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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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A few hours ago...

...Feat. Cynwaer Cynric

Time: Evening
Location: Shooting Range
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Appearance: Sjan-dehk
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The lilt of a Caesonian fiddle drifted across the firing range, its swaying, merry tune dancing over a rhythm set by a Viserjantan bamboo flute’s calm and steady breaths. Hailing from lands that were, quite literally, a vast ocean apart, the two instruments made for an unconventional—strange, even—pair, but by no means a poor one, as far as Sjan-dehk was concerned. He thought their interwoven voices and tones to be rather pleasing, in fact; perfect for a late afternoon spent resting beneath the shade of a tree.

A contented sigh left his lips, and he shifted slightly to find a more comfortable way to rest his neck against the snaking root he was trying to use as a pillow. He found none, and after giving up and resigning himself to live with this mild discomfort, he adjusted his hat—placing it more squarely over his face—and gave the music his fullest attention.

It surprised him, really, just how well fiddle and flute complemented each other. The former flew freely, with the wildness of a recently uncaged bird, as it flitted about this way and that. And yet, it never wandered too far from the flute’s rhythm, always returning to it whenever its liveliness teetered on the edge of tipping into chaos. By contrast, the latter flowed with the tranquility of an undisturbed, unhurried river, its few flourishes never quite matching its partner’s energy. Not once did it fall into monotony, however—the fiddle was more than willing to pull the flute along, coaxing it into brighter, more spirited refrains and passages.

Their duet was by no means perfect—Sjan-dehk counted at least a half-dozen starts and stops in the past few minutes alone—but it still mingled well with the surrounding sounds. It twirled with the soft murmurs of a passing breeze and answered the rising chirr of stirring crickets; eased the quiet rustle of shaking leaves and masked the faint whispers of conversation, and–

Dull thumps. Sharp cracks. The strident reports of muskets and rifles rang out in a scattered chorus, easily cutting through every other sound at the firing range.

And yes, even the din of gunfire.

Sjan-dehk neither blinked nor flinched; he hadn’t when the earlier volleys rang out, either. Such things had long since stopped startling him. To his ears, these discordant calls of firelocks may as well be the beats of drums—albeit erratic ones—accompanying the music.

He inhaled deeply, his nose filling with the fresh, earthy scents of damp soil and sun-kissed grass—as well as stale sweat, courtesy of his hat—and exhaled in a long breath that tapered into another sigh, this time a wistful one. Everything felt so familiar, and yet at the same time, not. In style, all was new. The melody and one-half of the duet was unmistakably Caesonian. The insects and their noises, also Caesonian. Even the air itself carried a markedly foreign taste that Sjan-dehk couldn’t quite describe.

And yet, in substance


Another wistful sigh, another deep breath.

In substance, it was all too familiar. His mind was cast back to
Well, not good times—only the mad would think of war as a good time—but bright moments during a dark period. Moments when he, then naught but a new and inexperienced captain, could rest in the company of friends between battles. He could picture it all vividly. Tehn-sai drilling his crew at a makeshift range, their chatter punctuated by gunshots; Asahn-jehn playing a tune on his battered flute, accompanied not by a fiddler, but by Sajehmai strumming her beloved zither. And in the midst of it all, their ever-diligent commodore, Nashra, caught between planning their next actions and writing her poems.

“Five set forth; only one return’d. ‘Tis been some while since thou thought of them, lost Jafin child.”

Annoyance, rather than disquiet, knitted Sjan-dehk’s brows together. It was that voice again—the ethereal, echoing whispers of a woman—the one that’d been disturbing his sleep for just under two weeks, and now his waking hours as well. Had he the mental fortitude, he might’ve responded to it. But three-and-a-quarter days of non-stop work—administrative work, mind—had left him too tired to even bother. It wasn’t as if the voice had ever engaged him in an actual conversation, anyway. Not even in his sleep.

But annoyed as he was, he had to admit that the voice had a point. He hadn’t thought much about his past comrades in not just weeks, but months. Between handling the Kokinshuun Incident and preparing for the Far West Expedition, he’d been kept busy after the War’s end, long before he came to Caesonia. And now that he was here, things had only gotten worse. Learning a new language, dealing with foreign dignitaries, and coming to terms with local ways offered plenty of distractions, and left little time for reminiscing.

Those four—those lost friends of his—would’ve understood, of course. They’d all been soldiers, and knew that duty always came first. Sjan-dehk could hear Nashra in his head, telling him to focus on his tasks, and Tehn-sai calling him an idiot for wasting time thinking about them. Even so, he felt a pang of guilt tug at his heart. He should do something for them soon. It was the very least he could do.

The quiet crunch of grass under approaching footsteps, along with a half-hummed, half-sung song, pulled him from his thoughts.

“...Hands tae ta mast; hol’ fast an’ hol’ together
”

Now that was a voice Sjan-dehk could put a name to. Such a thick accent was as distinct as it was difficult for him to understand, and could only belong to one man—Cynric, Recompense’s red-haired captain. With a hummed tune on his lips, he sauntered over and set himself down beside Sjan-dehk with a grunt.

“Ye awake, Cap’n?” he asked.

“No,” Sjan-dehk replied drily.

Cynric chuckled. “Well, ‘tis about time, aye. Ye’ve been out fer feckin’ hours, pal.”

Hours? That immediately caught Sjan-dehk’s attention. He pushed his hat off of his face, quickly regretting it when the sun’s glare, filtering through the tree’s canopy, stung his eyes. A gasp, half out of surprise and half out of pain, escaped him. He raised a hand to block the harsh light and blinked away the fuzzy shapes and stars floating across his vision.

“What is the time?” Sjan-dehk asked, the soreness in his eyes slowly fading.

“Just intae evenin’,” Cynric replied.

Only then did he finally notice the sunlight’s golden hues, the sky turning purple behind the leaves, and the wispy clouds streaked with pink and orange. He shot upright, his joints protesting with creaks and his back chiming in with a dull ache. The straps of his lamellar cuirass had left his shoulders sore, and the arm he’d wrapped his rifle’s sling around didn’t fare much better. He huffed and shook his head. A quick rest was all he’d wanted, and instead he’d ended up idling until the day’s colours changed and his body turned stiff.

“Long day, huh?” Cynric asked, casting a sideways glance and a grin at him. “Cannae say I’ve e’er seen a man nod off sae fast, aye I cannae.”

It was more of a long quarter of a day, and a very, very long preceding three days. “Yes,” Sjan-dehk replied simply. “Very long. Very tiring.”

Cynric nodded. “Ah, just some o’ those days, aye? Cannae say I’ve ‘ad it any different from ye. Fixin’ up ol’ Recompense’s been feckin’ draggin’ on, aye it has. Dae’n get me wrang, pal, all this privateerin’ business suits me just fine an’ like, but ‘avin’ tae patch ‘oles every time I pull intae ‘arbour’s a feckin’ hassle.”

Sjan-dehk stifled a yawn as he tried to rub the stiffness from his neck. “You need help? I can send some of my crew.” Though his words were aimed at Cynric, his attention stayed on the half-dozen men standing on the firing line—all from his ship, Sada Kurau. They’d only just discharged another volley, gunsmoke curling from their rifles’ muzzles and drifting above their heads. Sjan-dehk took a moment to examine their targets with discerning eyes before concluding that yes, they were all performing to expectations, both his and the Commonwealth Navy’s.

“Ah, cheers, Cap’n, but there’s nae need fer that,” Cynric replied quickly. “‘Tis nae me askin’ fer help, dae’n get me wrang. I’m just bein’ a whiny wee shite; that’s aw’ there is tae it.”

“Okay,” Sjan-dehk said with a curt nod. “So you need me for what?”

Cynric chuckled and shook his head. “Always straigh’ down tae business wi’ ye, aye?” Before he could go on any further, another scattering of gunshots snatched his attention. He turned toward the firing line, now occupied by several of his crew. Frustration flickered across his well-worn, yet still boyish features, and he clicked his tongue. “Oi!” His shout pulled several pairs of eyes to him. “Daley, what’d ta’ feckin’ sun dae tae ye, tae make ye wan’ tae feckin’ shoot it? Fix yer feckin’ aim ‘fore I get Svante tae fix it fer ye!”

He huffed, leaned back on his palms, and glanced at Sjan-dehk. “Yer offer tae send some o’ yer fellas o’er tae me still on ta’ table, Cap’n?” he asked, his tone not entirely serious, but not quite in jest, either. “‘Cause I might wan’ tae borrow a few now, tae whip my fellas intae shape. What’d ye e’en dae tae get yer lads tae ‘ave that sort o’ skill, anyway?”

“We fought in war,” Sjan-dehk replied bluntly.

“Ah, right.”

An awkward silence settled between them. For a moment, the two men simply watched Cynric’s crew take their turns on the firing line, and listened to the fiddle and flute’s meandering duet. It didn’t take long for the atmosphere to become too heavy for Sjan-dehk’s liking—he was already fidgeting by the fourth volley, and by the fifth, he was itching to just do something to change the mood. And so, he spoke up.

“Your people,” he began, clearing his throat. “They are better at shooting now, yes? Compared to when we started, I mean.”

Cynric gave a wry smirk. “Well, if yer comparin’ tae that absolute shiteshow, then yer right, though I reckon they’d ‘ave tae try real feckin’ hard tae find a way tae get worse.” He chuckled, then jerked a thumb over a shoulder, towards a corner of the range. “An’ my fellas ‘ave yers tae thank. Yer people gave heaps o’ help, aye they did.” Then, he paused, his quiet laughs trailing away and his smile disappearing. He snapped his fingers, as if he’d only just recalled something.

“Ah, feck me, I almost forgot,” he said. “Ye keen fer a drink, Cap’n? Some o’ my fellas and yers are thinkin’ o’ findin’ a tavern after this an’ ‘avin’ a few pints. Y’know, tae end ta’ day on a ‘appy note, an’ aw’. Thought I’d ask if ye wan’ tae come along wi’ us.”

Sjan-dehk’s first thought was to decline. He was tired—as his unintended, extended rest had proven—and the idea of making the night any longer than it needed to be wasn’t an appealing one. All he wanted was a quick return to Sada Kurau and an early reunion with his cot.

But then his gaze drifted to where Cynric’s thumb had earlier pointed.

There, a small group of people had gathered—some Cynric's, some his. They’d stacked their muskets and rifles in neat piles, and done the same with swords, helmets, and all manner of other equipment. Most sat on the grass, while a few lay sprawled on it, their eyes following passing clouds. Amongst them, Sjan-dehk noticed several familiar faces—Iyen, his closest friend, playing cards with a few others; and Yehn-tai, Sada Kurau’s best shot, breathing life into a well-used flute. The fiddler, one of Cynric’s men, wasn’t far from the latter, his bow gliding across his instrument’s strings with practiced grace.

A smile, small and wistful, pulled on Sjan-dehk’s lips. Memories of old friends surfaced once more, and his mind drifted to thoughts of Asahn-jehn and Sajehmai, of how they would’ve loved this music. He could see them joining Yehn-tai and the fiddler with their own instruments. Or rather, Sajehmai would join first—she’d always been the more outgoing between the two—and Asahn-jehn would’ve followed after her.

“‘Tis been some while since thou thought of them, lost Jafin child.”

The voice returned, speaking the same words, and in the same ethereal tone. But this time, it didn’t feel as annoying as before. Rather, it seemed almost gentle—a reminder, rather than a taunt. Sjan-dehk still didn’t reply to it, but neither did he dismiss it entirely. He couldn’t, not when it was right. Perhaps it was just trying to help him remember them in its own way. Perhaps it was telling him that now was as good a time as any to do something—anything—to do right by them.

“Okay, I will go,” Sjan-dehk said, looking at Cynric. “One drink. Maybe two.”

Or maybe even four.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by princess
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Part 3


Time: 2nd Ignis, Evening
Location: The Damien Estate




Violet listened. Or rather - she endured.

Every word Alexander spoke seemed to land on her skin like cold fingertips: deliberate, admiring, assessing. Alexandrite. Diamond.Potential.

The room heard flattery.
She heard appraisal.

Inside, something in her stomach twisted so sharply she nearly lost her breath. She swallowed wine instead of the nausea. She felt less like a woman and more like a stone sitting on a velvet cushion while two men debated its market value. A precious thing. Rare, yes. But still a thing.

And stones were only precious until someone found a better one.

She wondered, for a fleeting and shameful second, if he would cast her aside the moment her shine dimmed. Yet she didn’t have to wonder; he did so after their date. If all this talk of potential was simply a way of saying she was still unshaped, unpolished, unfinished.
Worthy. But worthy for what? Affection? Utility? A place in someone else’s future?

Or perhaps she was simply the convenience of being a pretty object with a well-connected father?

Her fingers trembled once against the stem of her glass before she stilled them.

“Mr. Deacon
 Your words are
 overwhelmingly kind.” she said softly, giving a faint, practiced laugh. “I fear I don’t quite know what to do with so much flattery at once.”

She dipped her head in a gentle gesture of gratitude

“But I do appreciate the time you have taken with me. Truly.” She glanced briefly toward her father, then back to Alexander. “You have given me something I did not expect to find tonight.”

She took a small sip of wine, more for the pause it afforded her than the taste.

“For so long, I believed my future could only be measured in how well I prepared myself to be a wife.” Her tone remained light, almost self-deprecating. “A pleasant ornament at a husband’s side, perhaps, if I were ever fortunate enough.”

“That
 however, is a dream that has since passed.” she admitted, the honesty cloaked in gentleness. “To hear that you see something more in me has given me a different kind of confidence.”

Her fingers relaxed their hold on the glass, just enough to keep from revealing the tension.

“Giving me the confidence that perhaps there is a place for me beyond doting on the notion of a husband that may never come.” she continued, her voice soft but clear. “Perhaps there is work, real work, that might be
 fulfilling.”

She let the word linger, as if tasting it for the first time.

Then, with a final, graceful nod:

“For that, Mr. Deacon, I am sincerely grateful.” Her eyes looked over to her parents, “And I am so very grateful to my parents for allowing me the space to do so.”

For a good, long moment, Cassius had simply been listening to the conversation unfolding before him with an amused smile. But soon, he grew bored with this monotony. Not even his little barbs at Alexander could entertain him any longer. Not tonight. Too much had happened in the last week, too many theoretical demons to chase and metaphorical dragons to slay for him to care about the verbal chess playing out around him.

His poor sister
a pawn in the games of others. He could tell she was more aware than she let on, but it did not change her role. Something needed to, though, as despite her unclear disposition of Cassius, he could sense that they had grown closer. The dreadful night of the banquet had bonded them in its way. There’s something about almost bleeding to death in the arms of another that gives one a distinct appreciation for them. She deserved better than this
disgusting game. Not just from wretched Alexander, but from her father as well. The man’s willingness to let her be involved with the Black Rose, even in a minuscule way, drained some of the respect Calbert had earned from him in recent days.

Cas felt his mind wander away from the conversation entirely. Images of the night they were attacked flashed in his mind, as did the weight of Kira’s revelation. He thought of her actions at the auction
then he thought of his date there, with Charlotte, where they decided to part ways. Her face lingered in his mind but only for a moment, as the sound of the door opening brought him back to reality.

“Beautifully said, Lady Viola!” The nearly pining voice of Lianna Deacon shot through the dining room like one of Persephone's arrows. Her hands remained neatly folded in her lap as a tall man in black pushed her wheelchair through the door.

The familiar voice and calculated mistake of her own name didn’t go unnoticed as crimson eyes flicked to the doorway. Alexander had failed to mention his wife's attendance. Perhaps this was a surprise to him as well, but frankly, she was starting to wonder if she would even believe him had he said it was.

Before their eyes could even process the details of his face, a cold draft filled the room. It slid in under the doors like a warning, a breath of cold that curled around the candle flames, making them tremble in their cups.

The dark-haired man stepped in slowly, wheeling the woman forward with an unhurried gait. His hair fell in loose strands around an aged face, streaks of gray in his beard. His eyes were the worst of him—flat, brown, and old in a way nothing mortal ever was.

The fire from the hearth painted his skin in copper on the edges of old scars, but nothing touched those eyes. Shadows clung to him a millisecond too long as he passed, dragging very subtly behind his shoulders. He settled Liana beside her husband carefully before taking his place at Alexander’s flank. When he lowered himself into the chair, it was with a silence that felt deliberate.

Cassius lifted his eyes to the man pushing the chair, and for the first time since he walked into the room, he felt sober.

“Good evening
 I hope I have not kept you all waiting
” His voice was low yet resonant when he finally spoke. No smile formed on his lips despite his greeting, only the faint suggestion of one. His gaze moved once along the length of the table, brushing past each person without settling on any single soul.

His next words slid slowly off his tongue, as if rolling off a nearly flat decline, “...Time.. moves.. differently for some of us.”
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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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A while ago...

...Feat. Cynwaer Cynric

Time: Evening
Location: Tavern Exterior
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Appearance: Sjan-dehk
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They hadn’t walked far from the firing range when the sound of raised voices reached Sjan-dehk’s ears.

He paid it little heed at first. After all, arguments were to cities as creaks were to ships—nothing more than ambient noise. Harmless and easily ignored until, of course, they stopped being so. But as they continued down the bustling street—weaving through the evening crowd and passing well-stocking shops, makeshift stalls under awnings, and lively cafes—one of the voices started to sound familiar. A little too familiar.

The louder, gruffer voice was undoubtedly that of a Caesonian man. Traces of a brogue not unlike Cynric’s coloured his speech, though nowhere near as prominently. Not that it mattered; frayed nerves, pure anger, and sheer volume turned most of his words into a muddled roar. Sjan-dehk wasn’t particularly interested in what he had to say, anyway. It was the other voice, the one the man was trying to yell into submission, that had drawn his notice.

Higher-pitched, insistent yet light, and clearly belonging to a young girl, that other voice carried the tell-tale signs of a Viserjantan trying to speak Caesonian. Namely, it sounded like Sjan-dehk—with awkward starts, misused words, sudden stops, and mispronunciations—whenever he tried his hand at the language, albeit with markedly less fluency. He’d heard that exact same sing-song cadence enough times on Sada Kurau’s decks that he’d recognise it anywhere, regardless of language. It could only belong to one person. Still, he hoped against hope that his suspicions were wrong.

Turning the next corner, however, quickly proved just how not wrong they were. If anything, he hadn’t been suspicious enough.

Just a little further up ahead, and clustered in front of the closed doors and dark windows of a tavern, were four youths, all of them distinctly Viserjantan—their teak-toned complexions, their night-dark hair, and their styles of clothing were dead giveaways. Two of them—two girls—were strangers to Sjan-dehk; they had to be from Sudah’s crew, he thought. The others, however, he knew. There was Yasawen, with his hair pulled into a tail high atop his head, wearing his usual flowing, pale-grey, and impractical robes. The boy seemed to be trying to defuse the situation, to no avail.

And standing right beside him was the person causing the situation in the first place, and also the owner of the voice that’d caught Sjan-dehk’s attention—Inshahri. Her hair, gathered into two long tails, swished and swayed as she confronted the four Caesonian men blocking the tavern’s entrance. Though she was easily half the size of any of them, she still matched them shout for shout, and even seemed to be wearing them down with her relentless energy.

“Huh,” was all Cynric said at first. He tilted his chin towards the scene. “Those yer people, Cap’n?”

Sjan-dehk clenched his jaw. It seemed rest would have to wait. “Yes,” he replied. “They are. Some.”

He looked to his left, at Iyen. The Sudhrayarn seemed more amused than anything else, and met his gaze with a little grin. Her eyes turned to the scene, then back to him, and she shrugged. Sjan-dehk merely kept his half-tired, half-vexed expression. “You’re coming with me,” he said. “I’ll deal with Yasa and Shahri, but I need someone from Sudah to handle the other two.”

“Me?” Iyen asked with mock surprise, pressing a hand to her chest. “Oh my, Captain, I think you’ve got me mistaken for someone with actual rank and authority. I’m just one of Lady Adiyan’s personal guards.”

“And that alone gives you more authority than I’ll ever have over anyone from Sudah,” Sjan-dehk retorted, his tone making it clear that he wasn’t in the mood for an argument. Iyen chuckled quietly, but nodded and said nothing more. He took one step forward, then abruptly stopped when he remembered that he still had ten or so fully-armed men from Sada Kurau’s Seaborne company following him. Frustrated as he was with the two youths, he didn’t want to give them any more of a scare than was absolutely necessary.

Well, he didn’t want to scare Yasawen, at least. He doubted Inshahri would care.

He glanced over his shoulder. “Sergeant Dahsahn,” he called out. “Keep the men here.”

Dahsahn—a man whose face managed to look youthful, grizzled, fresh, and worn all at once—gave a nod in response. “You got it, Captain,” he said and offered a brief salute, his right fist over his chest.

Sjan-dehk turned to Cynric. “Please wait. I must handle this. Apologies.”

“Ah, nae worries, Cap’n,” Cynric replied. “We all ‘ave our own troublesome fellas, aye we dae. Dae’n worry about me. Ye can take yer time. I know that’s what I’d wan’tae dae.”

Only then did Sjan-dehk make his way towards the tavern, Iyen keeping pace beside him. As the two drew closer, he noticed the small crowd that’d gathered—curious onlookers standing in a loose semicircle, each peeking over one another’s shoulders whilst keeping their distance. Ignoring the guarded looks and muted whispers directed at them, Sjan-dehk pushed his way through the small audience. His ears caught parts of the altercation, and not long after that, he could see it for himself.

“Once again, you daft bitch, we’re fuckin’ closed! Closed! Fuck off!” It was clear from the Caesonian man’s voice that this wasn’t the first time he’d said such a thing. He was a rather large man, thickly-built, and with an imposing face dominated by a heavy brow.

“No, no, no, you lie!” Inshahri’s response was quick, almost as if she’d been through this exchange several times and knew on instinct just what to say. She shook her head, her hair flying about wildly. “You lie! I can feel magic. Magic! Inside! So not closed!”

Behind her, Yasawen stood ill-at-ease, nervousness painted all over him, from his face, to the way he kept shifting his weight from foot to foot. “Inshahri, stop,” he pleaded. “Just let it go. There’s people watching us and we’re not even supposed to be ashore! The Captain’s going to hear about this and then we’re going to get into a lot of trouble!”

That was when Sjan-dehk cleared his throat. “So you do know you’re in the wrong,” he said drily. “That’s a good start, but it also makes me wonder what made you choose to go against my orders to begin with.”

Yasawen yelped, a short, sharp cry that mixed fear and surprise in equal measure. Beyond that, however, he gave no response—he just stood frozen, unable to even turn and look at Sjan-dehk. Instead, it was one of the girls from Sudah who spoke up. Redness tinted her cheeks, and her round eyes darted left, then up, then right, then down—at everything but him. She ran her fingers along the looped braids on either side of her head as she spoke.

“O-Oh, Captain! I-I mean, sir—No, I mean, my lord—”

“How many more ranks are you going to give me?” Sjan-dehk interrupted, his tone perhaps a little sharper than he’d intended. The girl recoiled visibly. He sighed. “Captain or Sjan-dehk will do. Who’re you?”

The girl nodded. “O-Okay, Captain Sjan-dehk,” she said. “My, um, my name is—”

She was interrupted once more, this time by Iyen. The Sudhrayarn’s wide grin made her look as if she was a cat toying with its prey. “You’re Hasehnya, aren’t you? Yasawen’s senior.” A look of surprise spread over the girl’s face, but then she nodded, her feet trying to rub holes into the ground. Iyen’s gaze didn’t linger on her, and she turned to the other girl from Sudah.

“And you must be Tehwasang,” she concluded.

As with Hasehnya, surprise coloured Tehwasang’s features—clearly, neither of them had expected Iyen to recognise them—but she recovered much faster than her friend. “That’s me,” she said, her voice brimming with exuberance, almost as if she was proud to be caught. Black ink lined her upturned eyes, flowing from the corners like little wings. Unlike Hasehnya, she allowed her long hair to flow freely. “But you can just call me Tehwa, Captain Sjan-dehk, and
” She turned to Iyen, head cocked slightly. “...Guard Iyen?”

Iyen ignored her, folding her arms and looking sideways at Sjan-dehk. “Arcanists, both of them.”

Four arcanists. Ashore. Making a scene in front of a tavern for all of Caesonia to see. Sjan-dehk wanted to scream, but he settled for rubbing the bridge of his nose and breathing in deeply. This evening was turning out to be quite a mess. And worse than that, a mess he now had to clean up.

He turned his steely gaze on Yasawen, then Inshahri. “So,” he began, addressing the boy. “An explanation would be nice.”

At last, Yasawen looked at him. Or at least, he tried to—his nervous eyes wandered everywhere before he decided to just stare at the dirt between his feet. “It
It was Shahri’s idea,” he mumbled. Sjan-dehk huffed, and he carried on, his voice jumping a few pitches higher. “S–Sorry, Captain! S–Shahri just wanted a night ashore before
Before the new rule went into force. I–I tried to stop her, I really did! But she got away, and so I–I followed her to make sure she didn’t get herself into trouble
” He glanced at Inshahri, who seemed far too engrossed with her argument to pay Sjan-dehk any heed. “Not too much trouble, I–I mean.”

Sjan-dehk shifted his attention to Hasehnya and Tehwasang. “And the two of you? Same reason?”

“What?” Hasehnya looked genuinely shocked, her voice suddenly loud. The redness in her face deepened as she continued. “I–We–I mean, Tehwa and I didn’t know anything about that! W-We had permission from Captain Kaizahn to stay ashore until sunset! A-And we were going to return, really! But we ran into Shahri at the pier and she said she had your permission to stay out a-and said we could join her, so
So we did.”

Tehwasang covered her mouth with a hand and giggled. “And you actually believed that?”

It took no small amount of willpower for Sjan-dehk to resist the urge to beckon Dahsahn and his men over, and have them haul these wayward arcanists back to their ships.

For almost every waking hour of the past three days, he’d had to endure endless meetings and mountains of paperwork. Ploughing through them had been an agonising affair, but he’d kept the bulk of his grumbles to himself. After all, there’d been a very good reason for his efforts. Although his report on the banquet had been brief, it’d still caused a stir within Viserjantan leadership. News of an active witch-hunt—one ruthless enough to persecute even the Caesonian Queen—demanded action.

And—his personal misgivings aside—Sjan-dehk had to give credit to everyone else who’d been part of the discussions for taking swift action. They’d come to a majority consensus during their very first meeting, on the very first day—all arcanists were to be confined to ships until a better solution could be found. Then, in true Commonwealth fashion, the remaining two days had been dedicated to drafting, reviewing, critiquing, and inevitably re-drafting the regulations to ensure that every possible loophole had been closed.

Unfortunately, none of that accounted for someone like Inshahri. Sjan-dehk and the rest of the Viserjantan leaders could’ve spent a full month refining and revising the regulations, and Inshahri would’ve still ignored them as easily as she breathed.

But irritated as Sjan-dehk was with her, he couldn’t bring himself to feel properly angry. Being confined to a ship was considered a punishment by sailors—Jafin ones included. And while being trapped aboard a ship like Sudah, which had been built with comfort in mind, might be bearable, being limited to the four decks of a frigate like Sada Kurau must’ve been like torture for youths like Inshahri and Yasawen. Neither had even served aboard a warship before, as far as Sjan-dehk knew.

And so, when he finally called out to Inshahri, his voice didn’t have as much of a bite as he’d planned, and instead carried more of an older brother’s sternness. “Inshahri.”

Rather than her, it was the Caesonian man with whom she was arguing who answered him. A pair of pale, bluish-green eyes glared at him from over Inshahri’s shoulder. “Oi, this bitch belong to you? Get her out of here before I decide to stop playin’ nice.”

Sjan-dehk bristled. “You will not speak of her that way,” he said, jaw set and eyes narrowed. “And I am not speaking to you. You will wait.”

Inshahri spun around, relief in her smile and hope in her eyes. “Captain!” The joy in her voice almost made Sjan-dehk feel bad about having to discipline her later. She stepped closer and looked up at him. “Please, you have to help me! There’s bad magic in there! Really, really bad magic!” She jabbed a finger toward the tavern, then glared at the Caesonians standing in front of the door. “I can hear it! It’s terrible, terrible music and we have to do something! Please, explain it to them!”

Sjan-dehk met her gaze with one brow raised. “Inshahri, you’re not even supposed to be here,” he started, voice dry and words measured. “What makes you think I’m going to help you?”

Genuine distress came over Inshahri’s face, and she tugged at his sleeve. “Please, Captain! I-I, um I know I did wrong, but please just help me? I promise I won’t do anything like this again! And I’ll accept whatever punishment you want to give!”

The right thing to do, Sjan-dehk knew, was to ignore her pleas, apologise to the Caesonians, and drag her back to Sada Kurau—by force, if need be. But there was something about her insistence, about the hint of desperation running under it, that gave him pause. Inshahri had never been the type to confront obstacles like this, and though she’d asked him for things and favours before, she’d never begged for them. Perhaps there really was something worth looking into here.

“Fine,” he said. Inshahri let out a little cheer. “But only this once, alright?”

Sjan-dehk shifted his attention to the Caesonian man, his face hardening into the visage of a battle-tested captain. “She says there is something wrong here—”

“And I’m sayin’ she’s a fuckin’ idiot.” The man didn’t let him finish. “Tavern’s closed. That’s it. Fuck off.”

“Do not interrupt me,” Sjan-dehk said. He folded his arms. “If it is closed, then just let her see. Maybe open the door for a while. Let her look through a window. Then she will know it is closed, and then it will be easy for me to take her away. That is simple, yes?”

“No fuckin’ chance.” The man’s reply came without hesitation. “Get her out of my sight now, or things’ll get real messy real fuckin’ quick.”

“Why no?” Sjan-dehk asked. “You have something to hide?”

Beside him, Inshahri nodded vigorously. “Yes, yes! Hiding! They are hiding some
Something.”

“Shut your fuckin’ gobs, both of you,” the man snapped. He shot Inshahri a dirty look. “Especially you, you mad bitch. You want to accuse us of witchcraft? Witch-fuckin’-craft? Then either get some fuckin’ proof get the fuck out of here.”

“Okay!” Inshahri said. “I get proof!”

Before Sjan-dehk could stop her, she darted forward. The man shouted, a sound halfway between a growl and a roar. His hand reached for a wooden handle jutting out from his belt. It could’ve been part of a knife; it could’ve been part of a truncheon—it wouldn’t have mattered to Sjan-dehk either way. He only knew that he had to act. “Yasa!” he shouted for the boy even as he grabbed Inshahri’s shoulder and pulled her back, pushing her towards Sada Kurau’s other arcanist. “Take her!”

Yasawen yelled something in response, but his words were lost amidst the panicked clamour of the crowd, the cold hiss of steel against leather, and the clatter of approaching footsteps. Sjan-dehk paid little heed to all those sounds, and drove his fist into the man’s face. It struck his nose with a wet, sickening crunch. The man staggered back several steps, a pained scream bursting from his lips. Sjan-dehk gave him no time to recover and closed the distance with practiced ease. Fabric rustled as he landed an open-palmed strike to the man’s jaw, followed by an elbow to his temple.

“Fuck you—” The man managed to growl despite the blood pouring from his ruined nose. Sjan-dehk didn’t reply, his lips twitching into the ghost of a smirk as he planted a foot on the man’s chest with enough force to send him sprawling. The man hit the cobblestones hard, the air rushing from his lungs in a wheeze.

Even so, he retained enough of his senses to draw his weapon—a knife with a wicked, serrated blade. His tenacity was impressive, Sjan-dehk had to admit, but not his speed. Before the blade’s point could clear its sheath, Sjan-dehk had already pulled his pistol out and levelled its muzzle at the man’s head.

“Do not try,” he said flatly.
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TIME: Evening
LOCATION: The Gossamer


Lucian listened intently, interested in Torvi’s story. The idea of being left alone like that in the cold when young left a cold feeling in the back of his chest. He couldn’t even imagine what he would have done in that situation. He couldn't imagine his mother even allowing it. It gave him a small pause to reflect on how comfortable his upbringing had truly been.

Regardless of his own feelings, he turned to look at Kilian as he was given the floor to speak. He nodded along as Kilian started, already feeling all too strongly about it. Would he have worded it the same way? Probably not, but he still agreed. He listened to Kilian’s choice words about the queen and king, blinking in mild confusion. Sure, Kings and Queen had their issues, as all people do, but from his stance, what Kilian was beginning to discuss could be grounds for war for someone of his station. He had to play this carefully.

Lucian watched Kilian slide a file over to him. Tentatively, he reached for it and opened it to read while he listened. It already had his blood boiling. Once again an image flashed of that figure behind his wife and he couldn’t help but overlap this person with them. The anger seeped through him like a poison, thick and low. This was the kind of person who had taken his life away. It took no small amount of effort to remind himself who this person was. A Prince. As much as he agreed, wanting to punish him, he knew doing so publicly would be more than just risky for him. It could constitute an act of war if he wasn’t cautious. Still, Lucian was tired of sitting and waiting. Inaction had killed his wife and he would not allow it to continue.

”What’s the plan then? I agree that the stability of the throne needs to be considered at all times. Unrest will only lead to more chaos and violence. There is no need to give them a martyr or a cause to rally behind.” Lucian asked, looking from Torvi to Kilian. ”How do we plan on bringing him to justice without causing more strife for the kingdom’s people?”

Torvi leaned forward, her gold-embroidered sleeves shimmering as she spoke with the cold precision of a huntress.

"The plan for Callum must be delicate. As you say, ve cannot risk a martyr. However, rot is... unique," she began. "He has abandoned his usual vays, acting as a pompous prince, but his aura tells the truth. It is red, the color of pain and destruction, vith edges bleeding black vith corruption. It pulses erratically, but the most critical part is it is obscured by smoke. Smoke suggests possession, or something hidden vithin him. A Prince who loses control of such power creates a crater vhere a city used to be."

She paused, her expression darkening as she brought up the second name.

"Then there is Lady Violet Damien. She vas gone for a time and has returned... changed. She is deathly pale, her eyes now a vicked red. Her aura is buried under a thick fog that renders it almost unreadable. It is a catastrophic marker. One theory ve hafe is she may hafe been turned, though ve lack the proof to move just yet."

Torvi’s golden eyes remained steady, but she turned slightly toward Kilian, her posture tightening.

"Howefer, I can confirm there is at least one vampire on the loose in this city. I found a body last night, discarded in the shadows. The killer vas clever. They gutted the man to make it look like a simple mugging gone vrong or revenge on someone. But there vas no mess, Kilian. Not nearly enough blood on the clothes for such a vound. The man vas drained dry before the blade ever touched him."

She looked back to Lucian, her voice dropping to a low murmur. "To avoid the strife you fear, I beliefe ve must isolate these targets and verify the corruption behind closed doors. Once ve hafe filled you in on the others, ve can discuss how to lure a Prince into the dark vhere a monster can be dealt vith vithout the vorld ever seeing a body."

“Torvi and I are of one mind on this matter, and that leads me to our third and final member of the dossier.” Kilian explained as he reached forward and turned the page of the file he had presented Prince Lucian to its final pages. “Lady Charlotte Vikena, future Duchess, witchblood abomination. This one is especially curious to me.” He admitted, leaning back in his chair and crossing his arms.

“Her aura indicates dormant powers. Not only is she clearly from an arcane bloodline, but there is something more there. I can feel it. She has the potential to be a real threat, and I have decided to manage this one personally. Soon, I will be making a house call to the Vikena estate. It is time Lady Vikena and I get acquainted.” A sick smile crossed his already intense face as he relished in the thought of their meeting. “This will be our first move, and once I have dealt with
”

Kilian’s words came to a sudden halt as the attention of the table was pulled elsewhere. A groan, long and ungodly loud, came from one of the nearest tables across the room. Kilian’s eyes locked onto the culprit, his head tilting like that of a confused dog as he took in the sight of them. His jaw fell open, confusion sweeping over him as the strange
person
at the table twirled their obviously fake mustache insanely and awkwardly lifted a pair of opera binoculars to their eyes
pointed directly towards Kilian and his guests.

“Is
Is that a fucking woman in a mustache?” Were the only words he could manage as his brain fully malfunctioned at the absurdity he was witnessing

He listened quietly. He could feel his gut wrenching and churning at what he was hearing. Fear washed over him like a cold breeze. If what they were saying was true, then there were far more evils in this world than he knew. Far more. And they were far up the chain, people he couldn’t touch without consequence. He wasn’t sure what he’d been expecting but it certainly wasn’t nobles or royalty. He also didn’t want to consider what the term ‘turned’ meant.

His gaze shifted to Kilian as he spoke of visiting Lady Charlotte before shifting back down to the girl at his feet. He wouldn’t.. Right? But if she was
 He could feel a headache coming on. He wasn’t sure why he expected this to be black and white but it was rather muddied, wasn’t it?

Lucian’s brow raised as Kilian trailed off. He turned his head behind him and spotted her. Lucian went through emotions quickly. First shock, as his eyes went wide and his mouth dropped a little. Then, it shifted into something angrier, brows furrowed and hands gripping the seat a little too tightly. He might just kill her.

Lucian turned back quickly, a look of frustration on his face as his lips pressed together in a tight frown. ”Please
 just ignore her.” He spoke quietly. ”I’ll
 be right back.” He added after a short pause and got up from his chair.

He made the relatively short walk over to her table and sat down, an unimpressed look on his face. ”Good evening sir. We couldn’t help but to see that you have been watching us rather closely. Can I help you?” He asked aloud, blinking expectantly at her.

”Because if you don’t say no and walk away, I think I might just have a heart attack right here.” He whispered angrily as he leaned in closer to her. ”What are you doing here Marina?”


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TIME: Evening
LOCATION: The Pasta Oasis
MENTIONS: @HylianRose Lucian | @Princess Marina







As the gentle notes of the piano drifted through the air, the Pasta Oasis came alive. Lanterns cast a golden glow over tables draped in elegant navy blue or cream cloths. The scent of rich sauce mingled with fresh basil and roasted garlic, wrapping the occupants in a tantalizing warmth. Laughter and clinking cutlery rose and fell with the music, creating a lively cacophony beneath the chandelier’s shimmering lights. As the two Camilia offspring and their loyal knight stepped inside, the brilliant blue of the pool came into view, along with towering tropical plants.

Though Ambrose walked at their side as the obvious shield, he was not the royals’ only protection tonight. Two Varian Protectors in dark, tailored coats lingered near the main doors, posing as ordinary gentlemen waiting on a table, eyes tracking the events of the room.

Another guard occupied a small table on the upper balcony, his untouched glass of wine giving him an excuse enough to sit and watch the pool floor below. Outside, a final man kept to the lamplit street by the carriages as he monitored anyone who loitered too long near the entrance. To most patrons, they were just part of the crowd; to Ambrose, they were a well-placed net ready to draw tight at the first sign of trouble.

As for the trio themselves, their status ensured they were almost immediately ushered to a table. A well-dressed waiter approached at once, offering a polite bow before he began to take their drink orders. In the meantime, he poured water into crystal glasses and provided them with a basket of fresh-baked bread.

Askel gave the waiter a polite nod of silent appreciation and then looked at his two dinner companions. "I must say, it is nice to share a meal with you two once again. Shame that Marnie and Lucian could not attend, but I cannot complain; the company of you both is enough to fill my heart," he said with a warm smile to his sister and their solemn companion and protector.

His gaze trailed the restaurant, a scene of plenty that not many were privileged to witness; an excess of food and fineries as far as the eyes could see. A soft chuckled puffed past his lips. "Though I have to admit, I find myself feeling rather out of place. Such decadence was not afforded to me during my journey nor were such protections. Why, you'd think I was a prince after all!"

He certainly looked the part, handsomely dressed in a black dinner wear, a stiffly starched white dress shirt, and for a splash of color a deep blue ascot around his neck that contrasted with that fiery head of hair.

Syvlia could not contain her excitement leading up to the restaurant, it was her choice after all. The novelty of having a pool in the middle of the establishment had shoved aside all other options. She bounced on the front of her feet even as they walked, often tapping Askel’s arms when something fun or interesting captured her attention while bombarding Ambrose with a myriad of her often obvious observations.

She clung onto Askel’s arm as they entered Pasta Oasis, her bouncing a near constant and only her grip on his firm arm holding her from speeding off. A bright smile matched her wide, open eyes as they finally moved and were struck with the mix of fantastic sights and delicious smell. Her gaze then quickly shifted to the pool with a few people already swimming in it. The bright smile on her lips twisted deviously as her bouncing ominously stopped.

Sylvia dropped her hold on Askel’s arm and kicked off her jeweled sandals in a quick motion as she made a quick surge to move forward. The firm hand on her shoulder was almost enough to cause her feet to slip out from under her, luckily the grip was strong and she was rather light. Sylvia turned her head slowly with her best charming smile at Ambrose yet the brief squeeze on her shoulder and scowl on his face told her his answer. ”Fine~” She pouted for just a moment and let her body relax. It was worth a shot.

She picked up her discarded sandals after Ambrose let go of her and followed the waiter to their table. Sylvia stood next to her chair and glanced at Ambrose once again with a sweeter, less plotting smile than earlier. It turned into a pleased, somewhat proud smirk as he pulled out the chair for her and then pushed her back in after she sat down, her hands landing on her lap as she adopted a properly dignified posture. The giggle that followed shortly after didn’t let the image last for long.

”I agree, Askie!~ I feel like a proper princess with my two valiant knights!” She exclaimed cheerfully, the unique extravagance of the venue not even within the orbit of her thoughts. This place is amazing! We have to bring Marnie and Lulu next time! That would be so fun.” Syvlia let out what was more a snicker than a giggle at the last part.

”I don’t know, brother.~ I think I saw quite a few pretty girls looking your way when we entered. Maybe a few of them would want to go swimming with you. I can point them out if you’d like.” Sylvia offered in the same tone that often led to grease spread around the castle halls. She let the words hang for a moment before giggling again, her whole body turning towards Ambrose ”And you, my dashing knight, shall have whatever you want on the menu! It is a treat from your favorite princess!” She titled her head up a little with a confident grin.

Ambrose was quiet, as he had been for some time on the way to this strange restaurant. This was a new city, a new Kingdom, but the same task. All that mattered was keeping the Camilia heirs safe. But how, he wondered, was he meant to keep those who refused to comply safe? This question came often, haunting him as an unending source of frustration. That very sentiment was obvious on his face; the expression he wore made his irritation quite clear.

The man was rather grumpy, after all
 Grumpy but vigilant. Always vigilant. Always ready to fulfill the orders of his king.

As such, Ambrose wore his formal attire. It was comprised of tailored dark layers beneath a polished cuirass of deep blackened steel with warm bronze detailing. His arming sword hung plainly visible at his hip; it was not his full Briarknight armor, nor the iconic greatsword that he was most known for, but there was enough protection to do his duty without drawing unnecessary attention. The kit was practical, stylish, and most importantly
 fit for the occasion.

Once Sylvia was back in her seat and settled, Ambrose listened to her conversation with Askel, to whom he gave a gracious nod before turning his bronze gaze back to the girl.

“It is true, Your Grace
” Ambrose exclaimed, his voice laced with dry sarcasm. “You are my favorite Princess, because you are here, where you are meant to be. Unlike your sister.” The sigh that followed was nothing but the release of pure, never-ending exasperation. “Speaking of Princess Marina
 Where is she, and why is she not here to meet us as I was led to believe?”

"My apologies Ambrose, it slipped my mind. Marnie decided to retire to her guest quarters for the night as she found the journey quite tiring." Askel explained, his smile apologetic for he knew the worry that always went through his fellow knight's head. Ambrose scowled as Askel’s smile then turned wry and the younger knight said, "The only trouble that you're dealing with tonight is the one sitting in front of us." He shot his dear little sister with a look of annoyance that only an older brother could give to their ever-precocious younger sibling.

"Seriously, what is with you Sylvie? Ever since I returned home you have done nothing but parade me around to every able-bodied woman that you know; your friends, your friends of friends, and Gods know who else. Those poor ladies must be sick to death of the sight of me by now!" Askel exclaimed with an exasperated chuckle of someone that he had been pulled around by his sister's well-intentioned schemes.

Sylvia’s grin turned a bit more smug at Ambrose’s admission and nodded along with such a natural conclusion. The expression fell some as he mentioned Marnie, a mix of longing and annoyance at the absence of her closest sister. She took the moment Ambrose and Askel talked to take a sip of her water, dipping the edge of the crystal glass against her lips in a show of refined elegance that showcased the royal demeanor she could express if she only chose to. Displays like it were just another way she teases others. Strangers would think her to be refined as her lineage suggested, while those close would know she was just making a point.

She set her glass down with that faux noble smile as Askel’s attention shifted to her. ”It is quite simple, my dear Askel
” Sylvia had begun with the same tone of voice she adopted for public appearance that dropped quickly as she continued, her dainty hands making a tap rather than a thud as she slammed them on the table with no real force behind them.

”...It is a royal crime that my daring and charming brother does not have a beloved! Every Knight needs a fair maiden! These are the rules!” Passion erupted in her eyes that bore a fierceness rarely seen in the free-spirited princess. ”Besides, there is now a fresh
” She raised a hand to her mouth to hide her wide smirk and giggle, glancing over at the center of the restaurant and back at Askel. ”...pool of lovely women who would love a princely knight to take them away.”

The way her hand trembled a little showed how much she was struggling to hold back her laughter. Her eyes glanced over at Ambrose, ever seeking the faintest sign of amusement from the broody knight. ”You have to agree, right Ambrose? A dashing knight whisking his princess away on a ride through the meadow
.” What had started as a strong question faded into wistful mumbling as her gaze shifted to the window.

“Whatever you say, Princess.” Ambrose answered dryly, posture unchanged as Sylvie’s thoughts wandered off into the familiar depths of her imagination. He did not follow her there.

His thoughts shifted instead, unhurried, settling back on the other princess he was sworn to protect
and then, inevitably, to the man across from him. As his gaze returned to Askel, measured and unreadable, Ambrose considered his words. Perhaps the young knight believed his sister when she claimed she would retire early. Perhaps he didn’t.

Ambrose, of course, did not. It was never that simple with this family.

A quiet sigh left him, more habit than frustration at this point
 and with it, he set Marina aside for later reckoning. His voice returned to Sylvie, calm and even, though his eyes never left his former squire.

“Though I’d argue what your brother really needs is less galivanting,” he added, the faintest curve of a smirk touching his mouth, “and more training.”

Following his sister's line of sight, his eyes fell upon the pool that sat smacked in the middle of the restaurant. He squinted at her, seeing that she could barely hold herself together from her own amusement and could only roll his eyes at Sylvia's antics.

"Nothing screams romance more than the smell of chlorine, cheese, and beef." Sarcasm dripped from his lips before the prince reached out and grabbed one of the slices of freshly baked bread and ripped a piece off, carefully dipping it in some of the provided olive oil that sat in a pristine dipping bowl. He silenced himself with the piece of well dredged bread as Ambrose made his stance quite clear on what Askel should be doing with his time instead.

Finally seeing some signs of life from the man, Askel returned Ambrose's smirk. "Ambrose, don't threaten me with a good time. I'm not one to boast, but I think I could give you some trouble." There it was, his love for competition that lit up his eyes. The prince knew that Ambrose was likely still the better warrior, but it had been years since they last crossed blades; anything was possible.

A chuckled rumbled from his throat and he said, "Besides, who would be so crass to pick up women during a family outing?"

His gaze fell upon his sister who wistfully looked out the window for her future knight to come and whisk her away. If Askel had a gold piece every time that she had that look, he would've had enough to fund his very own kingdom. A playful grin played upon his lips. "Woe to the man that pursues you and has to compete with the ideal in your head."

Syvlia adopted a cute pout as she crossed her arms at Ambrose’s rigid dismissal and Askel’s sarcasm, letting a soft huff of annoyance at them both. She really had her work cut out for her between the two regimented knights. The princess disguised her brief discontentment by following Askel’s lead and angrily stuffed her cheeks with some buttered bread. His eagerness to accept Ambrose’s offer was nearly enough to make her cry out in exasperation.

”You know, Askie, you won’t have room for dessert if you fill up with excuses!” Syvlia waved the butter knife she had used toward him, a playful scowl on her face that quickly faded. She set it down and made a point of correcting her posture in her seat. ”And Ambrose, Askie has been far more successful in his training than his gallivanting so I must disagree.” Her voice holding the poise that she so often discarded, a mock look of offense on her face.

The mock look directed at Ambrose shifted into an honest one as her gaze and head snapped towards Askel, her mouth slightly agape and a light blush on her cheeks. ”W-what is that supposed to mean? I think my requirements are perfectly reasonable!” She protested as she crossed her arms, turning her head slightly in a true pout this time.

Ambrose simply rolled his eyes at the duo, but could not hide the slight growth of the faint little smirk he wore so handsomely. He had not taken a seat between the two, instead he stood vigil by the table, as was his role as protector. The royal knight was not here for bread, pasta, nor the pool. He was here to keep the others safe. Yet, despite his best efforts, that had never stopped him from being pulled into their conversations before. For now, however, he remained silent so that the brother could answer the sister’s query.

Askel could only chuckle at his little sister's indignation. She could tease him all she wanted, but all it took to get a rise out of her was a well-placed jab. Somehow, he got the feeling that he was going to be paying for this later in the form of cake. "Standards are good to have, healthy even." Askel explained. "I have them, Ambrose has them, and I am sure anyone with any self-respect would have them. The problem arises when suitors climb the tallest mountain only to find that they need to reach sky."

His smile softened with brotherly affection for Sylvia. At the end of the day, he was just a concerned older brother worried for his little sister. "I'm not saying you should accept any man that shows the tiniest passing interest in you; they'd have to answer to me then. What I am saying is that good men are flawed and if you focus only on them then you'll never see the greater picture. In fact, if you find someone that seems perfect then I would be wary of them the most." He motioned towards their knight towering over them.

"I mean, take Ambrose for example. He's grumpy on the best of days, so stoic that his face cracks whenever he smiles the slightest, and he refuses to sit with us even when standing draws more attention. Save for his handsome face, you'd write him off, no?" Ambrose glared daggers at him, and Askel stifled a laugh with a quickly disguised clearing of his throat, he quickly followed up, "But if you saw the parts that made up the whole, well, you'd find that he's probably the most eligible bachelor in Varian." The prince gave their ever statuesque guardian an apologetic grin for making him the butt of a joke for the moment. It was times like these he was glad that he was no longer Ambrose's squire for he knew what kind of punishment would have awaited him.

Sylvia had begun to open her mouth to passionately object, but the smile Askel had offered disarmed her instinctual reaction. She had a tendency to go a little
overboard and she hadn’t spared the image of her ideal partner that treatment. Her gaze looked towards Ambrose as Askel spoke of him, lightly nodding along with each of her brother’s assessments. There was a light that sparked in her eyes as she glanced between the two. Sylvia’s nodding turned fervent, a knowing smile washing away the thoughtful mood she had been in listening to Askel. ”I understand you, brother. I understand completely.” There was a wicked glint in the corners of her eyes as they flicked between her older brother and their protector.

”I should just send any men who come bother me to you or Ambrose! Those who don’t die can be put on a list!” Sylvia tiled her head up slightly with a prideful smile, planting her hands on her hips confident of her decision. Her siblings were simply the best. That much was certain to the young princess. Therefore, if potential suitors could defeat either Askel or Ambrose, who had trained Askel, then they would be fit to pursue her! A smug smirk replaced her previous smile as her eyes had closed, picturing the sight of a mountain of defeated suitors beaten under the two knights next to her.

“Well first off, it’s good to know that you think I’m handsome
 Askie”. Ambrose announced in jest, using Askel’s pet name in a way he knew the young knight would hate. That same slight curl of a grin that formed with his joke shifted into pure stoicism as he addressed Sylvie’s plan. “I guess that means you’ll never find a proper suitor.” He said plainly, with no emotion behind the words. Simple facts from a man confident in his, and his trainee’s competence. The sureness of his words, along with the pure neutrality of his expression when speaking them could have turned a man’s blood cold.

Askel maintained a blank smile while he slowly blinked after hearing his sister's grand idea on how to decide her suitors. This had taken a turn that he had not expected. The prince was ready to open his mouth, but Ambrose had beat him to the punch. He shot his senior knight a glare back at him though before he could protest, the stoic confidently stated that they would just kill all of her suitors with that unreadable expression on his face.

Askel looked at devilish duo and with a bemused laugh said, "Were you two always this terrifying or did this come about while I was gone?" He really did not want to know the answer to that. "Anyway, I have to agree with Ambrose; you'd just end up as an old spinstress. Mother and father would be most displeased if the reason you never married was because of us." Askel grinned mischievously and playfully threw his hands up. "Who knows, maybe we’ll lose on purpose to a man with a valiant heart, but the head of an ass. Now that would make for an interesting family portrait."

She had simply clasped her hands together, tilted her head, and gave the most innocent smile she could give at his question. ”It would seem that my dreams of a valiant hero coming to save me from two horrible demons just won’t be realized
.” She said dreamily back to the two knights, or demons, as she pictured strong heroes fighting one after the other for her hand. Her brows furrowed, breaking her pure expression to glare at Askel. ”You do that and I’ll send a certain someone a very passionate and romantic letter. I still know your handwriting, dear Askie.” She let out an annoyed hmpf that lasted an entire second as she glanced over her shoulder.

”Oh, perfect. Our food is about to arrive! All this love talk has really given me an appetite.” Sylvia said cheerfully with an eager look as if the entire previous conversation had been entirely scrubbed from her current mood. The truffle butter pasta ribbons with black truffle shavings were placed in front of her. It had been at the top of the menu and looked very good so that had been enough for her. ”Oh, what did you two get? Hold on, let me guess, you BOTH got the pasta with short rib?”

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The man’s eyes widened as they swept over Sjan-dehk, as if seeing the swords, pistols and armour on the Viserjantan’s person for the first time. He dropped the knife, its blade clanging against stone. “Okay, okay, wait, I—” His words came quickly, like a torrent surging through a broken dam.

“Let me warn you, for the first time and last time,” Sjan-dehk went on. “Inshahri is part of my crew. To obey me is her duty. To protect her is mine. Hurt her, and I will hurt you.”

“Alright, alright, I’m not—”

“Now,” Sjan-dehk interrupted him again. “She says there is magic in there. I believe her. Explain. Now.”

“What fuckin’ magic?” The man’s voice grew loud, but without its earlier bluster and edge, it sounded more like a desperate wail than a threatening roar. “I’ve been tellin’ your girl all fuckin’ evenin’ since she and her pals got here, there’s no. Fuckin’. Magic! Nobody’s mad enough to try that shit in this fuckin’ city! Might be she heard somethin’, or thought she saw somethin’, I don’t fuckin’ know. But I fuckin’ swear to you, there’s no fuckin’ magic! The tavern’s just closed, and that’s the truth!”

“Trust not his lies, lost Jafin child.”

Once again, that womanly whisper came unbidden to Sjan-dehk’s mind. Were it not for the tense situation, he would’ve smirked. For once, it’d spoken plainly, and had said words he could agree with. The man was clearly hiding something—everything he’d done so far betrayed that fact. Proving it, however, would be far easier said than done. Sjan-dehk knew Inshahri wasn’t the sort to go around picking fights. He knew of her ability to sense arcane energy. The Caesonians didn’t. To them, she was just a strange girl accusing these men of a grave crime.

“The boys and I just want to make an honest livin’, that’s all,” the man went on. His eyes shifted toward the crowd every few words. “We never intended to cause any trouble, never! The boss paid us good money to keep people away, and that’s what we did! We sure as fuck didn’t plan on fightin’ foreigners, gettin’ beaten up, or havin’ fuckin’ guns pointed in our faces!”

Sjan-dehk clicked his tongue and grimaced. He couldn’t understand the crowd’s murmurs, but his instincts told him that its sympathies were with the Caesonian men. The man seemed to know it as well—there was a shine in his eyes, and a ghost of a smile on his lips when he looked at Sjan-dehk.

“Ye’re still stickin’ wi’ that gobshite o’ a story? Cannae say I’m nae impressed wi’ yer determination.”

Cynric’s playful lilt sliced through the tension with ease. Sjan-dehk glanced over his shoulder. Behind him, Dahsahn’s men had two of the other Caesonian thugs held at gunpoint. Inshahri was with Yasawen, along with the other two arcanists, hiding behind Iyen. At their feet was the third thug, his body still as the stones it laid upon, and a bloodied rock by his head. The crowd had grown to a thronging mass, but Cynric’s crew did a fine job of holding it at bay.

And through it all, Recompense’s captain strolled over, his hands pushed into the pockets of his jacket and a nonchalant air about it.

He stopped beside Sjan-dehk. “Sorry, Cap’n,” he said. “I thought things were’nae gae’n yer way, so I came o’er wi’ our fellas. Hope ye dae’n mind.”

“No, not at all,” Sjan-dehk replied. He tilted his head towards the man. “You were saying something?”

“Aye, I was,” Cynric said. He turned to the man on the ground, fixing him with a look that was both amused and disappointed. “Y’know, folks like ye used tae put actual effort intae their lies, aye they did. Used tae be that ye’d ‘ave tae be a wee bit clever tae dae this kind ‘o work.” He chuckled and shook his head. Then, he gestured to the tavern. “Come now, use yer ‘ead, aye? There’s nae a tavernkeeper who’d close their doors on an evenin’ as busy as this, aye there’s nae. Ta’ whole feckin’ place could be on feckin’ fire, and ye man would still be servin’ brews frae ta’ ash heap.”

The thug bared his teeth. “You shut your—”

“Nae, I dae’n think I will, pal,” Cynric cut in, an impish smile growing on his face. “‘Cause e’en if ta’ keeper was awa’, they would’nae spend good money hirin’ folks tae jus’ stand at ta’ door tellin’ people tae feck off, would they?” He shifted his attention to the crowd. “I dae’n know about ye lot, but all ta’ tavern’s I’ve been tae jus’ lock ta’ doors an’ ‘ang a sign tellin’ folks tae try their luck some other day when they’re closed. Any o’ you e’er seen one that hires fellas tae chase folks awa’?”

More murmurs rippled through the crowd, but nobody gave Cynric an answer.

“I thought nae,” Cynric said. He walked over to the man, kicked the knife away, and squatted beside him, a confident air about him, and a look that made it clear that he knew he’d won. “So, ye still thinkin’ o’ stickin’ tae yer story, or are ye ready tae tell ta’ truth?”

The man’s eyes nervously flicked over to Sjan-dehk, then returned to Cynric.

“I mean, we can aw’ways break a few fingers tae get started, if ye prefer. It’d match ye nose pret’y nicely, if ye dae’n mind me sayin’. Personally though, I’d jus’ talk an’ save e’erybody ta’ trouble
” He trailed off and made a show of slowly reaching for the man’s hand. “But if a bit ‘o pain’s what’ll make ye talk, then I’m nae gae’n let that stop wee ol’ me, aye I’m nae.”

“Okay, I’ll talk!” The man almost shrieked as he pulled his hand back.

Cynric chuckled and stood back up. “That’s a good lad,” he said before beckoning Sjan-dehk over. “Looks like ye man’s ready tae sing.”

“Thank you,” Sjan-dehk replied. Then, he turned to the man. “Explain everything. Now.”

“I–I really don’t know much, and that’s the truth,” the man said. His eyes widened when he saw Cynric sigh and crack his knuckles. “Wait, wait! That doesn’t mean I don’t know anythin’! The boys and I were hired by another gang to stand guard out here!”

“Another gang?” Sjan-dehk’s eyes narrowed. “How many are there? Do they have magic?”

“I don’t know, I didn’t count,” the man replied. “Maybe twelve? Fourteen? But they’ve got a witch, that’s for fuckin’ sure. I never liked that bitch, honest.”

“The one you call
Witch.” The word left a poor taste in Sjan-dehk’s mouth. It’d been a long time since any Viserjantan arcanist had been labelled with such an insulting term. “You know what she can do? You know what she is doing right now?”

The man shook his head. “T-They never told me the whole plan, so no, I don’t,” the man said. Displeasure flashed across Sjan-dehk’s face, and he quickly added, “B-But they did tell me that she’ll keep people from lookin’ in and lookin’ out. Cut the tavern off from the world, that’s what they said! T-That’s why they needed the boys and I to keep people away. Otherwise it might break the illusion, that’s what I was told!”

“And they do this
Why?” Sjan-dehk asked.

“They’re
” The man trailed off and averted his gaze. “They’re robbing the place.”

Cynric gave a short laugh. “Feck me, usin’ magic fer a robbery? That’s a wee bit much, aye? An’ what’s ta’ cut they promised ye and ye lads fer ye troubles?”

“They said
Twenty percent, I think? Split among the four of us.”

Cynric guffawed. “Twenty? Ye’d be lucky tae see five, pal.” The man stared at him, confused. With a shake of his head, Cynric sighed and went on. “Think about it fer a moment, pal. Twenty fer standin’ aroun’ dae’n feck aw’? That’s a feckin’ lie if I e’er saw one. An’ ye said it yersel’, ye lot were ‘ired, ye’re nae wi’ ‘em frae ta’ beginnin’. Tae those inside dae’n ta’ robbin’, ye’re jus’ feckin’ tools. If ye think they’d gee’s tools a whole twenty percent cut, then ye’re a feckin’ idiot.”

The thug opened his mouth to protest, but Cynric cut him off. “If ye’re nae tools, then ye’d nae be out here gettin’ feckin’ thrashed, aye? Ye’d be in there wi’ ‘em, dae’n the actual robbin’ and hirin’ other idiots tae be punchin’ bags fer my pal an’ ‘is people.”

“It’s good money
”

“Money ye’re ne’er gae’n see, pal,” Cynric said. “Look, let me spell it out fer ye. Frae here on out, only one o’ two things’ll ‘appen. One, ta’ robbery goes ‘aff wi’out a hitch. Ye’ll gae tae meet yer bosses, an’ ye know what they’re gae’n dae? They’re gae’n tell ye that ye’re nae gettin’ yer twenty, ye’re gettin’ five. What’re ye an’ ye pals gaen’ dae about it? They’ve got a feckin’ witch an’ all ye’ve got is four lads sharin’ a knife. Ye’ll be turned intae feckin’ paste if ye try tae argue.”

“Two,” he went on. “Ta’ lot o’ ye get caught. Considerin’ ta’ crowd we’ve got ‘ere, ye really think ta’ ye pals are gae’n walk out o’ there wi’out anyone noticin’? Sooner or later, they’ll get caught, an’ ye’ll be caught wi’ ‘em, I promise ye. Dae’n feckin’ forget, ye’re nae jus’ scrappin’ or robbin’, pal. Ye’re workin’ wi’ a witch, an’ we aw’ know what ‘appens tae those who work wi’ witches, aye?”

The man gulped. “T-They
”

“Burn wi’ ta’ witches, aye,” Cynric finished for him. “Or they get ta’ drop. Either way, ye’ll nae ‘ave much o’ a life left.”

Colour drained from the thug’s face. The gathered crowd’s unease was palpable.

“I’ll gee’s ye a chance now,” Cynric said. “Take ye pals an’ feck off.”

He turned around and looked at Sjan-dehk. “Ye’re fine wi’ that, Cap’n?”

Sjan-dehk nodded. As unpleasant as he found these thugs, and as much as he wanted to hand them over to the authorities, they weren’t his main concern anymore. The rogue arcanist inside was. The faster these thugs made themselves scarce, the better. “Yes, that is fine. They can go.”

The man gulped, and for a while, the only parts of him that moved were his eyes as they flickered between Cynric and Sjan-dehk, as if he expected this to be a trick. Only when Sjan-dehk tilted his pistol up, pointing its muzzle away from him, did he scramble to his feet. His knife lay forgotten as he shouted for his fellows, his words hurried and—thanks to his ruined nose—garbled. The two held by Dahsahn’s men backed away from the rifles, slowly and carefully at first, then with quicker, hastier steps when they were sure that those blackened muzzles wouldn’t follow them.

With that, the three of them rushed over to their unconscious friend. After a bit of squabbling, they carried him together and retreated down the street. The crowd parted as the group shouldered their way through.

Sjan-dehk and Cynric watched them until they disappeared from view. “So, uh,” the latter started, stopping to clear his throat. “Ye’ve, ah, ye’ve got fellas who can dae magic?”

That got Sjan-dehk’s attention right away, and he snapped his head around to look at him. Unease settled in his stomach, and he tightened his grip on his pistol.

“I saw ye lad send a rock intae a man’s ‘ead,” Cynric continued, nodding first toward Yasawen, then to the rock on the ground, still dark with blood. “I’ve seen plenty o’ weird shite in my time, but a feckin’ rock takin’ fligh’ an’ feckin’ a man up? That’s new tae me, aye.”

A thousand thoughts flooded Sjan-dehk’s mind at once. His jaw tightened. Cynric had been friendly to him and his crew so far, but he was still a Caesonian. Did he share his people’s opinion on magic? Or perhaps this was his way of warning that Yasawen had been seen, and not just by him? Was Yasawen—and other arcanists, for that matter—now in danger? There were too many questions, too many uncertainties floating in Sjan-dehk’s mind, and far, far too many things he didn’t know.

But he could find one thing out now, at least. “Yes,” he said, steel in his voice. “Is that a problem?”

“Nae, nae,” Cynric replied quickly, his hands raised in front of him. “‘Tis ta’ opposite, actually, aye. Cannae say I’m fond o’ witch-hunts mysel’, an’ ‘tis aw’ways grand tae meet someone o’ ta’ same mind.”

Sjan-dehk relaxed slightly. “Is that so?”

Cynric nodded. “Aye. Nae aw’ o’ us like ta’ crown’s big ideas, y’know?”

That would have to be assurance enough—for now. Sjan-dehk supposed that had Cynric meant any harm, he could’ve simply kept quiet about Yasawen and waited until a later time to report the boy’s actions to the city guard. That he’d taken the trouble to sound a warning had to count for something. Sjan-dehk returned his pistol to his holster. “Later,” he said. “We will talk more later.”

“Aye, we should,” Cynric replied. He turned to the tavern, his hands resting on his hips. “We’ve got one big fecker o’ a mess tae deal wi’ first, aye? Ye’ve a plan, Cap’n?”

That was a very good question. Sjan-dehk wished he had a good answer.

The sensible thing to do—the smart thing to do—would be to simply turn around and walk away. He’d only intervened because Inshahri had been in trouble, after all. Now that the thugs had been dealt with and she was safe, he hadn’t any reason to involve himself any further. Caesonian criminals preying on Caesonians in their own taverns was unfortunate—sad, almost—but it was something for Caesonian authorities to deal with. Not him. Not any Viserjantan.

“Wouldst thou abandon them to the mercy of the wicked?”

That whispering voice slipped between Sjan-dehk’s thoughts again, its question soft and gentle, yet edged with admonishment. Its words stung, but try as he might, he couldn’t deny its truth. His gaze turned toward the tavern, at its windows that—as he only now realised—were far too dark. Whatever magic Inshahri had sensed had to be powerful, and had to be extracting a terrible price from those trapped inside. Knowing all this, how could he ignore their plight? To do so would be wrong. Immoral, even.

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Oso

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Time: It’s hard to tell in the dank, dark castle dungeons
Location: Her Prison Cell
Attire: Prison Rags




The dungeon did not change for her just because she had stepped backward in time.

The iron at her throat remained cold, and the chain at her wrist still had its own language—every small shift of her hands answered by a metallic murmur.

But Alibeth’s eyes were no longer on her children.

For a long moment, she simply looked past them, and that familiar distance returned to her face. When she spoke again, it was not to the cell, or the gallows waiting above, but to the thirteen-year-old girl she had once been.

—
FLASHBACK


Eikavaat had smelled like money.

Not coins, more like wax and perfume. Bread that wasn’t stretched thin with sawdust. Even the mud looked different, packed down by carriage wheels that belonged to people who never walked anywhere unless they wished to be seen doing it.

Alibeth remembered the road first, as if her mind could not help cataloguing evidence. Curtains on wagons, cloth swaying over the windows. A boy no older than she was, but clean, holding reins. It had been the first time she understood, in a single, clear moment, that there were entire lives lived without hunger as a constant companion.

Her father did not let them stare for long.

He moved through the streets with that same stride he brought into their room when he returned from months of absence—shoulders squared, eyes scanning through each and every shadow. He held Polina close, but not tenderly; more like an object he could not afford to misplace. Alibeth walked on his other side, matching his pace without being told, because she had learned early that falling behind meant being forgotten.

They reached the apothecary in the late afternoon.

Behind the counter, glass jars caught the sun, and dried herbs hung in bundles. There were drawers with labels in script with names that sounded strange to thirteen-year-old Alibeth.

Alibeth watched her father speak to the man there. She watched the apothecary’s mouth form a line when he saw the state of their clothes. Watched his eyes flick once to the grime beneath Polina’s nails, then away as if it might stain him to look too long. Watched the shape of refusal form before the words ever left his tongue.

Alibeth did not remember the exact words they shared. She remembered what mattered: the small shake of the man’s head, the way his hand never reached for the medicine, the moment he glanced toward the back room.

And then she watched her father turn away as if it had been his choice.

And Alibeth’s stomach had gone cold with it because their mother was dying and they had no medicine for her.

They followed him back into the street, Polina silent, Alibeth silent, the world around them continuing with ease—women laughing with parcels in their arms, a man tipping his hat as if the day itself were something pleasant.

Her father paused at the corner of an alley and looked down at them. “You will not repeat what happened in there,” he said.

Polina nodded quickly, desperate to obey, but Alibeth did not nod. She simply looked at him and waited, because she already knew what came next. The man’s gaze sharpened. “Do you understand?” he asked.

“Yes,” Alibeth said, because she did.

Then he had them continue walking through Eikavaat until they stopped beside a narrow lane between two shops. “Wait here,” he ordered.

Polina’s fingers had twitched, wanting to hold his sleeve, but she did not dare. She stood with her chin lifted, trying so hard to be brave that it made her look even younger, and the girls watched him walk away.

But he did not return. Minutes passed. Then more as the sun slid lower and the street grew colder.

Polina began to tremble, not with fear at first, but with exhaustion. Hunger lived in her bones at this point.

Alibeth took stock, because that was what she did when panic threatened to loosen her grip on the world. She counted exits. She marked where the guards on the main road stood. She listened to the cadence of footsteps, separating the heavy ones from the light. She watched men’s eyes, and she watched women’s hands, because either could decide to harm you.
Then she looked at Polina. “We are not going home without medicine,” she said quietly.

Polina’s lashes fluttered. “Father—”

“He is gone,” Alibeth answered, and even then, there was no accusation in it. It was the same tone she used when she told a sibling the bread was gone, or the water had frozen, or the baby had stopped moving.

Polina swallowed. “What do we do?”

Alibeth’s gaze lifted to the far end of the street, where the Baron’s house stood behind iron fencing. They had passed it earlier, and she remembered it because Polina had stared at the windows the way starving people stare at food.

“We borrow,” Alibeth said. “We take what we need.”

Polina’s eyes widened. “That’s stealing.”

“Our mother is dying,” she said again. “You may call it whatever word makes you comfortable.”

Polina’s mouth opened, then closed, and then she nodded.



They approached the Baron’s property, the fence there was iron and tall. The lock, though, was what really mattered.

Polina’s fingers shook as she produced the hairpin she had stolen from an older girl weeks ago, a thing taken in an alley after a fight. She held it as if it might burn her. “I can’t,” Polina whispered.

So Alibeth took it from her without comment.

She crouched, back to the hedge, and set her shoulder against the gate to steady it. That steadiness had not been born from calm; it had been forged by necessity. One had learned very quickly that shaking hands kills people afterall.

She slid the pin into the lock and listened. Not with her ears alone—but with her fingertips, with the tension in the metal, and then came the faint click. Polina exhaled. Alibeth pushed the gate open just enough for them to slip through.

They did not run. They moved with the careful patience of children who had learned to be invisible to survive.

Inside the yard, the world became unnaturally quiet. Gravel crunched beneath their boots, and Alibeth paused, waiting for a shout, for the bark of a dog, for the thud of footsteps.

Nothing.

The Baron’s house rose ahead of them. It was not a fortress, nor a castle, yet still vast enough to make them feel small.

Polina reached for Alibeth’s sleeve, grip tight. “You said this wasn’t dramatic,” Polina whispered, voice thin with panic.

Alibeth glanced down at her. “It isn’t,” she said. “Stop making it dramatic.”

And then she went to the servant’s door, and the latch there was simpler. Alibeth worked it open with the same pin, and the door sighed inward.

Warmth hit her face first. And then she saw it.

Beauty.

The real kind. The kind that made her stomach twist because it wasn’t meant to be shared. Rugs thick and woven with beautiful designs, walls hung with exquisite paintings, hallways lined with brass candleholders. This was a place of wealth and indulgence.

Alibeth felt something unpleasant rise in her chest. It was not awe, but rather resentment.

Polina stared openly, eyes reflecting the candlelight.

“Do not touch anything you do not intend to take,” Alibeth murmured. “You leave fingerprints, you leave stories.”

Polina swallowed and nodded too hard.

They moved room by room, not wandering but searching—Alibeth’s mind mapping out the space as they went. Bedrooms meant jewelry. Inside the grand bedroom the two girls had stuffed their pockets with small bracelets and rings. Kitchens meant food, but food would not stop the blood in a cough. There were servants inside anyway, so the girls could not indulge in any spare nourishment. The study meant papers, ledgers, locked drawers—places where medicine might be hidden for convenience, for a noble’s sudden discomfort.

They found the study by accident, because Polina brushed too close to a panel and the wall shifted under her hand. She froze. Slowly, she pressed again. The wood gave, as if acknowledging it had been touched.

Alibeth stepped in close, eyes narrowing. She ran her fingertips along the seam. There was a latch disguised in the carved molding.

Of course there was. Rich people loved secrets. They just hated being caught having them.

Alibeth lifted it, and the panel loosened and swung inward, revealing a narrow corridor behind the bookshelves.

Polina’s breath quickened. “We shouldn’t—”

Alibeth cut her a look so Polina stopped.

Alibeth took a candle from the sconce and stepped through first, because that was her role.

The corridor smelled like dust and old paper. The air was cooler here. Sound was dampened, swallowed by the walls.

They followed it to a door at the end. And the room beyond was a library, but not like the ones her father sometimes dragged them past in the city—public places where the poor could stare at books they would never touch. But his was private and personal. Shelves climbed the walls, heavy with volumes. A red rug lay over the floor. A desk sat near the far window with ink and quills arranged like ornaments.

And there—almost hidden behind the desk, on a low pedestal—was the book.

It did not gleam like treasure. It did not look expensive at first glance. Its cover was dark, plain, worn at the corners as if it had been handled often and not gently. It could have been any old volume
 except for the emblem stamped into its front.

The emblem was faintly luminous, and the air around it felt
 wrong.

Polina took one involuntary step forward and Alibeth’s hand snapped out and caught her wrist.

“Do not,” Alibeth said quietly, and there was something about her voice that made it sound as if it did not belong to a child. It sounded too much like their father.

Polina stared at the book, mesmerized. “It’s—”

“Quiet,” Alibeth warned, but she could not stop her own gaze from returning to it. Alibeth felt it too.

There was a tingling that started in her palm as if her body recognized something her mind could not name. Alibeth approached, and she reached out. Polina made a small sound of protest, but did not stop her. Her fingers hovered a breath away from the cover—close enough that the tingling became a hum up her wrist, into the bone. The emblem’s faint glow seemed to throb in response.

And then Alibeth touched it and the sensation was immediate. It was less a feeling and more a presence—like placing your hand on a door and realizing, too late, that something on the other side has been waiting.

Alibeth swallowed.

Polina whispered her name, terrified, but Alibeth did not answer. She lifted the book from the pedestal, and it was heavier than it should have been.

Her mind moved quickly. They did not have time to open it. They did not have time to be curious.

She wrapped it in cloth stripped from the edge of the desk runner, and shoved it into Polina’s hands.

Polina blinked at it as if it might bite. “Under your skirt,” Alibeth murmured.

She obeyed, awkwardly, clutching the bundle close and tucking it beneath the fabric with trembling hands. She looked ridiculous, like a child trying to hide stolen bread.

They slipped back the way they came, moving through the house with their breaths held.

On the walk home, Polina kept leaning toward Alibeth, whispering through clenched teeth as if the book could hear her thoughts.

“It’s warm,” Polina breathed. “Ali—do you feel it? It’s warm.”

Alibeth stared straight ahead, jaw tight. She felt it was all right. She felt it like a fever under her skin.

And even then, even as dread began to take its first root, she told herself the only thing that mattered was that this could be sold for medicine. They had something.

And later, when Polina unwrapped the cloth in the light of their room, their siblings gathered the way starving children gather around a pot of soup—shoulders pressed together, eyes too big. Not because they understood what it was, but because it was new. Because for once, they had stolen something that felt like it belonged to a different world.

Alibeth looked down at the book in her sister’s hands. She did not yet understand what they had taken.

The book did not announce itself as evil.

In the first hour, it did nothing at all. It let their mother cough in the corner without offering an answer. It let the baby wail until the sound turned thin. It let the room keep smelling like the sweet rot of too many bodies in too little air.

And still, the children circled it.

She did not like the way the book pulled attention from the room’s real emergencies—water, heat, mother. She did not like the way Polina’s fingers kept brushing the cloth as if soothing it would make it forgive them for stealing it. She did not like, most of all, that she herself kept glancing at it between tasks, as if the object had somehow become a new member of the household and required monitoring.

They waited until their mother fell asleep.

Alibeth made the older siblings lie down, because a room full of children awake at night is a room full of mistakes. She sent one to fetch water, another to keep the baby quiet with a finger dipped in broth.

Only then did she and Polina sit by the candle.

The flame made the walls ripple like something underwater.

Polina unwrapped the cloth with reverence that irritated Alibeth on principle.

“Open it,” Polina whispered.

Alibeth didn’t. She stared at the cover as if staring long enough would reveal the mechanism inside, the same way locks did.

Alibeth turned the cover with two fingers.

The first page was not written like any book she had ever read. There were symbols—some like letters, some like drawings, some like eccentric, angry scratches. The ink was dense and dark. When she leaned closer, the lines seemed to shift at the edge of her vision, not moving exactly, but refusing to sit still in the mind.

Polina made a small sound. Awe, or hunger. It was hard to tell the difference between the children.

“This is for witches,” Polina breathed.

Alibeth traced a symbol with her eyes.

Polina looked down again and began to read, because that was what she did when the world presented something dangerous: she tried to understand it before it understood her.

The words were not words, not truly. They were instructions. There were margins filled with notes in a different script, tight and sharp, as if someone had been arguing with the book.
Polina leaned closer, shoulder brushing Alibeth’s.

“We could fix her,” Polina whispered, and nodded toward their mother’s shape in the corner.

Alibeth didn’t answer. Not because she disagreed—because she did not like the way Polina said it. She turned another page.

There were warnings too, though Alibeth did not understand them at first as warnings—phrases like cost, tithe, balance.

Polina plucked a hair from her head and then plucked a feather from their pillow and held it over the page like she had seen scribes do in the market.

Their youngest sister, the one with too-big eyes, had crept close again, drawn by the candle. The other children giggled in the dark, trying not to wake their mother.

Polina lowered the feather as if it were a ritual. She read aloud—stumbling over words at first, then finding a rhythm, more earnest.

And then the feather lifted.

It rose a finger’s breadth above the page, quivering like a startled thing.

For a moment, none of them moved. Not even the baby.

Then the room exploded into muffled laughter, hands clapped over mouths, shoulders shaking. One of the sickly boys—who hadn’t smiled in days—let out a sound that was so close to joy that Alibeth felt something tighten behind her ribs.

Polina stared at the feather as though it had chosen her personally.

”Again,” she whispered.

Alibeth should have closed the book then.

She should have wrapped it, hidden it, buried it beneath floorboards, done what their father would have done: remove the threat before it grew teeth.

But their mother coughed in her sleep, wet and red, and the sound of it made all logic feel
 smaller. In the face of that cough, the feather’s trembling lift became more than a trick. It became an argument.

So Alibeth let Polina turn the page.

They did not begin with fire. They began with things that felt like mercy.

A pebble that rolled across the table on command. A thread that mended itself when Polina’s fingers traced a symbol above it. A bruise on a child’s knee that faded to yellow, then nothing, when a whispered line of script was spoken with enough belief.

Each success made the next attempt feel less like a risk and more like entitlement.

They practiced in stolen minutes—between errands, between hunger, between their mother’s fits. They did it in the hush of early mornings when the street was empty, and in the late evenings when the house was full of bodies sleeping.

Polina started carrying the book tucked beneath her dress the way some girls carried prayer beads. She refused to leave it behind even when they went to fetch water.

Alibeth watched her sister’s devotion harden.

At first, Polina was generous with it. She used the little tricks to amuse their siblings, to buy laughter the way other children bought sweets. She made the feather dance and the youngest squeal. She made a coin spin on its edge and the boys gasp. She made their mother’s blanket warm for a few minutes and called it a miracle, eyes bright with triumph.

Polina soon stopped laughing when the feather lifted. She stopped clapping a hand over her mouth to keep quiet. She began to scowl at the book when it did not give her what she wanted quickly enough, as if the book were an insolent servant.

Alibeth noticed it in small ways first, because she noticed everything.

Polina stopped sharing the book without being asked. When a sibling reached for it with dirty hands, she slapped their fingers away hard enough to make them yelp. When the youngest begged her to “make the feather fly,” Polina snapped at her to stop whining.

“This is not for you,” Polina hissed one night when one of their brothers tried to peer at the pages. “You can’t even read.”

He shrank back, stung.

“Then teach him,” Alibeth argued quietly.

Polina’s eyes flicked up. For a second there was something in them that made Alibeth’s skin prickle. “Why?” Polina whispered. “So he can ruin it?”

Alibeth stared at her sister across the candle. “Because he is family,” Alibeth said.

Polina’s mouth curled as if the word tasted naïve. ”Family doesn’t save you,” she murmured.

It was the first time Polina said something that sounded as though it had not originated in her own mind.

After that, the change sped up.

Polina began to stay awake when the rest slept, hunched over the pages, shoulders drawn tight as if she were guarding the book from theft. Alibeth would wake in the night and see the faint light under the door, hear Polina’s whispering. Sometimes there was a second sound beneath it, so faint Alibeth wasn’t sure she had heard it at all: a low, almost-laugh in the back of Polina’s throat, as if she were answering someone.

Polina’s temper shortened the more exhausted she became. She snapped at their siblings for breathing too loud, for stepping too close, for asking questions. She began to hoard food more openly, not out of hunger but out of control—breaking bread into portions and refusing to budge when a smaller child cried.

When Alibeth confronted her, Polina’s eyes went strange with indignation.

“You think I’m cruel?” Polina whispered. “I’m trying to fix it. I’m trying to fix everything.”

Her voice shook, not with guilt, but with fury that the world had dared remain broken.

Alibeth held her gaze. “Then you do not get to break us in the process.. Are you ready to heal mama yet or not?”

“Not yet,” Polina stared at her sister as if she were the one who didn’t understand.

And somewhere in those weeks, the book stopped feeling like an object and more like another member of the family.

The air around it grew heavier when it lay open. Children who had once giggled now hesitated at the doorway, peering in as if the room belonged to someone else. Polina began to crave bigger proofs.

The feather wasn’t enough. The coin wasn’t enough. Mending threads became boring. Healing bruises became beneath her. She turned pages faster, skipping warnings, ignoring the careful marginal notes, hunting for anything that promised more.

One afternoon, she drew a circle on the floor with charcoal and commanded the younger siblings to stand back.

Alibeth watched from the doorway, arms crossed, posture already braced for consequences.

Polina spoke a line of script that tasted bitter in the air.

The room went cold.

Their youngest sister whimpered.

Polina didn’t look at her. Polina stared at the circle with glittering intensity, hands outstretched, fingers trembling—not with fear, but with need.

The charcoal line began to glow faintly.

The candle flame bent toward it.

And then a cupboard across the room rattled, violently, as if struck from inside.

A pot toppled. A cup cracked. The baby began to scream.

Polina’s face lit up as if she was almsot fevered.

“There,” she breathed. “There—do you see?”

Alibeth stepped forward and snapped, “Stop.”

Polina didn’t.

The cupboard door burst open.

Not outward, not as if pushed by a draft, but as if yanked by an unseen hand. The wooden hinge shrieked. The sound set teeth on edge. The room’s shadows seemed to stretch toward the circle.

Their siblings backed away in a huddle, eyes wide with that old, animal terror that children get when the world stops behaving the way it’s supposed to.

Polina laughed and it wasn’t like the bright laugh from the first feather.

Alibeth crossed the room in three strides and grabbed Polina’s wrist.

Polina flinched as if the touch offended her.

“You are going to wake Mother,” Alibeth hissed.

Polina’s gaze snapped to hers.

For a moment, Alibeth saw something raw behind Polina’s eyes—a flicker of the girl she knew, terrified and exhausted and desperate.

Then it vanished.

Polina leaned in close, voice low, venomously intimate. ”Mother is dying anyway.”

The words hit Alibeth like a slap, not because they were false, but because Polina said them.

Alibeth tightened her grip until Polina hissed through her teeth.

“Close it,” Alibeth ordered.

Polina’s lips parted.

For a second, Alibeth thought she might obey.

Instead, Polina whispered something else—something that wasn’t on the page Alibeth had seen.

The cold deepened.

The charcoal circle flared brighter.

And Alibeth felt, very distinctly, the sensation of being watched—like eyes in the dark pressing against the inside of her skull, patient and curious.

Polina’s pupils dilated until the amber of her eyes seemed swallowed.

She smiled at Alibeth with a softness that did not belong on a child’s face.

“You don’t feel it?” Polina murmured. ”It’s listening.”

And in that moment, Alibeth understood with a clarity that made her throat go dry: this was no longer a game they could put down.

Something had gotten its claws into Polina—something bad.

Behind them, their mother coughed in her sleep.

Polina didn’t even flinch at the sound anymore.

She only looked back at the book, and the look on her face was not wonder anymore.

It was possession.


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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by HylianRose
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HylianRose Defender of Hyrule

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Lucian & Marina


Location: The Gossamer
Mentions: @Oso Kilian @Tae Torvi



Marina adjusted her view through the binoculars just in time to land on Kilian’s face—staring straight back at her, his intimidating expression filling the entire little sphere of her vision like he was standing right before her, glaring her down with those terrifying eyes of his.

Her fingers clumsily loosened as adrenaline coursed through her, and the opera glasses slipped. They struck the edge of the table with a loud clack, and the jolt set off a whole chain reaction: a fork skittering into a spoon, the spoon into a knife, the knife tapping a champagne flute that chimed loudly, garnering attention at the worst possible time. Marina lunged in a panic to collect them, palms sweeping and grabbing, trying to catch everything at once. Her hand closed around the opera glasses just before they hit the floor, but she still managed to knock a napkin loose and nearly flip her own plate.

It was then, with her heartbeat thundering loudly in her ears, that she saw Lucian rise.

He began crossing the room, just like he had when she had angered him all those times in the past. He was making a beeline for her, and in that moment Marina felt a flash of disbelief.

Marina snatched the opera glasses with one hand and shoved them beneath the table so quickly she clipped her knee and bit back a hiss. She hastily straightened, smoothing her coat, as if nothing out of the ordinary had just happened. By the time Lucian reached her table, she had gathered herself into a posture of indignant dignity: the sort of expression that suggested she had been minding her business all evening and anyone who implied otherwise was so wrong.

When he leaned toward her, Marina met him with a stare that could have started a war. She allowed her lips to lift into a pleasant expression. “Good evening,” she said sweetly in an exaggerated, low tone. “Sir.”

Then Lucian leaned in, and Marina’s smile held even as it tightened. Her pupils flared, her gaze flicking past his shoulder toward the table behind the velvet rope. “I
 I don’t know what you mean,” she lied instantly. “I’m simply a humble gentleman enjoying the ambiance. Who is this Marina you speak of? I’m
 uh
 Marvin.” The name left her mouth, and she wanted to throw herself into the nearest fountain.

Lucian felt his eye twitch at her response. Of course she was keeping this up, of course. Of course!

The lie lasted exactly as long as it took her to see what was happening behind him in her mind again: the chain, the blindfold, the scary guy, the giant wolf. Then Marina’s countenance went flat—seriousness overtaking the look in her gaze. She exhaled once, then gave up the performance with reluctant honesty. “Yes, yes, it’s me,” she admitted quietly, the mustache suddenly feeling ridiculous. Her gaze snapped back to Lucian’s, and for all her theatrical bravado, there was a sincere intensity in her violet eyes now. “But let’s be honest—the one who should be questioned here is you. Why are you meeting with those weird people? ” Her voice softened, fear slipping into her tone as she searched his face. She then tipped her chin toward the roped section—toward Kilian. “I mean, come on, that guy has a woman in chains.”

Her expression softened into a small frown as she told him lowly, “...You’re scaring me, Lucian.”

He paused as she dropped the act, suddenly more serious than before. He could tell that what he was doing right now was bothering her. All the more because she didn’t understand it. He let out a soft, exasperated sigh. He could understand her concerns and valued her opinions and care for him. He just
 couldn’t let her get involved in this.

”Marnie
” He started, unsure how he could give her any peace of mind. Another soft breath left his lungs as he reached a hand to rub the bridge of his nose. ”Do you trust me, Marina?” He asked earnestly. He looked over her face, trying to show her his sincerity.

Marina’s brows lifted as if the question itself had offended her. Then, after the briefest pause, her eyes found his and stayed there. “Of course I do.” She answered sincerely.

”Then, I need you to trust me right now.” He returned. He reached over to offer her his hand. ”I know it looks scary over there. If I’m being honest with you, I’m a little scared too.” He explained, conveniently leaving out the part where he was somewhat enjoying the girl in chains at Kilian’s side, if only because he couldn’t help but to overlap her with the people who killed his wife.

”I have my reasons, Marina. And I’d rather keep you out of it and safe if I can
” He added softly, a tenderness to his tone now.

She took his hand and squeezed it, chewing at the inside of her lip for additional comfort. Marina let his words settle in her mind before letting those brows of hers furrow suddenly with the immovable determination. “I trust you,” Marina repeated, stressing the word in a way that clarified her feelings even before she finished her point, “Not them.”

Then she let go and leaned back, folding her arms like she could physically block him from trying to push her away. “I won’t tell anyone anything. I don’t even care what you’re doing or why—” she started, and even she couldn’t keep a straight face through that lie. A sigh cut her words off and she corrected herself with annoyed honesty, “Okay, maybe I do. I’m quite nosy.” She waved off the notion hastily, bouncing her leg like the energy in her body was looking for somewhere to go. “However, I digress.”

Lucian stifled a chuckle at her relenting to being quite nosy, but let her continue.

“I am here because I don’t want you to be alone “ Marina’s bouncing leg slowed then stilled. “I know you’ve been sneaking off doing something for a while now, so
” Her chin lifted, like she’d already decided how this ended. “Whatever you’re doing, whatever you’re fighting—let me fight with you.”

Lucian let out a low groan, ”It’s dangerous work, Marina. And as much as I want you by my side, I’d rather have you somewhere safe instead.”

“But it’s dangerous for you too!” Marina exclaimed in protest.

He let out a breath of air, his eyes closing for a moment. He swallowed, his throat thick with regrets. He couldn’t let Marina get hurt too, couldn’t let this touch the people he cared about. He had lost too much to relent on this now. His fist clenched against the chair as he made up his mind.

”I’m not going to argue this, Marina. You need to leave.” He declared firmly, standing up. He waved a waiter over. ”Please escort this gentleman out of the building. Ensure that he is sent home by carriage.” He told him, being sure to place emphasis on the ‘by carriage’ part. He didn’t need her sneaking back in. He watched the waiter expectantly.

”Oh, y-” He started, ”Yessir.”

Marina stood up, her fists clenched with anger. “My meal hasn’t come yet.” She retorted as her face fell into a frustrated pout. After some deliberation, she suddenly ripped the mustache off her upper lip, proceeded to throw it on the floor, and then planted her foot on it. She ground the mustache into the marble flooring, her heel shifting back and forth as if she were squishing a stubborn little bug.

Lucian stared in stunned silence. His gaze shifting from his sister to the waiter, who was just as shocked as he was, if not more. He thought he heard him mumble something about a very convincing disguise.

Her gaze slid back up to the waiter, and she smiled innocently at him. “I am not a gentleman; I am clearly a lady. He must be referring to someone else.” Marina curtly informed the man, then jabbed a finger accusingly in Kilian’s direction. “He’s talking about that tall man with the scars over there. Remove him at once!”

Another long sigh escaped Lucian’s lips. He grabbed at Marina’s wrist, the one attached to the finger currently pointed at the most dangerous man in the room. “While I pride myself on my sister’s bravery, please do not insult my host.” He told her through a clenched jaw.

He put a smile on his face and turned to the rather frightened-looking waiter. It was better not to make a scene. “I apologize. We’ve inconvenienced you. You are dismissed.” He spoke, his voice upsettingly calm for the situation they were in.

The waiter left all too eagerly, still mumbling something about crazy royals.

Lucian turned now to look at his sister, his hand still around her wrist, his grip tight. “If I promise to tell you later, will you go home?” He asked, a defeated tone to his voice. He knew the answer, but he had to try.

Marina’s expression shifted. The bravado didn’t vanish, but it wavered. She held his gaze, her eyes searching his again as if she could keep him safe just by looking hard enough. “I’m strong, Lucian, you know,” she insisted, the words rushing out as if she could make them true by sheer force. “I’ve been practicing.”

Lucian let out a soft breath, unsure entirely what to say to that. He knew she was strong, all of his siblings were. How could he impress upon her the fear and anxiety in his own heart? How much he needed her to be safe? How much losing her would shatter him?

And then her mouth pressed into a line. She bit her lip, and the fiery girl who’d stomped on her own mustache a moment ago did something gentle instead: she lifted her free hand and laid her palm over his with a tender touch as if she was trying to remind him she was real, here, and not some problem to be managed.

He looked down at the touch, before looking back up to her face. It was a stark contrast to the way she’d been acting only a moment prior.

Her eyes dropped as she retreated into her thoughts, then rose back up to his face, somber in a way that made her seem suddenly younger.

“How do I know they won’t hurt you?” she asked at last, her voice softer—but still stubborn as ever.

Lucian took in another deep breath. He was done making promises he couldn’t keep, he’d made that vow to Ambrose and he intended to keep it. Even if it killed him.

”They are going to help me keep you and all of our people safe, Marina. I know they look scary, I’m scared too. But this is something I have to do.” He explained, turning his hand up to hold hers. “I can’t promise they won’t hurt me anymore than I can anyone else here in this room. What I can promise you, however, is that what they do will protect the people I care about.”

After a moment, looking at her face, Lucian bent down, resting his forehead against the back of her hand. ”I can’t
 lose anyone else
” He whispered, his voice strained with emotion.

And it was in that moment that something in her face shifted, and her shoulders slumped as if they finally remembered they were exhausted. For a moment, she just stared down at that red head of hair. Then, she wrapped her arms around him and moved her hand to stroke his hair. “I don’t want to lose anyone else either, Lucy, especially you.” She whispered, her gaze reaching a manner of hollowness as she fixated past him on a spot on the wall at random.

The face that had materialized in both of their minds did not need to be named aloud in that moment—they both knew.

“...And it’s because of that, I don’t understand why you think you need to do this alone.” Her eyes narrowed slightly, and she pulled back just enough, her hand still on his head. “They’re my people too, and you’re my big brother
 I feel safest with you. 
 Not away.”

He felt his heart twist at her words. He knew they were honest, but he knew what kind of danger he was putting himself in. After an incredibly long pause, Lucian lifted his head, a stern look on his face.

”Okay. You listen to me and when I tell you to do something, you do it. That is the only way I am going to let you join me over there with them.”

Marina pursed her lips then said at last, “Fine.”

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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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Apex Sunburn Justified text enjoyer

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A while ago...


He drew in a deep breath. No, he had to act. There wasn’t any other option.

But resolve alone didn’t—couldn’t—change reality. Charging into a building under an arcanist’s spell was a terrible idea, more often than not. The magic had to be dispelled first, and while that was a straightforward enough task—Yasawen was trained in counter-arcane arts—-keeping it hidden from the prying eyes of the crowd would be nigh-on impossible. If Cynric could notice a stone flying under the influence of magic, then surely someone would witness a whole building being cleansed.

Sjan-dehk grimaced. The risks he’d be asking the Viserjantan arcanists to take wouldn’t be small, and that wasn’t even considering the official reprimands and other punishments that’d be waiting for them—himself included—once they returned to their ships. This would, after all, be a direct violation of orders.

He shook his head. Now wasn’t the time to worry about such things. “All sails and all speed,” was what his former commanding officer, Nashra, would’ve said. And of course, she’d always follow it up with, “We’ll do what’s right, right now, and deal with the consequences later. Let’s go!”

A mirthless chuckle left his lips. “Let’s go, then,” he said beneath his breath.

“Cap’n, ye still wi’ me?” It was Cynric.

“Yes,” Sjan-dehk replied. “Sorry. I was thinking. We must act. But first, I will speak with my people.”

A grin curled Cynric’s lips, and he nodded. “Aye, ‘tis what I was thinkin’, mysel’. I’ll ‘ave a chat wi’ my fellas too, but I’ll kick ta’ feckin’ doors on me ane if I ‘ave tae. I’m after a feckin’ drink, and nobody’s gae’n get in my feckin’ way o’ gettin’ one.”

With that, he turned and walked to his crew. Sjan-dehk did the same, marching over to where Iyen and the arcanists were gathered. “Dahsahn, Yehn-tai,” he called out along the way. He didn’t need to say anything else—the two men answered with shouts of acknowledgement and quickly fell in behind him.

Iyen greeted him with a small, knowing smile as he approached, as if she already knew exactly how things were going to play out. She leaned against a streetlamp, with one hand resting on the pistol at her hip, the other idly tracing the rope coiled across her body. “So,” she said breezily, dragging out the word. “What do you have in mind, Sjan-dehk?”

He didn’t answer her. Instead, he fixed his attention on Inshahri. “Shahri.”

The girl immediately stopped brushing dirt from her skirts and turned to him, her eyes expectant.

“Tell me again,” he went on. “How bad is the magic in there?”

“Very bad, Captain.” She stole a nervous glance at the tavern, her hands tightly gripping the fabric around her waist. “It sounds
It sounds messy—I mean, dangerous. Very, very dangerous. And it can hurt people too! It already has, and still is!”

Sjan-dehk frowned. “So it’s not just
Shrouding the building? It’s not just isolating it?” He paused, trying to think of a better word for what he wanted to say, but finding only the official Commonwealth designation for the spells he had in mind. “It’s, ah, not a defensive spell?”

Inshahri shook her head. “No, no, it’s not defensive! It can do more than that, but
But I think only to those inside?” Her face fell, and genuine distress crumpled her features. “Sorry, Captain. The magic’s powerful, and really, really loud. I can’t tell anything more than that.”

“That’s alright, Shahri,” Sjan-dehk said, giving her a reassuring pat on the shoulder. “We never really know our opponents until we face them, anyway. You’ve done well enough.”

Iyen’s smile turned into a playful grin, and she pushed herself away from the streetlamp. “Oh my, Captain, you’re calling them opponents already?” Amusement dripped from her words. “Sounds like you’ve come to a decision.”

“Yes,” Sjan-dehk replied. “But I’m not—”

“You can count me in,” she said, as if he hadn’t said anything.

Sjan-dehk blinked. “Iyen, I haven’t even asked yet.”

“You still think you need to ask me? Oh, you wound me, Captain.” Were it not for the mischief on her face, and had Sjan-dehk not known her as well as he did, he might’ve believed that she was actually upset. The giggle that flowed from her lips did plenty to give her away as well. “Did you really think I’d return to Sudah and let you have all the fun?”

She shook her head. “Not. A. Chance, Sjan-dehk.”

Sjan-dehk couldn’t help but chuckle and give her a grin of his own. Iyen was right, of course—he shouldn’t have expected her to do anything less than jumping head-first into the mess with him. Danger and trouble had always been something they faced—and often found—together. This wouldn’t be any different. “Thank you, Iyen,” he said. “I owe you one.”

“And you’d better remember that,” Iyen replied in a sing-song voice.

Dahsahn cleared his throat. “Pardon me,” he said, pressing a fist to his chest and bowing his head to both Sjan-dehk and Iyen. “But there’s a hostile arcanist in there casting a spell we don’t know much about. You can’t be serious—” He caught himself and swallowed. “I mean, with all respect, Captain, trying to push into a building like that with just the two of you is
Tactically unwise. That's my opinion, of course.”

Sjan-dehk opened his mouth—half to agree, half to ask the arcanists for help—but Yasawen spoke first.

“I–I can dispel the magic,” he said.

“You?” Hasehnya exclaimed, her eyes wide in surprise. Yasawen’s cheeks reddened, and he looked at the ground between his feet. “Oh, no, no, I—That’s not what I meant! S–Sorry Yasa! I, um, I know you’ve been studying hard and you’ve definitely gotten better! I–I mean, everyone knows how hard you work!”

She ran her fingers over her braids and hurried on. “But we, um, we don’t know much about the spell. And that’s not your fault, Shahri! Y-You told us that it’s powerful and that’s good enough! I–It’s just when spells are that strong, we need strong counter-spells, you know? And, um, you’re a really good healer, Yasa! So much better than me, really! B–But dispelling is different, you know? A–And I’m a little better at that. I can use the stronger counter-spells.”

Yasawen sighed. He nodded once, still not looking up. “I
I understand, senior Hasehnya.”

Hasehnya cast an apologetic look at Yasawen before turning to Sjan-dehk. She breathed in deeply. “I’ll do the dispelling, C–Captain.”

Sjan-dehk didn’t reply immediately. For a moment, all he did was look between the two arcanists, his brow furrowed in bafflement. He wasn’t quite sure he understood what he’d just heard. Were they bickering over who got to volunteer for a task that would have them break regulations? One that would undoubtedly land them in no small amount of trouble?

“You two
” He spoke slowly, as if he were speaking to someone who didn’t understand Viserjantan. “You two do realise what you’re signing up for, right? You’ll need to use your abilities, and that means breaking regulations. That means getting into a lot of trouble. You understand that, right?”

Yasawen lifted his head just enough to meet Sjan-dehk’s gaze. “Yes, Captain,” he said. “I understand.” He swallowed. “But it can’t be helped, right? Shahri reacted really strongly to that magic, and–and it’s the first time I’ve seen her like that, so it has to be really, really bad. I–I know we’re not allowed to use our abilities, but if
If people are being hurt, we have to help. That’s the right thing to do, isn’t it?”

“Yes, yes!” Inshahri almost squealed as she slipped her arms around Yasawen’s shoulders and pulled him into a quick hug. “Yasa, you know me so well! I wouldn’t make so much noise about this, otherwise!”

Beside her, Tehwasang laughed quietly before separating her from a crimson-cheeked Yasawen. “And we, as good seniors—” she glanced at Hasehnya “—can’t just let our juniors run off on their own, can we? We have to do our proper duties and watch over them.” She giggled and winked at Sjan-dehk. “And if we end up getting into trouble
I’m sure we can think of something.”

“I’m not your junior, though,” Inshahri piped up.

“You’re younger than me,” Tehwasang said with a smirk. “That makes you junior enough.”

Hasehnya’s nervous eyes flitted between her fellow arcanists. “I–I agree,” she said with a nod. “It’s just like the stories we read. W-We have to do what’s right. And besides, I
” She trailed off, shaking her head and drawing a deep breath to steady herself. In as firm a tone as she could manage, she continued, “I won’t let junior Yasawen do this alone! If he goes, I have to go too. It’s my duty as his senior!”

Tehwasang giggled and clapped her hands. Redness spread across Hasehnya’s cheeks. In a softer voice, one closer to a murmur, she added, “S–So if, um, Captain Sjan-dehk needs me to dispel the magic, I will.”

Once again, Sjan-dehk couldn’t find the words to reply. All he could do was look at them with astonishment written all over his face. These four arcanists were mere youths—Yasawen and Inshahri were only fifteen, and the other two couldn’t be much older. And yet, they were prepared to use their abilities to save people belonging to a land that would sentence them to death for doing so. It wasn’t as if they didn’t know that—it was Sjan-dehk that’d insisted on mentioning the Caesonian penalties for magic in the new regulations.

And still, none of them had hesitated. Not even for a moment.

Sjan-dehk let out a long breath. “Alright then,” he said, giving them a single nod. “I appreciate the help and you have my thanks. But we’ll do this properly and safely. That means staying close, following orders, and above all, no playing the hero. I won’t hesitate to personally throw you back onto Sada Kurau if any of you dare to get hurt. Understood?”

The four of them answered with nods and acknowledgements.

“You should listen to the Captain,” Yehn-tai chimed in. The sniper had been silent this entire time, but now he looked around with a smile on his perpetually tired face, and a whistled tune on his lips. “Leave being a hero to those of us in uniform, eh?”

Sjan-dehk looked at him. “I suppose that means you’re in, too?”

“You know what they say, Captain,” Yehn-tai replied. “Sada Kurau follows her Captain
”

“
And so does her crew.” Dahsahn finished the saying. He stood to attention and saluted Sjan-dehk. “My section and I are ready for your tasking, Captain. Just say the word.”

Sjan-dehk swept his gaze over the assembled Viserjantans—the arcanists clustered together; Iyen leaning against the streetlamp once more; Yehn-tai with his rifle resting on his shoulder; Dahsahn standing ramrod straight and stock-still. It wasn’t a sizable force, but it certainly was a formidable one. With the exception of the four youths, everyone here was a veteran of countless battles. Sjan-dehk felt a familiar grin creep onto his face—the sort of grin he had whenever a fight was imminent.

He forced it away. It was time to plan.

“Sergeant,” he called to Dahsahn. “You’ll take your section and circle around the back of the tavern. There has to be a rear entrance of some kind. Find it, secure it, and don’t let anyone in or out once we make our way inside. If you hear fighting, breach and join the fray. Understood?”

“You got it, Captain,” Dahsahn replied. “Do you want me to move the men out now?”

Sjan-dehk nodded. “Yes. Go now.”

“As you command.” Dahsahn snapped to a salute and hurried away, commands already flying from his lips as he returned to his section.

“Yehn-tai.” Sjan-dehk turned to the sniper. “Take your spotter and find somewhere up high. You’ll be doing a lot of moving, I’m afraid. First, find a spot to watch over Dahsahn’s section. Once they’re in position, find another position where you can overlook the front of the tavern. Give us a signal when you’re ready. That’s when I’ll have Hasehnya start casting. You’ll keep an eye on her. If you see anyone approach her with bad intentions
”

“I’ll drop them,” Yehn-tai finished. Then, he frowned. “There’s a lot of people here though, Captain. I’ll keep an eye on all of them as best I can, but if I start shooting anyone who looks unfriendly, I’m going to make a lot of corpses.”

Sjan-dehk chewed on his lip. “I’ll talk to our Caesonian friends, see if they can help us control the crowd or get rid of it. For now, stick to those orders. Move.”

“Will do, Captain,” Yehn-tai said. He yawned, hefted his rifle, and jogged away.

Iyen hummed and tapped a finger on her chin. “So
Dahsahn and his section are watching the back door, Yehn-tai’s keeping an eye on the front.” She looked at Sjan-dehk, her lips pouted childishly. “I hope you’ve got something for me, Sjan-dehk. Otherwise
” Her pout changed into an impish smile. “I’ll be upset.”

Sjan-dehk rolled his eyes. “Don’t worry, Iyen. You can have the second floor to yourself. If things get loud, sweep it, clear it, and make sure we don’t have any surprises coming from above.”

“If?” Iyen frowned. “Sounds like I could just be sitting on my arse doing nothing.”

“Don’t worry,” Sjan-dehk repeated. “I’ve a feeling that things will get violent even if we try to be peaceful.”

“I’ll take your word for it, then,” Iyen said and started walking away. “Don’t leave me waiting too long!”

With all the veterans settled, Sjan-dehk could finally address the arcanists. “Hasehnya,” he called, his tone a touch gentler than before. “Do you need anything for your spell?”

“Oh, I–I don’t need anything, Captain!” Hasehnya blurted out. She turned to the tavern, her head tilted as if studying it. “Um, m–maybe I need some space? I–I should look for a few spots and–and see which works, to be safe
But–But if there’s no time I–I don’t need to do that, really!”

“No, no,” Sjan-dehk replied. “I’d rather you be as safe as you can.” He looked at the other three arcanists, one by one. “Tehwasang, Yasawen, Inshahri, help her with what she needs. Also, Tehwasang, take care of Hasehnya after she’s done casting.”

“That’s what I do best, Captain,” Tehwasang said with a grin. “And you can just call me Tehwa.”

“I’ll try to remember that,” Sjan-dehk replied before turning to Yasawen and Inshahri. “I’ll need you two with me when I go into the tavern.” Looks of surprise spread over their faces, although Inshahri’s seemed more eager, while Yasawen’s had an uncertain, apprehensive tint to it. “Even after the spell’s gone, we still have an arcanist to deal with, and I’m sure they’ll try casting again as soon as they get a chance. Inshahri, you’ll have to find them before that happens. Think you can do it?”

“Yes, yes!” Inshahri nodded. “If I’m inside, I’ll know who it is for sure!”

“Good.” Sjan-dehk shifted his attention to Yasawen. “Once Inshahri finds the arcanist, you’ll silence them. I don’t need you to do anything big. Just make sure they can’t cast anything. Can you do that?”

“I–I’ll–” Yasawen started. Then, he drew in a steadying breath and nodded. “Yes, Captain. Of course.”

“That’s what I like to hear.”

Sjan-dehk gave him a clap on the shoulder before addressing the arcanists as a group. “Alright, I think I’ve said enough. All of you have your duties, so get to it. I’ve got things to discuss with our Caesonian friends, but I won’t be far. If you run into any trouble, just give me a shout. Understood?”

The four of them nodded—Inshahri and Tehwasang more enthusiastically than the other two—and replied with a chorus of acknowledgements. Moving as a group, they hurried to their tasks. Sjan-dehk kept an eye on them for a while longer, partly to make sure that they were doing as they’d been told, and partly to give himself a moment to collect his thoughts after issuing so many orders in rapid succession.

He counted ten heartbeats. Then, he went to find Cynric.

Recompense’s captain hadn’t strayed far from where they’d interrogated the thug. He was standing by the edge of the crowd, his arms folded as he conversed with a handful of his crew. An overly-curious onlooker tried to force his way through, and was quickly turned back by an expletive-laced shout from Cynric. Then, as if nothing had happened, the red-haired captain returned to his conversation.

“Captain,” Sjan-dehk called out as he drew closer.

“Aye.” Cynric turned around. “Ah, I s’pose ye’re done talkin’ wi’ yer fellas?”

“Yes,” Sjan-dehk replied.

He gave Cynric a brief outline of the plan—not because of secrecy, but because his Caesonian still wasn’t good enough to allow him to be any more detailed. Even so, Cynric listened attentively, his brow knotted in concentration and hand rubbing his chin. “Well, feck me,” he said once Sjan-dehk finished. “That’s nae jus’ a plan, that’s a whole feckin’ operation. I like it. But ‘avin’ yer
What d’ye call ‘em? Arcanists, was it?”

“Yes,” Sjan-dehk confirmed. “We do not use words like witch. It is
Not good.”

“Arcanists,” Cynric repeated. “‘Tis a fine word. I’ve tae start usin’ it more, aye I dae. Anyway, if ye’re gae’n tae ‘ave ye arcanist start castin’ ou’ ‘ere in ta’ open, then I’ll ‘ave my fellas watch ta’ crowd. Maybe e’en get some o’ ‘em tae feck off. I’ve tae admit, though, I’m nae sure we can get rid o’ it entirely, but there’ll be nae as many eyes watchin’, at least.”

“Yes, that is also my concern.” Sjan-dehk glanced at the crowd. Although it’d thinned a little—he supposed most had only been interested in the confrontation with the thugs—there were still a fair number of people loitering around. “As long as they stay away from the arcanist, and they do not harm her.”

“Oh, dae’n ye worry about that, Cap’n,” Cynric said, his lips curled into a confident grin. “We’ll make feckin’ sure o’ that, aye. What we ough’tae worry about though
” He tilted his chin towards the tavern. “Ye ‘ave a plan on ‘ow ye wan’tae go in? I know I said somethin’ about kickin’ ta’ door down, but ‘twas just a figure o’ speech, aye it was. Those fellas inside’re gae’n be feckin’ nervous once we feck wi’ their spell. We charge in like feckin’ madman, an’ they’re gae’n start stabbin’ an’ shootin’, I reckon.”

“Yes, that is likely.” Sjan-dehk placed his hands on his hips and chewed on his lip. “I think it will be better if we go in peacefully. Like we want to talk.”

Cynric nodded slowly. “Aye, that migh’ work. Wi’ou’ their magic, they migh’ be more willin’ tae negotiate.”

“Yes. That will also give my arcanists time to find theirs. They will stop them from casting.”

“Aye, we’ll ‘ave tae take ‘em ou’ first, that’s fer feckin’ sure.” Cynric rubbed his chin, deep in thought. Then, he turned to Sjan-dehk. “‘Ow about I take ta’ lead when we gae in, Cap’n? I’ll dae ta’ talkin’ an’ be enough o’ a gobby shite tae keep ‘em lookin’ at me. Yer fellas can dae what they need, an’ e’en if we feck up, an’ it aw’ goes tits-up, I reckon it’ll be distraction enough fer yer other fellas tae take ‘em by surprise.”

Sjan-dehk had no disagreement there. “Thank you,” he said. “That would be good.”

The breathy trill of a bamboo flute put an end to their discussions. To an untrained ear, it might’ve sounded like nothing more than a simple song—interweaved with the evening noise, and yet still able to cut through it all. But Sjan-dehk knew better. It was Yehn-tai’s signal that everyone was in position.
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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by Infinite Cosmos
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Infinite Cosmos XIV

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color:ffce00
-In the streets of Hartworth, Caesonia-

A slender figure, dressed in drabby, rough-hewn clothing with a cloak that covers him from head to lower calf walks slowly through the street. Another figure, dressed in similarly drabby clothing, follows a few paces behind.

"How much for this?" The slender figure said, picking up an apple and perusing the other various edible items in the stall.

"One copper for one. Three copper for five..." The stall-tender said absentmindedly. not paying the slender figure much attention at all.

Normally, the slender figure would have said something about the lack of respect. But. Given light to recent events, he simply does not care anymore. There isn't much in the world that he truly cares about. The events of that evening still replaying in his mind, like a old wound that just would not stop causing pain...

"Just the one, I think. Thank you, friend." The slender figure said meekly, dropping one piece of copper on the table and taking one apple before turning away from the stall, continuing to walk through the busy market. The second figure walked past the stall and purchased one apple for himself as well, offering the stall-tender a courteous nod.

The slender figure mindlessly wandered the market for a time, taking small bites of the apple from time to time. The sweet, crisp, apple did it's best to wash away the bitter taste that lingered, though he has not had anything physically bitter to eat in a long time. The taste never seems to fade.

Another day, another sunset. During the pointless meandering, the second figure was stopped by a courier, somehow making out how the figure is. The courier handed the figure an envelop, embroidered with a noble wax seal. The figure took a look, knowing that it could be and opened it before offering the courier the same courteous nod as he did the stall-tender. Taking a look a the content of the envelop, he offered a small sigh. They have to attend. It's expected of them, after all.

Walking up a spiral staircase, the second figure followed the slender figure, brushing past several sheets of lace and satin serving as dividers. When the pair reached the top, the slender figure made his way to a pile of pillows on the floor and curled up amongst them, looking nothing like who he was born to be...

"Shahzade. We have to attend. We have been invited...Please...' The second figure let his hood fall back, revealing a handsome young man, small marks of sand and weariness upon his cheeks.

"No. No we don't. I don't want to...' The slender figure replied, his tone soft and weak but not stemming from fatigue. It was something deeper.

"Shahzadi Rayna is said to be attending... I'm sure she would love to see her older brother..."

"Heh... I wonder if Father knows she is all the way here..."

"Only one way to find out, Shahzade."

"Still I don't want to. Go for me. Tell her I died. I don't care.

"Now we both know that simply would not work. Nor is it proper, Shahzade...

"Eh. Whatever. Father doesn't expect me to make a match and ascend the Sun Throne anyways. I'm always the failure. The Prince-That-Should-Not-Be. Heh..."

"Wh-...? Ok. That's it. MUNIR IBN RAIF AL KADIR. The second figure said in a loud, stern and forceful voice. One that roused the man that is currently still on the floor. "YOU GET YOURSELF TOGETHER DAMMIT. STOP SULKING. THIS ISN'T YOU. NO SON OF ALIDASHT IS ALLOWED TO SELF-DESTRUCT. WAKE THE FUCK UP. FORTIFY YOURSELF!"

The man previously curled up amongst pillows has now scrambled and sat up. In the process, the hood that covered his head had fallen, revealing another handsome man. His features spoke of a soft grace, with and edge behind it. Like an ornate dagger, one that is as pleasing on the eyes as it is deadly when used.

"GET YOURSELF TOGETHER. I WILL ARRANGE FOR YOU TO MEET SHAHZADI RAYNA.... uhum. Excuse me. Before we have to attend the ball. Now. I will go have some clothing, fitting for a ball, made for you. Don't do anything else stupid in the mean time.

The man on the floor nodded sheepishly. The second figure offer a small smile and a deep bow before excusing himself...
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by HylianRose
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HylianRose Defender of Hyrule

Member Seen 5 hrs ago

Sir Nikolai Dragos Berova
Sir Nikolai Dragos Berova
Time: Early Morning
Location: Berova Estate
Attire: -
Interactions: -

Trigger Warnings:: Blood, Mutilation, Death, General Horror

___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________



He can feel the cold stone of the room beneath his bare feet. The room feels like it’s been blanketed in darkness, threatening to swallow him whole. It makes him feel tiny, insignificant and the air around him is thick and metallic, each breath tasting like rust. It’s a sensation he’s all too familiar with. Blood. The walls of the room glistened in crimson, dripping sickeningly to the cold floor. It’s then that he realized the bodies that surround him. They lie tangled at his feet, pale limbs twisted at impossible angles, face slack in expression. There is a pool of dark crimson that surrounds them. It is slick and reflective. As he moved to look down at his reflection, a sound startled him.

A monster stands just across the room, a limp body in it’s grip.

Its form is vaguely human, familiar, but wrong. Its shaggy dark hair is disheveled and matted with both wet and dried blood. Its arms look proportionally wrong, and he can see that same slick crimson liquid covering its claw-like hands. He noticed, a horrified expression on his face, that the creature’s face was completely blurred in an unnatural way. It was as if someone had taken an eraser and smudged it out.

The monster tilted it’s head at him.

Nik’s heart stuttered, his chest tightening. It wasn’t just fear, no. There was something else there. Something he shuddered to consider.

Recognition.

A sound tore through the room, part growl, part scream. The sound of a creature that had long forgotten mercy. He swears he can hear his name in the depths of the roar. The monster took a step towards him and dropped the body it was holding. Then another.

Run.

The thought hits him too late. The creature lunged at him, screeching. Nikolai spun on his heel and sprinted for the exit, his bare feet barely finding purchase against the blood-soaked floor. He tripped over tools, bodies, but eventually breaks through to the outside. All at once he is outside in the forest. The brush cut at his feet as he ran. Behind him, he heard it. Heavy footsteps, relentless and gaining ground. He can feel its presence at his back, hot and suffocating, like a hand hovering inches from his spine.

He stumbled, tripping over a root. His broke the fall with his hands, but the impact sent painful jolts down his arm.

Cold fingers touched his shoulder. He jolted. The world fractured.

Nikolai jerked awake with a strangled gasp, bolting up in his bed. The sheets are soaked through with his sweat, clinging to his skin. His heart hammered painfully in his chest. Each breath felt like fire, and for a brief moment, he was convinced he could still smell blood. It took him several seconds before he dared to look at his hands and when he does, they’re clean. He let out a sigh, lifting one hand to rub his temple, which was throbbing. After several minutes, he pushed himself up off of the bed, unable to shake the certainty that the monster was familiar to him. He pulled on some clothes and a thick coat and began his walk outside.

Another sleepless night.

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Hidden 5 mos ago Post by princess
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princess

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Time: Evening, Ignis 2
Location: Tough Tavern

@Tae@CitrusArms@Potter@Lava Alckon@Samreaper@Tpartywithzombi@ReusableSword

₱₳ⱀ₟ 4 - ₟ⱧɆ ĐⱀƂ₊₭Ƃ₊â‚Č â‚Č₳₄Ɇ



â±€Ă˜É„â‚ŠÄ â‚źâ‚©Ă˜


Garran lifted his hand. “Alright,” he said calmly. “Round two.”

His eyes flicked once to the still-smoking brand on Drake’s back, then returned to the table, lingering only long enough to watch the looter step in front of the stairs.

“Same rules,” Garran continued. “Faster this time. No pauses. No mercy for mistakes.”

He nodded toward the hearth.

The poker slid back into the coals with a hiss.

“Tankards up.”

Ariella glanced down at the stein as the table and glass seemed to move like a wave of the ocean. Her eyes slowly blinking then opened as she attempted to focus, but it was no use.

Just before they began, Marius’s giggling stole the room’s attention. Some had already noticed him snickering through the first round—barely holding it in.

His pupils were wide. A soft, childish delight warmed his chest as his eyes stayed fixed on Kalliope.

He drifted close enough that she could catch his sour breath and set his blood-smeared fingertips on the bar with a wet, casual tap.

“Mm.” The sound was small—almost appreciative. His gaze moved over her patiently: hands, throat, eyes. Then his mouth curved, faintly.

“You spoke before as if you’re untouchable.” He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to.

“That’s sweet,” he murmured, as if confiding in an old friend. “Makes it easier to pick the moment you finally understand you’re not.”

His eyes drifted past her shoulder—to the table, to Drake bound at the post, to the trembling barmaid, to the men watching with their hands flat—then returned to Kalliope with a wretched smile.

“Garran,” he said softly, polite as anything, “let me have the ones who fail.” A pause followed his words—just long enough for the room to imagine what that meant.

“Not now,” he added, almost thoughtful. “Later. When they’re tired.”

His gaze dipped, briefly, to Kalliope’s hands.“And her,” he finished, “She’s mine.”

Then Marius stepped back, letting the razor chain sway once as he turned away, as if she’d already been handled.

Garran’s expression didn’t change. He simply nodded to Ox—who raised his hand, and the room drank.

Ari’s heart was a drum in her chest, hammering faster with every scream, every cruel strike that echoed from Drake through the bar. Her eyes shifted to Charlotte as she struggled, knowing what was coming next as her own hand trembled, attempting to lift her glass.

Charlotte was the first to raise her tankard, her hand shaking as she lifted it. The panic from the last round still sat heavy in her chest, her breathing uneven, no matter how she tried to steady herself. She drank anyway, driven by desperation not to fail Drake again.

But even the first swallow went wrong. She spluttered, coughing as foam spilled over the rim, and instead of stopping, she forced herself to keep going, tilting the tankard higher in a frantic attempt to make it work, but her throat locked.

She lurched forward as she started choking suddenly, and the chair tipped beneath her. Then she collapsed off the chair, palms on the floor, the tankard clattering away. Charlotte clawed at the ground, chest convulsing, tears streaming as she gasped uselessly for air that wouldn’t come.

Laughter blurred around her, her world narrowing to nothing but the desperate need to breathe.

Ari’s heart dropped into her stomach as her glassy eyes shot to Drake, the color disappearing from her face.

Drake softly mouthed a single word as he watched her fumble. ”No
”

He had watched with horror as rough hands had suddenly seized the back of Charlotte’s dress and yanked her upright as Winston hauled her hard like dead weight. The sudden movement made the room spin violently; bile surged up her chest before she could stop it.

She deliberately managed to turn her head before she retched—it splattered across Winston’s face and chest, right into his eyes. For a brief moment, despite herself, the corners of her lips twitched upward at the sound of his furious roar.

Immediately, blinded and still roaring, he grabbed her by the hair and drove her forward. Then he smashed her head into the tabletop.

The impact broke through the noise of the tavern.

Across the table, even while she continued her chug, golden light glinted in Stratya’s eyes, her gaze straining to track Winston as her head tilted back with her drink.

”Hey! Such manners are not-GAH!” Drake’s protest was cut short by the heat of the poker riding against his skin. As the tool pierced and threatened to break the first layer, he was reminded that these games—these “rules”—are all a farce. An excuse to do wicked against the kinder people of the world.

He looked at Charlotte’s head as it came back up from the impact, making a note of Winston’s outlandish strike against a lady. Each sin they committed, another strike in Edwards' mental book of judgment.

A sharp sensation split his posture, as flesh gave way to metal, trickles of blood seeped into Drake’s clothes. Burning pains were mixed with stings unlike anything he had experienced as the spike slipped and took more than the man bargained for. Drake’s binds pushed against the pillar—his back arching in protest to the new wound.

“Are you just resorting to stabbing me now? Is burning me not enough?” In a snide rebuttal, the man simply pushed the hot metal into the wound as Drake shouted in pain. “Just shut the hell up you whiney lil git.”

Dropping her glass, Ari barreled through the chaos, her bare feet slipping over spilled ale and shattered glass, cutting up her skin as she trailed blood behind her. Her fiery hair whipping wildly as she weaved her way with unsteady movements towards her brother.

There he was, Drake, tied to the chair, bruised, bleeding, and utterly exposed to the cruelty of these men. The sight made something inside her snap as the man pressed the metal into his wound.

“No.No!” she hissed, tears stinging her eyes. Without thinking, she threw herself at Drake, wrapping her arms tightly around his chest, catching the man off guard, so that he stumbled just enough.

Her body pressed against Drake’s, shielding him from them, every ounce of her strength focused on keeping him safe. The blood from his wound stained her dress and hair as she held onto him for dear life. Her forehead buried in the crook of his neck, her hands clenched around his broad shoulders as if sheer force could stop the torment.

She whispered, low and trembling, words meant only for him, barely audible over the din of chaos. Through her muffled, drunk whimpers and tears, knowing everything was about to change.

“I’m sorry
I love you
”

The following words came to her with ease, as if she always knew them. As if they were always there just waiting to be said


“Mentis Fulgur.”

Silence followed.

The syllables slipped from her lips like sparks igniting a storm. The bar went silent for the briefest heartbeat, a vacuum that sucked all sound into the sudden stillness. And then the air tore.

A wave of telekinetic energy burst outward from Ari, concentrated, fierce, and wild. Chairs flew, tables splintered, and some of the attackers were hurled back like rag dolls. Nearby patrons got thrown out of their chairs, screaming in surprise. Wine tankards smashed midair; screams of surprise and pain reverberated off the walls. Every thought and focus of her enemies scattered, disoriented by the sheer force of her power.

And Ari
 collapsed.

Her tiny frame went limp, her body falling slowly at first as her grip on him loosened. She finally crumbled against Drake’s feet, her limbs slack as exhaustion claimed her. Her hair spilled over the floor, like a pool of molten red that spread across the ground.

The power she had unleashed lingered like an echo in the air. The bar was wrecked, attackers were bruised and dazed. And in the center of it all was Ari, collapsed along the floor in front of her brother.

The second Ariella’s words had left her mouth, Garran had felt the air change—and then the force hit him full in the chest. It ripped the ground out from under him; his boots slipped, and he was thrown backward, shoulder and spine jarring against the boards as the breath was punched out of him in one hit. For the moment, he lay there stunned, ears ringing, watching the ceiling beams wobble above him while chairs scraped and something shattered nearby.

Ox took the blast too—his boots skidding out, his balance breaking for the first time all night. His huge mass went lurching backward in a stagger as he tried to plant himself and hold, but the slick floorboards betrayed him, and he slammed back into the pillar.

The very same pillar Marius had already claimed as his.

The moment the air snapped outward from Ariella, Marius had reacted upon hearing her words the way a dock rat does when the tide yanks at him: not by fighting the pull, but by grabbing something. The razor was already in his hand, and he drove it fast into the post near his stool with a solid thunk, burying steel deep into the wood. The chain followed immediately—slicking around the pillar in a quick loop, links rattling as he hooked it fast, using the weight of that embedded blade as an anchor point. The blast still hit him; it slammed into his ribs and shoulders and tried to peel him off the floor anyway, boots sliding, coat snapping, his body yanked taut against the chain. Marius clung there with both hands like a delighted parasite, and he laughed—tipped his head back against the pillar and let out another chuckle like being nearly blown off his feet was the funniest joke in the world.

And Ox recovered fast—too big to stay down. He shook it off with a roll of his shoulders as he hauled himself upright again, legs braced wide, jaw set, eyes snapping back toward Ariella and Drake.

Behind the bar, Moira had slammed hard into the shelves, while Maelen had dropped low, ducking under the counter with her hands over her head.

Then there was Merrill—his scream climbing, cracking, turning animal as he thrashed inside the hearth while the fire ate away at his flesh.

He’d been unlucky enough to be thrown straight into it, his head clipping the stone hard enough to knock the breath right out of him, and in that same instant, the flames climbed his chest and shoulders like they’d been waiting. He tried to scramble out on instinct, palms skidding, elbows jerking, but every movement only dragged him through more heat. The tavern erupted into horrified screams as people bore witness to his agony; they saw his skin blister and char, his face becoming a gruesome, raw red under the peeling burn, his pupils blown wide with pure, helpless agony. And then the smell hit—burning cloth, burning hair, that sickening sweet reek of someone being cooked alive—it was so thick it felt like it slapped the whole room. Patrons gagged, eyes watering, throats closing up. The room felt suddenly smaller.






By the time the smell reached her, Stratya was already in motion. When Ariella had gotten up to run to her brother, Captain Durmand had taken that as a cue, and rose from her seat as she chugged. She was just about done. Whatever happened, this incident was going to come to an immediate end. Amber disappeared down her throat. When the magicked shockwave hit her, her footing was already quite wide, it gave her the foundation she needed to stay upright while her hand snapped to grip the edge of the table.

And what luck, her chug was freshly done. Her ammunition was ready.

As the heavy vessel fell from her lips, the Fury began to flow. The crackling golden light that filled her eyes told of a raging magic that filled her body and made the urge to act nigh irresistible. As Fury in her bones rose into her muscles, as it flowed from her heart to her fingers and toes, her training kicked in. Her body did not tense with the raging wave of magic and emotion; her judgment remained above the intoxicating ocean of frustration and anger and wrath. Compassion gave her the buoyancy to stay above the poisons of even Righteous Fury, and an entire childhood of training let that compassion withstand the tempest.

Her flagon was guided down, back, up, and at last around, its course aligned with magicked strength for the archer high in the rafters. She did not watch for it to make an impact; there was no time.

With her left hand, Stratya pointed her palm at the archer on the stairs and made a show of spinning about once as though she were catching something from the air while she whispered, “Objicerre invocarre.” The bolt from the archer’s crossbow appeared in her hand along with a singing pain. She passed the object to her right hand.

Armed now, the captain rounded the table and stabbed Winston with the stolen bolt before kicking out his knee and driving her left elbow into his back. Her eyes snapped to Ox, who’d been pushed between her and Marius, and the big lug even turned to face away. Big mistake. And yet..

By then, she had registered the screaming from the fire. Her eyes caught sight of the man. The Fury wanted him to burn, but..

Years ago. They had spotted great plumes of smoke, the sign they were already too late. Indeed, when they arrived, the remnants of what had been were slowly toddling and crying aimlessly away from the horror, burned and hopeless, deep in despair.

Captain Durmand bolted past Ox and to the fire. She reached in with a gloved hand fearlessly and grabbed a limb before she pulled him up and out, high over her head where she could hold him aloft with both hands. She pivoted sharply and called, “OX!” and threw the poor fellow at the beast of burden of a man. “You werrk ferr me nao. Pu’ tha’ mahn ou’!”




Every sound and action around him threatened to break his concentration as they were served the next round. Roman knew he couldn’t stop what he had started; the magic was pooled and ready to be released. When he saw Charlotte start to choke from the corner of his eye, he felt himself straining, resisting the rage that boiled inside him. When Winston grabbed her, he felt himself nearly crush the mug in his hand and shut his eyes in an attempt to steady himself.

It was an attempt that made him miss what happened next: the shuffling of feet and moving chairs beside him. Ari and Stratya were moving. Caught off guard, he opened his eyes to see Stratya making moves against the archers first, judging by her posture, while Ari threw herself onto her brother.

Roman pivoted low out from behind the chair when the blast hit him, pushing him off balance. He rolled and recovered against the wall just in time to lock eyes with their witch and cast his spells. In his experience, the wordless spells he used were always powerful, yet not as refined as a spoken spell. This always added some randomness, some unknown metric, some wild magic to his spells. The cost was always higher—the cost of making the will and voice of the gods manifest.

The first of these spells only the witch could see. His glowing yellow eyes fixated on her like a predator hunting its prey. For her, all light in the room vanished. Those same yellow eyes fixated on her in the dark, then one pair became many, then hundreds. Unblinking, filled with hatred and rage, they were followed by the sound of laughter, first from her companions, then growing to a cacophony of hundreds of voices laughing at her, loud enough to deafen her to the world around her.

The second spell shifted. It was still a distraction but focused on causing fear and panic. He would need it to be big, draw attention, and be monstrous.

“YOUR SHADOWS ARE MINE!” Roman shouted, his body shaking with rage and adrenaline he could not contain. Shadows rushed from all across the floor to him, coating him in a flat darkness that began to bulge and pool. It enveloped him in a growing mass of writhing and swirling shadows. Human and animal forms alike formed in the mass, trying to escape it, pulling at each other, pushing and growing the mass further.

Hand, foot, and claw latched, pushed, and pulled like a nightmare manifested and growing. A menagerie of moans, screams, and growls emanated from the mass until it crawled its way to the ceiling. Roman’s form could not be seen in the mass that engulfed that portion of the room. Then, all at once, it stopped. Stopped moving, stopped screaming. Every single one of countless forms and masses, every eye small and large, every face and snout snapped to one person at the same time with unnatural movement and precision. Marius.

Then, as one unified mass of endless abyss, it charged. The screams and growls sounded more like an oncoming train. It ripped, grabbed, and moved with speed something that size wouldn’t—shouldn’t—be able to do. Darkness intent on devouring the one it set its eyes on.

Roman moved in the center of the mass unseen; his movements, like the mass, were unnatural. Mostly moving on all fours, the color in his left eye drained and his right ear muted. He could barely maintain his focus as his mind fought not to be consumed by the very nightmare illusion of light and sound he had created. He reminded himself that it wasn’t real, reminded himself that he had to protect Drake.

His head and shoulder found the pillar first. The illusion was mostly focused on Marius, engulfing him in darkness. A darkness he knew wouldn’t last much longer. Some of that writhing, screaming darkness still enveloped him as he searched for the chain with a splitting headache and blurred vision. When he finally found it, he began to twist and pivot it against itself in an attempt to break the links and free Drake. Only now did he really start regretting not seeing how they had locked Drake to the pillar.




When the shockwave of Ariella’s power ripped through the room, Kalliope didn’t fight the force; she leaned into it. The iron-bound oak tray was up in a heartbeat, a heavy buckler caught in a white-knuckle grip as she skidded across the slick, ale-soaked floor. She didn't wait for the dust to settle or the screaming to stop. While the others were dazed by the blast, she bolted for the bar, holding the tray high and angled toward the rafters—a silent, tactical precaution against the crossbowmen in case they tried to find their marks in the chaos.

She moved through the wreckage with a cold, rhythmic intensity, the phantom echoes of a burning palace wing pushing her faster. As she closed the distance to the bar, she weaponized her momentum. With a snapping rotation of her torso, she frisbeed the heavy oak tray toward Marius; it cut through the air, a spinning disc of wood and iron aimed to catch him while he was distracted by Roman’s shadow-mass.

Kalliope reached the counter and didn't slow. She drew a dagger in a silver flash and vaulted over the bar in a single, athletic arc. Maelen was a huddled mass beneath the counter, and Kalliope landed on her with the full weight of her fury. She grabbed the woman’s hair, yanking her head to the side, as she buried the blade deep into the fleshy junction between the witch’s neck and shoulder, Maelen’s scream turning into a wet, choked gurgle as the steel was ripped free across her throat.

In a fluid, predatory spin, Kalliope leveled her gaze at Moira, who was scrambling behind the bar. With deadly precision, she flicked her wrist, sending the blood-slicked dagger whistling through the air. The blade buried itself in Moira's throat with a sickening thwack.

Kalliope didn’t go to retrieve it. Instead, she pulled a second, heavier blade from her belt. Beneath her, Maelen was still twitching, her hands clawing feebly at the floor. Kalliope didn't offer mercy; she offered a message. With a brutal, rhythmic hacking, she worked the blade through bone and sinew, her expression locked in a mask of jagged, focused intent. She worked quickly, and when the task was done, she stood, the front of her clothes and the tan skin of her face splattered in a gruesome, warm map of Maelen’s lifeblood.

She rose from behind the bar like a ghost born of a slaughterhouse. Her green eyes, shimmering with a terrifying, unhinged light, locked directly onto Garran’s. A sadistic grin spread across her crimson-stained lips. With a flick of her wrist, she tossed Maelen’s severed head over the counter. It tumbled across the floor, leaving a grisly trail before coming to a rest near Garran’s boots. “You let the wrong woman roam freely.”

The scene exploded. Olivia’s eyes widened at the telekinetic blast. Before she could react, she was blown from her chair onto the floor. Silverware, napkins, plates and other objects went flying. Poor Kazumin had taken a bowl of mildly hot soup to the face with a yelp, his wet, blonde hair now clinging to his skin.

Luckily, she ducked and wrapped her arms around her head and pulled her knees up to her chest. A few loud clinks told her how close she was to having been stabbed. When it ended, her eyes opened and she unraveled herself. With debris in her hair and scratches on her skin, Olivia felt as if she were stepping back into Persephone’s shoes.

Then, Olivia grasped a knife laying at her feet and noticed another one. Her eyes trailed to Charlotte and she bumped her hand gently with her own. She slipped it discreetly into both Lottie’s and her own pocket and then stood up quietly.

Her eyes traveled to Merrill on fire, who was tossed at Ox by Stratya (who used magic? How many of the king's employees used it?); the illusion from Roman, who was now trying to free Drake. It was then her gaze snapped toward the bar as Kalliope beheaded Maelen (which made her want to throw up-what the hell?). Winston was keeled over on the ground in pain. This left Kazumin, Lottie and her to react next. Her gaze traveled to Kazumin and a wry smile curled up her lips. She gestured to the archers and the others.

“Banana split!” She yelled, causing mass confusion, and ran around the side of the table toward the pillars nearest the staircase to the balcony. She scrambled out of the way of terrified bargoers and stayed low to the ground, moving like a rocket. Once she was near the staircase, she ducked low and out of sight of the archers. She knew one of them would come.




Charlotte pushed herself up on her palms, the feeling of the damp wood at her fingertips. However, her arms trembled so badly she wasn’t certain if they were holding her up at all, or what even was happening entirely around her; the roar of the tavern was distant and muffled, as if she had been submerged underwater. Her wide blue eyes were locked on the hazy view of the floor. She had been watching as red blots seemed to form before her with an audible, heavy drop every few seconds. It took a moment for her to register that she was the source of them—that blood had been trailing from not only the gash on her forehead, but from burning nostrils as well. She saw each one land—saw the way they darkened the wood. Charlotte realized that her face had become a canvas for the streams of blood that had painted it.

She shifted her weight, her elbows quivering with the movement as she lifted her gaze in time to watch a severed head tumble past her, the slack features embedding themselves in her mind as her pupils dilated. For a long moment, Charlotte simply stared, her breath stuttering as if her lungs had forgotten how to work. Tears burned hot in her eyes and spilled freely down her cheeks, streaking through the blood and dirt. But she couldn’t look away. The horror had her rooted in place, and it brought upon an unsettling epiphany
 This was not a nightmare they could just wake from—there was no guarantee any of them would get out of here alive.

Then Olivia had yelled something, something so familiar, and Kazumin had answered with a code word of his own. Her nails scraped slightly at the wood beneath her. Her jaw suddenly set and so had her mind.

No more hesitation.

She didn’t allow herself to think upon it further, and she pushed off the floor, surging forward, drawn only by raw necessity and adrenaline. Her world narrowed into the space of just her and the man guarding the stairs. Her vision swam as she forced her body onward. His gaze had been drawn elsewhere when Charlotte suddenly slammed herself into him with a force of desperation.

They went down, their bodies crashing hard against the stairs.

Olivia watched as Lottie tackled Paul (the looter) by the staircase. She seized the opportunity and raced up the steps, taking two at a time until she reached the top. She passed by a man who eerily resembled Felix, but she didn’t have time to check. She ran straight for the wall, kicked off, and spun into the air, her fingers grasping around the rafters.

After a moment of confusion, Kazumin was hot on her trail and ran in the opposite direction. He broke at a low sprint, then dropped even lower as he slid beneath one of the tables. He paused to orient himself as someone crouched nearby, their eyes widened and frozen—and staring right at him.

Meanwhile, she pulled herself up and waited. Her breathing was slow and controlled. Olivia assessed the situation, calculating her chances, and then acted. She raced for the archer nearest her like a bullet, with the knife now in her hand. She spun the knife in her hand and then pierced him between his shoulder blades.

He screamed, shock and pain tearing from his throat, and Olivia seized the moment, wrenching the crossbow from his grasp. She pulled it around herself securely. The guy whirled around and faced her, but as he went to attack, she was ready. Olivia sprang into a backflip like a cat and landed on her feet.

With a wild grin, she gestured for him to come at her. “Come on, hotstuff. Show me what you got,” She grinned and pointed at the crossbow. ”Finder’s keepers, eh?” If she knocked him down and he was able to recover or fight, then she was endangering others needlessly. No, she’d finish him on her own when the time was right. What if he fell near Charlotte?

Under the table, Kazumin reached out and clamped a hand firmly over the man’s mouth before a sound could escape. The man’s cheeks puffed beneath his palm, eyes wide with terror.

He leaned in just for the man to hear and murmured, “Shh. Don’t give me away.” With his other hand, he plucked a torn piece of bread from a fallen plate beside him and offered the man a reassuring look before slipping out from under the table as easily as he’d come. He made his way beneath another table, where he took a moment to bite into the bread and chew. His expression sharpened, a serious look overtaking his features. He rose just enough to get a clear line of sight and then made a sprint up the stairs after Olivia.

After a running start, he jumped onto a barrel like it was a stepping stone, vaulted, and caught the lip of the rafters with both hands. For a moment, he hung there, muscles burning, then hauled himself up and went again. He saw Olivia already in motion. He tackled the other crossbowman much like a spider monkey would, all limbs and momentum. Kazumin wrapped an arm around the man’s shoulders and drove his weight into his center, boots scrabbling as he clung on. The sudden impact knocked the wind from the man’s chest; his arms flailed as he tried to recover, but Kazumin shifted his weight deliberately, dragging him sideways. One foot slipped off the rafter. Then the other followed.

The crossbowman pitched forward with a startled shout and went over the edge entirely. He hit the wood of the balcony below with a painful thud and a groan. In the same motion, Kazumin tore the crossbow from his hands as he fell, the weapon wrenching free just before the man disappeared from view.

His fingers caught, and he stumbled with it, nearly dropping it. After getting a grip, he fumbled with it immediately, brows knitting.

“How do I—” he muttered, turning it like it might explain itself. “Eh. Whatever.”

Next, Kazumin stood up on the rafters and lifted the crossbow into the air.

“RUIN OUR DRUNKARD’S DAY, WILL YA?” he bellowed at the room, his voice tearing through the chaos. “YOU FUCKERS!”
Without a second thought, he flicked the last of the bread he’d pocketed toward Olivia. “Popcorn!” he called to her.

“Popcorn noted!” Olivia yelled back and caught the bread with an outstretched hand. With a lazy grin, she bit into it and stuffed the rest into her pocket.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by princess
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Time: Evening, Ignis 2
Location: Tough Tavern

@Tae@CitrusArms@Potter@Lava Alckon@Samreaper@Tpartywithzombi@ReusableSword

₱₳ⱀ₟ 5



Jory had already scrambled back up into the rafters after the bolt vanished from his hands like it had been snatched out of the air. His stomach still lurched every time he replayed it.

He’d retreated on instinct, boots slipping on the beam as he hauled himself higher, breath coming too fast, fingers shaking so badly he nearly botched the latch on his crossbow.

From up there, the tavern looked chaotic. Then that woman with the strawberry hair was suddenly there, close enough that he could see the debris in her hair and the calm in her eyes that made him feel even smaller.

When the knife went between his shoulder blades, the pain hit like lightning. A sound tore out of him that he had never heard from himself before. She wrenched the crossbow away before he could even claw it back, and the humiliation landed right on top of the panic. His face went white.

Then Jory did what Jory always did when his fear outgrew his sense.

“GARRAN—SHE’S UP HERE! SHE TOOK IT—” he screamed, voice cracking, eyes wild as he staggered backward along the beam. “SHE’S GOT MY FUCKIN’—”

He scrabbled for the knife on his belt with shaking fingers, blade coming free in a jerky flash. Jory was not brave enough to rush her. But also not calm enough to think straight.

And instead of being smart, he went big(at least in his opinion)—he slashed at the nearest hanging chain on impulse, trying to swing a lantern between them like a moving threat. The lantern lurched, throwing wild light across the rafters as he backed away, blood already darkening the cloth at his shoulder.

Meanwhile, the older crossbowman hit the balcony below, air leaving his lungs in a grunt. For a second, he just lay there, cheek pressed to wood, vision pulsing at the edges while he tested his ribs and found at least one answering back with pain.

Then he rolled into a crouch. His eyes went up first, tracking the rafters, already hunting the blond idiot who’d stolen his weapon.

His crossbow was gone. That mattered more than the fall.

So he made the smartest choice left and slid behind the balcony rail, using it as cover, and drew a blade. He repositioned toward a thicker support post.

“Rafters!” he called down. “They’ve got my bow. Don’t look up—move!”




Down below, Garran’s gaze had dropped to the head at his boots, and for a moment, he didn’t react at all. He just stared at it, letting the room keep screaming and scrambling around him while his eyes traced the slack mouth, the wet shine on the hair, the way it left a smear of blood where it had rolled.

Then his eyes lifted slowly to Kalliope, and the corner of his mouth tugged up in a smirk, faint and mean. He simply set his weight, drew his foot back, and kicked.

The head skidded across the slick boards with a sickening speed, spinning end over end as it went, hair dragging wetly along the floor. It shot straight toward Stratya’s shins.

Garran used the second that everyone’s eyes twitched toward it. He moved with purpose through the wreckage, weaving between chairs and scattered tankards like he’d been born in a room like this. His attention locked onto Ariella.

Then his hand slid into his coat, and when it came back out, the lamplight caught hard on iron as he revealed a pistol.

He then yanked Ariella toward him by that pretty red hair of hers. As he held her up, he pressed the barrel against her scalp and held it there. “Nobody moves,” he said, and his voice didn’t rise, which somehow made it carry further. He let his eyes sweep—Roman near the pillar, Kalliope behind the bar, Olivia and Kazumin up on the rafters, Stratya already moving.

Garran’s aim never left Ariella while he counted them.

“You breathe wrong, and I put a bullet through her skull,” he continued, calmly. “You reach for steel, you take one step, you get heroic—and you watch her die right here at her brother’s feet.”

The barrel pushed into her head. It wasn’t a threat meant to look scary, but a reminder that he could do it with a twitch.

“Hands,” he barked then, “flat. Back to the tables. Eyes down. I don’t care if you’re bleedin’ or prayin’—you keep your palms where I can see ’em.”

He cut his gaze toward Ox, who was moving toward them now, without moving his head much. “Ox.”



Ox had been at the pillar when the shockwave hit, but he had recovered fast, too big to stay down, hauling himself upright with a roll of his shoulders and a hard swallow of breath.

Then Stratya’s shout had come, and something flaming had been thrown in his direction.

Merrill hit the boards where Ox had been a second earlier, a tangle of limbs and fire that burst brighter on impact. Heat shoved outward in a wave, that terrible sweet smell still wafting through the tavern. Merrill’s hands scrabbled in spilled ale that hissed under his palms as he tried to drag himself free, his scream collapsing into desperate gasps.

Ox didn’t catch him. He stepped just barely aside and left him there, burning on the ground.

And when Garran called his name, Ox didn’t hesitate. He came forward with that same blunt inevitability, boots thudding, jaw set—

—and his hand closed around Drake’s throat, squeezing tight enough to make the man’s breath hitch.




Meanwhile, Paul's back struck the stairs with a crack that rattled up the rail, and for a second, his eyes went glassy as she practically barreled him down, her palms braced on either side of his shoulders, her weight pinned him just for a moment. Then his hand shot to her forearm, fingers clamping it, and he bucked his hips hard while twisting his shoulders sideways. The stairs did the rest, turning the scramble into a roll. The world snapped sideways as he used Charlotte's momentum against her.

In a blink, she was the one slammed into the step, her spine biting wood. He came down over her, forearm braced across her chest as he crowded her space.

Charlotte tried to bring her knee up, but he had already found what he wanted. His fingers snagged a fistful of her dress near the collar, yanking her just enough to expose the line of her throat. The knife came out quickly, and he drove it in close and pressed the flat of the blade to her neck. The edge kissed the skin in a manner that made her whole body tense. “Don’t.” He warned low, as his eyes flicked over to the room then dropped back to her face with a pleased look. “You want to be brave? I’ll make you brave in pieces.” He leaned closer, the knife never leaving her throat. “Open your mouth...Do anything clever
And I’ll paint these steps with you.”




Marius had been lightly anchored to the pillar when Merrill hit the hearth.

The scream that came out of Merrill hadn’t sounded like a man. It had turned animal as the flames caught and kept catching. Marius’s eyes gleamed as the skin blistered, as the cloth shrank and blackened. The first laugh came out of him when Merrill clawed at the ground and skidded in his own panic, dragging himself through more heat every time he tried to escape it.

While others had gagged at the smell, Marius had inhaled as much as he could with a smile of delight. His head then tipped curiously, watching Merrill thrash like it was a puppet show staged just for him. He pointed with two blood-smeared fingers, almost delighted, as if he’d just spotted a joke no one else could understand. “Look,” he giggled, voice bright and cracked with glee. “He’s tryin’ to crawl out!” He laughed harder at that, shoulders shaking. His eyes shone, pupils blown wide, the sound of it crawling over the screams like a second fire.

“Go on,” he crooned to Merrill, as if cheering a friend. “Do it. Do it fast. You’ll be ash before you hit the floor.”

Then he noticed Stratya, the beautiful brunette who had been holding his little redhead just earlier. Marius’s gaze slid to her. He watched the golden light in her eyes, the flagon’s swing, the bolt snapping into her hand. He watched her drive it to Winston’s body.

Winston’s yowl tore out of him, the fury evident in his roar. And Marius nearly folded at the sound. He laughed like it was the funniest thing he’d heard all night. His mouth fell open, and the giggles came in choking bursts, his shoulders rattling as he clung to the pillar. “Oh—oh!” he wheezed. He pressed his forehead to the wood for a second like he couldn’t hold himself upright, then lifted his face again, still grinning, still watching Stratya with that hungry interest, following her with his eyes as she threw Merrill toward that big wall of a man.

The moment Roman’s darkness swelled, Marius’s whole face changed. It was as if something inside him had been called by name. All those shapes clawing out of the black like a nightmare trying to be born
 It delighted him.

As the shadow-mass thickened overhead, he stared up at it with that same blown-pupil wonder. “Oh,” he murmured in a reverent manner, and his eyes slid toward where Roman had vanished. “That’s yours.”

His grin widened slowly. “You don’t even know, do you?” He tilted his head, listening to the screams. “Shadows have always reached for me. They always—” His voice softened into intimacy. “—reached for me.”

But for that brief second, he was distracted enough to forget the rest. He didn’t notice when Kalliope moved nor when she sent the tray flying.

Marius didn’t see it until the last instant, and his laugh hitched. He turned just enough to register the blur before it slammed into him brutally. For a second, all the air left him at once, pain blooming through his chest where the iron edge caught. The impact snapped him sideways.

He made a choking sound, spit thick in his mouth as the room spun. His body lagged behind his mind in a way that made him furious. But he stayed there just long enough to taste it—to let the pain soak in, to let it remind him he was still alive.

Then his eyes found the bar. Moira and Maelen’s bodies were down on the wooden floor. His gaze skipped over the mess like it couldn’t decide where to land, and he spun fast, chain clinking, pupils huge, and that’s when he saw it: the head by Garran’s boots. He watched as Garran’s foot drew back, as the head went skidding toward Stratya.

His mouth curled into a grin so quick it looked involuntary. He hoped Stratya’s attention would be taken by the incoming head for a split second, and Marius surged forward out of nowhere, laughing again as he closed the distance. He came in low, slipping under the angle of her guard, and he didn’t reach for her blade arm as a sane man would. He reached for her hair.

He fisted it hard at the base, yanked her head back just enough to steal her balance, and drove himself into her space with a feral sound. His chain rattled as he tried to wrap it up and over her shoulder like a leash. “Found you,” he whispered, his breath in her ear, and then he pulled, trying to drag her into him. With her hair still trapped in his fist, Marius used the pull to force her posture open, driving his shoulder into her ribs like a bully in an alley.

He then threaded his chain behind her neck and laughed right against her ear, and he yanked again, trying to drag her down onto the ground covered in spilled ale and blood. “Stay,” he murmured, voice sickly pleased, like he was talking to a dog he’d finally gotten a leash on.




It had all gone to Garran’s wish.

He let his eyes roam, pistol still on Ariella’s head, as if he was taking inventory. “Listen close,” he said, calm as anything.

“You’ve got a gun on her head.” His free hand tipped, indicating the stairs without looking. “A blade on another.”

He let that sit, the meaning spreading through the room.“You all had your bit of fun, but it's over.” His eyes flicked, counting: Charlotte pinned on the steps, Stratya tangled, Drake already in Ox’s grip. “This isn't a game any more. I'll kill Lady Edwards first. Then the Vikena girl. Then that captain. And Lord Edwards. If I have to, I'll keep killing until there's no one left.”

The barrel nudged Ariella’s scalp almost intimately, “And you up in the rafters? You're probably scrambling together some kind of plan right this very second. But I'm warning you... Do not make me prove myself—Don’t make me kill your friends.”

That was when a laugh began reverberate through the tavern.

It wasn’t loud at first; it was a sweet—almost saccharine voice. Feminine. Even dainty. It made Garran’s mouth tug into a smirk that didn’t reach his eyes. It had come from the barmaid, who had still been curled over the barrel where she had been sobbing this whole time. Her face had been hidden in her hands, and her shoulders had been shaking with sobs.

However, the shaking wasn’t from her crying anymore.

As she slowly peeled her palms away from her face, it became ever so clear that she was no longer crying. The smile she revealed didn’t belong on anyone human. And then she regarded them with completely blackened eyes; no irises, no pupils
 Just darkness.

With patient movements, she got to her feet and allowed her arms to drift outward from her sides and then her heels lifted as she rose into the airt. Dark energy begin to form and gather in her hands in slow, deliberate coils, and her white hair began to rise on its own as well, strands lifting as if they were being pulled by invisible puppet strings

Then her gaze found Kalliope and she started whispering. . “Umbrae Tendere, Constringere, et Frangere.”

The darkness answered immediately.

Tendrils snapped out across the space between them and coiled around Kalliope’s middle and shoulder in a brutal grip. There was no time to brace. Kalliope was yanked off her feet and hurled sideways.

Her body struck the wall with a crack that made nearby bottles jump on their shelves. Wood shuddered. Glass rattled. She was pinned there by the shadow itself, suspended off the floor like she had been turned into a wall decoration.

The barmaid turned her head slowly toward Roman next. Another small lift of her hand and the darkness obeyed again, snapping across the tavern in a second violent lash. It hooked into Roman’s side and shoulder like a giant hand closing around him, and then it threw.

He went airborne just long enough for the room to register what was happening before the force slammed him into the opposite side with a brutal impact that rattled the rail and knocked dust loose from the beams.

The barmaid hovered there, smiling wider, the dark energy in her hands still curling and hungry, as if she’d only just begun to warm up.

Her laugh returned and she tipped her head, eyes still nothing but void. Black branches begin to grow on her limbs, veins darkening as if ink had been poured into her blood and told to climb. It crawled up her wrists, along her forearms, and kept going, slowly, claiming more of her with every heartbeat.

For a moment, it looked like it hurt and her breath hitched. Her shoulders tensed. And then she smiled wider.

The darkness reached her throat, and the laugh turned steadier and more pleased.

The kitchen door behind the bar opened suddenly in that moment. It cut through the tavern and brought the attention of many. For a moment, the doorway framed nothing but darkness. Then the men poured out, knives in hands and clubs heavy over their shoulders. They wore nasty grins on their faces, as if they had finally been given permission they had been seeking to emerge.

But as they spilled into the room, the hearth died in a single instant. The flames didn’t sputter or fade—they simply went out, as if someone had reached in and pinched them between two fingers. Smoke curled up in a ribbon.

For the first time tonight, Garran’s face changed.

The smirk drained away completely. His jaw set as his gaze slowly slid toward the front door.
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Hidden 5 mos ago 5 mos ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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He nodded to Cynric. “It is time.”

“Aye,” Cynric replied. “I’ll get my fellas intae position. Dae what ye ‘ave tae, Cap’n. We’ll ‘andle ta’ crowd.”

With that, he strode off, barking commands and pointing to the crowd. His crew quickly spread out, most of them formed a loose line in front of the mass of onlookers, while others threaded through it, easily slipping between elbows and bumping shoulders as if they’d always been there. Cynric had no intention of merely holding the crowd back, it seemed—he wanted to control it.

That suited Sjan-dehk just fine. The lower the chance of a bystander getting involved, the better.

He found Hasehnya standing a fair distance away from the tavern—roughly halfway between its doors and the crowd. The girl’s nerves were clearly frayed, and badly so. She trembled from head to toe, her sleeves and skirts swaying like curtains caught in a breeze, and her shoulders shuddering with every breath. Quiet murmurs, vague and half-swallowed, tumbled from her lips. And although the three other arcanists fussed over her—offering encouragement, clearing the ground of rubbish—she barely seemed to notice.

“Hasehnya,” Sjan-dehk called, his voice gentle.

She didn’t react.

“Hasehnya,” he tried again, firmer this time, and set a careful hand on her shoulder.

“Ah!” The girl cried out, flinching hard enough to almost stumble—and to give Sjan-dehk a little shock. She snapped her head around to face him, looking as if she’d just been pulled out of a nightmare. “I–I’m so, so sorry, Captain! I–I didn’t know you were—”

Sjan-dehk cleared his throat as he collected himself. “It’s alright, Hasehnya,” he said. “Are you ready?”

The colour drained from her face, but she nodded. “Y–Yes, Captain! I–I’ll do my best!”

Sjan-dehk regarded her for a moment. Then, he gave her a warm smile. “I’m sure you will. No matter what happens, I know you’d have given it your all.” Hasehnya’s mouth opened, but Sjan-dehk cut her off before she could get a word out. “You’re already going well beyond what’s expected of you just by being here, so if things don’t go according to plan, don’t worry about it. We’ll find another way, or make one.”

She swallowed hard. Sjan-dehk reached out and gave her shoulder a gentle squeeze, similar to what he’d do were it his sister who was in such a state. “To borrow Yehn-tai’s words,” he said, a confident grin on his lips. “Leave being a hero, and leave the difficult work to those of us in uniform. You just do what you can.”

Hasehnya drew in a deep breath.

“O–Okay, Captain,” she said, a steadier gaze in her eyes. “I’m ready.”

Sjan-dehk gave her a smile. “That’s what I like to hear.”

He beckoned the three other arcanists to follow him. “Let’s give her some space,” he said and led them to a spot that was far away enough to not get in Hasehnya’s way, but still close enough for him to intervene if the situation called for it.

Hasehnya faced the tavern.

Her legs trembled, as did her arms. The weight of the crowd’s gaze—curious, anxious, scared, suspicious, and all others in-between—pressed in on all sides. She felt their eyes on her hands; felt them cutting holes through her clothes and into her back. Heavier still was the responsibility sitting on her shoulders. It turned her body to lead, rooted her in place, and threatened to crush her.

Still, she raised her hands, as she’d done so many times before during practice.

She closed her eyes. This was all it was. Just another round of practice. The eyes, the leers, the gazes, all of them didn’t belong to foreign people of a foreign land. No, they were simply those of her seniors, and of her master. The weight on her shoulders wasn’t that of responsibility. It was simply the stress that naturally came with being assessed.

That was all this was. Just an assessment. One she couldn’t fail.

“Our Great Elders of Sedaran,” she whispered, the words barely leaving her lips. “Grant me guidance.”

Her thumbs and forefingers came together, forming a rough rectangle before her eyes, framing the tavern, confining it neatly within them. Hasehnya squeezed her eyes shut and focused on that little space. Arcane energy answered—slowly at first, like a drizzle, and then suddenly, pouring like torrential rain. Between her fingers, the air stirred and swirled. Pale currents danced, and merged, and folded in on themselves.

“O Great Forebears,” she intoned.

Her eyes snapped open. “Hear now the words of a daughter of the Hallowed Isles.”

She pushed her hands forward, and pulled them apart.

The rippling air followed her movements, its rough lines stretching and straightening, until it expanded into something akin to a grey-tinted pane of glass. Slowly, tentatively, Hasehnya lowered her hands. The pane remained floating where it was. “Formless is the arcane,” she recited, reaching out to tap two fingers upon the ethereal glass.

“And disciplined is that hand that shapes it.” Ripples radiated from her fingertips. In their wakes, geometric sigils traced themselves onto the pane. Angles, shapes, and interlocking forms glowed and thrummed with power. Behind them, the image of the tavern shifted. It warped, and bent, and folded, for a moment turning into a mockery of itself. Then, as quickly as it’d started, the image stabilised. The tavern was still the same building of red brick and dark wood, but now darkness seeped from it. Black tendrils trailed from windows, doors, and every slender crevice and little crack.

Hasehnya slowly pulled her hand back. The tendrils quavered. “Hear me,” she said, her voice rising. “Hear me, formless ones, for thou’rt not chained to the hand that cast thee!”

The tendrils started to turn, their wispy tails pointing towards Hasehnya and the pane.

She thrust her hand forward, then jerked it back. “Thou’rt unbound!”

A gust burst from the pane and surged towards the tavern. The tendrils danced in the wind, but turned stiff when the same gust receded, as if they were fighting it. Hasehnya clenched her jaw. The pressure started to burn her arm, but she pushed. And pushed. And kept pushing.

And then, the tendrils turned limp. They oozed, dark and oily, from the tavern, and were immediately swept up by the wind, and dragged screaming into the pane. The sigils flared, and then dimmed as their intricate lines were flooded with darkness. Cracks spider-webbed across the pane. The black energy forced its way through small fractures, turning them into fissures filled by a gaping emptiness.

“And thou’rt claimed!” Strain thinned Hasehnya’s voice, but she held on.

The pane creaked and groaned.

“And by mine right,” she yelled through gritted teeth. Her knees started to shake. Her mind felt like it would soon shatter entirely. But she refused to give in. Not now. Not when she was so close to succeeding. She drew in a hissed breath. “I command thee–”

She slammed a palm onto the pane.

“Fracture!”

The pane exploded.

A thousand shards of blackened glass flew in every direction. The air itself screamed. Panicked cries and shocked gasps echoed from the crowd. Hasehnya, with great effort, turned her hand towards herself, and clenched it into a fist. The shards stopped, frozen mid-flight. They shuddered, turned, and surged towards her. They didn’t pierce her, but rather dissipated on impact, their black energy absorbed into her body.

Pain lanced through Hasehnya as this strange, foreign arcane energy surged through her. A strangled cry burst from her throat, and soon turned into a scream. She staggered, but forced herself to stay on her feet until every last scrap of magic had been drawn into her. Every moment felt like an eternity. She felt herself flag, felt her body beg her to stop before she broke.

Then, all went silent.

Her head swam. Her vision blurred. She swayed, like a puppet cut from its strings.

And finally, she allowed herself to fall.

Sjan-dehk raced forward, his boots thumping and squeaking against the cobblestones, catching her just in time. “Easy, easy,” he said as he carefully lowered her to the ground. His brow creased in concern, and he swept his eyes over her, searching for even the slightest hints of an injury. When he found none, he did so again—after that spectacle, he didn’t believe that Hasehnya could’ve been left unscathed.

“C–Captain Sjan-dehk, I–” Hasehnya’s voice was weak.

“If you’d told me that was what’d happen,” he cut in. “I’d never have agreed to your plan.”

She shook her head. “N–No, I–”

“We could’ve dealt with the arcanists with force—”

“No, that’s not it!” Hasehnya blurted out, and rolled out of his arms. She fell onto her hands and knees, her back heaving as she retched several times. Spittle sprayed from her lips, some of it too dark, too oily to be saliva. She pressed a hand to her chest. Her eyes squeezed shut in pain. Just as Sjan-dehk was about to call for help, she spat out a black, formless mass. It dissipated into mist before it struck the ground, hissing away into nothingness.

“S–Sorry, Captain!” Hasehnya said between pants. “I–I tried to tell you, but I–I have to expel the energy in me, o–otherwise it’ll be bad. F–For me, I mean! N–No one else would get hurt.”

“Are you hurt, then?” Sjan-dehk asked. “Other than the
Energy thing, of course.”

“Just my eye,” Hasehnya replied hesitantly, and faced him with just as much hesitation. Her left eye was a solid black orb, as if it’d been cast from volcanic ash. In place of her pupil and iris, were glowing concentric circles, much like the sigils she’d conjured earlier.

“By the Mother,” Sjan-dehk breathed. He leaned in to take a closer look. “That doesn’t look good.”

“I–It’s just temporary blindness! It’s nothing, r–really! It doesn’t–It doesn’t even hurt!”

He baulked at her words. “I don’t care if it’s temporary or not. Blindness isn’t nothing!”

“A–Arcane energy can’t be destroyed, Captain. It–It can only be transformed.” Yasawen’s voice came from behind. Sjan-dehk looked over his shoulder. The three arcanists approached, their expressions concerned and worried, but not surprised. “If–If I’m not wrong, senior Hasehnya, um
I guess you could say she took the magic from its caster? Or maybe saying she freed it would be better
” He seemed to fall into thought for a moment, but then shook his head. “B–But anyway! The energy has to go somewhere, s–so she let it go into her.”

Sjan-dehk nodded slowly. He wasn’t sure he fully understood everything, but he caught just enough of it to know Hasehnya had just paid a great cost to break the spell. “And this happens every time you do this sort of thing?”

Hasehnya pushed herself up onto her knees and shook her head. “N–No. U-Usually we have talismans or something w–we can direct the energy into, but I–I didn’t think I’d have to dispel something that strong, so I–I didn’t bring any with me when I left Sudah. It–It’s my fault, really! I’ll be fine, d–don’t worry! It’ll go away on its own.”

She looked up at Inshahri. “And, um, Shahri
?”

Inshahri closed her eyes and held a hand to her ear, her body leaning towards the tavern. A tune hummed in her throat. Then, she giggled. “Yes, yes!” she exclaimed. “It’s better now. Quiet. You did it!”

Hasehnya smiled weakly. “That's
That’s good.”

“More than good,” Sjan-dehk said. He patted her shoulder and stood up. “I’d say you did fantastic. We’ll all have an easier time now, thanks to you.”

A blush crept over Hasehnya’s cheeks. “O–Oh! Thank you, Captain
Captain Sjan-dehk.”

“Oi, Cap’n!” Cynric’s brogue, paired with the thumps of his hurried footfalls, caught Sjan-dehk’s attention in an instant. The mirth that usually coloured his words was gone, replaced by alarm and concern. And as he came to a stop in front of the arcanists, Sjan-dehk could see those emotions drawing his face tight. “‘Twas some feck—” he started, but quickly stopped himself when he noticed the youths.

He cleared his throat. “What I meant was, ‘twas some impressive magic, aye. But ye’ve also caught plenty o’ eyes, and not aw’ o’ ‘em are friendly, nae. Ta’ crowd’s gettin’ feck—I mean, they’re in gettin’ riled up righ’ an’ proper. My fellas’re keepin’ em back fer now, but that’ll nae last, if ye ask me. Yer arcanists should start makin’ themsel’s scarce, right quick.”

Only now did Sjan-dehk finally remember the mass of onlookers. They had pressed closer—only by a few steps, but that was enough to be cause for worry. Suspicious eyes glared at Hasehnya. Furious shouts cut through the air. Cynric’s crew stood in their way, some with outstretched hands and demanding peace, but most simply met fire with fire, and barked threats of violence. The few who’d threaded themselves through the crowd darted through the shifting mass, pulling the most belligerent away where they could.

But despite the efforts of Cynric’s crew, there were simply too few of them. One spark—one person whose hatred was infectious enough to push their fellows into action—and the crowd would overrun them through sheer force of numbers.

Sjan-dehk placed himself in front of the arcanists. “Don’t worry,” he said, his eyes narrowing as he kept his gaze on the crowd. “We’ve got a plan, so we’ll follow it. Tehwasang, get Hasehnya standing. Yasawen and Inshahri, the two of you help her.”

“You got it, Captain,” Tehwasang replied, her voice losing some of its earlier lightness. She knelt, took one of Hasehnya’s arms, and draped it over her shoulders. Yasawen did the same on the other side. Between the two of them, they managed to slowly bring Hasehnya to her feet.

“Someone ‘as tae keep an eye on ‘em while we’re inside,” Cynric said. Before Sjan-dehk could get a word in, he turned and shouted, “Oi, Daley! Get yersel’ o’er here right now!”

A dark-eyed young man jogged over, sweat sheening his skin and matting his mop of sand-brown hair. He gripped the handle of a knife sheathed at his hip with such force that his knuckles were white. “What d’you need me for, Cap’n?” he asked.

“I want ye tae get these two—” Cynric pointed to Hasehnya and Tehwasang “—o’er tae ‘Leida, quick as ye can. Tell ‘er, frae me, that she’s tae keep ‘em safe by any way she can, ye understand? If anyone tries tae be funny, get rid o’ ‘em. I dae’n care if she ‘as tae bribe, or threaten, or batter, or e’en kill, these two lassies cannae be ‘armed in any way.” He paused, fixing Daley with a serious gaze. “They’re like our wee Tommy, and so we’ll treat ‘em like that sour shite.”

“Aye, Cap’n,” Daley replied with a nod. “Anythin’ else, Cap’n?”

“Just one,” Cynric said. “Tell ‘Leida also that if things get too tricky, she’s tae get these lassies out an’ back tae either their ship or Recompense, whichever’s easier. Talk tae our ol’ regulars and use their routes if ye ‘ave tae, an’ tell ‘em Cyn’s callin’ in one o’ the ‘undreds o’ favours they owe me if they gee’s trouble.”

“Aye, Captain.” Daley turned to the two arcanists and gestured for them to follow him.

Hasehnya gave Sjan-dehk an uncertain look. “Go with them,” Sjan-dehk said, giving her and Tehwasang a reassuring smile. “It’s alright. They can be trusted.”

“O–Okay,” she replied, her voice small. “If–If you say so, Captain Sjan-dehk.”

Cynric gave Daley a nod, and the young man hurried away with Tehwasang and Hasehnya in tow.

“Thank you,” Sjan-dehk said to Recompense’s captain. “You did not have to.”

“Nae, I did,” Cynric replied, his voice a shade darker than what Sjan-dehk had expected. “Caesonia’s nae a safe place fer anyone wi’ magic in their blood. An’ they’re jus’ wee lassies, aye? They dae’n seem a day o’er twenty tae me. I cannae jus’ leave ‘em tae fend fer themsel’s, nae if I can ‘elp it.”

Sjan-dehk simply looked at him for a moment. Then, he smiled. “You are a good person, Captain.”

Cynric chuckled. “Oh, I ‘ppreciate it, Cap’n, but I think ye’ll find plenty who’d disagree, aye ye will.”

A grin tugged on Sjan-dehk’s mouth. “Is that so? You seem to have many secrets.”

“You could say that.” Cynric returned the grin. Then, he jerked his head towards the tavern. “But we’ll ‘ave tae talk about ‘em some other time, eh? Maybe when ye tell me about yer arcanists an’ whatnot. Fer now, we ough’tae take care ‘o business, I reckon. We’ve left ‘em waitin’ long enough.”

“Yes, we have,” Sjan-dehk agreed.

He turned to Yasawen and Inshahri. “We’re going in now. Stay close, stay behind us, and you’ll be fine.”

“You got it, Captain!” Inshahri replied excitedly. Yasawen simply nodded, nervousness clear on his face.

The four of them marched over to the tavern’s doors. Along the way, Sjan-dehk and Cynric went over their arms—making sure hammers were cocked, and swords were loose in their sheaths. Sjan-dehk righted his hat, pulling it just a touch lower to shadow his eyes. He tightened the straps of his lamellar cuirass, making sure it sat snugly over his body. Cynric, for his part, simply straightened his coat’s collars and adjusted his sheaths and holsters.

They stopped just before the threshold.

“It is your show, Captain,” Sjan-dehk said.

Cynric chuckled. “Aye, it sure is. Time fer Cyn tae show ye 'ow tae be a proper gobby shite."

He shoved the doors—hard enough to make hinges squeak and rattle locks, but not so hard as to seem threatening. His every move was filled with confidence, as if certain that nothing in the tavern could hurt him, as he stepped into the tavern. The sight of the carnage gave him pause, but only for a moment. Blood and gore wasn't anything new to him, after all. But to see a severed head, a bound man used as a pin cushion, and others held at gunpoint, knifepoint—and many other points—was still interesting. "Good evenin'," Cynric said with a smirk. "You city folk sure know 'ow tae 'ave a proper craic, aye?"

Sjan-dehk followed him into the tavern, keen eyes taking in every detail, every position of every person. His gaze lingered on Kalliope a moment longer than the rest, and his jaw tightened. His palms tingled; the pistols at his belt suddenly felt very attractive. Still, he forced himself to remain calm. There would be time for vengeance later. For now, he just had to let Cynric continue.

"Now, my mates and I 'eard that this place wen' under new management," the Recompense's captain continued. "So I thought I'd come by an' see 'ow you're runnin' things. Cannae say I'm impressed, tae be feckin' honest. We jus' walked through a shiteheap-an'-a-'alf, and 'tis what greets us? An' nae e'en a brew as an apology? 'Tis a feckin' travesty, aye it is. The lot o' ye 'ad bet'er start dae'n somethin' tae make it worth aw' our feckin' trouble, otherwise I'll be pissed, an' not in ta' good way, aye."
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Time: Evening, Ignis 2
Location: Tough Tavern

@Tae@CitrusArms@Potter@Lava Alckon@Samreaper@Tpartywithzombi@ReusableSword@Apex Sunburn

₱₳ⱀ₟ 6




The doors slammed open and the tavern’s noise ceased—every head snapping that way, even Garran’s, his pistol still planted on Ariella but his focus shifting. The man with the heavy accent had distracted everyone for a few seconds—

—and then Stratya had moved.




Ox had simply stepped out of the way of his comrade in peril. These were criminals, sure, but to have so little care for his comrade told Stratya all she needed to know. Despite being the capital, despite having infrastructure and authorities around, the city had somehow fostered actual, full-blown bandits within its borders. The kind that considered a loss from the team as one less mouth to pay and feed. Hired and promptly terminated in the space of a breath. Unfortunate. His strength would have been useful for construction.

The head that came sailing over from behind the bar informed her that the witch had already been dealt with. Not quite how she wanted her death to go, but Stratya couldn’t really complain. At least the threat was gone. Roman rushed past her to Drake’s side, and the knight took up a position to cover him while she assessed the situation. The nobles in her care had scattered around the room, which would make it difficult to protect them.

Garran shifted his weight, drawing the knight’s attention. She hopped aside reflexively, leaving her open for another threat to close in on her with deathly swiftness. She misread Marius’ intent and braced for her arm to be grabbed, the realization that he meant for her hair coming too late.

The man’s chain brought her arms into her body, her right hand high and her left low, before he gave a mighty heave to try and bring her to the ground. Her feet planted wide to keep herself upright and her arms, instead of struggling against her restraints, grabbed on to Marius. Her left held him close while her right hand gripped onto his head wherever it could. The intense golden light in her eyes stared into his, “you came to me.”

She wrenched the both of them around so she could see Garran and point her right palm at him while she held Marius. A quick scan found the knife he mentioned, at Charlotte’s throat. He’d had the good grace to point it out to the room, even, and then.. the barmaid. What was happening? Had the witch done something in her last moments? Garran had not seemed very concerned about losing his witch. Ox had Drake by the neck, another hostage. The squad of men entering the room was going to drag this out, as well. All of these things were concerning, but there was something she had to do first.

Once more, softly as the first, “Objicerre invocarre.” Her eyes were trained on the gun in Garran’s hand. She wanted his bullet. For her, the idea of one hand being dominant over the other was foreign. She understood that was how it was for many people, but for her, they were interchangeable. Her right hand, this time.

The bullet would be pulled to her right hand and pushed into Marius’ head, and though shallow, it resulted in an immediate seizure. And then the fire went out.

Both her hands ached deeply now, but it wasn’t the ache that concerned her. No, The Fury had abated.. no, been dissipated, leaving her to feel the pain in her hands. It was not gone - she could feel it rebuilding. The Knight took a moment as she unraveled herself and pushed Marius off of her, retaining the chain in her right hand. Her eyes came to the hostage situation on the stairs. Lady Charlotte was still in peril. With any luck, her hands could withstand another casting. With her left hand again, “objicerre invocarre.”

Her left hand would need rest, she could feel it. As well, the darkness of the room must have inhibited her ability to perform the spell accurately. Not only did her left hand now feel like it was burning, but the dagger that appeared in her left hand appeared in her left hand, the blade luckily slipped between her bones and tendons. Stratya Durmand let out a strangled cry of pain and the golden glow of her spell casting returned to the raging torrential shine of her Fury. The chain came for the boulder of a man, for his head, and the captain watched as the end wrapped around and she pulled hard, her leg out to trip him. She abandoned the chain for the dagger from her left hand, pulling it out swiftly to plunge it down into Ox’s jugular as he fell.

Her golden gaze turned to Garran, the next closest.



She gave Ox’s head an irritated kick as she stepped across him, her right hand now drawing her dirk. Once past the tripping hazard, she’d charge the ring leader, her left hand moving to block his gun out of habit while her right sought to plunge another blade into another neck and shoulder.

Garran was too quick, and still fresh, he’d hardly done more than pull himself to his feet. Even with the Fury, Stratya felt the weight of combat and casting. The ringleader moved back, dragging Ariella with him as he flicked chairs in Stratya’s path. When she stopped to kick at the chain she’d accidentally left to grapple with her feet, he saw the chance to reload. Done with a practiced precision, Garran then retrained his weapon on Ariella and readied himself to put the trigger with a wicked grin.

“Kill them all!” He suddenly roared.




It wasn’t enough that the illusions didn’t have the desired effect on Marius. The mage was dealt with, but Roman's plan to free Drake had only got him thrown across the room. The shadows felt like barbs and hooks—wrapping, restricting, and pulling him off his feet and against the far wall. The shadows were back up, or possibly never left. Possession, maybe? Or just good acting.

Taking stock of his injuries, he knew he was concussed. Three cracked ribs, two out of place, internal bleeding, a gash along his left forearm. He was deaf in his right ear and couldn’t see color out of his left eye. He felt feverish, though not bad, but his left eye was dripping blood, and he could taste iron. Not a good position to be in.

He could destroy this place; he still had plenty of might left in the tank. But could he risk it? Would he risk the Red Wake here? No. He knew far too well that it did not discriminate between friend or foe. He could stay here, slouched in a heap, feigning unconsciousness. He would be well within his rights to do so. But no—he would protect his friends.

Forcing his eyes open, he found his vision blurry, making it hard to concentrate on any moving person. Slowly, he made out Stratya’s movements. She was still fighting, still trying. Then, in a moment, he felt it: the sudden disappearance of the fire, the overwhelming weight of magic in the confined space simply vanishing.

The door opened and he recognized one of the men entering, standing tall against the bandits. A foreign savior in more than one way, he supposed. Still, there were others who needed help before these new arrivals could get to them.

Ariella was still being held at gunpoint, and Charlotte still had a knife to her throat. If he didn’t want to raise the Red Wake, he only had enough energy left for one or two simple spells. Nothing extravagant—just small and planned.

He focused on the gun first; it was a model he recognized. He knew how the firing mechanism worked. There was a mainspring in a small, hollowed part of the grip. That spring was under tension now, the hammer cocked back, waiting for the trigger to release the force and ignite the blasting cap. Roman reached his left hand out towards it, envisioned it, saw what he wanted it to do. It didn’t need much—just a flash, a spark of heat to weaken the spring and render it useless. He couldn’t see if it actually worked, but the charred burning flesh that spiraled from his middle fingertip told him something happened.

The only other thing he could try was to help Charlotte. Slowly, he turned his head but otherwise didn’t move. All he could see were glimpses and reflections off other items. Then, the glint of a blade at her neck.

This time, it had to be specific. It was already a bad angle; a wordless spell was out of the question. There was too much collateral in the way. She might still get hit, but he had to do something.

“Elding í hjarta,” he whispered, raising his left arm. The hair on his arm stood straight up and the smell of ozone wafted from him. His arm burned and went limp as a small blue bead scurried off his hand. It traveled up the wall and sprung towards the weapon, latching on and electrifying the knife and its wielder.

He was spent. All he could do now was hope the others could hold their own. His focus had to be on getting himself centered, ensuring he didn't let out the monster that raged inside, begging to be let loose.




During this moment, Winston hauled himself over the bar like a man climbing out of a grave, elbows shaking, breath caught. One hand smeared along the counter for balance, leaving a drag of blood across, and his boots skidded as he dropped behind it. The other hand was over the stab wound in his side, painting his skin red as it spilled between his fingers. He glanced back only once with his eyes wild, jaw clenched, and then he staggered through the kitchen door, shouldering it open with the last of his strength before it swung inward behind him, swallowing him.

Marius had tried to follow, but his body still wasn’t fully his. The seizure had wrung him out and left him twitching, fingers spasming as he pushed himself upright in uneven increments. He got one knee under him, then another, swallowing hard against the sour taste in his mouth, forcing his eyes to focus through the afterimage of pain. He made it three steps before his legs threatened to fold again, a tremor crawling up his spine; still, he lurched forward anyway, stubborn as a dog that refused to stay down. He staggered after the kitchen door, determined to get out even if he had to crawl. Luckily, he was hidden mostly behind the bar from the view of those on the first floor now.




Kazumin’s hands wouldn’t stop shaking... and then the tavern doors shrieked on their hinges. Four silhouettes filled the doorway like a shadow spilling in. Kazumin’s focus snapped toward them on instinct, and the sudden shift threw him off: his boot slid on something slick, his shoulder catching the rail as he stumbled back.

For a second, the crossbow dipped, his grip faltering as his stomach lurched. He recognized one of them from the banquet: the man who had been speaking with Charlotte and kept looking at Kalliope. If they had gotten inside, that meant backup could come in. This was their chance! He dragged in a sharp breath and forced his wrists to obey.

The bow-gun felt wrong in his grip, and the barmaid’s levitating silhouette made his stomach twist in a knot.
Below him, voices crashed together, and he couldn’t pick them apart anymore. The sight of Lottie and Ariella with weapons close to their bodies had made his blood run cold. He lifted the bow-gun anyway, fighting the tremor in his wrists. He gulped as the sight wobbled and he fumbled it once, corrected, then swallowed hard.

And then Percy’s face flashed in his mind—how steady she’d been when she showed him, how simple she’d made it look. He pictured her hand over his, guiding his finger. Kazu then aimed for the floating witch, silently praying, and then exhaled, squeezing the trigger, and the crossbow snapped.
The bolt bit into the barmaid’s shoulder with a sharp jolt that twisted her midair as she yowled in pain. Kazumin didn’t lower the weapon afterward, even when her gaze of darkness met his with terrifying fury. His eyes were burning, he was still terrified
 but upright, refusing to be useless while the room was still bleeding.




The bolt in the barmaid’s shoulder didn’t drop her—if anything, it made her uglier. She twisted in midair with a hiss that sounded like laughter strangled into pain, one hand clamping over the wound as black seeped between her fingers like ink pushed through cloth. Her eyes snapped up to the balcony, fixing on the archers, and the shadows in the rafters answered her like hounds. They peeled off the beams in long strips, not smoke but something heavier, barbed at the edges, whipping upward in a violent arc.

The first lash snapped across the balcony rail and burst into splinters, forcing anyone aiming to recoil or lose their footing. Another ribbon of darkness hooked toward Kazumin’s position, clawing at his wrists and the crossbow like it wanted to wrench both from him.

Then she pivoted, fast, toward the doorway, toward the silhouettes that had just arrived. Her free hand rose, palm open, and the darkness gathered at it in a dense knot. She flung it outward, and it exploded into a fan of needle-thin shadow-spikes that screamed across the tavern in a straight, punishing line, aimed to split the entryway and drive the newcomers back. She only cared about stopping help from becoming a problem, turning the threshold into a killing zone, and daring Sjan-dehk and the others to advance through it.




With the chaos that ensued and rapid spell casts that threatened to turn the tide at any moment, Drake’s focus was on his sister. It was as if time slowed, and everything seemed to pass in slow motion. His strength returned, now that he was no longer being choked by that mountain of a man. But the damn restraints still kept him from moving. There was little time to bicker or argue. He knew he had to act soon or he’d lose his sister.

While the others had their magic tricks, leaving them spent and unable to move. Drake had the benefit of being a regular man amidst all this. The man rolled his wrists against the restraints, twisting himself in a subtle yet smooth motion. Garran had barely any time to witness the movement before Drake’s hand found the cold steel of his six-shooter. He unholstered it with a quick drop of his hip, his hand steadying the gun.

Then, once again, time slowed down. Drake’s eyes locked with Garran’s. A look of fury and malcontent was all that greeted him. Until it became one of triumph and smugness. The bandit flashed his eyes downward just in time to catch the spark of gunpowder as the hammer fell, and the gunshot rang throughout the tavern. From the barrel of his gun, through his jacket, just beside Ariella’s head, and finally into Garran’s skull, the bullet pierced the air and found its target.

The body that crumpled to the ground was no longer the ringleader; it was merely a corpse. In the silence that followed, Drake pushed his adrenaline-fueled body to its limit and ripped the ropes enough to finally wrench himself free from the post. He paced towards the ringleader, his thumb casually pulling the hammer back as he spoke.

”I gave you all a chance. Too many chances. And now he knows what comes when you cross the Edwards.” Drake softly kicked the gun away from Garran, and spun around. ”I can hit a moving target at 40 yards from the hip, 60 on a good day. I just put a hole in your leader's head, you’re all surrounded by several minutemen and mercenaries, several ferocious nobles worth more than their salt in a fight and one extremely angry older brother.”

The man’s barrel moved until it was trained on the man standing over Charlotte, but his eyes kept darting to the scant few who remained after the brawl. ”So let’s play my own little game. If any of you who tried to take us hostage move, I shoot. You cast a spell, I shoot. You say anything I don’t like, I shoot. I count 5 shots left, and 4 bodies yet to become corpses. So if you’re feeling braver than a man with everything to lose
Then TRY ME! MAKE MY NIGHT! I’ll happily let you meet your makers.” Drake shouted to the tavern, readying himself for whatever defiant stroke might come his way next. The bloodlusted battle cry was unbecoming of him – but he had to do his best and end this traumatic night alongside all the others giving their all to keep each other safe.




Meanwhile, Paul didn’t understand what the nobleman had done until the knife turned vicious in his hand. A sharp, biting snap ran up the steel and straight into his wrist, like lightning shoved under his skin. His fingers clenched against his will, forearm locking, teeth rattling as his grip spasmed and his shoulder jerked hard enough to wrench Charlotte’s throat against the edge. He felt the blade skate on her neck and felt the warm proof of it, and her breath hitched right under his ear, terrified.

He had time only to watch her fumble at her skirt, hands shaking so badly he almost missed it, and then metal flashed from her pocket. He felt the little knife before he saw it as it drove into the inside of his forearm with a wet, shocking sting, right where the tendons screamed; his hand finally loosened.

She twisted out from under him in a scramble, slipping down and away to crawl before he could re-grab her, leaving him swearing through the aftershock with his arm burning and his control blown to pieces. And after what Drake Edwards had said, Paul didn't want to risk budging from his spot—so he let her go.




The tavern was an eruption of chaos at this point: chairs shrieking against boards as patrons threw themselves down behind tables and benches. Someone near the hearth knocked a mug loose, and it shattered. A woman sobbed a prayer under her breath, and another man crawled on his elbows toward the back wall. Even the drunkest faces sobered; bodies pressed flat, hands over heads, eyes peeking through fingers at the kind of violence you only saw once before you learned to fear it for life.

What was left of Garran’s crew didn’t rush like bandits anymore—they hesitated like men who’d just watched the ground fall out from under them, especially after Lord Edwards' threat. One backed into the shadow of a support beam, jaw clenched. Another lifted his weapon halfway, thought better of it when Drake’s barrel tracked even the twitch, and froze with his breathing too loud. Their eyes kept darting at Stratya’s golden glare, at Roman’s hand, at the door’s silhouettes. They were measuring odds.

Then they noticed the barmaid’s darkness coming toward those at the door. Instinct snapped through the remaining bandits—fear, yes, but also opportunity. If the witch was trying to stop them, then those men weren’t reinforcements to bargain with. One of the thugs barked something panicked, and it spread like a spark.

They moved all at once, not bravely but with desperation. A pair surged toward the entryway to meet the newcomers in the confusion. One flung a chair into the path of the first man through, another lunged low with a short blade meant for knees and ankles, forcing the doorway crew to fight for every step forward. Somewhere behind them, a thug leveled a flintlock with shaking hands and fired toward the threshold.

The tavern then became a mess of bodies and panic.
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Hidden 4 mos ago 4 mos ago Post by Tae
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Time: Evening
Location: Tough Tavern
Interactions/Mentions: @CitrusArms Stratya, @Lava Alckon Drake, @princess Charlotte and the gang, @Tpartywithzombi Ariella, @Samreaper Kazumin, @Potter Olivia, @ReusableSword Roman @Apex Sunburn Sjan-dehk & Cynwaer
Aesthetic: Outfit



Garran’s fingers twisted into Ariella’s hair, and Kalliope’s jaw clenched hard enough to ache. She watched the pistol grind into the redhead’s scalp, her mind slipping into that cold, clinical place she’d honed in a hundred midnight alleys. Stratya lunged, moving with a speed that was almost inhuman, and Marius went down. Kalliope didn’t know what the Knight had done to make the man seize up, but she didn’t waste a heartbeat caring. If it worked, it worked.

The air in the tavern soured, thickening until it pressed against her skin.

Kalliope’s gaze jerked to the barmaid. The weeping girl had vanished, replaced by something hollow-eyed and crawling with shadow. Ozone and rot stung her nose in a warning of the kind of power she’d learned to avoid at all costs.

“Shit! There’s another ma—” The warning was cut short. The darkness lunged, snapping out like a whip. The tendrils wrapped around her middle and shoulder in a brutal, crushing grip that snatched the breath from her lungs. Kalliope was yanked off her feet as if she weighed nothing at all.

Her skull slammed into the wall with a wet, nauseating crack.

White fire burst behind her eyes. The world fractured into a storm of bells and distant, broken shouts. She hung there, pinned like a butterfly to a board. Through a haze of red, she caught glimpses: Drake tearing loose, a muzzle flash, the ringleader’s head snapping back, dropping like butchered meat. More shapes spilling in from the kitchen—too many. This was bad.

Then, the invisible pressure vanished.

Kalliope crashed to the floorboards, pain lancing through her skull again. For a heartbeat, she just lay there, mouth full of blood, the world spinning in sick, dizzying circles.

She forced herself up, hands sliding in Maelen’s blood, the floor rolling under her like a storm-tossed deck. Her vision split and blurred, but she locked her gaze on the doorway, dragging herself upright. There he was—a tall, familiar silhouette, as known to her now as the heft of her own blades.

“Sjan
 dehk?” she breathed, her voice a raspy thread. Confusion and a sudden, traitorous warmth surged in her chest. She wasn't sure if the concussion was finally claiming her mind or if he had actually come to help save them all.

She fought to steady herself, the world still spinning out from under her. Behind her, Drake’s voice ripped through the chaos, a blood-hungry roar about making his night. It was the perfect distraction...just not for her.

A sudden, icy sting bit into her neck.

Kalliope sucked in a ragged breath, hand snapping to her throat. Her fingers grazed a syringe in the side of her neck, the burn of something flooding her veins. The room spun faster, colors bleeding together, vision bruising at the edges. Rough hands caught her under the arms, dragging her up.

Through the thickening dark, she saw them: two patrons who’d been watching her all night, waiting for chaos. She fumbled for a blade, but her arms were dead weight, her body betraying her as the drug took hold. They dragged her backward, her boots scraping uselessly across the floor toward the kitchen.

Panic, raw and primal, punched through the drug’s haze. She turned, desperate, searching the doorway for the man she’d just dared to hope would save her.

“SJAN-DEHK!”

The scream tore from her throat, desperate and shrill, echoing off the rafters just as the kitchen doors swung shut. The last thing she felt was the cold rush of damp, musty air as she was pulled into the darkness of the smuggling tunnels, and then the world went black. She had been kidnapped.

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Hidden 4 mos ago 4 mos ago Post by Potter
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Olivia

Persephone

Time: Evening
Location: Tough Tavern
Interactions: @princess Charlotte/Felix/Yuka, @Lava Alckon Drake, @Tpartywithzombi Ariella, @CitrusArms Stratya, @samreaper Kazu & @Tae Kalliope
Mentions:
Aesthetic: ♞ Hair ♞ Outfit with hood

Olivia raced off the rafters once the others had acted. She hopped down and somersaulted back onto the balcony floor. Olivia raced to her feet and found the chair empty where she thought she might have seen Felix. Half the bandits were dead or rushing out, yet Marius remained. Thanks to Stratya, there was a bullet that had gone through his brain. Still, life clung to him like wet clothing after a torrential downpour. Olivia moved with ease and ignored the cacophony of noise behind her. Dangerous calm overwhelmed her and she could feel herself shaking like a leaf. That night raced through her mind over and over, like a song stuck on repeat.



”No, please! I won’t come back! Please let me go!”

Helplessness rushed through her veins, as the image of her pale, sickly old self returned to her mind’s eye–scraggly blonde hair falling out, sunken hazel eyes, skin pale as snow, her nose, staring up at the visage of Maelan and Marius, trembling uncontrollably


”Please stop!”

Loud, rambunctious laughter echoed throughout the home. Before she could move, she was frozen in place and her hands tied behind her back...

”I-I... I want to go home! I won’t come back, I promise! You
 You can have the food!

Desperation crept into her voice; tufts of blonde hair spilled all over the floor, mixing with red dots


I’m so hungry; please leave me alone!

Laughter from the two mixed with screams echoed throughout the home like a distorted symphony
 Spells, spells she recognized, were utilized. Agony and terror blinded her....

”That hurts, please stop!”

Pain swept through her and discomfort; she was desperately trying to cast a spell, but was unable to make a peep. Fire surrounded her greedily, causing her only extreme terror and desperation. Her clothes were ripped and torn off of her, leaving her barely clothed. Taunts of being called "little rabbit," only added salt to the wound.

”LEAVE-”

The laughter became ugly as did the pain, and Persephone laid there limply, strung up on a pole. A puddle of red laid around her mixed with matches. Persephone’s clothes were ruffled and reeked of ash. If she had died, she wouldn’t have known–reality was hell and hell had swallowed her whole. How long it lasted, she didn’t know, days turned into nights and night into days, time became a false construct– until finally, she was released, dazed, confused, and numbed, freezing and utterly humiliated...

Terrified bargoers were the least of her concern. Nothing else mattered. Olivia could only see red, and around her, a red and black cloud seemed to follow her until she stood in front of Marius. She stared at him seizing on the floor and tilted her head to one side. Maelan’s head, dismembered by Kalliope, lay nearby. It was a shame she was gone, but at least she was no longer able to haunt their reality; only their memories. Liv slowly pulled the knife out of her pocket and knelt in front of him. She grabbed a tuft of his head and forced him to look at her until he was capable. She knew he couldn’t understand her much, but the vengeance was pulsing through her veins.

”You might not remember or recognize me,” she spoke softly, only audible for them. ”But I remember you clearly, Marius.” She paused then added, ”The starving, burned, and terrified little rabbit you snagged lived to tell the tale. Sometimes, the past comes back to haunt you.”

She stood up now and grinned malevolently with glee. ”Let’s see how you like it.” She thought for a moment and then stretched her hand out as black tendrils began forming around her, curling around her like vines, beckoning her to call to them.

”Acu Ferro Ignis.” Pain surged through Olivia, but it was worse for Marius. For him, he would feel a thousand tiny needles piercing his skin. His garbled screams were heart-wrenching, but not for Olivia. His screams came out as music to her ears. She watched him coldly and twirled the knife in her hands. There was a glint in his eyes as he laughed as well within his screams. After listening to it and relishing it, she took the knife and stabbed him in the heart. His screams lingered briefly until it became silent.

Olivia watched him lay there pitifully and kicked him furiously in the head. Rage burned through her as tears consumed her vision. She punched him over and over, not caring that he was unable to feel it or react. Darkness consumed her as she beat him to a pulp.

Finally, she pulled back, sliding to her knees and staring at her bloody, dark tendrilled hands in horror, in the puddle of blood oozing out from him.

As her heart sank and her eyes returned to green, she whispered, ”Kazumin....”

In her peripheral vision, she turned and saw Kalliope faint. Then, she looked up to see two masked people behind her and her blood ran cold, colder than she already felt, and before she could react, they were gone.
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Hidden 4 mos ago 4 mos ago Post by princess
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Time: Evening
Location: Tough Tavern
Attire: Outfit, Amulet
Interaction: @Tae Kalliope @Apex Sunburn Your fellas outside



Charlotte couldn't believe she had actually stabbed that man in the arm–that awful man that would haunt her nightmares.

Her knees and palms were scraped raw on the boards from scrambling away. Her throat still burned where the steel had scratched it, enough to sting with every swallow. She clapped a hand to her neck anyway, fingers coming away trembling, and she stared at the drops of blood splattered on her palm. With a shudder, she then looked back up with a frantic, darting gaze.

The room was too loud and too bright.

It was hard to focus on one single thing occurring, but somehow her eyes found Kalliope, behind the bar, as two individuals in black came up from behind her.

“Ka—” T he name tried to leave her lips once and broke apart.

Charlotte forced herself upright on shaking arms, dragging her skirt out from under her. She saw it in fragments first. Then the needle pricked at her neck and Kalliope’s limbs went heavy. Charlotte’s stomach dropped as if the floor had vanished beneath her.

She had barely heard her scream for Sjan-dehk over her own, “KALLIOPE!”

Lottie subsequently shoved herself forward onto her feet, stumbling as her ankle caught on a toppled stool. She tried to run and discovered she could only scramble in a frantic, stumbling manner over spilled drink and broken glass.

Someone slammed into her shoulder and she nearly went down again, catching herself on the edge of a table and jolting pain up her wrist. “No—no, no—” she gasped, squeezing through the chaos toward the other side of the bar, toward the kitchen, toward the place Kalliope had been dragged.

The kitchen door was already swinging, and through the gap she saw only darkness.

Charlotte threw herself at it anyway, palms smearing on the wood as she shoved it open and staggered into the corridor. The lights were out and she couldn't quite make out any silhouettes in the room. However, she saw the outline of another door to the outside: a moonlit rectangle in the darkness. “Kalliope!” she called again. She pushed past the threshold and burst out into the night.
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Hidden 4 mos ago 4 mos ago Post by princess
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Time: It’s hard to tell in the dank, dark castle dungeons
Location: Alibeth is telling her offspring the story: the flashback itself is in a shantytown in Krasivaya.



FLASHBACK CONTINUED


The book did not corrupt Polina in one moment. It ate away at her the way rot does on a floorboard until one day you step where you always have, and the wood gives way.

At first, Alibeth told herself she was being unfair. She watched her sister at the candle, hunched over the pages with that fevered look, and mistook it for diligence, and the way she licked her lips before sounding out a line of script for courage.

After all, they had lived their whole lives beside death and called it ordinary. If a book offered even a sliver of relief, was it really wicked to reach for it?

So Alibeth watched. Then it began with Polina’s sleep.

At first, she stayed awake longer, as if bargaining with exhaustion. She insisted she was fine even when her words started to blur into each other.

The next change came in how Polina looked at their siblings.

In the beginning, she’d used the book the way poor children use anything precious—shared it too eagerly, desperate to make the miracle belong to all of them. It had been easy to forgive the glow in Polina’s eyes then. Joy was rare in their house; it startled them whenever it appeared.

Then one day Alibeth decided to hide the book.

She waited until Polina finally dozed with her head bowed over the pages and slid it out from beneath her hand. She wrapped it in cloth and tucked it under a loose floorboard beneath their bed. Then she went back to tending their mother’s forehead with water, rocking the baby, and portioning broth into cups.

Polina woke less than an hour later. The room was dark except for torchlight leaking through the cracks, but Alibeth could feel Polina’s gaze.“Where is it?” Polina demanded, voice ragged.

Alibeth didn’t lie. Lying to Polina had never worked. “Away,” Alibeth said, keeping her eyes on the baby because if she looked at Polina too long, she might forget Polina was still her sister.

“You think you can keep it from me?”

“I think I can keep it from killing you.”

Polina stepped closer. The floorboard creaked under her weight, and Alibeth noted the sound despite everything. It annoyed her—her body reacting to Polina as if she were a threat.

“I can fix it,” Polina whispered. “I can fix her.”

Their mother coughed in her sleep, wet and ugly, as if the word fix had summoned the sickness itself. Alibeth stood slowly, then she set the baby down with care and wiped her hands on her skirt.

“No.” She kept her voice steady. “You would have done so already if you meant to.”

Polina’s eyes flashed. “But you’re refusing it.” Her voice cracked with outrage. “You’d rather watch her die?”

Alibeth held her ground. “I’d rather watch her die than watch you become—” She stopped. She still didn’t have a word for what she could already see forming.

Polina’s breath shuddered. For a moment, there was a flicker of the sister Alibeth knew—the girl who was exhausted, terrified, and desperate enough to do anything.

“You don’t understand.”

Then Polina went to the bed and knelt. Her fingers slid beneath the loose board.

Alibeth moved to stop her, but Polina didn’t even look up. She simply spoke quietly to herself, and next, the room shifted. The candle flame bent. The baby began to wail. Pressure bloomed behind Alibeth’s eyes. Polina’s hand came up with the book, and when she stood, her pupils were so dilated the amber looked drowned.

Alibeth stared and understood with sick clarity: the book was no longer an object Polina carried. It was a limb.

“You can’t hide it from me,” Polina whispered, pleased.

Alibeth’s fingers curled at her sides. “What did you just do?”

Polina blinked slowly. “I didn’t do anything.” The lie came easily. “You’re just
 scared.”

Alibeth wanted to slap her. She didn’t waste her hands on gestures that changed nothing.
“You’re going to stop.” Her voice lowered. “We’re going to burn it.”

Polina’s lips parted and Alibeth thought she might cry.

Instead, Polina smiled and it made Alibeth’s blood go cold.
“You can’t burn it,” Polina murmured. “It’s already in me.”

After that, Alibeth stopped negotiating like they were still children.

She tried to outlast her, watching Polina through the days the way she watched the street for danger. She kept the younger siblings away when the book lay open. She assigned chores strategically, kept bodies moving. She forced Polina to eat when her hands shook too badly to hold a cup. She put Polina to bed like she used to put the sick ones to bed.

Polina became worse anyway.

She began to speak to herself. At first, it sounded like rehearsing—sounding out the book’s strange instructions—but then Alibeth heard pauses, as if Polina waited for an answer. Sometimes Polina laughed low in her throat at nothing. Sometimes she hissed like someone had insulted her.

Alibeth’s attempts to stop her grew more direct, and more dangerous. She tried to take the book when Polina slept. She hid it under a loose stone in the alley, only to find it back beneath Polina’s pillow by nightfall. Polina began to treat Alibeth like a nuisance.

The youngest brother started wetting the bed again. The baby screamed whenever Polina opened the book. Their mother’s cough worsened. The house felt colder even when the weather warmed, as if the book had pulled heat into itself and refused to give it back. Alibeth began sleeping with one eye open.

And then came the evening Alibeth tried to take the book for the last time.

It was late and their mother’s breathing had gone shallow. One of the younger sisters slept with her head in Alibeth’s lap. Polina sat by the candle, reading too fast. There was dried blood at the corner of her nose.

Alibeth reached out and placed her hand over the page. “Polina.” Her voice came out softer than she meant. “Enough.”

Polina’s gaze lifted to Alibeth’s hand. “Don’t.”

Alibeth didn’t move, and Polina didn’t push her away. The candle guttered. The room went icy. That pressure bloomed behind Alibeth’s eyes, and her knees almost buckled. The child in her lap whimpered awake, confused and frightened.

“Move.”

Alibeth’s hand jerked violently, and pain flashed up her wrist, causing her to gasp.

“You see?” she said in a bright tone. “It listens.”

“You’re hurting me.”

Polina blinked. “I’m stopping you,” she corrected.

The next morning, the book was gone. And so was Polina.

She sat up that morning, heart hammering, eyes scanning the room. The space where Polina slept was empty. At first, Alibeth told herself Polina had gone to fetch water, that she’d stepped outside to breathe. Alibeth and stepped over the sleeping bodies of her siblings without waking them, and went to the door. Outside, the street was quiet—eerily so.

Polina had taken the book. And whatever she had become, she was now loose in the world.
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Hidden 4 mos ago 4 mos ago Post by Oso
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Part 4


Time: 2nd Ignis, Evening
Location: The Damien Estate


Liliane was the first to recover her breath. Her smile blossomed slowly as if nothing in the room had shifted at all. Behind her, servants glided in with the next course, the clatter of silver momentarily swallowed by the vibe Marek had carried in with him.

Calbert’s smile held. He did not ask why the man had come unannounced. “Marek Delronzo,” He greeted, voice rich and warm. “We are fortunate to have you grace our table. Allow me to formally introduce my children.” He extended a hand toward each in turn, “My daughter, Lady Violet Damien
My son Cassius, Sorian's newest Lord and bachelor.”

His gaze subsequently fell on Violet, meeting a pair of deep red eyes looking back at him. “Mr. Delronzo is the head of operations of the Black Rose Trading Company.”

A smile graced her lips in a practiced manner as she offered him a slight bow of her head. ” It’s an honor, Lord Delronzo. I have only heard tales of your great deeds; it's a pleasure to put a face to the name. Just the man she was looking for


“Let’s not forget the precious Crystal and the venerable Countess Liliane Damien.” Alexander was quick to undermine his friendly rival. He had to in the midst of this surprise. These two, who had just walked in, were not supposed to be there. He remained poised and neutral, anticipating that they were only here to aid him.

“I can always count on Alexander to be extra thorough.” Lianna had beamed with a pleasant smile. “Especially with women.” Alexander’s eye shifted sharply toward his wife with that added comment.

“Of course. Thank you, Alexander.”

Her eyes drifted to Alexander with an unhurried, knowing sweep. There it was, the smallest of cracks in his veneer, the slip in his carefully curated narrative. Lianna’s tone had not been the tone of a woman merely teasing her husband.

It had been a warning.

Violet’s smile thinned, so subtly it could have been a trick of the candlelight, but the shift was there. A soft pull at the corner of her lips, the kind that signaled thought more than warmth.

Of course, Alexander hadn’t mentioned his lovely wife would be joining him tonight.
Or Marek Delronzo, for that matter. Her gaze lowered briefly to the table.

Two empty places. No plates, no glasses, no cutlery. It was not an oversight.

An unexpected arrival.

” You must forgive our staff, I don’t believe we were expecting you, but we can rectify that immediately. Please, take a place at the table where you feel most comfortable.” Violet gestured to a member of the staff as they quickly began to prepare new table settings for the unexpected guests.

” You’re just in time, the second course has only just arrived.”

Marek’s gaze did not brighten the way a courteous man’s ought to. It simply rested upon her, unblinking.

“And I,” he murmured at last, voice oddly resonant, “have awaited our meeting for quite some time...”

He raised his chin and smiled—the kind of smile that gave another chills. “Lady Violet Damien.” He let the words linger as he spoke them, as if tasting them.

Cassius tried to listen to the words around him, but he couldn’t shake the uneasy feeling that had washed over his form. It was something about the way the man moved. Cassius knew that walk. He knew that type of confidence all too well
 And the depth in the man’s eyes was even more telling. Even more chilling. Cas’s jaw tightened as his fingers stilled against the table, his beloved wine forgotten in an instant.

There was something old about this man; older than he appeared, and ancient in its own way. He wondered if the man revealed as Marek Delronzo was the same as Alexander and Violet. Was he another vampire in some kind of sick coven? If so, he was their leader. Cassius could tell without doubt, without ponderance. This man was authority incarnate. Head of Operations he had been called. Bullshit. Cassius knew what the Black Rose really was, and this Marek Delronzo wasn’t just the head of a trading company
 No, this man was the Don of one of the world’s most dangerous syndicates. To finally see the head of such a legendary serpent there before him felt like an honor as much as it did a curse. Cassius allowed his patented smirk to cross his face. The pleasantry was forced, and he knew damn well their new guest would clock it, but what other move did he have?

“As my sister says, Mr. Delronzo, you’ve made your entrance at the perfect time. Thank you for gracing my family with your presence.”

Cassius stood, leaned across the table, and offered his hand to Marek.

“In truth, I feel honored to have you join us. I can’t imagine that a man with such a busy schedule often attends such events.”

Marek looked at the offered hand as though it were not a greeting, but a specimen placed on a table for his inspection. His gaze moved slowly: first Cassius’s fingers, then the line of his wrist, then the pulse-point at his throat. Slowly, his eyes rose to meet Cassius’s. Then, finally, Marek extended his hand and took Cassius’s hand in his grasp, palm to palm, as any gentleman might
But Marek’s grip was steady in a way no mortal hand ever was. It wasn’t tight nor crushing, but something about it was absolute. His thumb pressed once lightly against the inside of Cassius’s wrist, feeling his pulse.

He then smiled at the younger man. “Lord Damien,” Marek said. “How prompt.” He released Cassius’s hand as if concluding a contract. His eyes darted about as he took in the sight of the servants setting down silver platters of meats and other fineries. They were slow, hesitant, as if suddenly clattering the items in their hands would cause them to lose their heads.

Roasted pheasant arrived on a platter lined with citrus, its skin brushed with honey until it shone. Venison followed, sliced thick, bathing in a berry reduction so dark it looked like spilled ink. A tureen of pumpkin soup was placed near Liliane with a swirl of cream. Crystal dishes came next: carrots glazed with butter; green beans dressed in lemon and oil; potatoes whipped so smooth they held their shape like silk. And then the wine: decanters that caught the light and held it. A servant poured with a steady hand. The servants then withdrew in silence once their job was complete.

With a contemplative hum, Marek turned his head back to Violet, and the room seemed to follow his attention without meaning to.

“Where is her blood?”

Violet's eyes snapped to Marek, her chest tightened as the breath seemed to leave her lungs.

Calbert’s fork stilled mid-motion; the faintest pause in his breath betrayed that the question had struck exactly where it was meant to. “Excuse me?” Calbert could not hide his feelings from his cadence this time. “You forget yourself, Mr. Delronzo.”

Marek’s expression did not shift. If anything, a faint amusement touched the corners of his mouth. It was an indulgent look. “Do I?” he replied mildly. “It is astonishing how frequently men accuse others of amnesia when what they truly fear is acknowledgment.”

His gaze slid toward Violet again, meeting her crimson eyes. “You host a tableau of abundance,” Marek continued, his tone polite, “and you expect your cursed daughter to admire the brushstrokes.”

“My daughter’s needs,” Calbert replied tersely, “are addressed privately. Not exhibited at my table for
 theatrics.”

“Theatrics,” Marek echoed, as if turning the word over and finding it insufficient. “No, Count Damien. Necessity.” He leaned back as though the point were self-evident. “You may drape the matter in discretion,” he said, voice like silk, “but discretion does not transmute physiology. It merely delays consequence.”

The realization left Violet momentarily speechless. She knew that she should be furious. Her father clearly was. Everyone likely expected her to be. But beneath the initial shock, anger never quite arrived. Instead, something unfamiliar stirred in its place. Not comfort. Not relief, but recognition.

Her gaze flicked to her father, then back to Marek, and for the briefest instant, she understood the divide laid bare before her: concealment versus acknowledgment. Shame versus truth. And she found, to her own quiet alarm, that she did not entirely resent the latter.

Then came a small, strangled sound, and Marek followed Calbert’s gaze to the youngest daughter, the ill one.

Crystal was staring wide-eyed, trying to make sense of the conversation as though it were a language she’d never been taught. Then her face drained of its color, and her hand flew up to cover her mouth. She looked from Violet to her father, and then to her mother, silently pleading for someone to tell her this was a joke.

Violet turned at once, the tension in her shoulders easing as she reached across the table. Her hand found her sister’s warm and trembling hand. She gave it a gentle squeeze, grounding, steady.

“It’s alright,” Violet said softly, her voice meant only for Crystal now. She offered her a smile, real and reassuring, unburdened by ceremony. “Truly. There’s nothing you need to worry about.”

Her thumb brushed lightly against Crystal’s knuckles, a silent promise.

“I’m fine,” she added, meeting her sister’s wide eyes with calm certainty.

“Pardon me,” Marek said smoothly as he took in her demeanor. “I was under the impression everyone at this table was already acquainted with Lady Violet’s
 predicament.”

“Mr. Delronzo
” Alexander cleared his throat as he drew attention amongst silence while addressing the most powerful man in the room. “This dinner is not the time or place for her yearnings. Right now, she practices patience and poise so that she might demonstrate the same in front of her peers in public.” Alexander kindly argued before stealing a glance at Violet.

“Yearnings, hmm?” Marek repeated with the slightest head tilt.

“And here I had so foolishly assumed that Lady Violet could speak for herself at this table, but yet all I hear are three men speaking for her. Very interesting.” Cassius' words summoned a quick scowl from Alexander, that was so sharp, the man might as well have told him to “shut his fucking mouth.”

“I am in accordance with my son. We shall let Violet decide what she needs and speak it for herself.” Calbert promptly agreed.

“My defense of Lady Violet does not silence her—she is welcome to speak her truth..”

“The food smells lovely tonight.” Lianna’s hand reached beside her, finding Alexander's arm quite easily. “Let’s not spoil it with this
 talk” She grimaced at the idea of discussing Violet’s desire to drink blood, but in truth, it was all part of the theatrics. Lianna only wished she could see Violet fizzle and writhe like a slug sprinkled by grains of salt.

Calbert’s brow lifted, but he regarded her politely all the same: “Please help yourself, Ms. Deacon... My apologies for the choice in discussion.”

To Violet, Lianna’s sweetness was too polished, too carefully placed. The hand on Alexander’s arm. The delicate grimace. Violet had lived long enough in this house to recognize cruelty when it wore perfume.

She did not rise to it.

Instead, Violet drew in a slow breath, letting it settle her before she turned her head just enough to acknowledge Lianna’s presence. Her expression remained composed, but something in her eyes cooled, almost darkened.

“The food does smell wonderful, almost as good as it looks.” Violet agreed quietly. Her tone was mild, almost pleasant. “The kitchen has outdone itself.”

She reached for her glass, fingers steady, and took a measured sip before continuing.

“And you’re right,” she added, meeting Lianna’s gaze at last. “There is little point in lingering on topics that make others
 uncomfortable.”

“But discomfort,” Violet went on, her voice still soft, “is not the same as impropriety. And silence has never made anything less true.”

“Hm,” Lianna replied, the vagueness of it difficult to read. Acknowledgment, dismissal, interest, feigned interest, or perhaps an attempt to pretend she grasped what was said? It was hard to tell with that faint smile and those glossy eyes peering back.

Her gaze lingered for just a second longer before Violet looked away, her attention returning to Crystal, her hand still resting protectively over her sister’s. “I do appreciate your concern and consideration for me, Mr. Delronzo.” Her eyes glanced to look at him with a warm smile, to which he returned with a seemingly genuine smile of his own.

“As do I, sister. I can’t imagine a downside to having the concern or consideration of a man as renowned as our esteemed guest.” The sarcasm from Cassius was subtle but not entirely hidden. Those that he wanted to perceive certainly would, and the rest
 Well, it wasn’t important if they caught on or not.

He looked around the table with a smile, taking in each person again, one by one. His gaze lingered on that of Calbert with an air of disappointment. Then, his eyes found Crystal last among the table as he offered his most reassuring nod and grin before turning his attention back to the man in the room with the most presence. A dark presence at that. Meeting Marek’s eyes felt like a combat maneuver; something that held risk each and every time, but he did it anyway.

“While the topic of discussion is on you, Mr. Delronzo, I am curious. Since I’m the newest member of this family and obviously rather uninformed about all the Damien’s dealings
 What exactly is your relationship with my father?”

Marek’s smile was rather saccharine as he bestowed his attention on Cassius, however, it was Liliane who cleared her throat and spoke up first. An attempt to regain decorum in hopes to shift the topic of conversation away from less tense matters. “For the sake of clarity, my daughter has never been deprived of what she requires. Her needs are anticipated, attended to, and met within the walls of this estate. “ Her smile warmed as she held his gaze.

“Your concern is
 thoughtful,” she continued, inclining her head just enough to acknowledge him, “and of course, appreciated. But rest assured, Violet has never lacked for anything under our roof.”

“How reassuring, Lady Damien.” Marek murmured. He raised his head as he looked down at her the way a scholar would regard a page of a book filled with inaccuracies.“ Yet do not mistake provision for permission, Lady Damien. To feed her in secrecy is to instruct her that her survival is an indecency. That what keeps her alive must be hidden like contraband.” His gaze drifted unhurriedly toward Violet, as though acknowledging a truth the room had spent years avoiding.

“At this table,” Marek said softly, “you and your husband indulge abundance without apology.” His eyes lifted at last slowly, “Why, then, must she dine only in the shadows in the comfort of her own home?” Alexander glanced his way, confused by what the man’s objective could be. What he said sounded more ridiculous than something Duke Vikena might spout! With a noticeable exhale, he returned to spoon-feeding his wife who looked much too delightful in her indulgence. Was it the thick tension or the tender meats?

Marek’s gaze slid to Cassius next, “Now let’s return to that excellent question of yours
”

The man leaned in his seat, the irises of his eyes darkening as they bore into Cassius, as if seeking to look into his very soul just for a moment, “ Well Cassius, quite simply, I work for him.”

Calbert had just lifted his glass to his lips, and the bit of wine he had consumed immediately went down the wrong way. He coughed once involuntarily as he brought a hand to his mouth. Cassius noticed.

A single drop darkened the linen beside the Count’s plate.

“That is probably the best way to describe the year-long relationship.” Alexander piped in to agree, granting little room for doubt.

Cassius shifted back in his seat more comfortably, a suave grin painted his expression as he let Marek’s words and Alexander’s comment hang in the air for the slightest moment.

“Interesting. He spoke simply, clearly amused. The way Marek’s presence alone held such an antediluvian and uncanny effluence unsettled him, but he knew better than to show those cards. “And, if I may
 What kind of work does a man, who runs an empire of his own, do for a Count like my father? Investments? Trade deals? Perhaps something more
off the books?”

Even beneath the candlelight’s warmth, nothing seemed to soften about Marek Delronzo’s face. He regarded Cassius as though measuring what kind of calamity the title had merely disguised.

“Off the books?” Marek echoed, faintly amused. “My work is to ensure your father’s intentions survive contact with the world.”

His eyes slid briefly to the linen by Calbert’s plate.

He returned to Cassius, his tone courteous. “Learn the difference between power and its theatre, Lord Damien. Secure your own interdiction—before you are given one.”

Cas’s eyes narrowed as he allowed a grin to soften his face. His gaze did not leave that of Marek.

“Mr. Delronzo,” Calbert interjected evenly, “my son doesn’t require tutoring at my table. If you have counsel, you may address it to me.”

Then, with the same calm, he gestured toward the food. “Now, before it cools.”

Violet’s gaze lowered to the table then, to the spread laid out in careful abundance. The dishes were rich, thoughtfully prepared. And yet, none of it stirred anything in her.

Not hunger. Not want.

Her thoughts drifted, unbidden, to blood. Warm, alive, and necessary. The ache followed close behind, familiar and patient. It had been some time since she had truly enjoyed anything at all. She could feel that familiar voice calling to her, trying to shake it from her mind.

She reached for the serving spoon anyway, out of habit more than desire, drawing a modest portion onto her plate. The motions were practiced, graceful, convincing enough for anyone who cared to look no closer than etiquette required.

Instead of lifting her fork, Violet’s fingers curled around the stem of her wineglass.

She brought it to her lips, savoring the taste as though it were something more than it was; letting the sharpness linger, grounding her. Marek had unintentionally reminded her of the one thing she was trying to push away again. Since Lord Fritz, she hadn’t found anyone to fall in his stead, making her situation not as convenient as her family painted.

The expression on her face seemed to drift as her eyes glossed over in deep thought at the glass resting against her bottom lip. Her crimson eyes glancing over to Alexander, holding her gaze on him for a beat longer than appropriate. And, just like they always had, his eyes caught hers as if he had felt her gaze from across the table. From where he sat, she appeared stuck, like a carriage’s wheels rolling into thick, slowly drying mud. He flashed a grin her way, an attempt to ease her mind that might have been at its limit.

“I think a much lighter subject is due for this table.” Alexander commented with a pleasant smile after a few moments of silent eating. He placed his utensils down and leaned in Cassius’ direction, putting every ounce of his attention on the man. “You’ve asked your questions. Now, I believe it’s my turn, and I’d like to start with the most curious of us at this table.” The attack was warm and friendly. “You must tell me how the courtship between you and Lady Vikena is going? I mean, her father might be a lunatic, but Charlotte is
” He made an uneasy face. “Plain is probably the best word, which probably makes it that much easier for you, being a Damien. You could probably do better, but the Duke of Vermillion’s daughter that everyone overlooks might be a great choice in the longterm. I might be lucky enough to see a Duke Damien in my time.”

Cassius finally allowed his gaze to slip away from Marek as Alexander addressed him. The man’s comment about Charlotte was an obvious barb meant to stir the coals within him. He did not give Alexander the satisfaction of a response outside of the slightest scoff of a chuckle escaped him.

Marek’s fingers stilled against his glass, the smile at his mouth thinning as though something inelegant had just been spoken aloud.

“Does it not have a nice ring to it? Duke Damien,” Lianna repeated with a thin smile.

“It’s the D’s, I think.” Alexander nodded to his wife.

“Yes, the D’s. It’s quite nice.”

Calbert shifted back in his chair, the wood giving the faintest sound beneath him. He had been about to speak up, but his wife beat him to the punch. Lily had smiled suddenly, folding her arms on the table. “My, my,” Countess Damien said pleasantly, folding her arms atop the table. “I have indeed noticed the way Cassius looks at Lady Vikena.”

Her smile did not falter.“Which makes it rather interesting that you should raise the subject at all, Mr. Deacon—considering how frequently your own name has been whispered alongside hers of late.”She tilted her head, as if recalling the details. “The art gallery, in particular, seems to have inspired quite a bit of discussion.”

Her eyes met his, bright and curious. “Rumors, of course. But care to enlighten us anyway?”

The ironclad grip Cas had formed on his composure slipped ever so marginally as he listened to Lily’s insinuations. His grin all but fell away; the eyes that had been calculatedly softened by that smile hardened as they broke from Alexander and moved instead to his plate of food. The thought of a vile thing like Alexander alone with Charlotte began to heat his blood.

Though curiosity festered within him like a nagging wound, he dared not wait to hear any revelations. It was time for him to remove himself from the moment.

“Please
continue on with such fascinating conversation, however I must excuse myself for the moment. I fear the holiday’s sporting has finally caught up to me. I’m in need of a bit of fresh air.” Cassius spun the narrative with charm, though inside his blood was not far from reaching its boiling point. He did not wait for permission or response as he walked away from the table in the direction of the front door.

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