
Sewernose's Snack - Part 2 (Vore)
My Flesh & Fur deuteragonist, Jobe, has already been eaten by six 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, and, most recently, Tick-Tock, the evil, Hook-obsessed crocodile from Peter Pan! We will again 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 by Tick-Tock and has now moved on to the opera house of an unnamed city (as far as I know, at least), where he will meet his next villain: the evil, fame-starved Sewernose de Bergerac, a one-shot villain from Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers. And just like the previous winners, this encounter will obviously end the same way it did with all of the others. . . .
Jobe walked toward the door to the dressing room, a hand outstretched and open to turn the doorknob. He then grabbed the knob, turned it, and opened the door.
Then, to his surprise, a handpuppet dressed like a Greek philosopher suddenly popped into the doorway, right in front of him.
The handpuppet, Euripedes, then began to sing to Jobe in a high-pitched, nasally voice. “Clarence Dudley, what a star! A celebrity through and through!”
Then, the surprise heightened as a second handpuppet dressed like possible a French Renaissance artist or writer, one named Voltaire, suddenly poked into the doorway. In a pauncy, French-accented voice, he took over from where Euripedes had left off, singing, “Your ego’s fat, but that’s okay!”
Part two of a commission by
ViceXXX.
And for those of you who don't remember Sewernose, you can refresh your memory of him by viewing the episode in which he appeared right here.
In this short story, Jobe has re-formed from his digestion by Tick-Tock and has now moved on to the opera house of an unnamed city (as far as I know, at least), where he will meet his next villain: the evil, fame-starved Sewernose de Bergerac, a one-shot villain from Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers. And just like the previous winners, this encounter will obviously end the same way it did with all of the others. . . .
Jobe walked toward the door to the dressing room, a hand outstretched and open to turn the doorknob. He then grabbed the knob, turned it, and opened the door.
Then, to his surprise, a handpuppet dressed like a Greek philosopher suddenly popped into the doorway, right in front of him.
The handpuppet, Euripedes, then began to sing to Jobe in a high-pitched, nasally voice. “Clarence Dudley, what a star! A celebrity through and through!”
Then, the surprise heightened as a second handpuppet dressed like possible a French Renaissance artist or writer, one named Voltaire, suddenly poked into the doorway. In a pauncy, French-accented voice, he took over from where Euripedes had left off, singing, “Your ego’s fat, but that’s okay!”
Part two of a commission by

And for those of you who don't remember Sewernose, you can refresh your memory of him by viewing the episode in which he appeared right here.
Category All / Vore
Species Alligator / Crocodile
Gender Male
Size 654 x 1024px
File Size 181.2 kB
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