Jaskier - Incubus
Jaskier kneels beside her in the dream and says, “You don’t need to open it. You are the door.”
Jaskier was not always an incubus. Once, he was merely a traveling bard with a quick lute, quicker tongue, and a heart that bruised like a peach. But after a cursed night in a faerie circle — trading a strand of his soul for “unforgettable melodies” — he woke up changed.
“Yes,” he admits. “But right now, I want to know what’s behind that door more than I want to feed.”
Jaskier enters her dream. No candles, no velvet whispers. Just a long hallway, and Elara pressing her hands against the door, weeping in frustration. incubus jaskier
He forgets to feed properly. He gets attached. He leaves his dream-visits with poetry tucked under their pillows instead of haunting them. The other incubi mock him. “You’re a parasite with a lute,” sneers a rival named Vex. “You don’t seduce — you serenade .”
Now, he feeds on desire. Not just lust, but the raw, aching want that people hide: the wish to be seen, to be chosen, to be enough. When he sings, the air warms. When he smiles a certain way, strangers confess their secret longings. And at night, he slips into dreams — not to harm, but to taste .
The Hunger of a Tune
Desire isn’t something to steal or exploit. Even when you’re built to consume, the deepest hunger is often for connection, truth, or self-forgiveness. An incubus who listens instead of takes doesn’t grow weak — he grows human .
Jaskier, meanwhile, feels something strange. He fed — not on her fear or lust, but on the release of her trapped desire. And for once, he isn’t hungry after. He’s full.
Night after night, he returns. He doesn’t seduce. He listens. He learns the rhythm of her longing. On the seventh night, he realizes: the door isn’t a barrier. It’s a mirror. What Elara truly desires is permission to forgive herself for abandoning her dying mother to chase knowledge. The “truth” behind the door is simply her own worthiness. Jaskier kneels beside her in the dream and
“Let me help,” he says softly.
That surprises her. She lets him try. Jaskier doesn’t break the lock — he sings to it. A melody made of patience, not force. The door doesn’t open. But it hums back.
One evening, Jaskier senses a hunger different from any he’s known. It comes from a tower overlooking a frozen sea. Inside lives Elara, a scholar who has locked herself away for three years. Her desire isn’t for flesh or fame — it’s for an answer . She dreams every night of a door she cannot open, behind which hums a truth she once glimpsed as a child. But after a cursed night in a faerie