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[RWBY] RWBY Shorts

Jaune Arc, Single Father 48 (Father's Day Special) New
The Beacon Cafeteria courtyard was unusually busy that afternoon, thanks to one very determined four-year-old.

Mia sat behind a rickety old wooden table she'd convinced the teachers to let her use. A slightly crooked cardboard sign reading "LEMONAD" in bright crayon letters was taped to the front. On the table sat a big pitcher of powdered lemonade, a stack of plastic cups, and a small bucket of ice Dust keeping everything cool.

Professor Ozpin had stopped by earlier when Mia had shyly asked him for money to buy her papa a gift for Father's Day.

"I can't just give you money, Mia," Ozpin had said with a gentle chuckle. "But if you want to earn it, you could set up a lemonade stand. That's how many enterprising young people begin."

So here she was, standing behind her little table, determination in her eyes.

Coco Adel was the first to walk by. She stopped, tilting her sunglasses down as she took in the scene.

"What's all this, darling?"

Mia looked up with big, hopeful eyes. "I'm selling lemonade! I want to buy my Papa a really good Father's Day gift because I love him lots!"

Coco's heart visibly melted. Without another word, she pulled out a generous stack of lien and handed it over.

"Keep the change, cutie." She took a cup, took one sip, and somehow kept a straight face. "Delicious."

She immediately waved over the rest of CFVY. Velvet, Fox, and Yatsuhashi each bought a cup (and quietly suffered through the overly sweet, slightly gritty lemonade) while Coco dramatically praised it as "a bold new flavor profile."

Other students started trickling in.

Neptune swaggered up, trying to impress May Zedong, who was walking beside him. "One cup for the lovely lady, and one for me!"

May blushed, quietly bought her own cup, and whispered, "Thank you…" before scurrying off. Neptune went after her.

"Hey! Wait up!"

Cardin walked by with his little sister Sam on his shoulders. Sam pointed excitedly at the stand.

"Lemonade!" she demanded.

Cardin groaned but pulled out lien. "Fine. But only because you're cute, kid."

"Yay!" Mia cheered.

"I wasn't talking to you, brat," Cardin grumbled, but at Sam tugging on his hair he coughed, "I mean... Just give me some lemonade!"

"Okay!"

Even General Ironwood, passing through on his way to a meeting, stopped. He regarded the stand with his usual seriousness, bought a cup, took a single sip, and nodded once.

"Acceptable hydration."

Mia's little table was soon surrounded. She was handing out cups as fast as she could, her face flushed with pride and effort.

Then she ran out of lemonade.

The pitcher was empty. The line was still there. Mia's lip started to wobble.

"I… I don't have any more…" she whispered, eyes filling with tears. "Now I can't get Papa a gift…"

RWBY and JNPR pushed through the small crowd just in time to see Mia's face crumple.

"Wha... Mia, seriously? What is all this?" Jaune asked.

"I-I wanted to get money to buy you a gift and-and Professor Ozpin said I could earn it-And-And I ran out of lemonade and now I can't buy you one!" Mia bawled.

The female majority of the two teams all looked at the heartbreaking scene with looks of affection and sorrow. Even Blake.

Weiss was the first to be practical.

Weiss sighed. "Mia, I could have just given you the money-"

"No!" Mia sniffled, wiping her eyes with her sleeve. "I had to earn it! For Papa! Y-You do everything and I-I wanna do something for you!"

Jaune knelt down immediately and pulled her into his arms. "Hey, hey… it's okay, kitten."

He hugged her tight, rubbing her back as she cried into his shoulder.

"You don't have to do anything special for me," he said softly. "You're already the greatest gift I could ever have. I love you so much, Mia. And I'm so grateful for you trying to do this for me."

Mia sniffled, then smiled through her tears and planted a big, wet kiss on his cheek. "Love you, Papa."

Jaune chuckled and wiped her face gently. "Love you too, sweetie. Now… how much did you make?"

Mia held up a surprisingly thick stack of lien with both hands.

Jaune stared.

The rest of RWBY and JNPR stared.

Nora let out a low whistle. "That's… gotta be close to a hundred thousand lien."

"Hundred thousand and fifty," Ruby muttered. "Geez... We never did those numbers for our lemonade stand!"

"We were out in the middle of nowhere," Yang added. She patted Mia on the head with a broad grin. "Nice work, kiddo!"

Jaune coughed in disbelief. "Mia… how—?"

Mia shrugged innocently, still sniffling. "Lots of people bought lemonade. Is it enough for anything good?"

Jaune looked at the stack, then at his beaming, tear-streaked daughter, and started laughing — half in disbelief, half in pure love.

"Yeah, kitten," he said, pulling her into another tight hug. "It's more than enough."
 
The Marriage Meeting: Arkos New
Pyrrha has a marriage meeting...

- - -

Pyrrha Nikos sat perfectly straight in the plush leather seat of her mother's private airship, hands folded in her lap, smile polite and practiced. The expression had served her well in tournaments, interviews, sponsorship galas—anywhere the world demanded the Invincible Girl be serene, gracious, untouchable. Inside, she was screaming.

Athena Nikos stood at the viewport, radiant as ever in a flowing emerald gown that caught the light like stage spotlights. Even pushing sixty, her mother looked barely forty; the benefits of a lifetime of Aura discipline and the best cosmetic surgeons lien could buy. Athena turned, beaming.

"You're going to love him, darling. Truly. Old blood—real blood. His great-grandmother ruled half the known world before she abdicated. The family still commands respect in every court from Vale to Vacuo. A match like this will open every door your tournament wins never could."

Pyrrha's smile didn't waver. "I have Beacon, Mother. I'm happy there."

Athena waved a dismissive hand. "Beacon is charming, yes, and I indulged you because you begged so prettily. But you're nineteen now. Past time to think of your future beyond schoolyard heroics."

Pyrrha looked out the window so her mother wouldn't see the flicker of pain in her eyes. She had fought this for months—quietly, carefully, the only way she dared. Athena Nikos loved her daughter fiercely, in the way a director loves her star actress: with absolute certainty that she alone knew what role suited her best. Pyrrha had begged, reasoned, even cried once (in private). In the end, she had agreed to one meeting. Just one. Then perhaps her mother would let it rest.

She missed her team so fiercely it hurt. Nora would have filled the cabin with wild chatter and threats to blow up any suitor who looked at Pyrrha wrong. Ren would have sat beside her in calm silence, offering the comfort of simply being there. And Jaune…

Jaune would have made her laugh. Clumsy, earnest Jaune, who believed in her even when she didn't believe in herself.

But Jaune had a family obligation this weekend, and Nora and Ren had been firmly told they were not invited. So Pyrrha endured alone.

She straightened her spine further. Fine. She would attend this farce, greet this spoiled princeling, and make it unmistakably clear that Pyrrha Nikos was no one's bargaining chip. She would be polite—devastatingly so—and he would flee back to whatever gilded manor had birthed him.

The airship descended toward a picturesque mountain valley. Radian nestled there like something out of an old storybook: white stone walls, colorful banners fluttering from towers, a waterfall cascading down the mountainside into a crystal lake. A castle perched on the highest hill, banners of blue and gold snapping in the wind.

Athena clasped her hands. "Beautiful, isn't it? It was the imperial seat once. They turned the old castle into a hospital after the war—such forward thinking."

Pyrrha followed her mother down the ramp onto the landing pad. The air smelled of pine and fresh bread. Townspeople waved cheerfully as they passed; several called out greetings to Athena by name. Her mother had clearly done her research.

They walked along cobblestone streets toward the hill. The castle-hospital loomed closer, its ancient walls softened by flowering vines. A grand sign arched over the main gate: Arc-en-Ciel Medical Center.

Pyrrha stopped dead.

Arc-en-Ciel.

It couldn't be.

Her mother noticed her pause. "Is something wrong, darling?"

"No," Pyrrha said faintly. "Nothing."

But her heart was suddenly pounding. Jaune had mentioned his family ran a hospital in his hometown. He'd laughed about it once, saying his mother threatened to make him scrub bedpans if he ever slacked off on his studies.

No. It was a coincidence. Plenty of families had rainbow-themed names. Plenty of hospitals were converted castles.

They were led through pristine halls that still retained vaulted ceilings and stained-glass windows depicting knights and lions. Nurses in pastel scrubs nodded respectfully. Finally they reached a private conference room on the top floor, sunlight pouring through tall windows onto a long oak table.

Nick and Isabel Arc rose to greet them—tall, kind-eyed, unmistakably Jaune's parents. And there, seated at the head of the table in a simple yet regal blue gown, golden circlet resting on silver-white hair, was Queen Arturia Pendragon herself.

Athena swept into an elegant curtsy. "Your Majesty. Lady Isabel, Lord Nicholas. What an honor."

Arturia's smile was warm, almost grandmotherly, but her eyes—sharp as any blade—assessed them both. "Athena Nikos. Pyrrha Nikos." She inclined her head. "I have heard much about you from my great-grandson."

Athena's perfectly maintained smile cracked a bit. "Y-your—?!"

The side door burst open.

"Yoooo! Baby!" A tall blond figure strutted in wearing a blindingly pink pair of heart-shaped sunglasses, at least six gaudy gold chains layered over a half-unbuttoned silk shirt, and—Pyrrha wasn't entirely sure—white pants so tight they had to be illegal in at least three kingdoms. He struck a pose, one hand on his hip, the other pointing finger-guns. "You are lookin' fiiiine, girl, and I am here to—Pyrrha?!"

The sunglasses slipped down his nose.

Jaune Arc stared at her in open-mouthed horror.

Pyrrha stared back.

Athena's smile froze in place. Isabel pinched the bridge of her nose. Nick coughed into his fist, shoulders shaking with barely suppressed laughter.

Arturia sighed, long and suffering. "Jaune. What are you wearing?"

Jaune yanked the sunglasses off, face flaming crimson. "Nana, I—this was—I thought if I acted like a total tool, she'd hate me and we could all go home! I didn't know it was Pyrrha!"

Pyrrha felt something bubble up in her chest—relief, amusement, affection so fierce it nearly knocked her over. The tension that had coiled inside her for weeks unraveled all at once.

She laughed.

It started as a small, startled sound and grew until she had to cover her mouth, shoulders shaking. Jaune's expression shifted from mortification to sheepish delight.

Athena cleared her throat sharply. "Pyrrha."

Pyrrha straightened, wiping her eyes, composure sliding back into place like armor. But her voice was softer than it had been in days.

"Hello, Jaune."

Jaune rubbed the back of his neck, chains clinking embarrassingly. "Hi, Pyr. Uh… surprise?"

Arturia rose. "Perhaps the two of you would like a moment in the courtyard. Alone."

Athena opened her mouth—clearly to protest—but one look from the former empress stilled her tongue. Nick gently took his wife's elbow. "Come along, ladies. I believe the kids have some catching up to do."

The adults filed out. The door closed with a soft click.

Silence.

Then Pyrrha stepped forward and, very carefully, flicked one of the gold chains. "This is new."

Jaune groaned, covering his face. "I look like a Mistral nightclub owner's midlife crisis. I'm so sorry. I thought if I scared the suitor away, Nana would stop dragging me to these things."

Pyrrha's smile turned gentle. "You were trying to sabotage the meeting?"

"Every time," he admitted. "Usually it works within five minutes. I didn't know it was you."

"I didn't know it was you either." She tilted her head. "Arc-en-Ciel. I should have guessed."

He winced. "Yeah. Sorry for the… everything." He gestured helplessly at his outfit.

Pyrrha studied him—ridiculous clothes and all—and felt the last of her dread melt away. "I was planning to do the same thing, you know. Be perfectly polite and utterly untouchable until he ran screaming."

Jaune's eyes widened. "Really?"

She nodded. "I thought he'd be some arrogant prince who saw me as a trophy."

He gave her a lopsided smile. "Instead you got… this."

"I think," Pyrrha said softly, "I much prefer this."

Jaune's blush returned full force. He reached up as if to remove the chains, then stopped. "So… courtyard? Before my nana decides to come back and lecture us both on proper courtship attire?"

Pyrrha offered her arm, the way he always did for her at Beacon dances when he thought no one was watching. "Lead the way, Prince Jaune."

He took it carefully, like she was something precious. "For the record," he muttered as they stepped into the sunlight, "I'd have worn something normal if I'd known it was you."

Pyrrha leaned her head briefly against his shoulder. "I know."

And for the first time in weeks, she felt perfectly, completely at peace.
 
Blake Meets Arturia and Shirou New
Blake is running through the woods near Radian. Some of the WF are chasing after her, even with Adam's orders. It's the day but they just won't stop. Blake runs into a clearing, intent on a final stand...

They run into a picnic where two old humans, a man and his wife, are enjoying themselves.

Arturia: "Oh. Hello young lady. Young people... Did you come to join our picnic?"

Blake: "Run away! They're after me!"

WF Thug: "They're humans! She's sided with them! Traitor! We should cut her legs off and bring her back to Adam!"

WF Thug 2: "And kill these two and bring their skins!"

Blake: What the hell is wrong with these people?! How did I not see how bad they were becoming?!

The old woman, a fading blonde in a blue dress, stands up and brushes off her dress.

Blake: "PLEASE! RUN AWAY!"

Arturia: "Honestly, young people today. They're so violent, rude and reckless, never thinking about anything but themselves. You should be ashamed of yourselves, terrorizing a young lady in the woods!"

White Fang Thug: "Shut up, you old hag!" He shoots a gun at her, Blake tries to deflect it... But the old woman brings up her sword and casually deflects it.

Shirou: Arrow notched, bow ready "You need help, darling?"

Arturia: "Some support would be appreciated, I'm not as young as I used to be."

A beatdown ensues. The two old people and Blake are triumphant... But the old lady staggers a bit. Blake rushes to help her as she pants hard, soon joined by Shirou helping his wife.

Blake: "Are-Are you all right?!"

Arturia: "Haa... Haa... Been a while... Since I had a fight like that..."

Shirou: "Hooo... Young lady, would you kindly help us both back to our car? We'll give you a ride into town."

Blake: "I-I don't think I can-"

Arturia: "ACK! MY HEART! MY HEART! IT'S A BIG ONE!"

Blake: "!!!"

Shirou: "Please help! My wife-her heart-!"

Blake: "Y-yes! Yes! Right away!"

Arturia and Shirou wink at eachother as Blake helps them to their car.

Shirou: "I told you not to eat so many burgers."

Arturia: "Blasphemy! Burgers are proof of God's love!"
 
Jaune Arc, Single Father 49 New
The lawn in front of the dorms was peaceful under the warm afternoon sun. A small kiddie pool had been set up on the grass, and Mia sat in it with her bright pink water wings, splashing half-heartedly. Jaune knelt beside the pool, keeping a close eye on her.

"Having fun, kitten?" he asked with a gentle smile.

Mia pouted, kicking her legs and making small waves. "No. I wanna go to the big pool."

Jaune sighed. "You're not big enough yet, sweetie."

"I'm plenty big enough!" Mia protested, standing up in the shallow water and puffing out her chest.

Weiss walked by at that exact moment, overhearing. "She's more than big enough," she declared. "I learned how to swim when I was younger than Mia!"

Ruby bounced over, nodding enthusiastically. "Me too! I was swimming before I could even ride a bike properly!"

Mia's eyes lit up. She turned to Jaune with the biggest, most hopeful look she could muster. "Pretty please, Papa? I'll be super safe!"

Jaune looked at the three of them, then at his daughter's pleading face. He sighed again, long and defeated.

"…Alright. Let's go to the big pool."

- - -

Later, at the academy's large outdoor pool, Yang, Pyrrha, Nora, Ren (wearing a shirt, as usual), Weiss, Blake, and Ruby were waiting near the shallow end. Yang stretched her arms overhead.

"It's good that Weisscream is encouraging Jaune to be more open with Mia," she said, "but why the pool specifically?"

Weiss smirked. "Because water is refreshing. And educational."

The group turned as Jaune emerged from the changing area.

He was shirtless, wearing only dark swim trunks. His muscular frame — honed by years of training and recent sessions with his father — was on full display, crisscrossed with faint scars from past battles. Mia walked beside him in a cute pink one-piece swimsuit, complete with water wings and a bright float ring around her waist.

"Pool! Pool! Pool!" Mia chanted happily, bouncing with each step.

Jaune chuckled, holding her hand. "Yes, the pool."

The girls stared.

Yang's lilac eyes widened. Weiss's teacup nearly slipped from her fingers. Pyrrha's cheeks turned pink. Ruby's silver eyes went huge. Blake's ears twitched under her bow.

Yang swallowed. "…Okay, you have good ideas sometimes, Weiss."

Weiss smirked, trying to look composed. "Don't I?"

Yang grinned. "But I have a better one."

She sauntered over to Jaune and Mia. Mia cheered when she saw her. "Auntie Yang!"

Yang scooped Mia up into her arms with a laugh. "Here you go, kiddo!"

She slipped into the pool with Mia, then turned and splashed a big wave of water right at Jaune.

"Whoops!"

Jaune yelped as the cold water hit him. "Ack! Hey!"

Water ran down his muscular chest and arms, glistening in the sunlight and highlighting every scar and defined line.

Yang laughed. "Haha!"

Weiss's eyes sparkled. "Genius!"

Ruby nodded rapidly. "So genius!"

Blake murmured, "Brilliant…"

Pyrrha's voice was slightly higher than usual. "So brilliant!"

Nora beamed and turned to Ren. "Soooo—"

Ren, still fully clothed, didn't even open his eyes. "I'll disrobe and get wet when I want to, Nora."

Nora pouted. "Phooey!"

"In a few minutes."

"WOO!"
 
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Knightshade: Beach Diplomacy New
Knightshade: Beach Diplomacy

The gentle waves of Menagerie's eastern coast lapped at the white sand as the Prydwen—a sleek private yacht the crew had quietly "liberated" from an old Albion naval surplus auction—bobbed at anchor. Arturia Pendragon-Arc, the Last (former) Queen of Albion and the deceased Vytal Empire, sat under a wide beach umbrella in a soft blue sundress and white shawl, her silver-streaked golden braid catching the sunlight. At her side, Shirou Arc, her husband, tended a portable grill with the focused intensity of a man who had faced down entire armies.

This was food, after all.

"Another burger, my darling?" Shirou asked, flipping a perfectly seasoned patty. Even in his hundred tens, his tall, lean frame moved with that same quiet precision that had once shielded her flanks during the Great War.

Arturia's emerald-blue eyes softened. "Only if you join me, dear. You've been fussing over that grill like it's a battlefield."

Before Shirou could retort, the treeline erupted.

A dozen White Fang militants burst onto the beach—masks on, weapons raised, shouting. Arturia frowned.

"Whatever are they on about, Shirou?"

"Something about 'filthy human invaders," Shirou said. He sighed.

"We really should have picked a more private cove."

Arturia stood gracefully, brushing sand from her dress. "A bit of exercise after that long sail will do us good."

Dragon Heart flared around her in a subtle golden-red aura as she drew her sword. The air itself seemed to bow. The nearest Fang soldier lunged with a Dust blade—only for Arturia to step inside his reach, disarm him with a casual twist, and send him tumbling into his comrades with a palm strike that hit hard enough to stop a moving truck.

Shirou didn't even draw Kanshou and Bakuya. Unlimited Blade Works shimmered faintly at his fingertips. A storm of projected kitchen knives—dulled for non-lethality—pinned weapons to the sand and tangled limbs in precise, almost lazy arcs. One particularly enthusiastic cat Faunus tried to flank him; Shirou simply manifested a reinforced spatula and bonked him on the head, knocking him out.

The skirmish lasted less than two minutes. The attackers lay groaning in the sand, thoroughly disarmed and demoralized. Arturia dusted her hands.

"There. Now where were we?"

A pair of figures emerged from the treeline—Ghira Belladonna, tall and imposing, and Kali Belladonna, elegant and watchful. Both wore expressions of deep apology mixed with wary respect. Their armored guard hung back, worried, weapons ready but not pointed at the humans.

Ghira raised his hands. "I am so sorry for this. Some of our more… radical youth have taken recent tensions too far. We'll handle them. You have my word."

Kali bowed slightly. "Please, allow us to make amends. We didn't realize anyone of your… stature was visiting."

Arturia smiled warmly, the regal poise melting into grandmotherly kindness. "Oh, no problem at all! These lads and lasses gave us a bit of a workout, but nothing more. Shirou's burgers are far more dangerous to my waistline."

Shirou chuckled and offered the Belladonnas a plate. "Care for one? Secret family recipe. Well, one of many."

The tension broke. Soon the four were seated under the umbrella, sharing food and stories as the sun warmed the sand. Conversation turned naturally to family.

"I have a daughter who is seventeen now," Kali said softly, a touch of melancholy in her voice. "I haven't seen her in quite a while. She's… finding her own path."

Arturia's eyes lit up with that familiar matchmaker gleam—the same one that had once helped negotiate treaties. "Really? Is she pretty?"

Ghira puffed up proudly. "Very!"

"Lovely!" Arturia clasped her hands. "Does she like books?"

Kali smiled. "Loves them."

Arturia leaned forward. "May I see a picture?"

Kali obliged, pulling out her Scroll. The image showed a young Blake Belladonna—black hair with cat ears, amber eyes sharp and thoughtful, a book tucked under one arm.

"Oh!" Arturia's voice rose with delight. "Wonderful! Shirou! I think we've found a fiancée for Jaune back home!"

Shirou nearly choked on his burger. "He's still dating Katy, darling!"

Arturia waved a hand dismissively. "No, they broke up when he ran off to Beacon! You know that. Young love, dramatic exits, the usual nonsense."

Shirou rubbed his temple, but his amber eyes twinkled with fond exasperation. "Even so… how exactly are we going to engage them? We don't know where she is."

"Don't worry about that!" Arturia declared, already mentally drafting letters. "We'll find them. The Arc family has its ways. And if she loves books and has that spark in her eyes… perfect for our boy. He needs someone who can keep up with him—and challenge that thick skull of his."

Ghira and Kali exchanged amused, slightly bewildered glances. The former queen's enthusiasm was infectious, if overwhelming.

- - -

Beacon Academy, That Day

In the cafeteria, Jaune Arc suddenly sneezed violently, nearly dropping his tray.

"Bless you," Pyrrha said, concerned.

Blake Belladonna, seated a few tables away with her team, felt an identical tickle in her nose and sneezed into her book.

Weiss raised an eyebrow. "Allergies?"

Blake rubbed her nose, an odd sense of impending doom settling over her.

"Not that I'm aware of..."
 
Jaune and Nick: For Father's Day New
The Beacon Academy library was usually a place of quiet study and whispered conversations. Today, it felt more like the eye of a hurricane.
A towering blond man in a long dark blue duster coat strode through the doors like he owned the place, gray eyes bright with easy joy. Nicholas "Nick" Arc, captain of Radian's militia, legendary Huntsman, and Jaune's father, scanned the tables until he spotted his son and the cluster of friends around him.

"Jaune!" Nick boomed, voice carrying effortlessly. Jaune looked up, eyes wide.

"Dad?!"

"That's your dad?" Yang whispered, looking the seven foot tall giant up and down in shock. "Dang... Now that's a nice future preview."

"Yang!" Ruby hissed.

"What-What are you doing here?" Jaune asked, an edge to his voice. Nick laughed.

"Well I decided to come see my son, of course! And all his friends!" Nick boomed, voice carrying effortlessly. He looked over the groups of students. "Ruby, Yang, Pyrrha, Weiss, Nora, Ren, and Blake, right?"

Weiss recovered first, manners taking over as she stood and curtsied.

"Yes. I am Weiss Schnee. It's nice to meet—YOU?!"

Weiss Schnee barely had time to open her mouth before she was swept into a crushing bear hug.

"Hahaha! Nice to meet you!" Nick laughed, lifting her clear off the ground for a moment. "My son says you're a great girl! He says that about all of you! Except for Ren—he says you're like the brother he never had!"

"Dad!" Jaune hissed, face flaming.

Ren smiled softly.

Pyrrha Nikos managed a polite "Um… Well, I'm glad to meet you—oh my!" before she too was enveloped.

Ruby Rose bounced forward eagerly. "I'm Ruby! Hugs away!" She was scooped up and held high with a delighted "HEE!"

Nora Valkyrie threw her arms wide. "GIMME!"

"GIVEN!" Nick roared, swinging her around.

Blake Belladonna tried to fade into the bookshelves. "I don't do hugs—URK!"

Yang Xiao Long grinned. "Hahaha! Well… if everyone else is feeling the embrace…" She stepped in and got the full treatment.

Lie Ren simply sighed, resigned, and accepted the hug with quiet dignity.

"Awww, hugs are nice!" Nick declared, finally setting everyone down. He turned to his son with open arms. "Come here, kiddo—"

Jaune stepped back, arms up in a block. "...I'm fine, Dad. I don't need a hug."

The big man's smile faltered. "Oh… I see." Hurt flickered across his face, but he brightened quickly. "Well son, you've got me all to yourself while I'm here! What do you want to do? Fishing?"

Jaune stared at the floor. Nick tried again.

"Motorcycle racing? You used to love that!"

"Did he?" Yang asked, interested. Pyrrha flushed a bit.

Jaune remained silent, eyes on the floor. Nick coughed.

"We could train if you'd like?" He pulled out his gigantic sword, and swung it around. "See how you've been improving?"

That was the breaking point.

"Now you want to train me?!" Jaune exploded. "Now?! After I begged you?! Pleaded with you?!"

"Son—"

"NO! No! I don't… I don't want to hear it!" Jaune spun on his heel and stormed out, leaving stunned silence in his wake.

Ruby was the first to recover. "Jaune!" She chased after him.

Nick sighed heavily, shoulders slumping. The cheerful giant looked suddenly smaller. Weiss cleared her throat as she saw all the other students staring and whispering.

"Perhaps we should move somewhere with fewer… staring eyes."

Pyrrha nodded quickly. Yang forced a tense smile and began herding everyone outside. Nick followed, frowning. Such an expression looked unnatural on the man whose smile could light up entire rooms.

- - -

Meanwhile, Ruby had cornered Jaune in a quiet courtyard.

"What was that all about?! That's your dad!"

"I don't want to hear it, Ruby! It-It's nothing!" He protested, sitting on a bench and scowling at the old stone wall. Ruby

"You exploded in there!"

"I'm fine! It's none of your business!"

"You're my best friend! Of course it's my business!" Ruby planted her hands on her hips. "He's sending you money! He's here! He clearly loves you—"

"He didn't stand up to Mom at all! He didn't support me! He just made me go along with Mom's wishes!" Jaune's voice cracked. "And he kept telling me
all these stories about our ancestors, about all the heroic things he and Mom did! Then he just… denied me the chance to even try! I had to do everything myself!"

"He's trying!" Ruby insisted.

"Too little too late!" Jaune sighed. "He never even asked what I wanted to do with my life! Just went with whatever Mom wanted!"

Nick rounded the corner then, the rest of RWBY and JNPR trailing anxiously behind him.

Jaune scowled. "...What?"

Nick took a deep breath. "Son… I understand you're upset with me but—"

Jaune leaped to his feet and cast an accusing finger at her father.

"But nothing! You didn't give me anything! You filled my head with stories of heroism, of being a Hunter, and then wouldn't let me try! Wouldn't let me even fail! I had to do everything all by myself! My sword is a freaking antique! My armor is junk! But I still got in and you didn't do a THING!"

Nick was quiet for a moment. He then sighed softly, and spoke:

"That's not true… I did give you your chance."

"How?!" Jaune demanded.

Nick's voice was quiet, steady. "I saw you sneaking out of the house, Jaune. I was on watch. I could have stopped you from getting to the train at any time."

Jaune's eyes widened. "Wha— You didn't—!"

"I also killed a few Grimm lurking around the road. I did it quietly, so you wouldn't hear anything. To keep you safe. I kept watch over you until you boarded the train."

"I don't—!"

"I even called Old Gus the station keeper and told him not to tell anyone you were leaving. He took your ticket, didn't he? No questions asked? He could have called your mom, but he didn't because I asked him not to."

Jaune stared, speechless. "But… why?"

Nick sighed. "This life isn't easy, son. Your mother and I did a lot of great things, but we lost a lot of people too. Your mother was so determined to keep you safe she forbade me from training you. And I loved and respected her enough to obey… But when I saw you heading out on your own? I knew I couldn't stop you. I had to let you make your own decisions. So I helped however I could."

Jaune's voice was small. "I… Dad…"

Nick offered a sad smile. "Your mother was furious. I don't disagree with her often—she's usually right… But she was wrong in this case. And so we are sending you money. And I am willing to train and help you if you want. You've got good friends, and you've made incredible progress."

"Dad…"

"But… parents make mistakes too. Maybe I should have said no to your mom sooner. Maybe I should have trained you. I can't fix that. All I can do is try to help you now that you've chosen your path." Nick's gray eyes shimmered. "Because, well… I love you, son."

Jaune swallowed hard. "I—I know… I love you too… I just wanted you to be proud of me, too."

"Son," Nick whispered, his eyes shiny, "I'm always proud of you."

Nick slowly walked forward and rested a large, calloused hand on his son's shoulder. For a long moment, neither spoke. Then Jaune stepped in and wrapped his arms around his father in a fierce hug. Nick returned it immediately, eyes closed, the tension melting from his massive frame.
Behind them, Ruby wiped at her eyes. Yang smiled softly, her own eyes shiny. Pyrrha smiled warmly. Even Weiss looked moved. Nora sniffled. Blake flushed a bit. Ren's stoic facade broke for just a moment as he smiled in soft nostagila.

Nick chuckled and patted his son on the back. Jaune laughed a little too, and hastily wiped his eyes.

"So... Ready to train?" Nick asked with a bright smile. Jaune nodded, his own smile wide and bright.

"Yeah! Just... Don't hold back, okay Dad?"

"All right son," Nick nodded, "I'll train you like how I was trained! Well, one of the ways! We don't have weighted backpacks, farms, or milkruns to do-Yet! So we'll go right to the fun stuff!"

Nick turned to Jaune's friends brightly.

"You guys want to watch?"

"Oh, no, w-we couldn't-!" Weiss tried, but Yang stepped forward with a grin.

"Sure we would!"

"Yeah!" Ruby volunteered.

"Of course!" Pyrrha added, "As Jaune's partner and uh... Tutor, I'd be happy to see how you train him! Maybe even... Join in?"

Nora raised her hand.

"Will it involve stuff blowing up?"

"Almost certainly!" Nick nodded.

Nora grinned and grabbed the shocked Blake and Ren's wrists.

"WE'RE IN!"

"Excellent!" Nick laughed.

- - -

Ten minutes later, in a training field...

"DODGE!"


Nick swung his huge sword, unleashing a truly massive Aura Slash that burned gold like the sun. It blasted through the ground, tearing a trench in the Earth. Jaune threw himself to the side, rolling back up to his feet, panting.

"Great son!" Nick cried, as a tree blew up behind Jaune. "You're getting a lot better!"

Jaune looked back, his armor dented, his face covered in dirt and sweat, and a lock of his blonde hair was on fire.

He was grinning broadly.

"Thanks Dad-!"

"DODGE!"

Another Aura Blade lashed out. Jaune didn't quite get clear of the blast zone and was sent flying through a stone pillar, breaking it in half. Nick frowned.

"SON! YOU GOOD?"

Jaune slowly stood back up, and threw a thumbs up and a bright grin at his father.

"SURE AM!"

Nick beamed with pride...

"DODDDDDGE!"

And unleashed another Aura Slash.

"GAAHHHH!"

The rest of Jaune's friends watched from the sidelines. Weiss was aghast.

"This... Is training?!" She asked in disbelief.

"Looks like it's working," Yang chuckled. She flushed as Jaune rose, and removed his top. "Ohhh my is it ever working..."

"Yeah," Pyrrha sighed happily.

"Huh? What's working?" Ruby asked. She stared and blushed. "Oh... Um..."

"NEED A BREAK SON?" Nick called.

"NO! JUST NEED TO FIX MY ARMOR AFTER!" He yelled back. Nick nodded.

"WE'LL GET YOU NEW STUFF! NOW! DRINK WATER!"

Jaune uncorked his canteen and drank, water spilling from his lips over his chest. Weiss turned bright red.

"Ohh... Um... Oh my..."

Blake was furiously writing in three notebooks, her face bright red.

Nora grinned.

"I like the exploding parts!"

Ren smiled softly.

"As do I."

"SIP SON! DON'T GUZZLE!"

"SORRY DAD!"

"NO PROBLEM! NOW DODDDDDGGGGGE!"
 
Hindsight New
Fun idea: Cardin, Jaune, Ren, Sage, Flynt, and Sun are playing a Great War themed game and debate who the best general of the war was. Cardin goes with the Patton-expy, Flynt goes with the Rommel or Zhukov expy... It's a big argument... But they all agree that the Warrior King of Vale was the WORST. They badmouth his terrible strategic decisions and how he was finally pushed back from making any more military decisions by his generals, government, and wife so they wouldn't lose the damn war. Ozpin stops by, listens... And is a bit annoyed by them all dunking on his previous persona.



Jaune's choice is the Eisenhower expy as he had to manage all these lunatics to win the war, but he also agrees the Warrior King of Vale was completely awful.)



Jaune: "I mean he was good at the diplomacy and morale sides but military decisions? Geez... I think a drunken hobo clown would have made better choices."



Cardin: "A newbie on Battle Lightning would be a better general than that guy!"



Guys: "Ahahahahahaha!"



Sun: "Wouldn't have given away as many secrets!"



Guys: "Hahahahahahaha!"



Ozpin: "At least he was capable in battle and willing to lead from the front!"



every head turns towards him
 
Whiter Rose: The Geist New
Whiter Rose: The Geist

- - -

Whitley Schnee had never expected to become a summoner, let alone one who used a Geist for household chores.

It had started as a simple training exercise with his Semblance — nothing too dangerous, just enough to prove he could defend himself out near an SDC outpost. Fully backed up by his father's security forces and Fafnir's watchful gaze. He'd managed to kill a lone Geist that had wandered too close.

The victory had been small, but satisfying.

What he hadn't expected was the Geist's essence bonding to his Glyphs.

Now the spectral Grimm hovered behind him like a loyal (if unsettling) shadow, ready to possess and repair any broken device he pointed at. It was surprisingly useful.

Ruby found out about it during one of their quiet afternoons together in the Schnee manor's private workshop.

"So… you just have your little buddy do stuff?" Ruby asked, eyes wide as she watched the Geist phase into a malfunctioning Dust heater and fix it from the inside.

Whitley adjusted his safety glasses, looking a touch embarrassed. "Yes. He-It-Can possess electronic devices, which helps me troubleshoot them. It's quite efficient."

Ruby's gaze slowly drifted to Crescent Rose, currently resting on the workbench with a few finicky internal components that had been giving her trouble.

"You… you think you could get into Crescent Rose?"

Whitley blinked. "Ah… Are you sure?"

Ruby nodded, cheeks slightly pink. "Y-yes… But be gentle?"

Whitley gave her a small, reassuring smile. "Of course. I'll be careful."

- - -

Later than afternoon, Yang stormed into the workshop, her eyes blazing red. She turned her fearsome glare on Whitley, who had been doing some adjustments on a power convertor.

"WHAT THE HELL AM I HEARING ABOUT YOU VIOLATING RUBY'S FLOWER?!"

Whitley nearly dropped the tool in his hand. "NO! Nonono that's not— that didn't—What?!!"

He cast about desperately as Yang loomed over him.

"RUBY! HELP!"

Ruby entered the workshop with a dreamy, slightly dazed expression. Her cheeks were flushed, and she was gently stroking the scythe's barrel like it was a beloved pet.

"Oh he was so thorough!" she sighed happily. "So skilled! He did things with my Rose I've never even imagined before!"

Whitley's face went from pale to bright crimson in record time. "STOP HELPING, RUBY!"

Yang froze mid-rant, blinking rapidly as her brain caught up with the actual context. The red in her eyes faded as realization dawned.

"…Wait. You mean the Geist thing. The actual ghost-possessing-robot-baby thing."

"Yes!" Whitley exclaimed, gesturing wildly at the now-innocent-looking Geist floating nearby. "It was just maintenance! Internal repairs! Nothing… untoward!"

Ruby tilted her head, still looking blissed out. "But it felt really good when he was inside—"

"RUBY!"

Yang stared at her little sister for a long moment.

Then she burst out laughing so hard she had to lean against the wall for support.

"Oh Breaker. You two are actually going to kill me one day."

Ruby finally seemed to realize what she'd implied and turned an impressive shade of red herself.

"I-I meant the scythe! He fixed the scythe! The internal mechanisms felt… smoother! That's all!"

Yang wiped a tear from her eye, still chuckling. "Sure, Rubes. 'Internal mechanisms.' Totally believable."

She walked over and ruffled Ruby's hair, then gave Whitley a teasing grin.

"You're lucky you're a good guy, Schnee. Otherwise I'd have to break your legs."

Whitley peeked through his fingers. "Noted."

Ruby, still blushing furiously, hugged Crescent Rose to her chest. She gave Whitley a shy, appreciative look.

"…He really did do a good job though."

Whitley smiled softly.

"You're welcome."

Yang smirked. "I'm telling Dad."

"NO!" both Ruby and Whitley shouted at the same time.
 
Stuck in a Tree New
Beacon Academy Grounds, Afternoon

Jaune Arc strolled along the winding sidewalk near the dormitories, enjoying a rare moment of quiet between classes. The sun filtered through the tall trees lining the path, and for once, no one was shouting about training or Grimm or vigilantism.

That peace shattered almost immediately.

"HEY! JAUNE! HELP!"

He stopped, tilting his head back. High up in the branches of a sturdy oak sat Blake Belladonna, clinging to the trunk like her life depended on it. Her ears were flat against her head, and her expression was a perfect mix of mortification and desperation.

"Blake?" Jaune called up, shielding his eyes. "What are you doing in that tree?"

"I'm stuck! Help!"

Jaune blinked. "Blake... you have Aura. You can just jump down."

"I can't! I got my Aura broken in training and it hasn't rebuilt yet!" she snapped, voice cracking with frustration.

"Then why did you climb a tree?"

"NEVERMIND THAT! JUST GET ME DOWN! GET A LADDER, GET THE FIRE DEPARTMENT!"

Before Jaune could respond, Yang Xiao Long sauntered by with a juice box in hand, the other tucked casually in her pocket. She glanced up at the commotion. "Hm? Oh hey, Vomit Boy. What's up?"

Jaune pointed silently upward. Yang followed his finger, spotted Blake, and broke into a wide, predatory grin.

"Hah!"

"Seriously, why did you climb up into a tree?" Jaune asked again, fighting a smile.

"WHAT, ARE WE DOING AN INTERVIEW HERE? JUST GET ME DOWN!" Blake yelled.

Yang burst out laughing. "Heh... Hahahaha!"

Jaune chuckled along. "You know, maybe we are doing an interview."

"WHAT?!"

"Welcome to the show, Blake! It's a pleasure to have you!" Jaune announced in his best over-the-top host voice, spreading his arms dramatically.

"ARE YOU SERIOUS?!"

"So, you're here to promote your latest project. What's it called?"

"I WILL SLIT YOUR THROAT IN YOUR SLEEP!"

Jaune nodded sagely. "Very visceral! Is this a thriller or a straight-up horror movie?"

"YOU SUCK! YANG, HELP ME!"

Yang, still grinning, took a long, loud slurp from her juice box and did absolutely nothing useful.

"My beautiful co-host would be happy to ask you questions, wouldn't you, Yang?" Jaune said smoothly.

Yang leaned in with mock professionalism. "I would be most happy to indeed! So, Blaine—"

"Blake— SH- REALLY?!"

"Blaine… want some juice?"

Jaune smirked. "And that's why I'm the star."

"HEY! You caught me unprepared!" Yang protested, though she was clearly loving every second.

Jaune rolled his eyes.

"Juice bit, really? This is why Spruce Willis won't return our calls."

"Should it have been cranberry?" Yang asked.

"IS SOMEONE ELSE DOWN THERE?!" Blake demanded from her leafy perch.

"Some ants… a squirrel…" Yang offered helpfully.

Jaune pressed on. "But back on topic, Blake: This is a horror movie, right?"

"UGGGGGHHHH..." She rolled her eyes. "YES. I hate 'thriller'! It's a pretentious term for directors who just want awards!"

Yang leaned over to Jaune. "No but seriously, want some juice? Ruby bought like twenty of these Capri-Sol boxes with Weiss's credit card, and we're trying to drink them all before she realizes."

"Yes, thank you." Jaune accepted the offered box and sipped. Up in the tree, Blake continued her tirade.

"It's a bloody and brutal commentary on Faunus rights!"

"Ooh, that might be difficult to play in the foreign markets," Jaune noted.

"WELL IT'S MY ARTISTIC VISION AND I'M STICKING BY IT!"

"Is it true the main actor got the job due to rumored relationships between him and yourself?" Yang asked, slurping loudly again.

"This is your first movie where you're both star and director. How are you handling the pressure?" Jaune added.

"I'm—I'm taking it one day at a time! My passion is seeing me through! AND NO! THAT'S A FILTHY LIE!"

"But what about all the nude and sex scenes?" Jaune continued innocently.

"WHAT?! I-UGH! I-I'M VERY COMMITTED TO MY ART!"

"Well that does help sell the political commentary!" Jaune said cheerfully.

Yang smacked her lips. "Damn, this is some good shi— sex scenes?! Blake, c'mon girl! Adding that on top of all the bloody stabbings and the chainsaw fight?"

"WHAT?!" Blake demanded.

"Now now, Yang, we should be open-minded," Jaune said. "Besides, the R rating is what's being released. There's an NC-17 cut, isn't there?"

"Yes! It's a bit too extreme... I may have gotten carried away but damnit, it's a passion project! I want to deliver! It's based on Ninjas in Love and Zombies after all—I can't spare on any of the sex scenes! They're a core part of the narrative!"

Jaune tilted his head. "Did you actually try to get Spruce Willis for this? Seems a bit ambitious and risky."

"W-Well maybe he's tired of playing the same character in every movie and wanted to stretch his acting skills! Make some actual art and not just a product!"

"That's a very bold statement," Jaune nodded, "Now, how about the writer? Roger-award winner Baal Cody?"

"She's an overpriced callgirl whore for the establishment!" Blake snarled, practically vibrating in rage.

"Ooh, that's not a good interview response," Yang said. Jaune nodded.

"Yeah, you need to be nicer to the people working on your movie! What if the Writer's Guild goes on strike? Can't have that!"

Blake gritted her teeth and dug her fingers into the tree bark.

"I think... The tattoo artist... Who worked on her fat arms... Was very honored!"

"Delightful!" Jaune chuckled. "And after the break we'll be talking with your co-star, Tom Dutchland!"

"WHAT?! I HATE THOM DUTCHLAND! HE'S THE WORST ARACHNO-MAN!"

"We'll be right back!" Jaune called cheerfully. "Shall we get more juice, Yang?"

"YOU SUCK! YOU BOTH SUCK!"

Yang finally relented with a theatrical sigh. "All right, all right... Sheesh." She walked over to the tree, grabbed the trunk with both hands, and—much to Blake's horror and Jaune's blushing amazement—lifted the entire thing. She gave it a firm shake.

"BWAAAHHH!"

Blake plummeted. Jaune stepped forward smoothly and caught her in his arms with a soft oof.

Yang set the tree back down carefully, brushing her hands off. She offered another juice box with a smirk. "Juice?"

Blake scowled, scrambling out of Jaune's hold. She stormed off without another word, muttering curses under her breath.

"You're welcome!" Jaune called after her.

Blake flipped them both the bird.

Yang snickered, muttering to Jaune, "She needs to get laid."

"Seriously..."

Later that evening, the inevitable reckoning arrived at dinner.

Weiss Schnee marched up to them in the cafeteria, arms crossed. "Jaune, Yang... You made Blake perform like she was doing a movie interview while she was stuck in a tree?!"

"Uh..." Jaune rubbed the back of his neck. Yang grinned.

Pyrrha, standing beside Weiss, gave him a disappointed look. "Really, Jaune?"

Weiss's eyes narrowed. "...Without recording it?!"

"Yeah!" Ruby added, sliding up, "That's the worst part!"

"Totally!" Nora added.

Blake, lurking in the corner with a book held like a shield, growled, "I will stab you all."

Jaune waved his hands. "No, no, of course I didn't!"

A beat of silence.

Yang grinned. "I did."

"YANG!"

- - -

A bit shamelessly stolen from Family Guy. Yes, I went there. Written with help from @brinkleberry Thanks!
 
The Horror Show New
Here's a fun idea:

The people of Remnant would likely have research labs and complexes out of cities to study Grimm. So you could do a kind of story that's popular in video games: Going to explore a base or research lab that has gone silent. And bad things have happened.

In this case, RWBY and JNPR go in on a training mission... But on the way there, contact is lost with the base and the trainees go in first to investigate. They then have to survive until they can get backup.

What would the research people would have found? Well...

1: It's a human/Grimm hybrid Merlot created.

2: It's a Grimm that can turn humans into Grimm/human hybrids.

3: It's a Grimm that can make humans into zombies.

4: It's a Grimm that is sapient and can speak and control Grimm.

5: It's one of Salem's former minions who is holding onto a sliver of his/her humanity and uses magic against the lab. Maybe they were in some kind of hibernation and were woken up out of their tomb.

6: It's a Grimm that can control the minds of humans, enhancing their negative emotions until they're mad with rage or suicidal, etc.
 
Councilman Arc 9 New
Blake takes bodyguard duty and Jaune gets his first assassination attempt.

- - -

The Vale afternoon was crisp, the park's air laced with the scent of autumn leaves and distant food carts. Jaune Arc, in his councilman's jacket, had been strolling through the crowd, shaking hands and smiling, with Blake Belladonna as his escort. Her amber eyes were sharp, scanning for threats, but she stuck close—closer than necessary, her arm brushing his, her tail twitching under her coat.

"I'm fine, Blake. Really!" Jaune said, chuckling nervously. "You don't have to follow me everywhere."

Blake's ears flicked under her bow. "I'm just ensuring future positive relations with Vale and Menagerie," she said, gesturing to herself. "I may not be an official ambassador, but sooner or later, someone will connect me to my parents back home. My actions—especially toward you—will be scrutinized."

Jaune softened. "Yeah, but I'd protect you, Blake. You're my friend… Really."

Blake blushed, looking away. "…R-Really?"

"Really," Jaune said, unwavering.

They'd been chatting with locals when Blake's senses prickled. A skinny, muscular Faunus man in the crowd—his posture, his glare—screamed danger. Her instincts screamed louder when he pulled a gun.

"FOR THE WHITE FANG!" he roared.

Blake's eyes widened. "Look out!" She grabbed Jaune, shadow-cloning them away as bullets sprayed wildly. The crowd screamed, scattering. The terrorist seized a young boy, gun to his head.

"Back off!" the Faunus snarled.

Jaune stepped forward, hands raised. "Don't! Don't… Look, you just want me, right? Take me instead of the kid!"

The terrorist sneered, aiming at Jaune. "You humans all deserve to die! But if you want to be first—!" He fired.

Blake's heart stopped. "JAUNE?!"

The shot hit Jaune center-mass, but he didn't fall—no blood, just a grunt. Ren, hidden nearby, fired a precise shot, dropping the terrorist instantly. Blake rushed to Jaune, hands shaking, forgetting his Aura in her panic. "JAUNE?!"

"I'm okay… I'm okay…" Jaune rubbed his chest, standing slowly.

Ren jogged up. "You all right?"

"Yeah…" Jaune nodded.

"COUNCILMAN ARC! WHAT HAPPENED?!" Lisa Lavender appeared, microphone thrusting forward, camera drone buzzing.

Blake's ears shot up. "How did you get here so fast?!"

Lisa smirked. "The most trouble-prone councilman in public? Something's gonna happen!"

Paramedics and police swarmed in, securing the scene. No one else was hurt, the terrorist dead. Jaune was whisked to the station for a statement, where RWBY and JNPR converged in a chaotic pile.

"JAUNE!" Ruby tackled him in a hug. "You okay?!"

"I'm fine, I'm fine, really!" Jaune laughed, patting her head.

Weiss scowled. "Fine? You were shot!"

"I have Aura," Jaune said. "Better me than someone without."

Pyrrha and Yang barreled through the hallway. "JAUNE, ARE YOU OKAY?!" they chorused, squishing his face between their chests.

"You scared the shit out of m—us, LB!" Yang said, blushing.

"Yes, please don't ever worry m—us like that again!" Pyrrha added.

Ruby hugged him from behind. "HEY!"

Nora leapt in. "I want hugs too!" The pile collapsed, Jaune wheezing, "URK!"

Blake, trembling, whispered, "J-Jaune?"

Neptune and Sun arrived, assisting the police. Neptune gaped. "…SERIOUSLY?!"

Sun grabbed him. "Easy, Neptune, easy!"

- - -

In the interrogation room, Detective Columbia faced Jaune, Neptune, and Sun. "Well, Councilman, this is straightforward. You're not being charged."

"Why didn't you alert local police?" Columbia asked.

Jaune sighed. "Given my security detail was following my every step, I felt it was unnecessary to divert their attention from their usual responsibilities for a walk in the park. I certainly wasn't expecting an international terrorist."

Sun nodded. "Makes sense."

Neptune scowled.

Columbia raised an eyebrow. "Did you not think putting civilians in danger was a risk?"

Jaune's face fell. "Much of the area was sparsely populated. It just happened that I was accosted near a larger group. But… even I know that's a poor excuse. My naivety and lack of experience put lives in danger, and I take full responsibility. You're within your rights to arrest me for negligence, and I'll come willingly."

Columbia shook his head. "Given nobody died, we're not pressing charges. Exchanging yourself for the hostage was heroic… but foolish."

Jaune smiled gratefully. "Thank you, Detective." His face hardened. "Any more questions?"

Neptune exploded. "How could you cuck poor Sun?! How could you cuck me with Weiss and Yang and Pyrrha too?!"

"YOU DAMN HAREM PROTAGONIST!" Neptune yelled.

Sun held him back. "Easy, Neptune, easy!"

Jaune blinked, confused. "I'm sorry, what am I being accused of?"

Neptune flailed. "STEALING ALL THE POTENTIAL HOTTIES, YOU WEIRDO!"

Columbia, nonplussed, said, "How about you head back, Councilman?"

"I think I will. Have a nice day," Jaune said, bolting.

Back in the station's main room, Pyrrha hovered. "You all right, Jaune?"

Jaune nodded. "Good news: no charges. Bad news: it's a warning. Next time, we follow protocol and inform the police. I thought you guys were enough, and extra security was a waste of taxpayer money, but… it's necessary bureaucracy."

Weiss turned on Blake. "Honestly, why would you let him go off like this?"

Ren stepped forward. "I was shadowing him. I share some of the blame."

Blake, trembling, clenched and unclenched her fists. "Not now, Weiss. Just not now."

Weiss fumed. "He could've been killed! Or that child, by a White Fang terrorist—!"

"The guy wasn't part of local cells," Jaune said. "Lone wolf, inspired by the White Fang."

"Oh, big difference!" Weiss snapped.

Blake looked ready to burst.

Yang glanced at her. "Weiss… there's a difference between being worried and being an ass."

Jaune sighed. "Look… I need to be more careful. We're lucky nobody got hurt, but next time, someone might use bombs on a crowd. We'd be okay, but normal people won't."

"Okay?" he asked.

Weiss nodded. "…Agreed. I can draw up a protocol for public events."

Pyrrha nodded. "I can help."

"Thank you. I really appreciate it," Jaune said.

Blake stayed quiet, eyes down.

- - -

Back at the Council Tower, as they entered Jaune's office, he pulled her aside. "Blake? You okay?"

She took a deep breath, face neutral. "Jaune, before I say anything, I need your word you'll be completely honest with me, at least for this conversation. Can you do that?"

"Yes. You have my word," Jaune said, no hesitation.

"Good." Blake's neutrality shattered. She slapped him, rage flaring. "What the hell were you thinking, jumping in front of me like that?!"

Her voice cracked, fear bleeding through. "You could've been hurt, and it would've been my fault! Hell, it's my fault we were out there in the first place!"

Jaune winced, shaking his head. "Blake, I'm sorry. It was reflex!"

"I mean, I never wanted to be a politician!" he continued. "I wanted to be a Huntsman. To protect people!"

Blake smacked him again. "Don't you think I know that?!" Her expression softened, but her voice shook. "I get it's not what you wanted, but it's who you are now. You're too important to recklessly throw your life into danger every chance you get." She rubbed her arm anxiously. "I know it's hypocritical, given some of the things I've done, but if I'm saying it, you know it's a problem."

Jaune's eyes softened. "Blake… there will never be a situation where my life is more important than yours, or a little boy's."

He sighed. "Look… I'll be less reckless, I promise. But I don't consider myself more important than anyone else. I'm supposed to be in front of people in trouble. That… doesn't change just because I've got a fancy office."

He hugged her gently.

Blake hugged back, murmuring, "I wanna believe that…"

Jaune, catching it in their closeness, asked, "Why not?"

Blake's eyes widened. "Shit, I said that out loud, didn't I?"

"Yes," Jaune agreed. Blake immediately tried to pull away, but Jaune's Aura enhanced strength kept her right there. Though she wrestled furiously.

"Blake-Seriously-Quit it-!"

"No, I have to-!"

Blake used a judo sweep to send Jaune falling… Right on top of her. He pinned her to the floor even as she tried to get away. Clones of herself appeared around him, trying to distract him, but to no avail.

"Damnit Jaune, let-me-go-!"

"No!"

"LET ME GO!"

"STOP RUNNING AWAY!"

Blake froze. Jaune panted for breath, holding her down. She looked up, almost meek. Her eyes met his.

"I just…" She shook her head. "I… I don't want to fail you… I don't want to fail again."

"Well… Running away isn't going to help that," Jaune murmured. Blake flushed, her eyes darting downwards.

"You can't fix anything if you keep running," he added, more gently. Blake looked up and blushed softly.

"I… But when the mess is so big you can't fix it-"

"This isn't," Jaune murmured, "I promise. As long as we work together, we'll do better. I screwed up too. It's not always about you."

Blake stared into his eyes. She nibbled her lower lip, worrying it, before she spoke.

"You… You don't have as much to make up for as I do-"

"Doesn't matter," Jaune insisted, "We both want to make the world a better place. Right? We both want to make things better. I know you, Blake. You wouldn't be so reckless and forthright if you didn't care… Right?"

Blake slowly nodded. She licked her lips.

"I do… But you need to stop being so reckless yourself. You're a target and… And I don't want to lose you. It would hurt all of us."

Jaune sighed, and nodded.

"You're right," he said, "I'll try. I promise."

Jaune blinked twice… Glanced from side to side… And realized their position. He turned bright red.

"O-Oh… Um, uh…"

"You really should get off me," Blake said softly, "Unless you want to keep me pinned underneath you?"

Jaune gulped. He was abruptly aware of how intimate their position was. Their legs entwined, his hands pinning her wrists down to the carpet…

"Oh, um, I uh…"

"Unless you want to keep me here? Under y-you?" Blake asked, her voice shaking a bit but still warm and honey toned. Jaune gaped.

"Wha…?"

"I… I wouldn't mind," she managed softly, "if-if it was you, I-I mean… You could even punish me for my lapse, if you wanted?"

Jaune sighed. He got up off Blake, and brushed off his jacket before he reached out. Blake took his hand, and let him pull her up.

"Over the desk? I suppose it would be appropriate," Blake added. Jaune sighed and shook his head.

"Blake… I have seven sisters. The teasing isn't going to work on me."

Blake turned bright red. Jaune chuckled.

"Still, thank you for that," he said. "But I mean… I don't want things to get any more complicated. I don't want you to get in trouble. They already think I'm keeping a harem as it is."

Blake hummed.

"You know," she murmured, "I wouldn't mind if you did keep one. As long as I got to play with the girls too~."

Jaune turned bright red… Then laughed it off.

"Okay that was a lot better. But I'm gonna-"

"Jaune," Blake said quietly, "Do you know who I really am?"

Jaune blinked.

"Uhh…?"

"I'm Blake Belladonna, daughter of Ghira and Kali Belladonna, the Chieftains of Menagerie," Blake said, soft and quiet. Jaune blinked. He blinked twice. Three times before his brain reconnected with his mouth.

"Wait what?! You're… That Blake Belladonna?! But-You-How-?!"

"I honestly don't know how no one else has made the connection," she admitted, "It's really amazing."

"No kidding," Jaune agreed, staring at her in astonishment. Blake smiles.

"Which means it would be good for both of us to connect," Blake said, "for politics, friendship… And potentially other things." She took Jaune's hands in hers. "For the sake of Faunuskind and international politics, yes Jaune, I would absolutely accept being part of a harem!"

Jaune gaped… Then laughed hard again. He patted Blake on the shoulder.

"Okay, you definitely got me then, Blake! But enough comedy. Thanks for cheering me up. And I promise I won't tell anyone your secret, either. That said, if we could meet your parents, that would help me with a lot of our issues."

Blake frowned.

"Well… I haven't seen them in a long time. I… I don't-"

"Please Blake?" Jaune asked. "It would help us out a lot."

Blake slowly nodded.

"I suppose I-I could try… If you were there with me?"

"Sure thing, Blake," Jaune said with a warm smile. He hugged her, and headed into the side room to change. Blake sighed.

"I suppose I need to be less subtle about my politics."

Said the former terrorist.
 
Adam and Weiss New
Fun crack fic premise: Adam decides he's going to get his revenge on Blake the only way an edgy manchild can...

He's going to date Weiss Schnee, get close to her to allow him to kill her dad, and make Blake jealous!

Adam: "Perfect."

However, things get complicated when she sees his real face...

Weiss: "My dad's men did this to you?! That motherfucking twice damned shit fucking cunt son of a whore-He should burn in the pits of Hell-I'd castrate him if he had any balls-!"

Adam: staring... Red faced "... Oh no... I'm in love."

Blake meanwhile is in disbelief.

Blake: "You're just using her to get to her father!"

Adam: "Correction: We're dating and planning on kill her father together!"

Blake: "B-But you hate humans!"

Adam: "Not this one! Also Jaune, apologies. I didn't mean to steal your girl."

Jaune: "She wasn't really my girl and as long as she's happy... I'm happy."

Adam: "... You're a real bro, Jaune."

Jaune: "Thank you Adam."

Adam: "... Okay so now there are two humans I don't hate."

Blake: "SERIOUSLY?!"

- - -

Blake then goes to the most racist human she knows...

Blake: "I'm your girlfriend now!"

Cardin: "I-What?"

Blake: "Yes! I am your hot catgirl girlfriend! We will kiss and cuddle and go on dates together!"

Cardin: "But-But-!"

Velvet: "HEY! He was racist to me first, ya know!"

Blake: "Well I'm everything he hates in a tight, curvy package!"

Velvet: "Not curvy enough!"

Blake: "Why you-!"

A catfight ensues. Glynda storms into the room.

Glynda: "MISTER WINCHESTER! What is going on?!"

Cardin: "I DON'T KNOW!"

- - -

Later...

Ruby: "Why didn't you choose Jaune to make Adam jealous? He's nice!"

Blake: "That's the problem! Nobody would buy that he's racist!"

Jaune: "HEY! I could be racist! ... If I wanted to! ... And had some time to prepare! ... Maybe!"

Yang: "Why does he have to be racist?"

Blake: "... I... You... Shut up!"
 
The Duel New
One idea: Duels might still be legal in some parts of Remnant. They follow the code duello: The seconds to the duelists do everything in their power to resolve the duel peacefully, and negotiate the terms of the duel. And what weapons can be used (usually named by the guy who is challenged but this can be negotiated). And the duel can be to the death but this was extremely rare, usually it was to first blood or a number of hits to satisfy honor.

So, Jaune Arc finds himself in a duel against a very traditionalist warrior and has to figure out how to either prevent it or win it. And perhaps choose a form of battle he's good at.
 
The Summons New
So... An older idea a friend of mine had: Jaune brings along some old spheres from one of his relatives, purported to be full of incredible power.

Jaune can't figure out how to use them. It's not until Initiation, when things go wrong and the teams are cut off... That he grabs one and begs, begs, for the power to save his friends, to not be useless!

One of the spheres reacts, shines with power... Jaune gets the impression of a great reptilian eye burning with power looking him over, seeing into his very soul... And going...

"Hm... You'll do."

And in a massive burst of magical power long forgotten... Bahamut, the King of Dragons, flies again and annihilates the Grimm before vanishing.

Good news: Jaune has incredible power and can summon the powerful Guardian entities from before the World was Destroyed in the war between Salem and Ozma!

Bad news: Jaune has incredible power and can summon the powerful Guardian entities from before the World was destroyed in the war between Salem and Ozma... And now everyone knows he has that power.
 
The First Shadow New
Idea for what if the grim Dragon was more a proper dragon from ancient times.

The First Shadow

The Grimm Dragon did not merely roar, it spoke.
The sound that tore from its throat shook the very foundations of Beacon Tower. Stone cracked. Glass shattered across every building still standing in the city below. Hunters and Huntresses alike dropped to their knees, hands clamped over their ears, not from volume alone but from the weight of the voice, ancient, deep, rumbling up from somewhere far older than language itself.

Smoke curled between teeth the length of flagpoles. Its eyes, burning with that sickly red glow, swept slowly across the burning city like a king surveying a domain that had always been his. "Little things." The words were not growled. They were measured. Deliberate. Each syllable carved into the night air with the patience of something that had waited millennia to speak again.

"You scurry beneath my shadow and think yourselves brave. You forge your little weapons, weave your little auras, and whisper to each other that you are the light against the dark."

The Dragon shifted its massive bulk atop the tower. The structure groaned, buckled, but held barely. Its talons, black as the void between stars, scraped against stone and left furrows like open wounds in the masonry. Each claw was as long as a sailing mast, curved and honed to a point that could pierce the hull of an airship like parchment.

"My claws are spears. Not the crude iron your kind hammers in forges. Spears forged in the first darkness, before your sun begged for its first dawn. Before your moon cracked and wept. Before your gods painted your world like children splashing color across mud."

Its wings unfurled, slowly, deliberately stretching wider than the amphitheater below. The membrane between them was thick, leathery, riddled with cracks that glowed faintly from within, as though magma flowed through the veins of the creature itself. They blotted out the stars.

"My wings are a hurricane. I have carried storms across continents. I have turned seas to dust with a single downbeat. When I flew in the age before your age, the world itself trembled and forgot which way was up."

The Dragon lowered its enormous head. Closer now. Close enough that those on the tower could see the texture of its scales, not smooth, not like a snake, but jagged and overlapping like plates of blackened iron, each one edged with a faint crimson glow, as if the creature's very hide was constantly burning from within. Scars lined its body. Old ones. The kind that spoke of wars fought before humanity had learned to cry.

"My armor is not yours to break. I have worn this darkness since the first shadow fell across the first stone. Your bullets pit it. Your blades scratch it. Your Semblances flicker against it like candles trying to burn a mountain."

It inhaled. The air around Beacon reversed. Smoke, ash, embers, all of it spiraled inward, drawn into the creature's maw like a world ending in reverse. The sky itself seemed to dim, as if the Dragon were stealing the light from the atmosphere.

Then it exhaled. Not fire. Not exactly. A wave of pure, concentrated darkness, Grimm essence in its rawest, oldest form, rolled outward across the sky. It didn't burn. It consumed. Where it passed, the air turned black. Dust particles ceased to exist. The clouds above Beacon simply... dissolved.

"My breath is unmaking. The God of Darkness breathed life into me with the very first exhale of creation. Where your light builds, I unbuild. Where your hope gathers, I scatter. I am not a creature of your wars. I am the reason your wars mean nothing."

The Dragon's gaze swept across the battlefield. The ones still standing. The ones still foolish enough to hold their ground. Ruby Rose, silver eyes wide and shining. Weiss Schnee, rapier trembling in her grip. Blake Belladonna, shadow melting into shadow as if she could hide from the thing that invented shadow.

The Dragon noticed none of them. Because it had caught a scent. Its nostrils flared. A small motion against the enormity of its form, but the effect was immediate, the smoke and ash hanging in the air stilled, then reversed direction, spiraling inward toward those twin black holes of breath.

It was scenting. "Hhhh." A low sound. Not a word. A discovery. Its enormous head swiveled slowly, deliberately, like a searchlight cutting through the chaos below. The red eyes narrowed. The scarred lips peeled back just slightly, revealing teeth that could serve as siege weapons.

"There." The gaze locked onto the tower. Onto a figure standing among the rubble, half-hidden in shadow, her amber eyes wide with something she had never felt before.

Cinder Fall didn't move. Couldn't move. Every nerve in her body was screaming at her to flee, to use the Maiden's power, to do something, but the Dragon's attention was a physical weight, and she was pinned beneath it like an insect under glass.

"You." The word dripped with something worse than malice, just nothing but pure disgust. "I smell it on you. Even from here. Even through the smoke and the blood and the stench of your own fear." The Dragon's upper lip curled further. A sound rumbled in its throat , not a roar, not a growl, but something far more unsettling.

A sneer. "The witch's stain. Old magic. Stolen magic. It clings to you like rot clinging to a corpse. You wear it like a crown, don't you? You think you've claimed something powerful. Something that makes you special." Cinder's hand twitched toward the bow at her back. The Maiden's power flickered in her palm, heat, flame, the desperate warmth of a stolen sun.

The Dragon saw it and it laughed. The sound was catastrophic. A deep, rolling, earth-shaking bellow that sent cracks racing through every wall within a mile. Debris fell from half-collapsed buildings. The air itself seemed to shudder.

"You would show me fire?" The laughter died. Instantly. Completely. Replaced by something far colder. "I was born in the dark before your sun existed. I have bathed in the cold fury of the God of Darkness Himself. And you... a thief ...would wave His brother's leftover warmth in my face?"

The Dragon leaned closer. Its breath washed over the tower like a tide of ash and decay. Cinder's hair whipped back. Her skin went pale. The Maiden's flame in her hand sputtered, dimmed, flickered, as if the very presence of the Dragon was suffocating the light inside her.

"You are not worthy of that power. You are a rat wearing a queen's robe. The magic you carry does not belong to you. It was never meant for something so small. You reek of desperation. Of ambition so hollow it echoes. You stole what you could not earn, and you think that makes you dangerous."

Its eyes burned brighter. "It makes you pathetic."
Cinder Fall, the woman who had orchestrated the fall of Beacon, who had murdered, manipulated, and clawed her way to power through sheer ruthless will, felt her legs give out beneath her.

She dropped to one knee. The Dragon had not touched her. Had not breathed destruction upon her. Had merely spoken and she was on her knees.

The Dragon's head pulled back slightly, dismissive, as if she were already forgotten. A footnote. An afterthought unworthy of further attention. But then...It inhaled again. Deeper this time. The ash reversed. The smoke spiraled. And the Dragon went still.

It went completely still. Not the predatory stillness of a hunter spotting prey. This was different. This was the stillness of something that had been waiting for a very long time and had suddenly, impossibly, been answered.

"No." The word was barely a whisper. But it carried across all of Beacon like a thunderclap.
"No, it cannot be." Its head swept left. Right. Left again. The enormous eyes, ancient, terrible, older than civilization, darted across the battlefield with an energy that hadn't been there a moment before. Something alive flickered in them. Something that had no place in a creature of Grimm.

Hunger. Not for destruction. Not for the annihilation of light. Recognition. "Where!!!!"
The head snapped downward. Past the fallen Huntresses. Past the scattering students. Past the Grimm pouring through the streets like a flood of black water.

Down to a blonde boy standing in the middle of a crumbling courtyard, sword drawn, shield raised, aura flickering like a candle in a hurricane. Jaune Arc. He was shaking. Visibly. Undeniably. His knees were bent, his breathing ragged, his grip on Crocea Mors so tight his knuckles had gone white. He had no idea what was happening. He only knew that every instinct he had ever had was screaming at him that the thing looking at him was not just a Grimm.

It was a predator older than the concept of prey.
The Dragon stared at him and then it made a sound that no one present had expected.
A sound that, given everything they knew about Grimm, soulless, mindless, driven only by the desire to destroy, should have been absolutely impossible.

It purred. Low, Deep and resonant. A vibration that could be felt in the chest, in the bones, in the marrow. The sound of an apex predator that had just scented the one thing in all the world it had ever truly wanted to find. "Oh," the Dragon breathed, and the word was almost tender.

"Oh, there you are." Jaune swallowed hard. "W-what?" "Do you know what I smell on you, little slayer?" The title hung in the air. Slayer. Not student. Not boy. Not child.Slayer. "I smell the Arc." The Dragon said the name like a prayer. Like a curse. Like a memory so old it had fossilized and then been dug up and breathed back to life.

"I smell the bloodline that hunted my brothers. That drove them from the mountains. That cracked their scales with blades forged in hatred and wrapped in holy fire. I smell the line that killed dragons, true dragons, not the pale imitations your age has forgotten and mounted their skulls on walls that have long since turned to dust."

Its wings twitched. Not in aggression. In anticipation.

"Do you understand? Your kind were the boogeymen of my kind. We whispered about the Arcs in the deep places of the world. In the caves before your caves existed. In the dark before your dark had a name. We told our young and we had young, once, before your ancestors butchered them, that the Arcs would come. That nothing could stop them. That even the gods themselves had tried."

The Dragon's voice dropped. Lower. Reverent.
"And failed." Jaune's eyes were wide. "The... the gods..." "The God of Light struck down your ancestor with a beam that carved a canyon into the earth. The Arc stood back up. The God of Darkness unmade the ground beneath another's feet, swallowed him into the void itself. The Arc climbed out. They threw everything they had at your line. Light. Darkness. Creation. Destruction. They waged a war against the Arcs that made your little human conflicts look like children arguing over scraps."

The Dragon leaned down. Far down. Its massive head came to rest at the level of the courtyard wall, eye to eye with a boy who could barely hold his sword steady. "And your bloodline survived. Not because of magic. Not because of relics or blessings or stolen power."

Its breath washed over Jaune. Hot. Dark. Smelling of ash and antiquity and something almost like respect. "Because you are built to kill things like me."

Around them, the battle had slowed. Grimm and humans alike paused, drawn by some primal gravity to the exchange. Even the other Grimm seemed confused, their relentless advance faltering as the Dragon, their progenitor, their living god , purred at a blonde boy with a dented shield.

"Look at you," the Dragon said, and there was something almost sad in it. "You don't even know what you are, do you? You stumble through this world with your borrowed armor and your clumsy stance and your fragile little shield, and you have no idea that the blood in your veins is the most dangerous thing on this planet."

Its eyes narrowed. It pulled back slightly, and its gaze shifted, comparing. Contrasting. The amber-eyed girl still on her knees atop the tower. The blonde boy in the courtyard below. Two inheritances. Two legacies. And the gulf between them was so vast it was almost funny.

"The witch reeks of theft. Of borrowed power clutched by desperate fingers. The wizard, oh, I smell him too, somewhere in this city dying, that old man with his staff and his stolen fragments of godhood, he is the same. Relics. Crutches. Parasites feeding on the corpses of an age that died before their grandfathers were born."

A low, rumbling growl, not of anger, but of contempt, vibrated through the air.

"They belong to a pathetic age. An age of leftovers. An age that scrabbles for the crumbs of powers it was never meant to touch. The Maidens. The Relics. Pale shadows of what the gods left behind, clutched by small, desperate things who think stealing fire makes them Prometheus."

The Dragon's head swung back to Jaune. The contempt vanished. In its place was something far more terrifying, pure Wonder. "But you, Jaune Arc. You are not a relic. You are not a thief. You are not a crutch. You are the original weapon. Forged before magic was divided. Tempered before light and darkness went to war. Your bloodline does not borrow power. It is power. The kind that cannot be stolen. The kind that cannot be given. The kind that can only be born."

Jaune's mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
"I... my family are just... we're just..." "JUST!!?"

The Dragon's voice cracked like a whip. The ground beneath Jaune's feet split. "Your ancestors slew my kin. They faced the gods and the gods blinked first. Every monster that has ever haunted your species' nightmares, the ones so ancient your historians have forgotten their names, the Arcs killed them. And you stand there and call them just?"

The Dragon drew itself up to its full, impossible height. Its wings spread wide. Its chest swelled. And when it spoke again, its voice was not contemptuous. Not mocking. Not cruel. It was exhilarated.

"I have slept for ten thousand years. I have watched your species rise and fall and rise again. I have seen empires burn and religions crumble and heroes turn to dust. And in all that time, I have wondered, wondered, if the Arcs were truly gone. If the gods had finally, after all their failures, managed to exterminate the one line they could never defeat."

Its eyes locked onto Jaune's. Blue met red. Terror met rapture. "And now, on the night I rise to end an age... I find you." The Dragon smiled.
It was the most horrifying thing anyone at Beacon had ever seen. "The gods could not kill your line, little slayer. The darkness could not swallow it. Time itself could not erode it."

Its wings beat once. A hurricane. The ground cracked in concentric circles radiating outward from the tower. "But I am not the gods. I am not the darkness. I am not time." The Dragon's voice rose to a crescendo that shook the sky itself. The broken moon above seemed to tremble.

"I am the thing your ancestors lived to destroy. And you, the last, the best, the brightest burning ember of a fire that refused to die, you will have the honor that no living soul has had in ten thousand years." Its jaws opened. Wide. Wider. The red glow in its throat intensified, building, to an end. "You will face a First Shadow." "And one of us will die."

Jaune Arc stood in the ruins of Beacon Academy, surrounded by falling ash and fleeing students and the screaming of a world coming apart, and he raised Crocea Mors with hands that would not stop shaking.

But he raised it. And somewhere deep in his blood, deeper than memory, deeper than training, deeper than fear, something old woke up.

Something that had been sleeping in the marrow of every Arc for ten thousand years. Something that had survived gods and darkness and the slow grind of ages. Something that the Dragon could smell like a furnace smells fuel.

Something that recognized the thing before it not as a nightmare, but as an old enemy. The shield on his arm, old, dented, passed down through generations of people who had no idea what they were carrying, hummed.

Not with aura or with semblance. But With an ancient heritage. The Dragon saw it and it roared with joy.
 
Jaune Arc, Single Father 50 New
The Star Maiden Garden was quiet and overgrown, full of crumbling stone ruins and wildflowers. It was technically off-limits for unaccompanied children, but Mia had wandered just far enough during recess to end up there, staying within bounds.



She wasn't going to wander out to get eaten by a Grimm... But those pretty purple flowers were so neat!



She was crouched beside a patch of the pretty purple flowers when a soft rustle made her look up.



A tall woman with long black hair and striking red eyes stepped out from behind a ruined pillar. Raven Branwen froze the moment she saw the small blonde Faunus girl staring at her with wide, curious eyes.



Mia tilted her head. "You look like Auntie Yang. Are you her mom?"



Raven was silent for a long moment. Then she gave one stiff nod.



Mia's ears perked up. "Why aren't you around? Auntie Yang misses you."



Raven crossed her arms. "I have important work to do."



"What kind of work?"



"I'm not telling you."



"Why?"



"It's a secret."



Mia crossed her arms right back, frowning. "That's dumb."



Raven's eyes narrowed. "You're lucky I don't feed you to the Grimm, brat."



Mia's lower lip wobbled instantly. Tears welled up, and she started crying in earnest.



Raven's tough exterior cracked almost immediately.



"Hey— wait, I didn't mean it. Stop crying."



Mia sniffled, looking up at her with big, watery eyes. "Do you mean it?"



Raven sighed, rubbing her temple. "…No. Just stop crying."



Mia wiped her eyes and smiled again. "Your sword is really cool."



Raven glanced down at her blade. "It was my father's."



"My papa has a cool sword too! I want one when I get older!"



Raven snorted. "Good for you."



Mia tilted her head. "Why don't you get Auntie Yang a sword? So she knows you care."



Raven paused. "I show I care in other ways."



"Like what?"



Raven sighed, looking almost tired. "By protecting her. And Ruby."



Mia frowned. "Why not hug them? Or be with them?"



Raven smirked faintly. "You're a wordy little brat, aren't you?"



Mia stuck her tongue out. "I wanna know! I really love Auntie Yang and want her to be my mom!"



Raven's expression flickered. She opened her mouth to respond when Yang's voice rang out from the path.



"Mia!"



Yang, Ruby, Weiss, and Blake came storming up, looking equal parts worried and annoyed.



"Mia, you can't keep wandering off like this!" Yang scolded, scooping her up.



Ruby nodded. "We were so worried!"



Weiss crossed her arms. "This is the second time this week!"



Blake sighed. "You promised you'd stay with the group."



Mia pointed over her shoulder. "Sorry! I was talking to Auntie Yang's mom! She can tell you all about it! I was super safe with her!"



They all turned.



A large black raven sat on a ruined wall, tilting its head before letting out a loud caw and flying off into the trees.



Yang sighed, hugging Mia tighter. "That's just a regular raven, kiddo."



Mia frowned. "No, it was her! I promise! She must have turned into the bird!"



Ruby smiled gently. "Come on, let's get you back to the others."



As they walked away, Mia scowled at the spot where the bird had been.



The raven circled once overhead before disappearing into the forest.



"Meanie bird Mom," Mia muttered.



She would get even with her!
 
"The King Still Breathes" New
"The King Still Breathes"

- - -

The training mission had turned into hell.

The Nevermore's screech tore through the canopy like a blade as it flew down upon them. Jaune's team—his new team—was scattered across three different ledges after the cliffside collapsed. Ruby was pinned under a fallen tree with her scythe jammed. Weiss was trying to glyph herself free while a pack of Beowolves closed in. Blake had already used her last Dust round. Yang's gauntlets were sparking, one barrel cracked. Nora and Ren were fighting frantically against a veritable herd of Boarbatusk, while Pyrrha was fighting valiantly against several Ursa.

And Jaune? Jaune was on his knees in the mud, one hand clutching the old leather satchel he'd smuggled from the Arc farmhouse. Inside were a few smooth, fist-sized spheres of black crystal veined with glowing gold. Grandpa Shirou had called them "the old man's last mistakes." Grandma Arturia had only ever said, "They are not toys, Jaune. They are older than kingdoms."

He'd never been able to make them do anything. Yet he couldn't get rid of them.

A Beowolf lunged for Ruby.

Jaune's hand closed around one of the spheres without thinking.

"Please," he whispered, voice cracking. "I don't care if it kills me. Just—give me something. Anything. I can't— I can't lose them. I can't be useless again—"

The sphere flared.

Not with Aura. Not with Dust. Something older. The air itself seemed to burn. A single vertical slit of molten gold opened inside the crystal—an eye the in his mind seemed the size of a cathedral window—and looked straight through him.

It saw every insecure thought. Every time he'd lied on his transcripts. Every time he'd swung Crocea Mors and felt like a child playing with his father's sword. Every night he'd cried in the bathroom at Beacon because he was terrified he was the weak link that would get his team killed.

The eye considered.

Hm… You'll do.

The words weren't heard. They were felt—a voice like mountains cracking and oceans boiling, ancient and amused and terrible... Yet kind.

The sphere detonated into pure light.

A roar shook the entire forest. Trees exploded outward in a perfect circle. The Nevermore that had been diving for the kill banked hard, wings beating in sudden animal panic.

From the pillar of golden fire rose Bahamut.

Not a Grimm. Not an airship. A dragon the size of a small mountain, scales like living sapphire and gold, wings that blotted out the rising sun. His eyes were the same burning vertical slits that had judged Jaune's soul. When he opened his jaws, the air itself ignited.

The Beowolves didn't even have time to scream.

A single breath from the dragon turned the entire pack into glowing ash, along with the rest of the Grimm closing on them.

The Nevermore tried to flee. Bahamut's tail flicked once. The giant bird detonated mid-air in a rain of burning feathers.

Then the King of Dragons looked down at the tiny, muddy, shaking boy still clutching the cracked remains of the sphere.

The great head lowered until one burning eye was level with Jaune's face. For a moment the entire forest was silent except for the crackle of burning wood and the distant sound of Ruby whispering, "What the hell—"

Bahamut's voice rolled through Jaune's bones like thunder wrapped in velvet.

"You are no hero yet, little king. But you carry the blood and heart of kings. That is enough. For now."

The dragon's form dissolved into rivers of golden light that poured back into the sphere—now warm and pulsing in Jaune's hand like a second heartbeat. The other two spheres in the satchel answered, glowing in sympathy.

Then he was just Jaune again. Kneeling in the mud. Covered in ash. Surrounded by his teammates and friends, staring at him like he'd grown a second head.

Ruby's silver eyes were the size of dinner plates. "Jaune… did you just… summon a dragon?!"

Weiss looked like she was experiencing every emotion at once and had settled on "deeply offended that the universe had not informed her of this earlier."

Pyrrha stepped toward him slowly, Miló still in hand.

"Jaune… what was that? Are you hurt?"

Nora was practically vibrating, Magnhild slung over one shoulder, pink eyes sparkling with manic glee.

"JAUNE YOU SUMMONED A DRAGON! A REAL ONE! IT BREATHED FIRE AND HAD A VOICE AND IT CALLED YOU LITTLE KING AND THEN IT JUST POOFED BACK INTO THE ROCK AND— CAN WE DO IT AGAIN?! PLEASE SAY WE CAN DO IT AGAIN!!"

Ren stood a little apart, StormFlower lowered, his usual calm expression cracked by the faintest widening of his eyes. He studied the sphere in Jaune's hand with quiet intensity.

Blake's ears were flat against her head. Yang was grinning like it was her birthday and someone had delivered her a tank.

Jaune stared at the sphere in his hand. It was cool again. Silent. But he could still feel it—them—watching. Waiting.

He swallowed.

"I… think I just became the world's most overqualified battery."
 
Last edited:
The Judgment of Alexander New
The Judgment of Alexander

Fall of Beacon: Courtyard Ruins

The sky over Beacon burned orange and red.

Cardin Winchester's shoulder slammed against the crumbled wall of the courtyard, his breath coming in ragged pulls. Behind him, Velvet Scarlatina pressed her back against the stone, one arm cradled against her chest, blood seeping through the torn fabric of her uniform. Beside her, Coco Adel sat propped up on debris, her sunglasses cracked and hanging off one ear, a gash across her forehead painting half her face in red.

"Coco.." Cardin started. "Save it," Coco rasped. Her Minigun lay in pieces twenty feet away, scattered by a Paladin's strike that had sent her flying. "Velvet needs attention more than me."

Velvet let out a pained sound, her aura flickering weakly around her. Her camera had been shattered in the initial assault. Her boxes of copied weapons had been trampled under the feet of fleeing students. She had nothing left.
"I'm fine," Velvet lied, teeth clenched. None of them were fine.

Through the smoke and dust, Cardin could see them assembling. A squad of hacked Atlesian Knights marched in rigid formation through the breach in the courtyard wall, their red optics scanning. Behind them, White Fang soldiers fanned out with rifles raised, their masks catching the firelight like grinning skulls. And above them, circling, waiting were a pack of Nevermores and Griffons rode the thermal currents, their eyes burning with malice.

A White Fang lieutenant stepped forward, his sword drawn. "Three more huntsmen-in-training," he called back to his squad with a laugh. "Looks half-dead already. Finish them."
The Knights raised their rifles in unison.

Cardin's hand moved on instinct, not to his mace, which had been lost somewhere in the chaos, but to his chest. To the necklace beneath his armor. The one his grandfather had given him before he'd died. The one Cardin had always dismissed as some old family trinket.

A simple iron chain. A red orb the size of a walnut, pulsing faintly with warmth. You'll know when the time comes, boy. You'll know. Cardin had laughed it off. Called it sentimental nonsense. He wasn't laughing now.

"Cardin, what are you..." Velvet started. He closed his fingers around the orb. The first volley of gunfire erupted from the Knights.
And Cardin prayed. Not to any god he knew. Not to any name he could put to words. He just poured everything he had into that single desperate thought, please, please, PLEASE!!!!

The orb ignited. The gunfire stopped mid-flight.
Every round, every single bullet, froze in the air like it had struck an invisible wall. The White Fang soldiers stumbled to a halt. The Grimm shrieked and veered away. Even the hacked Knights stuttered in their programming, servos whining in protest.

Coco's cracked sunglasses slid off her face entirely. "…What the hell?" The red orb in Cardin's hand blazed like a captured star. Light poured out of it in waves, not red anymore but holy, blinding, searing, white-gold radiance that pushed back the smoke and made the fires dim to candles. The light moved up, streaking into the sky like a pillar, punching through the cloud cover, splitting the burning sky open.

And then the ground trembled. Not like an earthquake. Not like a Paladin's footsteps. This was deep, a resonant, mechanical thrum that Cardin felt in his molars, in his sternum, in the marrow of his bones. It was the sound of something ancient turning on. Something that had been sleeping in that little red orb for longer than Remnant had a name.

The clouds parted. Velvet looked up and her breath left her entirely. It descended from the hole in the sky like a city falling from heaven.

Somehow she knows its name Alexander.
The Summon was enormous easily larger than any airship in the Atlesian fleet. It was a fortress given form, a cathedral of holy metal and divine machinery, all angular walls and concentric rings and towering spires that glowed with internal light. Its central body was a massive armored core shaped like a stylized face, serene, unmoving, judging. Concentric rings rotated slowly around it, each one inscribed with glyphs that burned white-gold. Wings, if you could call them that spread from its flanks, not feathered but layered, hundreds of interlocking plates that shifted and rearranged like living architecture.

The entire structure hummed with power. Not Dust. Not aura. Something else. Something older. The White Fang lieutenant took one step back. Then another. His sword shook in his grip. "What… what is that...?"

Alexander's core glowed brighter.

The rings around Alexander's body began to spin, faster and faster, the glyphs blurring into lines of solid light. Energy gathered in the fortress's core, building, constantly building, the air itself began to distort, heat and light and force compressing into a single point.

The Grimm felt it first. The Nevermores screamed, not their usual bone-rattling cry, but something different. Something afraid. They broke formation immediately, turning to flee, but it was too late. The Griffons followed, beating their wings desperately against the pressure that was building in the air. Even the Grimm on the ground, the Beowolves that had been creeping closer, froze, their red eyes widening with something no one had ever seen in a Grimm before. Fear just pure fear.

Because whatever was building in Alexander's core was the absolute antithesis of everything the Grimm were. It was light. It was order. It was holy not in the religious sense, but in the fundamental sense. The very force that rejected darkness on a molecular level. The White Fang soldiers started running.

The Atlesian Knights tried to retreat, their hacked programming screaming at them to flee, but their legs wouldn't move fast enough.

Cardin stood in the eye of it all, the necklace still burning in his hand, his eyes wide and streaming with tears from the light. He could feel Alexander's presence in his mind, vast, mechanical, righteous. It wasn't a person. It wasn't a creature. It was a principle. A weapon built by hands that had long since turned to dust, on a world that might not even be Remnant at all.

And it had chosen to answer him. "Judgment," Alexander's voice resonated, not through the air, but through Cardin's very bones. "Rendered."

The beam fired. It came from Alexander's core, a column of pure white-gold energy wider than the courtyard itself, descending like the finger of an angry god. It struck the ground with absolute silence.

For one second, nothing happened. Then the world erupted. The holy light expanded outward in a massive shockwave, and everything it touched was simply gone. The hacked Atlesian Knights didn't explode, they unraveled, their metal frames dissolving into particles of light as the sacred energy overloaded every circuit and shattered every bolt. The Paladin that had been stomping toward them let out a distorted mechanical shriek and came apart like a model hit by a sledgehammer, its armor plating peeling away in sheets before disintegrating.

The White Fang soldiers who hadn't fled far enough were hit by the shockwave's edge and sent flying, not killed, but purged. The darkness in their hearts, the malice, the bloodlust, the holy energy seared it out of them like a cauterizing iron. They collapsed, unconscious, their weapons crumbling to ash in their hands.

But the Grimm...The Grimm burned. Holy damage was not like Dust damage. It was not elemental. It was fundamental. The same way that Grimm were creatures of pure darkness given form, Alexander's judgment was pure light given wrath. The Nevermores that had been fleeing ignited in midair, their shadowy forms catching fire like paper held over a furnace. They didn't get a chance to scream. One moment they were there, the next they were unmade, their bodies breaking apart into black vapor that the holy light immediately consumed.

The Griffons fared no better. The shockwave caught them and they detonated, their bodies unable to contain the contradiction of pure light burning inside pure darkness. They popped like black balloons filled with starlight.

The Beowolves on the ground didn't even get that much. The beam's epicenter touched them and they simply ceased, no bodies left behind, no ash, no vapor. Just empty ground where they had been standing, as if they had never existed at all.

The shockwave expanded for a quarter mile in every direction, clearing the courtyard, the breach, the adjacent buildings, the forest edge where more Grimm had been gathering. Every shadow was banished. Every dark thing was purged. The very ground where the beam had struck glowed white-hot, a perfect circle of purified earth that would remain warm for days.

Then, slowly, the light faded. Alexander's rings slowed. The glyphs dimmed. The great fortress-summon rose back into the sky, its work done, its judgment delivered. It ascended through the clouds without a sound, and the pillar of light that had split the sky closed behind it like a wound healing.

The red orb in Cardin's hand went dark. He dropped to his knees.

Silence.

Absolute, ringing silence.

Cardin stared at the ground in front of him. Where a squad of Atlesian Knights had stood, there was nothing but scorched stone and a few lingering motes of white light drifting upward like fireflies. Where the White Fang had been, there were only unconscious bodies and scattered, rusted weapons. Where the Grimm had circled, there was empty air.

The entire courtyard, the entire section of the academy, had been cleared. Not a single Grimm remained. Not a single hostile machine. Not a single White Fang soldier still standing. "Cardin."
He looked up. Coco was staring at him, her mouth open, blood forgotten on her face. Her expression was one he had never seen on her before, not in class, not in training, not in the tournament.

Complete and utter shock. "Cardin," she said again, quieter this time. "What the fuck was that?" He looked down at the necklace in his hand. The red orb was dull now, just a plain little stone on an iron chain. But it was warm. Still warm. Like a heartbeat. "I…" His voice cracked. "I don't know."

Velvet let out a sound that was half-laugh, half-sob. She was crying, her good hand pressed over her mouth, her ears flat against her head. "You saved us," she whispered. "Cardin, you saved us." He wanted to feel triumphant. He wanted to feel like the hero.

All he felt was tired. He tucked the necklace back under his armor and looked at the two of them, wounded, broken, barely standing. But alive. Because of whatever the hell that thing had been.

"Can you walk?" he asked. Coco blinked. Then she let out a short, disbelieving laugh. "Did you really just ask if we can walk after you called down God's own artillery?"

"Can you walk or not?" "Yeah," Coco muttered, pushing herself up with a wince. "Yeah, I can walk." Cardin moved to Velvet and carefully pulled her arm over his shoulder, lifting her to her feet. She leaned into him, light as a bird, her breath hitching with pain.

"We need to find the others," he said, starting to move toward the academy's interior. "The evacuation point...." "Cardin." Velvet's voice was small. He stopped. "Your necklace," she said quietly. "It's glowing again." He looked down. Beneath his armor, the red orb pulsed once, soft and warm, like a heartbeat. Like it was listening.

Evernight Castle: That Same Moment

Salem had not felt pain in a very long time. Not true pain. Not the kind that reached past her immortal flesh and dug into something deeper. The curses that kept her alive, the Gods' twisted gifts had long since numbed her to such things. She could walk through fire, endure the bite of any weapon, suffer wounds that would kill a huntsman a hundred times over and feel nothing more than a mild pressure, like a finger pressed lightly against skin.

Pain was for mortals. Pain was for the small and the finite and the breakable. So when the sensation hit her, a white-hot spike of wrongness that lanced through her chest like a lightning bolt made of broken glass, she actually stumbled.

Her hand shot out and caught the armrest of her throne. Her black nails dug into the stone, leaving gouges. Her lips peeled back from her teeth. "What..." she hissed. It came again. Worse.

The connection she shared with the Grimm was not a leash. It was not a spell or a command structure or a network in any way that a human would understand it. It was biology. She was the source. The wellspring. Every Grimm that existed was, in some fundamental way, an extension of her, a fragment of her darkness given form and purpose and hunger. She felt them when they were created. She felt them when they fed. She felt them when they died, though she had long since learned to treat those sensations like background noise, like the ticking of a clock in a distant room.

But this was not background noise. This was screaming. Every Grimm in the vicinity of Beacon, every single one had been unmade at exactly the same moment, and the feedback slammed into Salem's consciousness like a tidal wave made of razors. She felt the Nevermores ignite. She felt the Griffons detonate. She felt the Beowolves cease not die, not perish to be be respawn later , but simply stop existing forever, as if they had been edited out of reality.

And threaded through that agony, woven into the destruction like a poisoned needle in silk, was something else. Light. Not the light of a semblance. Not the light of Dust. This was something alien, something that did not belong to Remnant, something that operated on rules her world had never catalogued. It was holy in a way that made the Brothers' light look like a candle held up to the sun. It was judgmental. It looked at the darkness inside her, the ancient, bottomless, God-cursed darkness and it rejected it.

Not fought it. Not clashed with it. Rejected it. As if the darkness had no right to exist in its presence. Salem screamed. The Grimm in the halls of Evernight Castle went mad.

The Apathy that lurked in the shadows began to shriek, a sound no Apathy had ever made, a sound that sent the Grimm-human servants fleeing in terror. The Sphinxes in the outer courtyards thrashed and wailed, smashing their own bodies against the walls. The Leviathans in the deep lakes surrounding the castle dove to the bottom and buried themselves in mud, trying to escape a pressure that came from everywhere and nowhere.

In her throne room, Salem fell to her knees.
The darkness inside her, the curse, the corruption, the thing that the God of Darkness had poured into her soul when she had jumped into the Pool of Grimm recoiled. It pulled back from the edges of her being like a tide retreating from shore, driven away by the holy resonance that still echoed through the Grimm network, still rang in the space where a hundred Grimm had just been erased.

And in the space that the darkness left behind,
Salem's eyes snapped wide. For the first time in a long while, she has Clarity. . The word didn't begin to cover it. It was like surfacing from deep water after holding her breath for millennia. Like removing a blindfold she had forgotten she was wearing. Like waking up from a dream so long and so all-consuming that she had forgotten what it meant to be awake.

She could think.

Not the slow, grinding, obsidian-heavy thoughts that had become her normal existence, thoughts that always curved back to destruction, to revenge, to the Relics, to the Brothers, to the same endless loop of rage and grief that had defined her for longer than most civilizations had existed. No. These thoughts were fast. They were sharp. They connected to each other in ways she hadn't experienced since Since before.

Since Ozma. Since she had been human. "Oh," she breathed. And then the memories came, not corrupted, not filtered through the lens of ancient rage, but clear. She remembered jumping into the Pool of Grimm. She remembered why. She remembered the grief, yes, but she could see it now for what it was grief. Not justification. Not fuel. Just grief. Raw and awful and human.

She remembered the God of Light's rejection. She remembered the God of Darkness's twisted gift. She remembered the first time she realized she couldn't die, and the terror of that realization, not the cold indifference she had worn like armor for ten thousand years, but the actual, bone-deep fear of a woman who just wanted to see her daughters again and had been told she never, ever could.

"I..." Her voice cracked. "I was so..." She looked at her hands. Black, clawed, inhuman. The hands of a monster. And she saw them. Really saw them. Not as tools. Not as weapons. As her hands, transformed and twisted and wrong.

"I was so angry," she whispered, and the words came out shaking. "I was so angry and I... I never stopped, I just .... I never stopped..." Tears.
She was crying. Salem, the Queen of the Grimm, the immortal terror of Remnant, the being that had brought kingdoms to ruin and ground the God of Light's plans to dust over and over and over again, was crying. Black tears that leaked from red eyes, running down pale cheeks, dripping onto the stone floor of her own throne room.

She didn't wipe them away. For the first time in ten thousand years, she didn't want to. "I killed them," she said, and her voice was small, human small. "I killed so many people. I... Ozma tried to help me and I ... I used him, I..."

The name hit her like a physical blow. Ozma.
Not the enemy. Not the obstacle. Not the cosmic joke she had spent millennia tormenting. Ozma. Her husband. Her partner. The man who had loved her and she had..

"I destroyed everything," she whispered. "Everything he built. Everything he .... every life, every ... oh Gods, what did I..." She pressed her hands to her face and wept. The Grimm in the castle went still. Not calm, confused. Their mistress was emitting something they had never felt from her before. Something that didn't compute. Something that had no place in the biology of darkness.

Grief...Pure, undiluted, uncorrupted grief. It lasted perhaps ninety seconds. Ninety seconds of clarity. Ninety seconds of sobbing. Ninety seconds of a woman who had been lost for ten thousand years finally, finally seeing the path she had wandered down and understanding, with the full, devastating weight of a clear mind, exactly how far she had gone.

Then the darkness came back. It started at the edges. A familiar heaviness in her fingertips. A slow creep of cold up her spine. The tears began to slow, not because the grief was fading, but because the capacity for it was being smothered. Like ash falling over a fire. Like a hand closing over a candle. "No," Salem gasped. She clutched her head. "No, no, no..."

But it was like trying to hold back the ocean with her bare hands. The curse was part of her now, woven into her soul so thoroughly that removing it would be like removing her own heartbeat. The holy resonance had driven it back temporarily, had created a space where the real Salem could breathe, but the curse was patient. It had waited ten thousand years. It could wait a few more minutes.

The clarity dulled. The sharp edges of her thoughts began to soften and blur. The grief, that beautiful, awful, human grief was swallowed by the returning tide of ancient rage.
But not all of it. That was the cruelest part. Not all of it.

Salem felt the darkness settle back into place like a familiar coat. She felt her thoughts slow down, felt the rage reassert itself, felt the cold indifference crawl back over her emotions like frost over a window. The transformation was nearly complete. Nearly. Because deep inside her, buried under ten thousand years of curse and corruption and spite, there was still a crack. A hairline fracture in the darkness where the light had touched her. And in that crack, something survived.

Not the full clarity. Not the weeping, repentant woman who had knelt on her throne room floor. Just a spark. A memory of what it had felt like to be her. To think clearly. To feel remorse. To understand, even for a moment, the monstrous scale of what she had become.

A splinter of light in an infinite darkness. Salem rose to her feet. Her face was blank. Her eyes were red. The tears had dried to black tracks on her cheeks that she did not bother to wipe away.
She stood in the silence of her throne room, surrounded by the stillness of her confused Grimm, and she remembered being sorry.

And then she didn't. And then she did. And then she.. She closed her eyes.."What," she said quietly, to no one, to everything, "was that?"
The darkness purred in her chest, secure once more, confident and ancient and absolute.
But it did not answer. Because for the first time in ten thousand years, the darkness was not the only thing living in Salem's soul. And it knew.

Beacon Academy : Courtyard Ruins : Moments Later

Cardin stopped walking. Velvet stirred against his shoulder. "Cardin? What's wrong?" He didn't answer. His eyes had gone distant, unfocused, like someone watching a screen that no one else could see. The red orb beneath his armor had begun to pulse, not with light, not with heat, but with information. Data. Knowledge. Something was pouring into his mind in a language he shouldn't be able to understand but somehow could, like reading a book written in a script he'd never learned but inherently knew.

Coco noticed it first. His eyes. The way they moved behind his eyelids, tracking invisible lines of text. "Cardin? Hey. Cardin." He didn't hear her.

He was reading. The report didn't have words, not exactly. It was more like a structure, a framework of pure understanding that assembled itself in his consciousness like a building rising from blueprints. Categories. Designations. Assessments. All of it crystal clear, all of it terrifying, all of it branded into his mind with the same white-gold intensity of the beam that had just saved his life.

He saw the battle. Not from his own perspective, from above. From Alexander's perspective. He watched the holy light expand and consume and he understood, with clinical precision, exactly what it had done to every target it touched.

He saw the Knights unravel. He understood why, sacred energy overwriting corrupted programming at the base code level, reducing complex machines to their constituent particles. He saw the White Fang fall and understood the mechanism, non-lethal purge, the darkness extracted from living souls without killing the vessel. He saw the Grimm cease to exist and understood the fundamental truth: holy damage didn't kill Grimm. It negated them. Erased the darkness that gave them form. Returned them to the nothing they had come from.

And then the report shifted and them Cardin saw her. A throne room. Black stone. Ancient. A woman on her knees, pale, black-veined, terrifyingly beautiful in a wrong and broken way. And she was crying. Sobbing. Weeping with a grief so raw and so human that it made Cardin's chest ache despite everything he knew about what she was. He didn't know her name. The report didn't give him one. But it gave him a designation:

SOURCE ENTITY.

And it gave him a timeline of what had happened in that throne room, displayed not in words but in understanding, in pure comprehension that slotted into his brain like a key into a lock:

Holy resonance transmitted through Grimm network upon mass erasure. Feedback loop reached source entity in approximately 0.3 seconds. Dark corruption, the curse binding the source entity, experienced forced recoil. Estimated 12-15% of total dark mass temporarily displaced from soul structure. Source entity achieved approximate 90 seconds of uncorrupted cognitive function before dark mass reasserted dominance.

Residual effect: Micro-fracture detected in dark binding. Permanent. Non-repairable by source entity's inherent regeneration.

Assessment: The darkness can be pulled back. It has been proven. The immortal is not invulnerable. She is not unchangeable.

She is just very, very patient. So is the light.Cardin gasped, his knees buckled. He would have fallen if Velvet hadn't been there to steady his shoulder, and in the end, they both went down together, sliding against a broken wall, Coco lunging to catch them.

"Cardin! Cardin!" Coco grabbed his face, forcing him to look at her. His eyes were wild, wide and white and shaking. "What's happening? Talk to me!" He stared at her. His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. "I saw her," he whispered.
" Saw who? " "I don't know." His voice was barely audible. "The one who makes them. The Grimm. I saw,she felt it, Coco. She felt what I did. And for a minute... just a minute... she was..."

He couldn't finish the sentence. Because he'd felt it too. Through the report, through the data, through whatever bond the orb had forged with him in that moment of summoning, he'd felt a ghost of what Salem had felt in those ninety seconds.

The grief. The horror. The remorse. The unbearable, crushing weight of ten thousand years of murder remembered all at once by a mind finally clear enough to understand it. "She was sorry," Cardin said, and his own voice broke on the word. "For ninety seconds, she was sorry."

Coco and Velvet stared at him.
Neither of them knew what to say.

Beneath Cardin's armor, the red orb pulsed one final time, a slow, steady beat, warm and patient against his chest. And then, in the back of his mind, in that same wordless language of pure understanding, the report concluded itself. Not as text. Not as sound. As a single, absolute certainty that settled into his bones like marrow:

Summon Log : Alexander :First Summon: Complete.

Bond Established. Summoner Compatibility: Winchester Bloodline :Awakened.

Side Effect: Resonance Feedback through Grimm Network :Target: Source Entity : Result: Temporary Purge of Dark Corruption, 90 seconds. Residual Effect: Micro-fracture in Dark Binding : PERMANENT.

Assessment: The darkness can be pulled back. It has been proven.

The immortal is not invulnerable. She is not unchangeable.

She is just very, very patient.

So is the light.

Next Summon Available.

Awaiting Input.

The presence receded. The warmth remained. Cardin pressed his hand against the orb beneath his armor and felt it pulse back against his palm, once, twice like a heartbeat answering a heartbeat.

In the silence that followed, Beacon burned around them. Somewhere in the distance, Grimm howled and airships crashed and people screamed. The Fall of Beacon was still happening. Nothing had been saved, not really. Not the academy. Not the kingdom. Not the world.

But a crack had been made.

Not in the walls. Not in the sky.

In ten thousand years of darkness.

And the thing that had made it was a boy no one believed in, holding a necklace he'd never understood, standing in a ruined courtyard with two wounded girls at his side and something vast and patient sleeping against his chest.

Cardin Winchester pulled himself to his feet.
He lifted Velvet up again. Nodded to Coco.
"We need to move," he said. His voice was steady. His hand was shaking. But beneath his armor, the orb was warm. And waiting.
 
The Dominant and the Eikon New
The howl of the Grimm split the evening air like a serrated knife.

Six-year-old Jaune clung to Saphron's hand as they sprinted through the outskirts of the old town district. The shrines and monuments to the Arcs of old blurred past—tall stone figures standing sentinel under the fading light. Roland III with his broken sword raised high. Jeanne D'Arc, her warm smile carved forever into marble. Georges the Unbroken, broad-shouldered and defiant even in stone. Their ancestors. Their legacy.

They'd gone out to visit... And the alarms had screamed with the howls. And so they ran out back home.

Saphron's grip was iron. "Keep running, Jaune! The militia's fighting them back, but we have to reach the shelters!"

Behind them the howls grew louder. Closer. The ground shook with the thunder of paws and claws. Jaune's short legs burned. Tears already stung his eyes.

They stumbled into the old church at the edge of the district—an ancient, half-forgotten place with weathered stone walls and a sagging roof. Saphron dragged him inside, heart hammering. They dove under a heavy oak pew near the back, dust and old incense choking the air.

Two Beowolves prowled through the broken doorway, red eyes glowing in the gloom. Their growls rattled the rafters.

"Be quiet," she whispered, pulling him tight against her chest. Her voice shook but never broke. "Stay down. When I say run, you run to the shelters. Don't look back."

Jaune's whole body trembled.

"N-No!" He whispered.

Saphron pressed a kiss to the top of his head, then gently pried his fingers from her shirt.

"I love you," she whispered, "Now—run!"

She exploded upward with a scream that echoed off the old stones, bolting toward the far window. The Beowolves roared and gave chase. Glass shattered as Saphron hurled herself through it.

Jaune scrambled out from under the pew on shaking legs. He could hear her outside—running, gasping, the Grimm right behind her. She'd fallen. He knew it. She was trapped.

Please… Please… There has to be a way to save her! I would give anything to save her! PLEASE!

The world answered.

The church went black. Flames—golden, ancient, impossibly hot—roared up around him without burning. A great reptilian eye opened in the darkness above, vertical slit blazing like molten gold. Jaune trembled so hard his teeth chattered. His legs gave out. Warmth spread down his pants as terror overtook him.

A voice filled his mind—deep, ancient, like mountains cracking and oceans boiling, amused and terribly generous.

"That is a dangerous thing to promise, child. Anything? But… I am generous. I remember your family of old, boy. The blood of kings and blade-makers still runs true. You will have what you want… And maybe one day you will forgive yourself for it."

Outside, the two Beowolves had cornered Saphron against a gnarled tree. She was on the ground, bleeding from a cut on her forehead, one leg twisted. The lead Grimm crouched to pounce.

Then the church exploded with light.

A roar that shook the very bones of Radian tore through the air. From the ruined roof rose Bahamut—the King of Dragons, sapphire scales flashing, wings blotting out the stars. Golden fire wreathed his form. The Beowolves froze. For the first time in their wretched lives, the Grimm knew fear.

They turned to flee.

It did them no good.

Bahamut's claws swept down like judgment itself. One Beowolf was torn apart mid-leap. The second tried to dodge, only to be incinerated by a blast of pure golden energy that lit up the entire churchyard like dawn. Saphron stared, mouth open, as the dying light revealed the impossible.

"Bahamut…?!"
 
The Confession New
It was late, after a joint training session with CFVY. Everyone was sweaty, laughing, packing up gear in the locker room. Coco was teasing Velvet about her ears twitching every time Yatsuhashi walked by—"Girl, just ask him out already"—when Velvet paused and sniffed the air. She slowly turned to stare intensely at Blake.

Blake, tying her bow a little tighter out of habit, froze mid-motion at the stare.

"Yes, Velvet?" Blake asked quietly. "Something... I can help you with?"

Velvet sniffed a few more times. She stared at Blake.

"... When was the last time you were in Atlas, Blake?"

Velvet's voice was quiet. Too quiet.

Blake's heart dropped into her stomach. She opened and closed her mouth, slowly.

"Blake? What's up?" Yang asked, leaning from her locker. Ruby and Weiss looked with concern too.

"When was it?" Velvet pressed again.

Velvet was staring at her, ears flat against her head, fists clenched so tight her knuckles were white. The room had gone dead silent—Coco's sunglasses slipped down her nose. Weiss tensed a bit. Ruby looked confused, as Yang frowned deeply.

"I..." Blake started, but the words died.

Velvet took one step forward. "You were there."

It wasn't a question.

Blake's mouth went dry. "Velvet—"

"That night. My parents. Atlas suburbs. Three years ago." Velvet's voice cracked like a whip. "I remember the masks. The horns on one of them. I was hiding in the closet. I heard everything. I smelled everything." Her eyes filled with tears, but they were furious tears. "You were the lookout."

The accusation hung in the air like smoke.

Blake didn't deny it. She couldn't.

Coco stepped between them instinctively. "Vel, what the hell—"

"Get out of the way, Coco," Velvet said, voice trembling. "She was there when they broke my father's ribs. When they told my mother she'd betrayed her people by marrying a human. When they—" She choked. "I thought they were going to kill them."

Blake's knees felt weak. "I didn't know," she whispered. "I didn't know it was going to be like that."

Velvet laughed, a broken, bitter sound. "You didn't know? You were there!"

"I was told—" Blake swallowed hard. "I was told your mother was selling Menagerie secrets to Atlas. That we were just... questioning her. I was new. They kept me outside. I was uncomfortable—I faked a police siren to get them to leave early—"

"You think that makes it better?!" Velvet shouted. "You think pretending to be a lookout while they beat my parents half to death makes you innocent?!"

Coco reached for Velvet's shoulder. She shrugged her off violently.

Blake's eyes were burning. "No. It doesn't. Nothing makes it better."

Velvet stared at her for a long moment, chest heaving. Then she turned and walked out, ears pinned flat, shoulders shaking.

The locker room was silent.

Coco rounded on Blake. "Explain. Now."

Blake couldn't. She just slid down the lockers until she was sitting on the floor, arms wrapped around her knees.
 
Jaune Arc, Single Father 51 New
The RWBY common room was thick with anticipation as Yang stepped inside and closed the door behind her. All eyes immediately locked onto her.

Ruby was practically vibrating on the edge of the couch. Weiss sat with perfect posture, arms crossed. Blake had abandoned her book entirely. Pyrrha stood near the window, calm on the surface but with a dangerous glint in her emerald eyes.

Yang leaned against the door and sighed.

"He's not picking anyone," she announced. "He wants to go to the dance as friends. With all of us. Says he doesn't want to cause any team drama right before the big training missions start."

A beat of silence.

Then Weiss's eye twitched. "Of course he picked the coward's option."

Ruby deflated. "But… I wanted to go with him…"

Blake closed her book with a soft snap. "So he's just… avoiding the choice."

Pyrrha's smile was serene, but her fingers tightened slightly. "Understandable. But that doesn't change the situation."

Yang pushed off the door, a dangerous grin spreading across her face. "Exactly. So here's what I'm thinking…"

The girls all leaned in, eyes gleaming with competitive fire.

Yang continued: "We compete for his attention at the dance! Whoever gets the most dances, the most smiles, the most moments wins!"

Ruby frowned.

"Yang, I'm not sure about this-"

"That just means you think you'll lose," Weiss sniffed. Ruby scowled.

"I can win better than you any day! I-I'll show you!"

Weiss flipped her hair. "I already have the perfect dress in mind. He won't know where to look first."

Blake's lips curved into a sly, feline smile. "I know how to move in the shadows. He won't even realize I'm playing until it's too late."

Pyrrha's usual gentle demeanor sharpened. "I've trained with him for months. I know exactly how to make his heart race."

Yang cracked her knuckles. "Game on, ladies."

The room quickly dissolved into whispered plotting and scheming.

From the doorway, Nora poked her head in (having clearly been eavesdropping). She beamed.

"What are we all scheming about? Can I join? Ren's being boring about the dance."

All five girls turned and shouted in unison:

"NO!"

Nora pouted and headed off.

"I never get to scheme... Phooey..."

Inside the room, the plotting continued late into the night. Each girl was secretly determined to win Jaune's heart at the Beacon Dance.

And somewhere across campus, Jaune suddenly felt a chill run down his spine.

He had no idea what was coming.

But he knew he was definitely in trouble.
 
Whiter Rose: "The Ghost" New
Whiter Rose: "The Ghost"

- - -

The world had ended in fire and silence.

Whitley Schnee stood alone atop the broken spire of what had once been Beacon Academy, the wind howling through the shattered towers like the ghosts of the dead. His white hair was streaked with ash and blood, his once-immaculate coat reduced to tattered rags beneath a suit of scarred Atlas armor. The glyph on his left hand pulsed with faint, dying light.

He was the last one.

Everyone else was gone. Ruby. Yang. Blake. Weiss. Jaune. Pyrrha. Ren. Nora. Even his sisters. All consumed by the endless tide of Grimm that had poured from the shattered moon like a second Flood.

But he still had her.

He raised his hand, fingers trembling as he traced the glyph in the air. The air cracked like glass, and she stepped through.

Ruby Rose.

Not the bright-eyed girl who had once dragged him to arcades and made him laugh until his sides hurt. This was the summon - a translucent echo of silver and red, her scythe spinning in perfect, silent arcs. Her silver eyes glowed with an inner light that was no longer alive, but still fiercely protective. The hood of her cloak fluttered in the wind as if she were still breathing.

She landed beside him without a sound, scythe resting on her shoulder, head tilted in that familiar, curious way.

Whitley's voice was rough, scraped raw from years of screaming orders that no one lived to obey.

"…Ruby."

The summon's eyes brightened at the sound of her name. She reached out - a ghostly hand passing through his cheek like mist - and for a moment the old warmth flickered in those silver eyes.

He closed his own eyes and let the memory take him.

- - - -

Rain. Blood. The ruined courtyard of what had once been their home.

Ruby lay in his arms, silver eyes dimming, her chest a ruin of shattered ribs and torn flesh. She smiled anyway - that same crooked, defiant smile that had stolen his heart the first time she dragged him onto the dance floor.

"Whitley…" she whispered, blood bubbling at the corner of her lips. "Use my power… It's the only way you can save everyone…"

He shook his head violently, tears cutting tracks through the dirt on his face. "No. No, I can't- I won't-"

She reached up with a shaking hand and cupped his cheek. "You have to. Please. I'm… I'm already gone. But if you take me with you… I can still fight. I can still protect you."

He bowed his head, shoulders shaking. The sword in his hand felt heavier than the world.

"Ruby… I… I love-"

Her smile softened, eyes fluttering. "I know. I love you too. Please, Whitley… Let me stay with you."

He kissed her forehead one last time, tasting salt and iron.

Then he drove the blade through her heart.

The light in her silver eyes went out.

He stayed there for a long time, cradling her body, before the roar of approaching Grimm Griffins forced him to move. He burned her remains with a blast of Fire Dust - he would not let the creatures desecrate her. Would not let anyone turn her into a trophy.

When the first Griffin landed, he raised his hand.

A glyph flared.

And she stepped through once more - eyes glowing, scythe spinning, cloak billowing like a banner of war.

Whitley's voice was ice.

"There's one significant difference between her and me… She was the nice one. I'm not."

- - - -

The memory faded.

Whitley opened his eyes to the present. The Griffins were circling, their shrieks cutting through the storm. The summon - his Ruby - stood at his side, head tilted, waiting.

He drew his sword, the blade humming with Dust and raw Aura.

"Ready?" he asked the ghost.

She nodded once, a faint, familiar smile flickering across her translucent face.

Whitley's eyes hardened into chips of frozen sapphire.

"Then let's make them pay."

He raised his hand.

The glyph exploded outward in a storm of white and crimson light.

Ruby's summon blurred forward, scythe carving through the first Griffin in a spray of black ichor and silver fire. Whitley followed in her wake, blade flashing, glyphs flaring with every step. Together they moved like they always had - perfectly in sync, two halves of the same storm.

The Griffins fell in pieces.

And through it all, Whitley Schnee - the last Schnee, the sole survivor, the man who had killed the only person he had ever truly loved - fought with the cold, merciless precision of someone who had nothing left to lose.

Except the ghost at his side.

And the memory of a girl who had once smiled at him like he was worth more than his name and money.

As the last Griffin dissolved into smoke, Whitley lowered his sword, breathing hard. The summon drifted closer, reaching out again. This time her hand almost felt warm.

He closed his eyes.

"…Thank you," he whispered. "For staying with me."

The ghost of Ruby Rose smiled - soft, sad, and eternal - before fading back into the glyph.

Whitley Schnee stood alone on the broken spire once more.

But he was never truly alone.

Not while she still fought beside him.

Not while her silver light still burned in the dark.
 
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