and the park. With federal government jobs being what they were nowadays, and the tight-knit community surrounding the Park feeling stifling even in the best of times, Dillon decided to strike out on his own, at least for a while. He said goodbye to his people and then moved out of the woods and into the city, where he was able to get a job as a a janitor and attend a local night college to study criminal justice, with an eye on maybe becoming a detective—even with budget cuts, werewolves were in high demand for local police, and Dillon wanted to use his natural talents to help people.
All and all, it was a good plan… yet at this moment, Dillon was totally miserable.
Everything about the move, to put it simply, just plain sucked. The city was not agreeing with Dillon at all—the noise, the pollution, the traffic, he was unused to any of it and so it was all extra obnoxious. The air never tasted clean and no matter how many showers he took he never felt like he got the grime and dust off him (his chosen part-time profession definitely didn’t help matters). The place had plenty of charms and opportunities for fun, sure, but despite his best efforts, nothing was doing it for him—clubbing, sports, gaming bars, movies, museums, restaurants, none of it seemed to replace the hole in his heart left by the outdoorsmanship he was missing from the Park. Dillon wasn’t stupid: he knew there would be an adjustment from rural to urban, and that he’d be a lone wolf for a while once he was separated from the old pack. What he didn’t realize was just how hard it would be to find a new one. Nobody ever
said anything outright rude or hostile, but, well, even in the most cosmopolitan cities, integration between the supernatural and the mundane was patchy and imperfect. It seemed like everyone he ever met treated him either with patronizing fetishization or barely-concealed suspicion and disgust. Dillon wasn’t naturally thin-skinned, but the isolation and dislocation scraped him raw, and so things like this stung, and made it hard to make friends. He found it even hard to talk to his classmates about the work they were doing together—living in different worlds, how was Dillon supposed to even talk to them?
It was walking to that class one day, that Dillon was feeling particularly sorry for himself. Tail low, swinging dully, ears pinned down to his head, a whine escaped his throat as he choked back tears. Maybe this all was a mistake. Maybe he should just go home. Sure, he wouldn’t really have much of a future back at the rez, but at the very least it would be better than
this…
Dillon exhaled, and wiped his eyes with his hoodie sleeve, trying to calm himself down and snap out of his depressed funk. It would be okay. He just had to be tough, like his brothers and sisters who had made this same move in the past. He could do it, he just had to breathe and focus on the good.
When he opened his eyes, however, he wasn’t my focusing on anything like that. Everything had changed around him.
Walking on autopilot while in his cloud of sadness, he must have stumbled into a new part of town, somewhere he hadn’t seen before—oddly old-style, like something from a historical district in a tourist town. It was odd, since he’s walked through this neighborhood hundreds of times, and never once did he notice this weird market square.
Dillon sniffed the air. Suddenly, his ears and tail stood up on their ends, goosebumps of adrenaline and fear rippling up and down his body. This was
not a normal part of the city. Every nerve in his body was screaming that something about this place was off. In fact, it reminded him nothing so much as the Park… and with his instincts taking over, he began to prepare for the sort of thing he might have to deal with back home.
Staring ahead and around at full alert, growling and snarling and showing his fangs with the sudden terror, Dillon’s hand slowly reached back to his backpack, where he had some heavy textbooks he could put between himself and an Anomaly, as well as a serrated survival knife—not much against one of those damn monsters, but Dillon knew to take whatever advantage you could in a fight, and you couldn’t (or at least shouldn’t) carry a big hunting gun in the city, like what you would typically start off with.
But then, hand hovering over the zipper of his bag, he sniffed the air again, and suddenly stopped. Slowly, his hands returned to his side, and the sharp, dangerous snarl disappeared from his face, replaced with an expression of utter confusion.
There was no menacing hint of sulfur or ozone, no subsonic growl or hiss of any evil monster from the unknown beyond. It felt oddly calm, inviting—mischievous, maybe, but in a good-natured way. In that way, it was totally
unlike a Nightmare Mountain Anomaly. It still felt “off”, but in a benign, playful way, which allowed Dillon to relax a little bit and drop his thoughts of imminent violence.
Now, though, his curiosity was thoroughly piqued.The werewolf slowly approached the tent, eyeing it up and down carefully, gleaming gold eyes settling on the sign and narrowing.
“ ‘Fortunes, omens, terrible advice,’—heh, that’s funny,” Dillon muttered, reading it aloud. “ ‘No refunds, no… crying?
No couples?’ What the hell sort of…”
He trailed off. The sound of conversation and the powerful scents of incense and burnt sugar danced out the tent flaps. Slowly, carefully, ears perked up and tail raised in alert, Dillon stepped into the frame of the tent.
What he found inside was a true menagerie. An assortment of diverse characters were inside at their tables: fairies, witches, some kind of masked cyborg, even a panting pug dressed as Zoltar (with whom he quickly exchanged a nod of canine understanding). The people milling about inside were just as exotic and strange. Scattered across the tables were numerous bits and pieces of occult paraphernalia—including some charms that looked and smelled suspiciously similar to those he saw in the window of a magic shop recently… An amused, open-mouth smirk slowly grew on Dillon’s face as he surveyed the scene. Was this a ren faire he didn’t hear about or some shit? Whatever it was, it was definitely entertaining, and behind his jeans Dillon’s bushy dark tail began to wag.
????? said:
"Come in. Come in, my child. We mustn't lurk in doorways. It's rude. One might question your upbringing."
Briefly, Dillon’s smile flashed into an infuriated snarl, and his eyes narrowed into a glare. Already in a sensitive, sour mood, he didn’t take the admonishment well
at all.
Saying shit like that about someone’s past for no reason makes me question your upbringing, bitch—
Luckily, that hostile thought remained unspoken, and Dillon immediately felt regret at his extreme internal reaction. He
was intruding into their thing and loitering in the way, after all. The… human? probably didn’t mean anything by it. He took a sharp breath and stepped inside, ears folding down with nervousness and a bit of shame, though his tail still wagged with the excitement of the thing.
“S-Sorry…” he said, to no one in particular, stepping forward and scratching the back of his head sheepishly. “Why no couples? Do you give relationship advice? I could use something for that, like, some tips, or a prediction… I’ve been kinda, I dunno, lonely out here, so…”
Dillon blinked, and the ridge of his face reddened slightly with embarrassment—evidently his loneliness was even worse than he thought, now he was just blabbing his anxieties out into the open air to total strangers. Trying to restore some dignity, he folded his arms with a slight canine huff, and awaited a response, tail still waving behind him…