As of February 10, 2026, I do NOT take commissions traditionally, but if asked I will give you a timeframe for when I would be able to service you



“Do what is right, not what is easy nor what is popular.”Ashor
He/Him
17
Bisexual & PolyamorousHi, feathers! 🪶
I’m a teen author, graphic designer, and digital artist who is perpetually juggling too many ideas at once. I’m currently working on six (yes, six) writing projects and fully believe I’ll finish a book I’m proud of one day; just trust.I design all of my own book covers and graphics, and I occasionally create art for friends. I don’t take commissions as of 02/02/2026, but that may change in the future. I also love designing original characters, and I plan to make adopts someday because if I don’t, I will forget I own them, and they deserve better homes than my brain provides.Outside of creative chaos, I work as a kindergarten speech teacher, swim instructor, and ranch hand, which honestly sounds insane to past me, but here we are."I write only because there is a voice within me that will not be stilled."

This is an artistic representation of what I look like :D
(Shocking, I'm not a borzoi irl XD)
Rowan Hart is perfectly content being the campus grump: quiet, focused, emotionally unavailable, and allergic to most forms of social interaction.As the brooding captain of the university soccer team, he's used to people assuming he's intimidating or uninterested... which is fine. He prefers it that way.Theo Vale, unfortunately, does not seem to get the hint.Theo is all sunshine: bright smiles, loud laughter, relentless optimism, and a talent for turning even the coldest rooms warm. As a design major with golden-retriever energy, Theo has a way of burrowing under people's skin... in Rowan's case, against his will.When a class scheduling mix-up and a mandatory project force them together, annoyance turns into banter, banter into tension, and tension into something Rowan definitely shouldn't want.
In the city of Verriane, magic isn't just power - it's art. Glassmakers trap sunlight in their creations, painters seal emotions in canvases, and every craft carries a fragment of the maker's soul. A seventeen-year-old glassmaker's apprentice thought she understood her craft - until a mirror in her workshop begins whispering secrets that shouldn't exist.When the mirror is stolen, she chases the thief through the city's shadowed streets, discovering a world of hidden powers, dangerous alliances, and mysteries that refuse to stay buried. Every reflection, every secret, seems to lead her closer to a truth she isn't sure she's ready to face, and she discovers that some reflections hide more than they show - and some secrets are worth risking everything to uncover...
Theo Martinez believes in being right.
Alexander Harper believes in being understood.Their professional rivalry has been quietly contained for years, stuck between lesson plans, faculty meetings, and a shared hallway. But when attention turns their way, and the tension between them refuses to stay academic, both men are forced to confront what really matters and the assumptions they've built their lives around.Correct Me If I'm Wrong is a dual-POV, slow-burn academic rivals romance with sharp humor, quiet angst, and very unprofessional feelings.2026 ONC entry
During a family game night, a harmless play unraveled into shouting, police lights, and a house that no longer felt safe. Seen through the eyes of an eight-year-old, this memoir captures the fear of adults' anger, as well as the quiet, unforgettable kindness of a stepsister who offered a moment of safety when everything else was falling apart.This memoir was originally written as part of my AP Language and Composition midterm exam. The assignment required us to write a personal narrative that demonstrated rhetorical awareness, reflection, and clarity. Essentially, a true story that showed how a specific experience shaped our understanding of something larger.I decided to share this memoir publicly because experiences like this are more common than we often like to admit, especially in our childhood years. While every family and situation is different, the feelings of fear, uncertainty, and reliance on others for safety are widely shared. I hope that readers who recognize parts of themselves in this story feel less alone.