
Like Cabbages and Kings - Part 4 (Vore)
My All Creation deuteragonist, Jobe, has already been eaten by thirteen Disney villains, one of whom has eaten him twice -- Legend of Tarzan villains Tublat, the evil gorilla, and Kaj, the evil Leopard Man who worked in the service of Queen La, Merlock, the main villain of Duck Tales: the Movie - Raiders of the Lost Lamp, even a human predator, Stromboli, the gypsy serving as a minor villain from Pinocchio, the feral form of the evil Shere Khan from The Jungle Book, the anthro form of Shere Khan from Tale Spin, Tick-Tock, the evil, Hook-obsessed crocodile from Peter Pan, Sewernose de Bergerac, the evil, opera-loving alligator from one episode of Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers, Boll Weevil, the evil oat tycoon from one episode of DuckTales, the sinister Bankjob Beagle, one of the seven infamous Beagle Boys from DuckTales, the deadly Sa'Luk, the Cassim-replacing King of Thieves from Aladdin and the King of Thieves, the dastardly Dark Dragon from American Dragon Jake Long, the "Honorable" Sherriff of Nottingham from Robin Hood, the sinister duck demon Paddywhack from Darkwing Duck, and, most recently, the evil Taurus Bulba from Darkwing Duck! We now continue this series of comics involving Jobe getting eaten by more of my favorite Disney villains. As I have said before, I'd always imagined them making meals out of me. As Jobe is based on me, appearance-wise and personality-wise, he'd be the closest thing I could have to me getting eaten by these villains myself. So I could live it vicariously through him, so to speak.
In this short story, Jobe has re-formed from his digestion and absorption by Taurus Bulba, and has now moved on to his Disney world, re-forming in Wonderland as seen in Alice in Wonderland. This time, he's found himself on a wide beach full of sand and garbage. And it's on this beach that he will meet his next villain: the cunning, manipulative Mr. Walrus from Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum's story "The Walrus and the Carpenter." And just like the Curious Oysters, Jobe will share their exact same fate. . . .
Desperate to avoid any kind of work, Mr. Walrus did something that he had done to his carpenter friend multiple times: change the subject and get his and Jobe’s mind off working.
He went into a semi-musical rhyme against working, dramatically striking various poses and making various dramatic movements as he did so:
“The time has come, my human friend, to talk of other things.
Of shoes and ships and sealing wax, and cabbages and kings.
And why the sea is boiling hot, and whether pigs have wings.
Caloo-Calay, come eat today . . . like cabbages and kings!”
The whole time, Jobe looked at him with a blend of surprise and utter confusion on his face. But he ultimately went along with everything as the large walrus wrapped an around him and began leading him across the beach to take him to the “grand feast” he’d promised.
“Well . . . all right,” Jobe said. “Let us go. The rhyming was unnecessary, though.”
Part four of a commission by
ViceXXX.
In this short story, Jobe has re-formed from his digestion and absorption by Taurus Bulba, and has now moved on to his Disney world, re-forming in Wonderland as seen in Alice in Wonderland. This time, he's found himself on a wide beach full of sand and garbage. And it's on this beach that he will meet his next villain: the cunning, manipulative Mr. Walrus from Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum's story "The Walrus and the Carpenter." And just like the Curious Oysters, Jobe will share their exact same fate. . . .
Desperate to avoid any kind of work, Mr. Walrus did something that he had done to his carpenter friend multiple times: change the subject and get his and Jobe’s mind off working.
He went into a semi-musical rhyme against working, dramatically striking various poses and making various dramatic movements as he did so:
“The time has come, my human friend, to talk of other things.
Of shoes and ships and sealing wax, and cabbages and kings.
And why the sea is boiling hot, and whether pigs have wings.
Caloo-Calay, come eat today . . . like cabbages and kings!”
The whole time, Jobe looked at him with a blend of surprise and utter confusion on his face. But he ultimately went along with everything as the large walrus wrapped an around him and began leading him across the beach to take him to the “grand feast” he’d promised.
“Well . . . all right,” Jobe said. “Let us go. The rhyming was unnecessary, though.”
Part four of a commission by

Category All / Vore
Species Mammal (Other)
Size 696 x 1072px
File Size 472.7 kB
Comments