Saturday, September 27, 2025

Aimless Wish part 2 of 2



Aimless Wish
by Varian Milagro

This story was created with the assistance of AI. All the characters, dialog, plot and settings are mine. ChatGPT took my series of long, very detailed, rambling, stream of conscousness prompts and formatted them into something coherent and added bits of sensory detail. I also used AI to create the illustrations.

Part 1

By two o'clock on Friday, Chase had already been to two breakfast meetings and a mid-morning walk-through of a private garden gala venue before arriving at the nondescript address scribbled onto the back of an RSVP card. He pulled up in his pearl white 2021 Lexus RX 350, the rose gold accents catching in the sunlight like jewelry. The hybrid hummed to a quiet stop, purring beneath him. He touched the power button with a manicured finger and took a long breath.

He stepped out in blush pink stilettos that made a clear click on the sidewalk. With his teakwood leather handbag hooked in the crook of one arm. Chase looked every inch the poised, powerful woman his business cards now suggested he was.

The sheen of his silk ivory pussy-bow blouse shimmered in the dappled sunlight breaking through the trees. It was sheer—but with intention—revealing nothing except exquisite tailoring. His blazer, cream with satin lapels, swung open confidently over the blouse, the cuffs crisp and studded with delicate gold cufflinks. His blush pencil skirt hugged his hips like a sculpted glove, dipping into a modest back slit that moved like a whisper when he walked.

Then, the sound of pure chaos.

A sudden roar of an engine—throaty, proud, slightly illegal. Riley’s rose gold 2023 Mercedes CLA Coupe screamed around the corner and pulled up next to his Lexus in a blur of chrome and flirtation.

“You win on best car again,” Chase said dryly.

Riley emerged like a fashion-forward Bond girl. Her ivory square-neck knit bodysuit hugged every inch of her upper body with precision, just conservative enough to disarm, just tight enough to entice. High-waisted wide-leg trousers in warm taupe billowed around her long legs as she moved, the golden buckle of her designer belt flashing with every sway of her hips. On her feet, gold pointed mules made a more delicate click than Chase’s stilettos, but the energy was the same—domination with poise.

She pulled off her oversized sunglasses and gave him a sly grin. “Damn right. Yours says ‘power brunch.’ Mine says ‘I can lose the cops in three turns.’”

They looked at each other for a moment—just looked. And in that quiet assessment, each tried to reconcile who the other had become with who they'd been just a week ago. There was still a faint echo of the old Riley in the sorority goddess standing there. But Chase was someone else entirely. Not a trace of the man he'd been still remained. Every line of his body, every step he took, every breath he drew radiated elegant, feminine authority.

"I need to tell you about my date," Riley said as they walked to the front door. "And I want to hear all about yours."

“If we haven’t changed back after this appointment, let’s go to Elixiria. It’s a wellness bar one of my new clients just opened.” Chase knocked twice on the front door. “I’ll have to cancel on Mrs. Kilgrave, but I’ve been switching jobs every day, so it probably won’t make a difference.”

The door was answered by a man who didn’t bother with greetings. His weathered face was carved with age and experience, deep lines cutting across his forehead and bracketing his eyes. His salt-and-pepper hair was cropped short, leaning heavy on the salt. His shirt, a button-down the color of tired paper, was rolled at the sleeves. No tie. No smile.

"Come on in.”

As they stepped inside. Riley handed over a slim envelope—two thousand in crisp bills.

He took it without glancing inside, nodding once. “Follow me.”

The living room was surprisingly nice—earth-toned furniture, framed landscapes, and bookshelves filled with classic novels. He gestured for them to sit.

“I’ve got your story. You tell me if anything’s off.”

He went through it mechanically: The wish, the scroll, the flames, the daily transformations. He clearly knew what he was talking about. Then came the bad news.

“Whoever created that scroll of yours was a real asshole. There’s no reason it needed to consume itself. With access to the original, I could've…" He shook his head slowly. "It's still possible—but I’d need to know the exact wording of your wish. Every word, every pause. They all matter."

The looks on their faces told them all he needed.

"I'm sorry, but without either of those, the spell will need to run its course."

Chase sighed dramatically, crossing his legs and resting his manicured fingers over his knee. “So what, that’s it? Riley pays you two grand for a 'Can't help you, so sorry' and we walk out as living cautionary tales?”

The Fixer didn’t flinch. “That’s the bad news. Here’s the better news: the spell’s still in effect. I can do a ritual. It won’t undo it—not yet—but I can see who you used to be. Once the magic burns out, I can use that insight to rebuild what was lost. That includes Logan and Deborah, too.”

Riley leaned forward, the gold chains around her neck catching the light. “Do they need to be here?”

“No. Only the casters matter.”

Without another word, he stood and beckoned them downstairs.

The basement was the opposite of the living room. Bare concrete floors were marked with overlapping chalk circles, many half-erased or stained with something old. Copper wires hung overhead, strung with flickering bulbs that gave the space a surreal glow. One corner buzzed faintly—the enchanted refrigeration unit, its surface beaded with cold, like it held secrets too dangerous to be warm. A phonograph played warbly blues in a loop.

“It’s not cozy,” the Fixer said. “But it’s safe while I'm here with you."



Thursday, September 25, 2025

Aimless Wish part 1 of 2


Aimless Wish
by Varian Milagro

This story was created with the assistance of AI. All the characters, dialog, plot and settings are mine. ChatGPT took my series of long, very detailed, rambling, stream of conscousness prompts and formatted them into something coherent and added bits of sensory detail. I also used AI to create the illustrations.

Part 1

The college library was nearly silent, hushed under the pale hum of fluorescent lights. Somewhere nearby, a printer buzzed halfheartedly. In the back corner, Chase and Riley sat together at one of the computer stations, the kind with slow processors and smudged screens. It was the kind of outdated setup that smelled faintly of disinfectant and quiet desperation.

They were hunting for something they couldn’t quite name—a fix, a shortcut, a miracle. Something that could solve problems they were tired of carrying.

Riley typed slowly, her nails clicking against the plastic keys as she searched variations of “life change spells” and “real magic that really works.” Each result led to more disappointment. Pseudoscience blogs. Clickbait crystal shops. New Age manifesting guides filled with smiling women and vague advice. Even the sketchier sites, the ones that looked promising, failed to load past their landing page.

Chase sat slouched next to her, arms folded, his foot bouncing restlessly beneath the desk. He hadn’t said much at first, but his posture spoke volumes. The last few years had worn down the casual confidence he once had. Every new filter notification on the screen chipped away at his patience.

His thoughts wandered. Mostly to Logan.

His older brother had always been the model: straight A’s, athletic, charming, effortlessly impressive. Their mother, Amy, had practically sculpted Logan out of praise and admiration, then looked at Chase like he was the discarded clay. He could still hear her voice when he dropped out of community college: “You’ll never get anywhere at this rate. Be more like your brother.”

And he wasn’t. He worked at a pizza place no one liked for minimum wage. He lived at home in the same bedroom that he used to share with his brother. He was twenty-one and could barely remember the last time his mom looked at him without disappointment.

Next to him, Riley sat with one leg curled beneath her. Her hair—long, unbrushed, and somehow always perfect—fell over her shoulder as she squinted at the screen. Her sweater sleeves covered her hands as she scrolled.

Chase glanced over at her, seeing more than just her expression. Riley had her own burdens, quieter ones. She had lost her mom years ago, and even though she never talked about it much, the absence lingered in her like an open window in winter. She had been close with her mother, forming the kind of bond Chase had never known. After she died, Riley drifted through high school in a haze of grief. Now, in her third year of college, she was still only taking one class at a time, with no clear direction or purpose.

Her father, Mitchell, had understood. He didn’t pressure her. He didn’t need to—he had enough money to support them both ten times over. But then Deborah entered the picture.

Deborah—expensive, beautiful, and calculating. She had a way of taking over space in a room, and now in Mitchell’s life. Riley saw her father changing under Deborah’s influence: fancier clothes, luxury cars, an entirely new aesthetic. Deborah had turned the warmth of their home into something colder, curated. And lately, she’d been pushing Riley to “get serious,” whispering in Mitchell’s ear about responsibility and adulthood.

Riley wasn’t afraid of Deborah taking her dad’s money. She was afraid of her taking his heart.

The search engine loaded another page of useless links.

Riley sighed, resting her forehead on her hand. “We’re not gonna find anything here,” she muttered.

Chase didn’t answer right away. He wasn’t sure there was anything out there that could fix how broken things felt—how stuck he was in Logan’s shadow, how Riley seemed to be losing the only parent she had left to a woman who saw her as excess baggage.

But deep down, he still hoped.

She stood, gathered her things and started to leave. She turned around. "Are you coming?" 


Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Hexed into the Spotlight

 I have a new illustrated story to share. This one was helped along by ChatGPT. All the characters, dialog, plot and settings are mine. ChatGPT took my long, very detailed, rambling, stream of conscousness prompts and formatted them into something coherent and added bits of sensory detail. I used AI to create the illustrations too.  Here is the result.



The RV sat parked at the edge of a gravel lot behind a faded dive bar off Interstate 8. The paint was chipped and sun-bleached. A plastic devil skull dangled from the rearview mirror, gently swaying as wind beat against the sides. From the outside, it looked like something left behind by a touring act that never made it past the second encore.


Inside, the air was thick—an acrid blend of cigarette smoke, old beer, leather, and the sharp tang of burnt incense. The tiny space was dim, lit mostly by the flickering flame of a black candle atop the kitchenette. On the counter next to it lay a stack of tarot cards, a rusted dagger used as a paperweight, and a half-empty bottle of cheap whiskey.


Celeste sat sprawled on a tattered bench seat near the window, legs crossed, a long, white cigarette held delicately between her fingers. The nail polish on her long nails gleamed cherry red, matching her full lips. Her outfit was unapologetically provocative—tight black mini dress with lace trim clinging to her athletic form, a weathered leather jacket with spikes on the shoulders, and laddered fishnet stockings stretched over toned thighs. Her black platform heels tapped idly on the floor in a syncopated rhythm. Her long, wavy hair flowed over her shoulders like smoke itself—dark black at the roots that slowly ignited into fire-engine red at the ends.


Friday, January 10, 2025

Story: Birthday Wish App


 Birthday Wish App

By Varian Milagro

AI images generated with PicLumen


"You got to check out this new app," Brad said as he entered the family room where his older brother of two years was playing video games. "It can change people and I'm gonna use it to give Mia big tits."


Joel didn't bother to look away from his game. He was used to his brother's weird comments. He'd hoped Brad would've grown out of it once he'd graduated high school last summer, but no luck. "There's like a million AI programs that will do shit like that."


Joel Watkins, recent recipient of an Associates of Arts degree from Spencer Community College 


"This is different, dude. It actually works."


New store coming!

 I'm very happy to announce that Ive finished a story. I was playing around with an AI image generator and was able to put together a series of images that kind of told a story. It was a frustrating experience for the most part, trying to generate images that had any consitancy. More frustrating was when I'd finallly get an image that looked right, but the character would have six fingers or worse.

Anyway, I finally got around to putting words to the story (those are all mine). I will be uploading it shortly.

FYI, the comic I was working on in late 2023 is on hold, but not abandonded. Also, a TG story I wrote in 2014 might actually see the light of day this year. It being illustrated by a wonderful artist. There'll be over 150 color illustrations and it will be on TGComics website as a premium feature. 

I hope everyone had a great 2024. 

Varian Milagro

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Computer is back online!

 Hello again,

My rendering computer is working once again. I'm installing Daz as I type this. Hopefully the install of all of my assets will go quickly and I can get back to rendering soon.

I'll do my best to keep you updated.

Varian


Friday, December 8, 2023

Comic status

 Hello,

The comic I've been working on has hit a couple snags. The first was creative. I didn't like the way the final part was going. It was a struggle technically, each scene was taking way too long to create and was a big headache. I also didn't like aspects of it, story-wise. I decided to start over on the final section. I came up with a different way to tackle the final part, which was more satisfying creatively and would be easier to do in Daz. I got side tracked for a while, but I had some time off coming up, which I knew would be a great time to get my comic rendering back into high gear.

Then the primary drive on my rendering computer went tits up. I lost my Daz setup, but not the renders or the scene files. The comic is safe. Resetting up Daz will be a pain and time consuming, but I kind of wanted to do it anyway. 

So, instead of rendering scenes during my time off, I will be fixing my computer and then reinstalling everything in Daz. This will delay the release of the comic. I wish I had better news.


Varian