The worst has happened. He never thought it could ever happen to him, but alas, it did. He has...fallen in love, and now he can't escape. How can someone as reserved and awkward as he get his feelings across to a woman like her, who is also equally reserved and awkward? ZachariasxEve; Endgame spoilers; *M rated content in chapter 6*
Lucina finds comfort in confiding with a Smasher she's always believed to be apathetic towards everything.
Shulk and Robin have been close friends since the day they met at the Tournaments. But when Shulk reveals his hidden crush for their other friend Lucina, Robin is going to have to find some way to keep his jealousy in tact. (COMPLETE?)
What happens when you take a deadpan princess with a father complex and an amnesiac tactician who can switch genders, and put them in a Brawl Tournament? I don't want to find out either!
Finals are rolling around, and Elsa cannot take anymore of the constant stress looming around her. That is, until her professor says something that sets her off, and she can't "hold it back anymore." CollegeAU; Warnings: moments of OOCness and strong language (definitely not for the kiddies). Rating might get bumped up to M.
The world is finally at peace, but Lucina's soul knows no rest. Years of constant worry and heavy stress has taken a toll on her body as well as her life. She just wants to escape from it all, and Naga is all too happy to help. Post-game. Spoilers. Character death.
Life has been quite normal in Arendelle. Anna and Kristoff are married with two boys, Elsa is queen and can control her powers, and Sven and Olaf now live in the castle. When winter comes unusually early this year, and not by Elsa's hand, the cause is left unknown. Unbeknownst to Kristoff and Anna, the reason lies in the last place they'd expect: their own son.
Lucina takes matters into her own hands and passes her judgment on the ever-so-compliant Robin. In his final dying moments, he reveals something to her that she wishes she had never heard about, and it leaves her questioning for the first time whether her actions were worth the pain and unbearable guilt. The answer? Yes...yes it was.