[center] [img]https://i.imgur.com/PVXYWf6.png[/img] [img]https://i.imgur.com/XKyugfP.png[/img][/center] [center] [color=7DBC89]Race:[/color] Yuan-ti [color=7DBC89]Class:[/color] Rogue Arcane Assassin [color=7DBC89]Location:[/color] The Temple of the Drowned God, Subterranean Training Chambers [color=7DBC89]Time:[/color] Meiyu’s Eleventh Year [color=7DBC89]Mentions:[/color] [img]https://i.imgur.com/phiFSQQ.png[/img][/center] [H2][b][center]Flashback: The Serpent's Coil[/center][/b][/H2] ​The air in the Chamber of Whispers was thick and wet, tasting of ozone and ancient stone. It was not the heat of the jungle that clung to the skin, but the chill of the earth, filtering up from the deep tunnels where only the eldest serpents slept. Meiyu was eleven cycles old–a pureblood, yet still cursed with too much softness around the edges, too much human warmth behind her amber eyes. Today was the day that weakness would be surgically excised. ​She was pressed flat against a wall carved with repeating motifs of snakes swallowing their own tails. Her scales, still a pale, dappled green that was too easily stained by dust, were dusted with chalk. Her breath was slow, controlled to the point of pain. Beside her, unseen in the artificial gloom created by a single, flickering oil lantern, was Jing. ​Jing was two years older, equally slender, and just as terrified. They had shared meager rations, whispered secrets about the outside world, and endured the same daily humiliations from the training priests. In the cold geometry of the Temple, Jing was the closest thing Meiyu had ever known to a friend. ​And that was the flaw. That was the test. ​A hiss-+low, dry, and sharp enough to score the stone–issued from the far end of the room. It was Sarkis, the Lead Cultist. Sarkis was ancient, half-blind, and possessed a voice that sounded like grit dragged across dry bone. He did not speak common. He only spoke the Serpent Tongue, a language of necessity and command. [Color=FFA759][I]​“Snakes who cling together die together. Weakness is not tolerated. Today, one of you earns the right to feed. The other is the feast.”[/I][/color] ​The words were not translated, nor did they need to be. Every acolyte understood the weight of the order. The room was not empty. Scattered across the cold stone floor were half a dozen dull steel training daggers, placed haphazardly among loose stones and drainage grates. The goal was simple: survive the room. Survival meant eliminating the competition, and the competition was Jing. ​Jing’s silence was absolute, a perfect reflection of Meiyu’s own fear. They had trained for this specific scenario a thousand times–a simulated 'accident' that forced a choice between self and attachment. Meiyu knew the layout better. She had spent hours mapping the cold spots where light failed and the acoustics shifted. She knew Jing’s rhythm of breathing when she was frightened: a minute shudder on the inhale. ​It was enough. ​Meiyu did not move towards the daggers. Daggers meant confrontation, noise, and the risk of taking a wound that would disqualify her. Her training emphasized the subtlety of the toxin, the quiet finality of the coil. She needed an advantage that wasn’t steel. ​She started to weave. Her earliest, most powerful affinity was not for poison, but for shadow. It was a skill born of desperation, a trick of the mind that convinced the light it saw nothing. As she focused, the pallid green of her scales seemed to drink the surrounding gloom. She wasn’t invisible; she was merely [I]absent[/I]. The faint glow of the oil lamp, which had previously cast sharp shadows, now seemed to bend around her, blurring her form until she was only a heat-haze against the cold rock. ​Jing, sensing the shift, reacted with panic. A quick, shuffling move across the floor to grab the nearest dagger. The scrape of her hand across the stone was a deafening roar in the silence. ​Sarkis hissed again, a sound of disappointment. ​Meiyu’s heart, a biological anomaly she hated, gave a rapid thump. She was still too human. She had waited a beat too long, paralyzed by the sight of Jing moving, grabbing the tool that could end her. The hesitation was nearly fatal. ​The training room had obstacles. It was littered with refuse from past rituals–broken ceramic bowls, strips of dried leather, and a shallow, open cistern of water used for ritual cleansing. Jing, blinded by adrenaline, moved toward the cistern for cover. ​Meiyu moved. Not a run, but a controlled glide. She used the patches of absolute darkness clinging to the base of the larger carved serpent pillars. Her hands, long and thin, reached out not for a weapon, but for the loose stones that littered the ground. ​[Color=FFA759][I]"Attachment is the source of all failure,"[/I][/color] Sarkis's voice echoed, though he hadn't spoken again. ​She remembered the lesson from the week before: the illusion of safety. The illusion of a friend. Jing thought the cistern was a sanctuary. Meiyu knew it was a cage. ​When Jing reached the lip of the cistern, dagger shaking in her hand, Meiyu launched her attack, but not at Jing. She threw a handful of small, sharp gravel directly at the oil lamp. ​The glass shattered. Darkness swallowed the chamber instantly, thick and absolute. The only sound was the hiss of the oil hitting the hot stone. ​Chaos was the weapon. ​Meiyu used the moment of complete visual disorientation to close the final distance. She didn't rely on sight; she relied on the echo of Jing's panicked heartbeat and the wet smell of her fear. ​She slammed into Jing's back, not with force, but with focused weight. Jing gasped, dropping the dagger into the cistern with a metallic clank. The impact drove them both against the rough stone of the pillar. Jing struggled, thrashing with a furious, terrified energy. ​Meiyu didn't fight back; she [I]suppressed[/I]. Her legs coiled around Jing’s, mimicking the crushing hold of a python. Her arms locked around the young girl’s torso, pressing out the air. She didn't use her strength, she used leverage and technique, the cold, practiced perfection of a predator's coil. ​For a brief, agonizing moment, Jing’s dark eyes met hers. Jing’s thrashing slowed. A desperate, broken whisper, thick with fear and saliva, broke free of her choking throat: [Color=FF87B9]“Mei... we promised. Please, not this way. We can–we can run.”[/Color] ​Meiyu saw the plea, the shared hope they had once clung to…and she felt the guilt flare, sharp and hot, a pain that felt shockingly real, not animal instinct. She hated it. This burning pain was the flaw the priests swore didn't exist in a true Yuan-ti, the human heart they claimed was a myth. She suppressed it, forcing the mask of indifference until the feeling was brittle and cold. [I]​Survive. Choose the serpent.[/I] ​She leveraged the coil of her body, using the full weight of her desperate intent. With a single, explosive heave, she slammed the back of Jing’s head against the rough, carved stone of the serpent pillar. A wet, sickening crack echoed in the newly silent chamber. The struggle ceased instantly. Jing’s body slumped, heavy and lifeless within Meiyu’s grasp. ​Meiyu released her, letting the corpse slide to the damp floor. The silence returned, heavy and complete, broken only by the drip of water into the cistern. Meiyu stood perfectly still in the overwhelming darkness, her breathing now restored to the slow, metronome rhythm of a hunter observing its prey. She felt the wetness of fresh blood on her forearm, but she didn’t flinch. It was simply a medium, like water or shadow. ​The small, pinprick glow of a lantern flickered back to life, held aloft by Sarkis, who had not moved from his initial spot. The light illuminated the scene: Jing's crumpled form, the lost dagger, the blood, and Meiyu standing over it all, pristine except for the single smear of red. ​Sarkis approached slowly, his half-closed eyes inspecting the silent chamber. He did not look at the body, only at Meiyu. He traced the blood on her arm with one clawed, serpentine finger. [Color=FFA759][I]​“Hesitation,”[/I][/color] Sarkis hissed, the word a poison in the air. [Color=FFA759][I]“You waited for the lamp. You waited for the desperation. Why the unnecessary theatrics? A clean cut is faster.”[/I][/color] ​Meiyu didn’t move. She didn’t apologize. She processed the criticism and delivered the only answer that mattered. ​[Color=7DBC89][I]”The Serpent does not rush when patience ensures control. I removed her sight, then her air, then her consciousness. The death was not messy; the silence was immediate. The theatrics ensure that the next time, the prey moves exactly as I predict, fearing the dark more than the blade.”[/I][/Color] ​Sarkis blinked slowly, his old eye focusing on her face, searching for any ripple of emotion–sadness, regret, or even pride. He found only the cold, practiced surface of ambition. [Color=FFA759][I]​“Your friend is dead,”[/I][/color] he hissed. ​Meiyu looked down at Jing’s body, the person who had once shared her dreams of escape. The scent of her fear was already dissipating, replaced by the faint metallic tang of iron. The only feeling was a dull, satisfying click of realization. ​[i][Color=7DBC89]”There are no friends here. Only vulnerabilities. The vulnerability is now removed. The task is complete. There is only the path of the God.”[/Color][/i] ​Meiyu Xian finally spoke, not in the Serpent Tongue, but in the flat, unemotional Common required for inventory reports. ​[Color=7DBC89]“Jing failed the test. I passed.”[/Color] ​Sarkis did not nod. [Color=FFA759][I]​“You are learning, little predator. Go. Feast.”[/I][/color] ​Meiyu turned to leave the chamber, interpreting the command as permission to break fast with the acolytes. She took one step, and Sarkis's voice, low and sharp, cracked like a whip in the air. [Color=FFA759][I]​“Not that way, predator. The initiation is incomplete. The feast is here.”[/I][/color] ​He let the lantern drop back to its hook, plunging the room into shadow once more, save for the faint glow of the oil. He moved to the cistern, his gaunt hand reaching into the cold water to retrieve the dagger Jing had dropped. He returned to the body, a swift, practiced movement of the blade cutting through Jing’s ribcage. There was no hesitation, no wasted effort, only the sound of wet tissue tearing. Sarkis plunged his hand deep inside the chest cavity and withdrew, holding Jing’s heart–still steaming faintly in the cool, damp air. ​He stepped back, holding the organ out to Meiyu. [Color=FFA759][I]“Feast. Let the final attachment be consumed.”[/I][/color] ​The command was absolute. Meiyu stared at the heart resting in Sarkis’s clawed hand. It was an ugly, crimson mass, a tangible piece of the guilt she had just brutally suppressed. She felt the human impulse to recoil, to vomit, but she forced the reaction down, crushing it beneath the weight of her will. She reached out and took the heart. It was still warm. ​Meiyu raised the organ slowly, her golden eyes fixed on Sarkis's impassive face. This was not a ritual of consumption; it was a ritual of absolute finality. She brought it to her mouth, her teeth sinking into the slick, coppery tissue. The taste was overwhelming, and with it, the last brittle fragments of the child Meiyu shattered. The serpent had won.