Bzzzt.
Amaris was always aware that there was something ugly about it all. Inherent messiness beneath the glamour of the surface was to be expected with something like Talents and Heroes and Fame. It was, perhaps, for the best that the drones were more invested in Elpis than they were in the Moon Arrow. A soft breath in, a longer one out. She tried to ignore the specks of light dotting the tips of her fingers as she allowed her voice to give form to words.
“Hm. I suspect Aspera won’t be pleased about that.” Even tone. No stresses, no emphases. For all intents and purposes, the Moon Arrow was as distant as her namesake in the moment despite the rampaging heartbeat savagely pounding at her ribs. “But I’m sure GAG will be able to discuss that with the appropriate personnel.”
The sound of hard heels clicked against the road as Amaris made her landing, the length of her coat trailing behind her. For a moment, she had to stop herself from moving further as a countdown ticked in her head with a steady silence, each number acting like a measure of her breathing. Slowly, the riotous thundering in Amaris’s chest began to subside, the fires it stoked put into a vice grip even as they wrapped unseen fingers tight around the talent’s throat. Hot. Scalding. Someone less disciplined than the night-haired Hero might have screamed in response to building pressure.
It was an ugliness she had to keep in check, even if the red-eyed beast with razor claws and vorpal fangs roared and writhed against such restraint in the pit of her stomach.
"We will work on that smile someday."
Elpis, the Maiden of Hope, wasn’t it? That pleasant naivete was easy enough to work with.
Amaris choked down bitter fury like medicine and trampled the chthonian monstrosity back into its place with determination tempered by visions of starlight and phantoms. Vile. Flawed. Everything grated against her with an abrasiveness that left her reeling, but it didn’t matter. Silvia Alba didn’t have the luxury of refusing any of the noxious tools in her reach.
“Elpis.” The name was spoken through their own channel, the next words soft; closer to a mentor’s recommendation than a teacher’s instruction. “The driver needs immediate medical attention. You shouldn’t have any trouble getting most of the drones to follow you if you take him. Cleanup crews will be able to start work sooner if all these drones clear out too.”
She still needed the lifeline provided by such grotesque undercurrents in the end.
“I’ll contact my agency for support on clean up. Aftermath is more our wheelhouse than Aspera’s, so it should be fine.”
And she’d swallow as much poison as she needed to keep it all burning to the end.
Amaris was always aware that there was something ugly about it all. Inherent messiness beneath the glamour of the surface was to be expected with something like Talents and Heroes and Fame. It was, perhaps, for the best that the drones were more invested in Elpis than they were in the Moon Arrow. A soft breath in, a longer one out. She tried to ignore the specks of light dotting the tips of her fingers as she allowed her voice to give form to words.
“Hm. I suspect Aspera won’t be pleased about that.” Even tone. No stresses, no emphases. For all intents and purposes, the Moon Arrow was as distant as her namesake in the moment despite the rampaging heartbeat savagely pounding at her ribs. “But I’m sure GAG will be able to discuss that with the appropriate personnel.”
The sound of hard heels clicked against the road as Amaris made her landing, the length of her coat trailing behind her. For a moment, she had to stop herself from moving further as a countdown ticked in her head with a steady silence, each number acting like a measure of her breathing. Slowly, the riotous thundering in Amaris’s chest began to subside, the fires it stoked put into a vice grip even as they wrapped unseen fingers tight around the talent’s throat. Hot. Scalding. Someone less disciplined than the night-haired Hero might have screamed in response to building pressure.
It was an ugliness she had to keep in check, even if the red-eyed beast with razor claws and vorpal fangs roared and writhed against such restraint in the pit of her stomach.
"We will work on that smile someday."
Elpis, the Maiden of Hope, wasn’t it? That pleasant naivete was easy enough to work with.
Amaris choked down bitter fury like medicine and trampled the chthonian monstrosity back into its place with determination tempered by visions of starlight and phantoms. Vile. Flawed. Everything grated against her with an abrasiveness that left her reeling, but it didn’t matter. Silvia Alba didn’t have the luxury of refusing any of the noxious tools in her reach.
“Elpis.” The name was spoken through their own channel, the next words soft; closer to a mentor’s recommendation than a teacher’s instruction. “The driver needs immediate medical attention. You shouldn’t have any trouble getting most of the drones to follow you if you take him. Cleanup crews will be able to start work sooner if all these drones clear out too.”
She still needed the lifeline provided by such grotesque undercurrents in the end.
“I’ll contact my agency for support on clean up. Aftermath is more our wheelhouse than Aspera’s, so it should be fine.”
And she’d swallow as much poison as she needed to keep it all burning to the end.




