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Current revert back? we never left!
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@Grey you joke but I have absolutely heard exorcists call demons lawyers
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Happy Easter guild!
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It's not Easter yet but thank you
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2 mos ago
p accurate description tbh

Bio

child of the storm

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If you're interested in some short completed pieces of mine beyond my regular RP posts, feel free to rifle through my filing cabinet here.

About me:
  • Birth year 1998
  • Female
  • Canadian RIP
  • Time zone: Atlantic, GMT-4 (one hour ahead of EST)
  • Currently judging your grammar
  • Not usually looking for 1x1s but if you're really jonesing, my PMs are always open
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Most Recent Posts





“I don’t want any trouble.”


Male | 18 | 5’11” | 140lbs


Name
Kyreth

Appearance
Kyreth is fairly tall and slim, with a wiry, sinewy build honed from a lifetime of odd jobs and limited food. His stark white hair is short and choppy, lying every which way even as he tries to brush it back, and the only “style” to speak of is the inconsistent lines of a haircut obviously done with a knife. His dark complexion hides the oft-present shadows under his eyes, and a tight-lipped nervous frown conceals a mouthful of sharp teeth.

Aside from his dark grey complexion and his speckling of white freckles, the first things people usually notice about Kyreth are his eyes; entirely white and pupil-less, they’re a dead giveaway of his Tainted blood, even if his horns and tail are covered. His horns are quite short and curl tightly over his head, making them mercifully easy to cover up. His tail is quite skinny as Tainted go, and long enough for the end to lay on the ground - if it ever decided to lay still, that is. It tapers smoothly to a point resembling half an arrowhead.

In an effort to make traveling a little easier, Kyreth hides his Tainted features to the best of his ability, concealing his horns with his hood and hiding his tail under his tunic, wrapped tightly around his waist. With his pointed ears, from a distance he can almost pass for a dark-skinned Elf, although the charade usually fails once anyone comes close enough to notice the distinct lack of pupils in his eyes.

Classification
Primordial - Fire

Abnormality
Kyreth has a spattering of white freckles on his face and body, concentrated around his cheekbones (especially the outer corners of his eyes) and the tips of his horns and tail. These freckles, along with his eyes, glow dimly in the dark.

Personality
Kyreth is non-confrontational to the bone. Fairly meek and lacking much confidence, he’ll take a lot in stride if it means avoiding a fight. In a group, he’s liable to try and play the mediator, but equally likely to get steamrolled if the parties aren’t convinced by his soft tone and shrinking presence. Still, he does his best to break up fights, even though the practice has earned him a few bumps and bruises in the past.

Abuse is a fact of life for the Tainted, and one Kyreth has grown to accept; when faced with contempt or even violence, he prefers to either escape the situation or endure until it’s over, often with an apology on his lips. While he plays the role of doormat well, he’s not driven so much by self-preservation, but by concern; he has a sickening fear that taking too much exception to “the everyday hassles of life” will only serve to embolden the more sinister part of him, making him do something he’ll regret. To Kyreth, a few scrapes and bruises from those who spurn his kind aren’t worth losing himself to his own innate savagery and confirming their fears.

Even as mankind rejects him, Kyreth also struggles to find community among his own kind. Although he grew up under the care of a protective Tainted community, he’s grown to become even more uncomfortable around them than he is around other races, feeling utterly alien with his aversion to dishonesty and violence. As such, he ended up in no man’s land, finding no home among the Tainted nor the rest of the world. Deep down, he worries that if he were to live among the Tainted again, as he used to, he’d revert back to his old ways and lose all the progress he’s made. Best not to stay too long.

Above all else, Kyreth just wants to lead an honest, unintrusive life. He’s gentle at heart, if a little guarded, and tries his best to be kind to anyone he meets - sometimes to degrees very much undeserved. It’s an uphill battle, but for Kyreth, every meek smile not returned or kind word answered with scorn is just one more step toward atoning for his ancestors’ sins - and his own.

Bio
The beginning of Kyreth’s story is not unique, at least among the Tainted.
Left on the doorstep of a Tainted orphanage in the Dregs of Buscon, he was just one of many helpless, crying babies disposed of the moment they opened their pupil-less eyes.

Although the world is a cold and dangerous place for the Tainted, for a blessing the Dregs were somewhat of a haven; with blades drawn and teeth bared to the rest of the world, the Tainted of Buscon fiercely looked after their own, and as such the many orphans of Urchin’s Run grew up with something of a family all around them. Tainted children were more or less welcome just about everywhere in the Dregs, and given guidance and leniency not afforded to outsiders. It was common for those in the community with a little to spare to kick some to the orphans, either in donations to the oft-crowded Dragon’s Clutch orphanage (originally named “Aziaza’s Refuge”, which understandably didn’t stick) or directly to the children themselves, who would often use their spoils to practice the bartering and swindling skills they picked up from their elders.

Things worked surprisingly smoothly. With outsiders generally wary of the Dregs, the insular Buscon Tainted managed to avoid much of the vitriol suffered by others of their kind, running an internal society relatively cut off from the rest of the city. Any outsiders naive enough to wander in usually regretted their time there, falling victim to pickpocketing and cheating at best, or violence at worst. Although conflict between Tainted often crackled, most fights were swiftly ended by bystanders and perpetrators ostracized for disturbing the peace; outsiders, however, were fair game.

And so it went. To Kyreth, it was normal; outsiders hated them, so any foolish enough to intrude on their one sanctuary got what was coming to them. Children were protected, but not coddled; Kyreth and every other child was expected to earn his own way and keep his head on a swivel; “You’ll need that skill one day,” as his elders always said. So, from the moment he was old enough to hold a broom, Kyreth worked; sweeping up taverns, running errands for brothel ladies, playing the innocent accomplice to swindlers - every job, no matter how dingy or underhanded, was worth the room and board it earned him.

But that didn’t mean he liked it. Kyreth was used to the harsh life of the Dregs, but he wasn’t well suited for it; in an uneasy peace maintained through necessity and a hierarchy of might, the skinny, small-horned boy fell squarely at the bottom of the totem pole. Averse to conflict and bad at it besides, Kyreth was easily pushed around by his peers and ordered hither and yon by his elders, with little capability or option to refuse. He made a habit of shrinking into corners when brawls broke out - and there were many - and always flinched at the blows and insults thrown around, no matter how many times he’d seen or heard them. The crass stories of tricking, cheating and beating outsiders that everyone else seemed to enjoy disturbed him, and even as he grew up and his peers grew into their underground society, the underhanded ways of the Dregs never stopped making Kyreth… uncomfortable.

Maybe that was why, despite his community’s tense closeness, Kyreth never really felt like one of them. In a pack of wolves, it seemed he was the runt, never strong or bold enough to bare his teeth like the others did, and shying away from the fervor of their voices when they howled. Though he’d never voice it, he could see why outsiders feared the Tainted; they thought his kind were traitors, devils, and worse - and after all he’d seen, who could blame them? The Dregs weren’t entirely bereft of kindness, but it was never offered to outsiders, who were ironically decried for their intolerance as the Tainted refused to tolerate them.

And that wasn’t even to mention Kyreth’s own sins. They started when he was young, too young to realize they even involved him, but whenever he got scared, or frustrated, or angry… accidents happened. Most of the time, it was just a bit of singed hair or a scorched hem after a particularly vexing scuffle with bigger kids, a leaping candle flame when a tavern patron said something particularly crass, but sometimes they were worse. Once, he set an outsider’s pantleg on fire by accident when the man tried to kick him out of the way, cursing at the “damn devils” in his path. Kyreth had heard the stories of the Tainted, how they were a cursed, fallen race, punished by Aziaza Herself for their alliance with the dragons - to him, it only made sense that his little “accidents” were a result of that unholy union. Why else would fires leap to life when he got angry, if not for some ancient draconic curse?

So he clung to the shadows, and did his best to contain the devil that seemed to dwell inside him. But when his whole world was a slum beset by crime and conflict, how could he possibly avoid feeding his sinister side? Avoiding confrontation was a delicate dance all on its own, let alone prying himself out of underground jobs he’d done for ages without protest. As time went on and keeping his darker side in check grew more and more demanding, Kyreth had no choice: he had to separate himself from the moral depravity of the Dregs and remove the temptation. No, it wasn’t just the Dregs - he had to get out of Buscon altogether, go somewhere new where he could get away from his dishonest life and start again.

So he did. As soon as winter ended in his eighteenth year, Kyreth gathered what few belongings he had and abruptly left, offering no explanation. Knowing only life in the bowels of Buscon, he laid eyes on what lay beyond the city walls for the first time and ventured out in search of something better.

That was the idea, anyway. In reality, it was a miserable endeavor; if it wasn’t hunger and cold snapping at his heels, it was other travelers throwing stones as he passed, or shops and villages chasing him away. More than once he found himself on the receiving end of violent thugs airing their grievances, and he could count on his fingers the number of nights he managed to spend under a roof. But, despite more than once yearning to return to the Dregs and put his lofty ideals behind him, Kyreth persevered, continuing his trek down the coast to Straithmoor. After all, those people were just scared - and Kyreth couldn’t blame them.

Straithmoor welcomed him as much as any other settlement along the way: with curses, stones and pitchforks. But as he searched on the edge of town for a good place to camp, Kyreth found something he didn’t expect: a tiny old woman mending a fence, calling out for him to help her. He didn’t believe it at first, thinking she must have meant to call for someone else, but there was nobody; it was just him, her, and a vast empty field. When he drew closer, he saw her cloudy grey eyes and for a second, thought she was another Tainted in disguise, living impossibly among this harsh and hostile town. But he was wrong - she was simply blind. No wonder she called out to him, she couldn’t see what he was.

Kyreth thought about outing himself to her - it would feel dishonest to lend a hand to someone who might not otherwise want it if they knew what he was - but decided to hold his tongue. After all, if she chased him off, her fence would stay broken, and that didn’t seem to be much help. Resolving to confess after his work was done, he followed her summons and helped her patch the fence. But just as he was about to inform her and take his leave, the woman asked another favour of him. Then another. And another. And more and more until he’d been sleeping in her shed and eating her food for two months in exchange for whatever help he could provide.

Food and board weren’t all she provided, either. She also provided company, companionship the likes of which Kyreth had never known before. He chalked it up to a lonely old woman wanting someone to talk to, but the reason didn’t really matter to him; he drank up every word, every second like a castaway finding fresh water. She told him stories about her late husband, the dedicated rancher; her sons, the fishermen, all dead now; and most importantly, she told him about Selene, lady of the moon and deliverer of the downtrodden.

Selene’s message touched Kyreth to the very core. The only god he knew much about before was Aziaza, who cast down the treacherous Illarin and would probably add every Tainted to her throne of bones upon their deaths - understandably, not an encouraging tale. But until now, Selene was unknown to him, and her mission of succor to the poor and suffering was the first glimpse of hope beyond death that Kyreth had ever seen. He latched on immediately, and became an adamant follower as soon as Berta taught him how. Impressed with his enthusiasm, she even gifted him the crescent hanging in her doorway, insisting that he needed the protection from bad luck more than she did.

Those two months were a dream come true for Kyreth, but sooner or later, everyone must wake. And Kyreth did wake; abruptly and violently. Having got it into his head that he would do something nice for Berta, he went into Straithmoor proper with some proceeds from her farm, hoping to trade them for a chunk of good swordfish - Berta’s favourite. But while the fishmonger took his payment, he wouldn’t hand over the fish. Instead, he laughed in Kyreth’s face, scoffing over the idea of trading with a devil.

Normally, the insult wouldn’t bother Kyreth, and he’d cut his losses and go away. But those were Berta’s wares the fishmonger had stolen, and Kyreth couldn’t tolerate that. As hard as he tried to contain himself, his temper flared - and so did a flame, catching the fishmonger’s stall alight and reducing it and his catch to ash. In an instant, the fishmonger and many of the passerby were on Kyreth, and it was all he could do to escape the town in one piece. He couldn’t go back to Berta’s house, fearing for her safety as well as his own, so he ran until his legs could no longer carry him and the shouts and torches faded into the night.

And that was it. A perfect dream, ruined in an instant. Kyreth was distraught, more convinced than ever that he harboured an evil that needed to be contained. But he still had to eat, and the winter cold was fast approaching, so he made for the road again. Apparently some establishment called a “Bounty House” had just opened in Finnagund, far away from anyone who knew who he was or what he’d done.


Likes
  • Working - legitimately earning his keep gives him more satisfaction than anything else in the world.
  • Helping people when he can
  • Full moon nights - they make him feel like Selene is watching over him.
  • Fish, almost any way

Dislikes
  • Fire - accidents always seem to happen whenever he’s around it.
  • Deceit - or anything dishonest, shady, or generally off the straight and narrow.
  • Conflict
  • Temples - despite his faith in Selene, he always feels like an intruder on holy ground.
  • Meat, unless dried - there’s just something uneasy about eating something with blood.

Habits
  • Looking over his shoulder
  • Apologizing
  • Checking his belongings
  • Grabbing the back of his neck
  • Hiding his teeth (for example, trying not to smile too wide)
  • Clutching his Selene pendant when nervous

Inventory
Kyreth doesn’t have much, but he does make sure to carry:
  • A weathered, waist-length cloak with a large hood, fashioned from one piece of canvas. He’s had it since he was small enough for it to fall to his knees.
  • A sturdy needle and a spool of strong linen thread
  • An old single-edged knife, sharpened so many times that the blade has grown narrow
  • A sharpening stone
  • A large water skin
  • An oilcloth bundle of cheap traveling food, like dried meat or fish skins
  • A heavy, palm-sized Crescent of Selene, crudely fashioned from iron and worn under his tunic on a leather cord. This is without a doubt his most treasured possession.

Other
  • Kyreth prefers to cover his horns with a hat if he can find one; he fears that walking around hooded all the time makes him look suspicious. Sadly, his only hat recently got destroyed in a Mishap, so it’s back to hoods for now.
  • Like most Tainted, Kyreth’s tail is very reactive to his emotions, so it can be difficult to conceal wrapped around his waist. As such, he prefers to keep his cloak on whenever possible.
  • Growing up in gambling houses got Kyreth pretty good at Buscon’s most popular games of chance - and especially good at cheating. However, he renounced that practice years ago in pursuit of leading a more honest life.

joey thing ideas
name: Kyreth (maybe goes by Kyr/Kyrin?)
race: Tainted who tries and fails to pose as an elf
age: 18-19


Born in some city centre to some cheating bitch who got rid of him asap (possibly a bastard of some then-unmarried rich/noble woman?)

Grew up in orphanage until he was old enough to start working for food/lodging (~7) (has no surname)

Worked in various taverns/brothels/drug dens doing menial tasks (clearing dishes, other chores) for food, had some minor fire accidents, not understanding why

Also got roped into all sorts of untoward schemes because he was hungry and kids are great for staging thefts

Wasn't taught much about his heritage, just that Tainted are supposedly cursed demonic traitors and that a lot of the Tainted he grew up around seemed to embrace that stereotype

Kyreth wasn't cut out for that kind of life, he didn't want to take advantage of people, didn't like the cutthroat lifestyle, just wanted to make an honest living (but there's nobody honest in Urchin's Run or the Reprieve and honest folk outside of Buscon don't hire Tainted)

Eventually went to Straithmoor, struggled to find work but ended up with a steady setup doing odd jobs for a blind old lady who befriended him and introduced him to Selene

Taken by the first truly kind soul he'd ever really met and receptive to the message of deliverance for the downtrodden, the faith became a lifeline for him. The old lady gifted him a crude iron crescent that he treasures and keeps around his neck on a leather cord at all times.

Eventually causes another accident (setting the neighbour's thatch roof on fire?) and is run out of Straithmoor, now he has to find work elsewhere and he's heartbroken about having to leave his gentle old friend



Took a walk to the summit at night
To burn a hole in the old grip of the familiar
And the dark was opening wide
Do or die


TEST TEST









Jorah was about as excited for another unit meeting as one could expect, and right off the bat things seemed about as optimistic as their meeting in the Cathedral just days prior. Ooooo, maybe someone from the Rose Unit itself went missing this time? From a cursory glance, no one he personally knew was missing, so if that was the case it couldn’t have been anyone too important. Surely then all this grief could wait until the morning?

Okay, maybe that was a little rough.

Ugh, but who cared?? Jorah just wanted to go back to his dorm and finish the sleep he started just before sunrise, not sit through another hour of professors prattling on dourly about this or that tragic occurrence in or around the esteemed walls of Garreg Mach. He didn’t need another afternoon of swimming through the worries of every other student at the Officers’ Academy. Couldn’t he just sit this one out? Come on, even Clarissa seemed a little put off by the as-yet-unannounced meeting, but unfortunately her presence despite the annoyance was as much a guarantee as anything that like it or not, Jorah probably wasn’t escaping anytime soon. Dammit.

Lysander didn’t help the general unease of the students with his weird, vaguely threatening introduction, but honestly, the vague threat of injury would probably have been preferable to what the two of them launched into next. The moment that chalkboard flipped over, Jorah felt his blood run cold - but not from his own doing. He didn’t need to look over to know the source. He knew that vicarious feeling well, and he knew exactly what spurred it on. The feeling hurt his heart, and not just vicariously; It’d been years since he’d felt it so potently, but it had never quite gone away, either. So, while the rest of the Deer might have been shocked to see Clarissa bolt out of the room at the mention of Crests, Jorah was just sad and unfazed.

He turned in his seat to follow, but thought better of it when Clarissa slipped out the door; the last thing she’d want, of all people, would be to cause a scene. The very act of leaving was already way beyond the pale for her, and Jorah knew it wouldn’t do any good to go running after her and draw even more attention. Instead, he did his best to act cool - easy enough for him, fortunately - so as not to alarm the other Deer. That was what House Leaders did, right? Set an example? Clarissa seemed to think so.

Still, it was lucky he was a good actor, because he was seething just as harshly as Clarissa was. Whose bloody idea was it to announce to the entire unit that every single member had a Crest? Goddess above, Lysander sounded like his father, acting like a Crest was the be-all end-all of divine endowments, something nobody could ever in their right mind come to resent or regret. Surely nobody would ever hide their Crest. Oh no, no no. Crest-bearing babies were blessed by the Goddess, bound for greatness - whether they liked it or not.

Jorah fought not to roll his eyes. Was it any wonder he and his father could never see eye-to-eye on this? What a ridiculous notion. Admittedly his own Crest had never caused him the same anguish as Clarissa’s had, but he could still see why the topic might be a sore one even without a Crest as infamous as the Crest of the Beast. But if the Monastery knew of Clarissa’s Crest, wouldn’t they know which one it was as well? Jorah would have thought they’d have a bit of tact given that Crest’s particular history, but apparently the highest seat of religious power in all of Fódlan was too high on their own incense to consider anything so droll as common courtesy.

At least Professor Tomai didn’t seem to be breathing the fumes as deeply as Lysander was. Clarissa was at the forefront of his mind, but Jorah still caught some pieces about the nature of Crests and how they could be controlled. His own Crest surely fell into the category of “passive,” given he could hardly conceive of what life might be like if he could “turn off” the ability to feel the emotions of those around him, and didn’t even realize it was abnormal until he was well into his childhood. Though, was it so clear? He couldn’t get rid of the feelings, that was certain; but the other side of his Crest, the one that allowed him to coax people to his side of an argument, seemed at least somewhat voluntary. Or, if it wasn’t, then it was weak enough that for most people it must not matter. He would concede that it would be interesting to learn more about his Crest and how it might be controlled, but that didn’t make him any less pissed over how clumsily the topic was handled.

To Jorah’s surprise, Clarissa returned. He really wouldn’t have blamed her for taking off back to her dorm or the cathedral, but he was happy that she found the courage to come back inside. She wasn’t fully better, but the worst of her turmoil seemed to have burned off; as fine a first step as any. She pressed a little closer when she sat back down, and Jorah returned the gesture with a friendly nudge of the shoulder, happy to let Clarissa lean on him if she needed to. Hopefully this wouldn’t be too much of a setback. As sad as it made him to think about it, the two of them might not have another several years left together to pull Clarissa through her pain all over again.

For once, the other students didn’t draw out the lecture with stupid questions, and soon enough they were all released from this farce of a class. Jorah gave Clarissa another nudge, offering a sympathetic smile. Well, he’d gotten her through once; by now, he was basically an expert.

“Needed the privy that bad, huh?” he teased, voice low enough that only she would hear, “I told you not to eat the fish today.”


Lienna gave Lysander a flat look. She wasn’t sure what a “social experiment” was, but she didn’t like the sound of it. Lucky for the skinny nerd, Professor Tomai came in with a slightly more acceptable answer. So he was worried they’d accidentally hurt each other, was it? Lienna would have thought that’d be all the more reason to keep the nurse lady around, but if this was the wisdom of the monastery then she supposed her protests would fall on deaf ears. They were probably in more danger during combat training anyway, considering Kellen’s aim.

Meanwhile, Derec still looked like he saw a ghost, and asked whether he could opt out of the new class. Honestly, she wasn’t sure what he was so afraid of; so he was gold digging, so what? He might personally be an idiot, but not even Lienna could fault him for that. But she was curious what exactly he used his Crest for. For all she knew, he was marrying into a noble family too, or being adopted by one. She and Derec might end up cousins by marriage or something, knowing her luck. Or maybe he was trying to become a Knight of Seiros; that'd suit his sanctimonious attitude. More than anything, she was surprised nobody figured it out sooner, herself included. After all, how else does a peasant get into Garreg Mach?

With that, the class was dismissed, and Derec was quick to flee into Professor Michail’s arms. There’d probably be some irony to it if she cared to think about it, but she didn’t. Lienna was still surprised about Clarissa’s reaction; she hadn’t known the girl long - or really even spoken to her much, come to think of it - but she always seemed so calm and assured, it was odd to see her so shaken. Lienna would have thought she’d keep her composure in the face of ruin if only to avoid being called crass.

She smirked. Maybe Crests were just a sore topic for redheads.

Not that Lienna herself was one to talk, what with her own little peculiarity still left to be figured out, but surprisingly, it didn’t trouble her too much. Professor Tomai’s broken machine was more his problem than hers so long as she avoided any more Crest checks. If they were just practicing, it shouldn’t be an issue. Probably.

She glanced up when Auberon started talking, unsurprised at his comments. Once more, his nobility was showing. She shrugged boredly. “Not necessarily. Back home people thought Crests were more a curse than a blessing; if you had one, you kept it to yourself.” She crossed her arms. “Maybe he’s from somewhere similar. Judging by that hair I wouldn’t be surprised if he was another Gautier brat.”


Lienna was exhausted out of reflex when the order came down to gather in the Black Eagles’ classroom at the end of the day. It wasn’t like she had anything else planned – much like many of her classmates, she’d been spending the bulk of her time since the announcement yesterday tucked safely away in her room – but it was hard to appreciate the protection of a few more bodies when it came at the end of a tiring day wading through dusty old tomes and strategy lectures.

Ugh. The least they could have done was give them some kind of training exercise; at least then she could have channeled her focus into magic instead of flitting back and back and back again to the news. As if she didn’t see enough shapes in the shadows already. Now she had to keep her head on a swivel once again. Wouldn’t be so much of a big deal back home, but after convincing herself those days were over, taking up the old torch was more exhausting than it would have been to never lay it down in the first place.

She filed in with the other Lions, taking her seat among them, although her gaze ended up somewhere off in space. Professor Tomai did catch her eye for a moment, and she was reminded how close she’d come to asking him to write a letter to Francis in her stead and get her out of here. Considering he’d yet to make good on his promise of an update on the Hanneman machine’s progress, she figured she probably made the right choice sitting tight. Tomai didn’t seem cruel, but he didn’t seem like the type to let his “ever faithful guinea pig” scuttle away over rumours either.

Lysander (she’d already forgotten his last name) opened the meeting just as dully as every other that day, but Lienna didn’t miss that veiled confession about Professor Simeon. Why on earth would he think a lecture – a lecture he was conducting – would result in injuries? And why couldn’t they use a proper healer if so?

Lienna’s hand went to a lump under her sash, where her grandmother’s needle box was tucked safely away. She didn’t know what the skinny runt was playing at, but she wasn’t planning on being poked, prodded or anything of the sort. Not that a little box of bone needles and thread would do her much good, but if it came down to it, she did have a much more powerful weapon at her fingertips; there’d be some collateral damage, but in a space this small she was pretty confident she could skewer Lysander with ice before he got the chance to try anything funny.

The thought relaxed her enough to let her hand fall, and she turned her attention back to the strange little professor in time for him to reveal that the students in the Rose unit had all been chosen for their Crests. Hm. Lienna wasn’t as surprised as the others; honestly, with a school crawling with highborns, she’d expected most students would have them. Any peasant like her who got in must have; she figured the only ones without would have been distant noble children never set to inherit anything anyway, coming to Garreg Mach to learn to command armies or whatever nobles had their children do. Come to think of it, that was the box she’d put Kellen into; she was a little surprised about him.

What didn’t surprise her at all, though, was Derec and his terrified thousand-yard stare. After all that bravado about trusting people and letting them have your back, he was in the same boat as she was. Some noble somewhere in his family line wormed a crest into some peasant woman, and now here he was, a diamond in the rough taking the opportunity for all it was worth. She’d almost respect him for it if he wasn’t so saints-damned sanctimonious about it. Where was he from, anyway? With that hair she’d swear he was a Gautier loose end just like her.

The rest of the lecture would have captured her attention if it wasn’t all stuff she’d heard before. But now that it was in front of her again, she thought back to a problem she’d discussed with Tomai in private: what about Crests that don’t grant special powers? Tomai was convinced that every Crestbearer had some kind of beneficial power conferred on them by their Crest, but that sometimes it was just unknown or difficult to discern. Even so, Lienna had trouble believing she had any special power. Such a thing would have come in pretty handy as a kid, so wouldn’t whatever it was have “activated” then? Maybe she had one of those bullshit “ungoverned” powers that only came out when it felt like it, and none of her prior troubles apparently made the cut. She supposed she’d find out if her dreams started predicting the future instead of replaying the past.

She raised her hand anyway, but this time, her question was directed at both professors. “So if this is about Crests, then what's with Lysander’s comment about getting injured? Did you round us up to research us or something?” The look on her face said it all; she wasn’t a fan of the idea, and Lysander had another asshole coming if he thought he was going to get one hair out of her without a fight.

April 13th


Pushing through the mirror, Emi gasped as the familiar sensation of change enveloped her; her uniform, once trim and neat, fell away into a white empire dress that floated around her, and all over her skin, unseen by her but announcing their presence all the same, crawled vibrant tattoos of lotus blossoms, moving subtly as if in a breeze. The air was different from the changing room, more still and stifling, and the large room she’d apparently emerged into echoed loudly with the concussive sounds of bouncing balls and thumping feet.

The foreboding environment didn’t seem to deter her, however, and the first thing she did upon stepping into the Other Side was stretch out her hand, where a card bearing the Moon arcana sparked to life.

“Euryphaessa, on the lookout!”

Emi crushed the card in her palm, and at once a swarm of black-and-white butterflies burst out in a blaze of cyan flames, dispersing like mist into every corner of the space until they were hardly noticeable.

For Emi, the effect was like taking a bag off her head. In an instant, her awareness of her surroundings multiplied exponentially; having previously gauged the size of the room by sound, she now knew its precise boundaries, was acutely aware of its occupants and their exhausted behaviour, noted the balcony and the doorway, and pinpointed each of her companions. But more than that, she could tell the dispositions of their Shadow companions, that there were more rooms beyond the gymnasium they were currently in, and most importantly, that something big and menacing was waiting for them at the end of it all.

The awareness was almost overwhelming, having been away from it for so long, but at the same time it was only now that Emi remembered how completely blind, deaf and numb she was in the real world compared to the Other Side.

It felt fantastic to be back.

Remembering why she was there in the first place, Emi stopped revelling in her reclaimed power and returned her attention to the group. She had missed whatever was said prior as her senses recalibrated, but she did tune in for the very end - including Hinari-kun’s nervous questioning.

“No,” she replied confidently, taking a few more steps into the room. She zeroed her attention on the Shadows running laps, noting their attention was on something other than her companions, but that something dangerous lurked underneath.

“They don’t want to be disturbed. They’ll get hostile if we mess with them, but if we sneak around them and leave them alone, they shouldn’t be a problem.” She glanced back to her companions, now notably better at pinpointing exactly where they were. “There are five rooms in this dungeon; this one, and four more. Something big is waiting for us at the end of it.” She shook her head at Hinari-kun. “There is no outside. The only way out is through.”

Despite the serious tidings, her tone was nothing of the sort; in fact, Emi was genuinely struggling to contain her glee at finally getting inside the mirror again. ‘Feeling’ around the room, as she called it, for any thread of evidence that her friends had been nearby, a shockingly familiar presence practically shouted out to her from the middle of the room. It was really a miracle she’d missed it - she must have been a little out of practice with Euryphaessa’s senses. The discovery made her forget all about the shadows, the dungeon and the foreboding presence at the end of it.

“Mineri..?”

Emi gasped, her Euryphaessa senses confirming it was true. It wasn’t a perfect match - a little fuzzy around the edges, so to speak - but even if she was a little rusty, there was no mistaking the leader of their little band, the one who started it all, and the one who would hopefully lead Emi to the rest of their lost friends.

“Mineri!” she exclaimed again, running up to the girl and pulling her into a hug. The tattoos all over her body rippled, the lotus flowers falling away to be replaced by cherry blossoms. “Oh, I knew you were alive! You sent me those signs and I knew! Are you alright? What happened?? Where is everyone else?!”




April 13th


“Really?!” Ueno jumped to her feet after Hinari, but while he seemed alarmed, she was ecstatic. “That’s Mineri-chan’s house! Oh, this has to be a sign!”

Her cheerfulness was a shock even to her own senses, a stark contrast to the mood of the rest of the room. And despite the foreboding concept, Emi was no less excited for Hinari’s mention of getting dragged into the mirror. “Do you think so? Excellent! she exclaimed in delight. She wouldn’t say fights with Shadows were fun, but she had enough experience that they no longer felt like the death sentence they made themselves out to be – especially not now that she had new companions to stand beside her.

I’ll find you yet! she thought to herself, wondering if William and Mineri, through whatever weird dream magic they were using, could hear her.

Hoshino spoke up then, further confirming her suspicions. Emi couldn’t believe what she was hearing; at long last, finally some concrete proof that she wasn’t crazy! She had been getting signs from her friends, they were still out there somewhere. And now she had a solid lead!

"Ueno-senpai," Hinari’s voice sounded from a little farther away, his somber tone cutting through Emi’s haze of blind optimism. "What- What's the point of all this? Persona. What is it?"

Emi’s excitement fled her then, the tone of Hinari’s voice and the vibe emanating from him making her feel a little guilty. She hadn’t noticed how nervous he got. Maybe it was insensitive to celebrate so soon. After all her time searching and all her experience with this crazy parallel world, she didn’t consider just how scary this all must be for him.

She sighed, twining her hands in front of her. “I’m sorry, Hinari-kun. I wish I could tell you. When it was me and my friends, we thought it was to root out corruption wherever we found it. We felt like characters in a show, vanquishing evil and bringing light to the shadows – we even called ourselves the Torch Bearers. She chuckled darkly, the irony of their childish notions not lost on her. “But clearly, we were wrong. And now… I don’t know. All this stuff with William is as new to me as it is to you. I don’t know anything about contracts or butterflies or the Velvet—”

Emi’s eyes went wide. “The Velvet Room! I forgot!” she exclaimed, reaching out for whoever was closest. “If you’re dreaming of William, you must be dreaming of the Velvet Room too. And the music that plays there – that was Mineri’s song! She used to hum it all the time, and she'd only ever say that she heard it in a dream.

Of course! She’d thought of this before, but now she was certain! Mineri must be connected to all this Velvet Room contract nonsense – and if ‘Mira’ frequented the place too, then she must know something!

Suddenly the door creaked, and Emi felt another living presence in the room. It was strange; small but insistent, she didn’t think it was a person, but it announced itself too loudly to be some common pest. A meow identified the presence as a cat. Was that the one Hoshino mentioned? It must be – no normal animal had a presence that screamed Persona.

Emi couldn’t follow its movements by sound, but she didn’t have to. As soon as the mirror was permeated, it was like someone opened a door leading out to a typhoon, the new passage in the room unmistakable to Euryphaessa’s lingering senses. Emi’s heart jumped into her throat, and when nothing came from the mirror to grab her, she approached on her own, reaching out an exploratory hand.

It passed through the mirror unimpeded.

“Ha—!” an astounded sound, like a laugh mixed with a gasp, escaped her throat, and tears pricked at the corners of her eyes. Finally!

She turned back to the boys, smiling. “Come on then, I’ll protect you!”

April 13th


Emi listened hungrily as the boys explained themselves, slowly sinking onto the bench Hinari had tripped over. It was a bizarre experience, their descriptions of events being at once intensely familiar and strangely foreign. Shadows popping out of mirrors and dragging people in she was familiar with, but all this butterfly stuff, the cats, and William were all as new to her as they seemed to be to the boys.

When “Hoshino”, as Mori referred to him, finished his piece, Emi was silent for a moment, gripping her knees as she thought through all they’d told her. How much should she disclose? Her initial thought was everything – maybe they’d have some idea what happened to her friends if they had all the information. But did spilling it all risk scaring them away? Surely not; they’d seen the horrors on the Other Side and still came back for more, they could handle it. Right?

Not wanting to wait too long to find out, Emi decided to err on the side of more information. But for all her enthusiasm, her tone started out measured, almost somber.

“Thank you for telling me all this,” she began. “And let me be the first to say that… I’m sorry. I know firsthand how awful it is to be faced with Shadow, and now all this responsibility has been heaped on you that you never asked for. You probably feel like freaks, or like you’re crazy – at least, that’s how I felt before I found others like me.” She sighed.

“I should explain. You’ve probably guessed it by now, but I’m like you – Awakened. I have a Persona, and I’ve also fought Shadows on the other side of the mirror. In fact, my friends and I used to make a habit of it.” Emi chuckled, though the sound was weighed down with melancholy. “And I think I should take some responsibility here, too. That ‘demon woman’ you mentioned – she sounds familiar to me. I can’t tell you exactly why, but I know she was important. I think… I think my friends and I were trying to… track something down…?”

Suddenly, Emi pitched forward, hands clutching the sides of her head in evident distress. “But I can’t— remember!” She spat, frustrated. “It’s so important, but I try and I try and it’s all just a blur…”

She drew a shaky breath, blinking back tears as she regained her composure. She hugged herself, her wounds freshly opened now that there was finally someone to whom she could tell the full story.

“I’m sorry. I should start from the beginning.” Emi took a slow, deep breath, stretching out the tension in her chest before launching into her explanation. “Like I said, I have a Persona. But I wasn’t the only person at Hinotori who had one – or even the first. There were five others – Mineri-chan, Makoto-kun, Hanami-chan, Reiji-san, and Kudan-kun. Maybe you knew some of them; Reiji-san is Nakano-san’s older brother, and Hanami-chan was going to be the student council president this year. Anyway, we all had Personae, and together we spent most of last summer rooting out corruption and slaying Shadows as a team. But then… well, you all heard about the fires.”

Emi’s hands twisted the hem of her uniform skirt as memories of the wreckage came rushing back, the smell of smoke and soot as clear as if she were standing right in front of it. She shook her head. “Everyone insists they’re dead, but that can’t be the case. Some lousy fire isn’t enough to kill a single one of them, mark my words. But that leaves the question: what happened to them? And why did whatever it was let me escape?”

She shook her head, reaching to massage her temple. “My memory of that night is hazy – I know we were on the Other Side, and I think we’d finally found something important. I think there was a fight… but then the next thing I knew, I was in my house and my parents were telling me my friends were dead.”

Emi looked up at last, fixing a look of unexpected optimism in the boys’ direction. “And that’s why what you’ve told me is so important. You say you met William in the flesh, in what used to be a burned out house? Can you tell me which street that house is on?” The question was aimed at Hoshino (or at least, in his general direction), and then she turned where she thought the others were. “See – notwithstanding exceptional circumstances – we always accessed the Other Side through a mirror in Mineri-chan’s house on Akaitori, not super far from here. Obviously, hers was one of the houses that burned down. Ever since, I haven’t been able to cross over into the Other Side at all. But then William’s dreams came, and I swear I saw – well, ‘saw’,” she made air quotes, “I don’t know how to explain it but trust me – I saw Mineri on the stage. Then William comes back and tells me ‘the previous denizen of the stage’ has ‘returned to my world’, and I’m inclined to believe him. If your mystery cat woman is familiar with William and the Other Side, maybe she knows something about my friends’ whereabouts.”

Emi blinked a few times, not sure if anything she said sounded remotely sane or if these boys, even with all their knowledge, would write her off as crazy like everyone else and back out of there, never to be found again. And there was still so much more to say, and so much she felt she needed to tell the boys – about Shadows, about Personae, about everything – but she figured it was best to let them catch their breath. “Am I making sense? Forgive me – I didn't think I'd ever find somebody I could tell all of this to.”


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