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1 mo ago
Current It low key still amazes me sometimes that I met my fiancé on this site lol. Dreams do come true xD.
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3 mos ago
The love she gives is unlike anything my heart ever believed this world could offer. The love she is owed is my purpose, and it is my honor to fulfill such an oath. My heart is yours forever.
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7 mos ago
It's time
10 mos ago
I'm halfway between "I'm overwhelmed with the 3 RP's I'm doing" and "Everyday I browse the site for more, because I HUNGER!!!!!"
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1 yr ago
"Rebellions are built on hope"
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Bio

Help, it's again!

Most Recent Posts

Guys I'm so excited that we're kicking this off!!!!!!!!


Time: Evening
Location: Banquet Dining Hall
Mention: @JJ Doe Hala, @Tpartywithzombi Ariella
Attire: A Suit Fit For A True Artist



Milo's hand remained where Hala had placed it, the weight of their touch fitting so naturally into the crook of his arm it might have been stitched there. Their voice curled through the air like smoke from the finest of bespoke blends that Sorian’s Gentleman’s Cigar Shop had to offer, thick with heat and indulgence, and Milo breathed it in with visible pleasure.

“You make it terribly difficult to stay humble,” he said, the words soft and amused, delivered like a secret shared between them. “Good thing I’ve never been particularly fond of modesty to begin with.”

He let his gaze drift lazily across the room, a man surveying a canvas, not with detachment but with wonder. There was no rush to leave Hala’s side. They were a vision, one daring the world to prepare for their trouble, and he took his time admiring the boldness of the lines and the richness of their colors as though they were one of his masterpieces.

But then something caught his attention.

A sound, a hush, a note shifting in the harmony of the room. His head tilted, just slightly. His eyes moved, not searching but already knowing where to look… Because it wasn’t the first time he had looked her way that evening.

He saw Ariella.

The wine tipped, a crimson stain blossoming across polished porcelain and delicate silk, and her gasp fluttered up like a lace curtain stirred by the wind. But beneath the performance, beneath the soft, sweet cooing and fluttering fingers, Milo saw something raw. Something sharp and silent and absolutely breathtaking.

The corner of his mouth lifted, though his smile had changed. It was still warm, still beautiful, still lit from within by whatever strange sun seemed to shine through him. But now there was weight behind it. The kind of weight found in oil paintings that stare back at you long after you’ve turned away.

“Forgive me,” he murmured to Hala, his voice still dressed in silk but touched now by something more akin to need. “Something divine is happening just across the room. And I do so hate to miss the moment history begins.”

His hand slipped from theirs with a softness that bordered on reverent. His fingertips lingered as if reluctant, but he began to pull away from them before turning back to speak.

“Don’t you dare believe this is goodbye,” he said, his smile returning in full as he looked back at them one last time. “I will see you again, lovely. Perhaps in a place and time that belongs only to us.” He raised Hala’s hand to his lips and pressed a decadent kiss to their flesh, one laced with the promise of more to come.

Then he moved back toward his seat, the crowd parting for him not just out of courtesy but as though they had no choice. Each step he took was pulling the thread and closing the distance between himself and the chaotic beauty of Ariella. As he walked, his mind drifted to enjoy how deliciously close they had gotten that morning at his art gallery…and how close he wish and planned to get to her tonight.



❗❗❗❗❗FLASHBACK ALERT❗❗❗❗❗

❗❗❗❗❗FLASHBACK ALERT❗❗❗❗❗





Time: Evening
Location: Banquet Hall
Mentions / Interactions: @Apex Sunburn Sjandehk @Tae Kalliope @princess Charlotte / Calbert @Helo Callum @ReusableSword Roman @Tpartywithzombi Ariella




Cassius moved through the hall beside Kalliope, her hand in his, the earlier heat of their exchange still lingering on his skin. But his gaze was elsewhere now, drawn without permission.

It had started as just a glance, but soon became his entire focus…Charlotte.

She sat at her table, wine glass untouched, fingers knotted tight in her lap. And beside her, too damn close, was Sjan-dehk. The man leaned in, speaking low, saying god knows what. Comforting her when he couldn’t. The man’s fingers touched her neck, just under the jaw, and Charlotte… she didn’t pull away. She let him, and even smiled at him.

Something shifted behind Cassius’s eyes. It wasn’t anger, not quite. But something not too far from it. Thicker, like tar in the lungs.

He didn’t say a word, but it didn’t matter because that’s when he heard them.

“You could say that something meant to be a gentle caress out of passion could have been a bit faster than one would like sometimes…”

The words slithered through the air like the most unwelcomed of bullshit. He froze mid-step, his jaw tightening before he even fully understood what was happening.

Every word Roman spoke after that only made it worse. The smugness. The smile in his voice. Like what he said wasn’t acid poured onto Violet’s skin.Then came Calbert, and the quiet dropped away.

“You have just informed a room full of royals and dignitaries that my daughter… was struck by you… And—how did you phrase it? Ah yes, ‘gentle caress out of passion.’”

Cassius turned slightly, his body shifting to face the table without thinking. The sound of the fork being set down was too calm. Too deliberate. He could feel the heat behind it. His father’s voice rolled out like thunder at the beginning of a deadly storm.

Cassius didn’t move yet, but that’s when Violet spoke.

“I find myself less interested in choosing between the two of them…”

Her voice was quieter than Calbert's, but it rang louder in his chest. She wasn’t afraid, nor meek. She was absolutely steady in her words.

Then came Kalliope’s voice to meet his ears.

“You should go stand beside her.”

He blinked, gaze turning to her.

“She might not ask, but she needs you. And you… you need to be with your family. At least for this.”

He gave her hand a light squeeze, not just an acknowledgment that she was right, but also a quiet thanks for the comfort and the loyalty she had shown him. That would always mean something. Always.

Then, as though the tension in his shoulders and the raging waters of his mind were never there…he made his way to stand next to his sister and the rest of the Damien family. Just in time for Violet’s words to escalate.

“...I am Lady Violet Damien, and if anyone here has forgotten what that name means…” She leaned forward, just slightly, her voice lowering “…I invite you to continue.”

For that moment…For that night…For better or for worse, the Damiens stood as a united front.

It wasn’t long after Violet finished her words that Callum stepped in to try his hand somewhere it didn’t belong.

“Count Damien, amusing you should speak of houses burning while yours sits aflame. Who else here can say they’ve failed to secure their estate from common criminals? Ransacked one day. Pickpockets at your masquerade the next. Oh, and did I not just see your bastard assault one of my father’s esteemed guests?

A cold smirk crossed the lips of that very bastard as he listened to the rest.

It was unfortunate, really. Cas had seen so much potential in the Prince, unlike in his pretentious dick of a brother. Guess even the rotten apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

Cassius relished the moment to speak.

“What humors me, little prince, is this…” he said, his voice low, stripped of warmth, each word weighed like it had been forged in fire. “I’m a bastard. Unwelcome here by many. A stain on the family line. A walking reminder of everything most fathers would try to bury. And a real pain in the ass at that.”

He took a step closer.

“And even still…” He didn’t blink, didn’t breathe…Just stared. “My father loves me more than our King has ever even pretended to love you.”

One heartbeat of silence followed, but no one dared break it until he continued.

“That’s the difference between you and me, Callum. I was born a problem, and still, here I stand…as his chosen son. And you? You’re just acting like a mouthpiece for a crown that’s too ashamed to be anywhere near your head.”

His smile grew as his words flowed like the richest of whiskeys.

“And speaking of shame,”

Cas’s gaze burned even brighter as it met Roman’s eyes.

“You hit my sister.”

The words landed heavier than any before them.

“Let me be clear, Ravenwood. Just in case my father’s words aren’t enough. You don’t touch Violet Damien in passion. You don’t touch her in rage. You don’t touch her when drunk, when sober, when dreaming, or when dying.”

Cassius let his hand reach up to gently squeeze the arm of his sister. Even if she didn't like him, she wasn't alone. Not anymore.

“In fact, you big son of a bitch…You never touch her again.”

His words might as well have been daggers aimed at the man beast’s heart.

“Because if you do…I swear to the cunts above you call gods, and to the very king sitting right here in front of us both, that you won’t even make it to your little trial.”


Ezekiel @Helo, Scratch / Vallena @Apex Sunburn, Callandra @princess

The pipe hits the floor with a ringing clatter. For a heartbeat, nothing happens.

Then…

The screech erupts, feral and bloodthirsty, bouncing off the walls like a beast in flight. The griffon freezes, head whipping toward the sound with predatory precision.

A heartbeat later, the slime hits. Brilliant purples and flickering teals burst across crimson hoods and lacquered armor, lighting the assassins like cursed stars.

The griffon screams.

It launches with terrifying speed, wings blasting debris aside, talons reaching. It doesn't hesitate. It doesn't care who you are. It saw prey. Now it sees rivals.

Two Swords flickers into view atop a crate, just as Scratch's bullet finds her.

The round hits hard. It punches into her shoulder with a flash of arcane light and a crack of force that sends her spinning mid-teleport. She reappears mid-air, faltering ...crashing through a hanging tarp and slamming into a stack of barrels that caves inward under the impact. Crates explode around her in a wooden burst. She doesn’t rise. At least not right away.

Furnace, caught in the middle of a glowing glyph, falters. The griffon’s cry throws his balance, and the final rune collapses into ash beneath his fingertips. The floor around him seethes with unspent heat, curling with smoke. His hands shake, magic sputtering.

Sparkler does not flinch. He raises his sickle, the blade glowing red-hot now. As the griffon bears down, he meets it. Metal clashes with beak and talon, a sound like steel tearing through thunder. He slides back from the impact but stays upright, his body bracing, his empty eye sockets glaring through the haze.

In that one instant, all three assassins are off balance. And more important perhaps, for the briefest moment, they are no longer focused on you. Chaos reigns.

You have time. Seconds, maybe, but its enough to make a difference.

What do you do?




Time: Evening
Location: Banquet Hall
Mentions / Interactions: @Tae Kali, @princess Lottie, @Apex Sunburn Sjan-dehk






Kalliope’s words hit him with the kind of imagery that tugged instinct out of muscle memory. He leaned in without thinking, letting that wicked little smirk settle fully across his face as his hand drifted lazily to the wall behind her, drawing them just a little closer.

“Hard candy,” he echoed, voice low and warm like the press of skin to velvet. “Hard liquor...”

His gaze dipped briefly, grazing her lips. He leaned in, his voice dropped into something that could barely be called speaking.

“As hard as things were the other night.” His eyes traveled down her body and then down his own…just about to his belt.

Then, something in his expression flickered.

Just the tiniest twitch of his brow, the subtlest shift in his gaze. Like a sound only he had heard.

His eyes moved, almost against his will, scanning the room... and stopped.

Charlotte.

She was seated again, her posture a little too stiff, her hand clutched around her wineglass like it was the only solid thing left in the world. He caught the tension in her jaw, the paleness in her cheeks. And beside her, Sjan-dehk.

Cassius froze, just for a second. Something inside him turned. Not jealousy. Not anger. Just... that feeling. The one that felt like waking up underwater. Heavy and cold. All he could think about now was how something was clearly bothering Lottie, and how he couldn’t fight the urge to make sure that she was okay.

His gaze lingered for a breath too long, then he turned back to Kalliope, the grin on his face dimming enough for perhaps just her to notice.

He cleared his throat softly.

“We should probably go find our seats,” he said, voice still warm, but quieter now, and far less playful.

He moved without waiting, offering her a hand like a gentleman even as something behind his eyes gave him away. Cassius Vael, wrapped in silk, sharp as ever, perfectly composed... and already gone.
Pulled across the room like the north pole of a magnet being drawn to its south.







The sudden, violent shake of the ship caught the man off guard. The corpse beneath his fingers, still cold and lifeless, trembled as the explosion rocked the vessel, sending ripples through the air. His gaze flickered for a moment, irritation flashing across his features, the kind one might have when a delicate ritual is disrupted. He set the severed head back into the bag with a care that was almost painful, like a father tucking a child into bed.

"How inconvenient," he muttered under his breath, his voice low and controlled, tinged with a quiet fury. "I was just getting comfortable." He stood, straightening his coat with an elegance that belied the chaos around him. The tension in the air was palpable, but it wasn’t enough to ruffle him.

He stepped swiftly toward the door, his every movement measured and deliberate. The sound of screams and hurried footsteps echoed down the hallway as he made his way to the stairs, his mind already calculating how best to deal with the unruly rabble. But as he exited his room and turned toward the deck, he paused.

The screams of the passengers echoed off the walls, muffled by the violence that erupted in every corner. The man stood in the doorway of his quarters, his pale eyes cold as he watched the carnage unfold.

One assailant stabbed a woman in the back, the blade sinking deep into her spine as she collapsed with a cry. He didn’t even flinch. Another attacker, taller and broader, moved methodically, his strikes clean and precise as he cut down a man trying to shield his family. The blood pooled on the floor like a macabre painting, staining the polished wood beneath them.

His sharp eyes narrowed, gaze flickering over the attackers. Black and red, the colors of Karrnath—the very colors of his nation. But something was wrong. The red was too… bold. Too brash. They wore it like a parody, a mockery of what it meant to be Karrnathi. It was obvious to him that these attackers were not of his nation, but the similarity in color could lead to misunderstanding…to assumptions…An insult, either way in his mind.

The man’s gaze narrowed as another assassin swung a blade down on a child who had been running for help, the innocent cry silenced with a swift blow. His fingers twitched at his sides, his body still, but the storm inside him was building.

The assassins, so caught up in their bloodlust, hadn’t noticed him standing there in the shadows. They were sloppy, wasteful, like children playing a dangerous game. His lip curled with disdain. It wasn’t until the last scream of a fallen passenger echoed down the hall that he moved. The man stepped forward, his movements fluid, like a predator finally closing in on its prey. His hand twitched, summoning the dark tendrils of necromantic energy that would carve a path through the fools in his way. The time for observation was over.

"You picked the wrong colors for your cute little costumes." he sneered, disgust rippling through his chest. "A careless mistake that shall cost your lives, and more." His voice turned bitter. "It's offensive."

His hand clenched around the dark, arcane energy swirling at his fingertips. With a twist of his wrist, he drew forth the shadowy tendrils of necromantic magic. The hallway darkened as he moved with grace, his footfalls silent. The assassins caught in his path barely had time to react before he swept them aside like cobwebs in a storm.

A flick of his hand. The air shimmered with dark energy as the bones of the fallen assassins were ripped from their bodies, twisted and pulled into a swirling vortex around him. He watched with a detached interest as the bones hovered, spinning and slicing through the air, like jagged daggers eager to taste blood. His eyes gleamed with a twisted satisfaction.

"How fitting," he muttered, the bones hovering just inches from his fingertips. With another gesture, he sent them flying down the corridor, their sharp edges finding their marks with deadly precision. The screams were brief, cut off as they were pierced through the throat, the chest, and the limbs.

He stepped over the fallen bodies with the same poise and calculated elegance as he had when dining, his coat flowing behind him like the cloak of a king surveying his kingdom. As he made his way to the deck, he saw the battle unfolding below, his eyes locking on a lone figure. The Warforged, his glacial blue sword flashing as it cleaved through the air and through one of the would-be assassins. The man couldn't help but smirk.

"A fine weapon," he murmured to himself with begrudging approval. "But how… pedestrian."

The wind whipped around him as he stepped onto the deck, his feet barely making a sound as he floated above the railing. With a flick of his wrist, the bones around him flew towards another assailant, sharp as the teeth of a beast. They tore through the air like missiles, embedding themselves deep into the assassin’s body in a grotesque, fatal dance. The figure collapsed, crumpling to the deck in a heap of shattered bone and lifeless flesh.

The man floated down, his feet gently touching the ground near the bar. He straightened his coat, adjusting his tie with a calmness that seemed to mock the chaos around him. He took a moment to survey the carnage, his gaze lingering on his most recent victim, now reduced to little more than a human pin cushion.

"How dare they," he said softly to Wendel, Arya, Menzai, and Gears…his voice laced with satisfaction. "To interrupt one’s vacation is a crime fit for a brutal death."

Liana Vestra


Mentions/Interactions: Phia @princess, Meiyu @Tae, Talis @Oso


The moment Phia lunged, there was a flicker behind Liana’s eyes like a master watching a wild animal bare its fangs for the first time.

The girl was fast. Sloppy, yes, unrefined and screaming with raw instinct, but there was something undeniably alive in the way she moved. Her staff came crashing forward like the branch of a storm-tossed tree, unpredictable and deeply personal. What Liana hadn't expected in all of that erratic movement was the level of skill underneath...and when Phia's staff caught the side of Liana’s head just enough to pull her slightly off her centerline, she couldn't help but smirk.

Not enough to wound. But enough to impress.

“Oh,” Liana murmured, barely above the hiss of their motion, “seems you fight as well as you bleed, little bitch.”

She parried the next blow with a sharp tilt of her forearm, bracing one dagger against the length of her own wrist as it met the staff mid-swing. The resulting crack of impact rang through the tiled chamber like a note struck too hard on a piano, and it reverberated through both Liana and Phia’s bones painfully. The force of it sent her sliding half a step to the side, heels dragging briefly across the tile as Phia bore down on her with more attacks in mind.

Then came the second danger.

The illusions arrived like smoke trails twisting out of the corners of her vision. Half-formed silhouettes, mimicries of Phia’s fury, began closing from multiple directions, and for just the smallest fragment of a heartbeat, Liana hesitated as she was taken by surprise. She moved to strike one of the attackers, just to have her blade move through it as though it were a ghost. Then came analysis, recognition, and then…she adjusted.

Shadows. Projection. Clever.

Unfortunately for her, that was just enough of an error to give the caster her chance to strike.

Meiyu’s blade was already in motion by the time Liana turned. She caught it in her periphery, just a glint of steel at first, but there was a whisper of something slick on its edge that gave it away. Not just sharp as a razor’s edge, but poisoned as well.

Meiyu closed the distance like a dancer, her strike coming in an arc aimed precisely where Phia’s chaos had just created an opening.

Liana had to admit, It was…well-timed. Too well-timed.

The dagger sliced across the outer edge of Liana’s ribs, drawing a thin but precise line of blood that bloomed dark against the black of her tunic. She hissed...not in pain, but in disappointment. The moment was not a loss, but there was an adjustment.

Her counter was nearly imperceptible.

One of her daggers vanished from her hand in a cloud of black smoke as if it had simply grown bored of being held. Her now free palm snapped forward, fingers curling, and in the same motion she turned her body into Meiyu’s space, close enough to smell the the venom on her blade. Her free hand caught the wrist that had struck her and twisted, just slightly, just enough to send a message through the nerves.

And with that, she pushed hard enough to send Meiyu back into the blur of illusions she had conjured, causing her own magic to flicker as movement and reflection collapsed into one another.

The move gave her a window of opportunity to turn her focus back to Phia.

She twisted low beneath another wild swing, letting her body pivot with a grace that seemed impossible in such close quarters, then surged upward in a clean vertical arc, one obsidian dagger reversing in her grip as she brought the hilt toward Phia’s injured arm with brutal intent. It was not meant to slice. It was meant to punish. To shatter the rhythm.

If it landed, it would hit like a flash of lightning at the nerve center.

She followed it with a high kick toward Phia’s midsection, a movement both graceful and cruel, meant to drive her back and break her stance without delivering a killing blow. Liana’s every motion was precise, every breath measured, every strike meant to teach.

They were both more dangerous than she had first assumed, and so now she moved as if they deserved better.

Her next dagger danced between her fingers before snapping forward in a spinning arc, aimed toward the ceiling...no target, no kill. But as it struck the vent above, the light fixture shattered, casting the room into a flickering, strobe-lit chaos of broken arcane illumination and shadow-play, where perception was now a lie and motion became harder to track.



Ezekiel @Helo, Scratch / Vallena @Apex Sunburn, Callandra @princess


They move like wraiths, cutting through the smoke with a silence that screams louder than any noise could.

One flickers into view with a hiss of displaced air, appearing atop a crate for the briefest moment before vanishing again. With each flicker, she draws closer to Scaerthrynne, teleporting from one stack of wreckage to the next. Her twin blades gleam in the haze, each step a whisper of intent. No footsteps. No sound. Just the sharp scent of ozone and the low hum of magic clinging to her like a second skin. She doesn’t speak. She doesn’t rush. Her gaze is fixed on him ...a predator watching, observing, threatening with her presence, and waiting to strike until the perfect moment.

Another walks through the debris-strewn aisle like a priest at a funeral. Their hand dances with smoke and magic, eyes unseen beneath a blood-red hood, mouth muttering words you can’t quite hear until they are in your bones. But then ...they stop. A sudden stillness overtakes them, and they drop to one knee, fingers etching sigils into the floor with liquid fire. Magic begins to pool in the air around them, warping the space with heat and pressure, building toward something unknown.

The third steps forward with slow inevitability, dragging a brutal sickle along the metal floor. Sparks bloom with every step, and with each spark, you swear you see glimpses of your worst mistakes reflected in the gleam. They come for Ezekiel, eyes locked, movements steady. This one does not linger, instead they approach like the ending of a sentence ...already written, already brought to an end.

You all have time to take action. What do you do?



Bastion

Race: Warforged
Class: Warrior
Location: Airship; Top Deck - Bar
Interactions/Mentions: Arya @Potter, Wendel @FunnyGuy, Menzai @samreaper
Equipment:

Attire:
Etched and weathered plating with bronze accents.
Fitted harness for carrying supplies.
Worn scarf
Gold Balance: 44 gold
Injuries:
None, but signs of past battle damage remain.





Bastion’s gaze shifted gently toward Arya. She’d said her bird was like a piece of the sky… and that he might like one too. That he wasn’t alone.

“Thank you,” he said quietly, his voice smaller than usual. “You are very kind.”

His fingers lingered over the painted sun on his chest, warm with thought, when Wendel’s voice rolled in.

“You have me for the time being. For all of today at best.”

Bastion turned, optics flickering faintly at the corners. There was something real in those words. Something impermanent. Something fleeting. And maybe… that was what made them matter more.

“Then I’m glad it’s today,” he replied simply, but with profound appreciation.

Wendel warned him about birds and shiny things in a hushed, conspiratorial tone...something about poop. Bastion tilted his head. He didn’t quite understand the logic, but it was offered with kindness, and that was enough. He nodded solemnly, committing the odd wisdom to memory.

Then Menzai spoke.

“To have the sky as your domain? What better gift could one ask for?”

Bastion looked up. The sky stretched wide and gold above them, bright with sun and promise. He didn’t need wings to understand the beauty in that. He thought of his gifted scarf. Of the sun painted on his chest. Of the people here beside him. These, too, were gifts.

But then the world changed.

It started as a tremble underfoot...barely a whisper, at first. Barstools rattled. Glasses shook in their places. Conversations faltered into silence.

The sound grew, swelling from below like something ancient and wrong awakening.

Then it struck.

BOOM.

Light and sound tore through the deck in a single breathless instant. The Stormrider groaned beneath them, bucking as lanterns swung wildly overhead. Bastion moved without thinking...placing himself in front of Arya, arm outstretched, shielding her from the blast.

Smoke followed, thick and black and curling upward from the stairwell like a living thing.

That’s when they came.

Eight of them, stepping out of the smoke like they belonged to it. Crimson hoods. Blank masks. Blades gleaming at their sides. The air around them bent, pulled tight, like gravity itself answered to them. They didn’t speak, they didn’t need to.

Bastion didn’t move. Not yet. His eyes scanned...calculating, tracking, assessing.

Then a man bolted for the stairs.

He didn’t make it. A flicker of steel. A body hitting the floor. No words. No hesitation.

And then it all fell apart.

Screams broke loose. Tables overturned. Glass shattered. Panic surged like a wave through the tavern. Bastion focused in on one of them...a tall figure closing in on a couple by the railing. The man, small but brave, stepped in front of his wife.

The blade slashed downward with sickening violence. The man collapsed, his blood painting the deck and the very flesh and face of his poor wife.

The woman screamed, and that was all it took. Bastion rose from his seat with singular purpose.

No roar, no battle cry, just motion...slow and purposeful. The kind of movement that didn’t need announcing. Like something inside him had turned back on. Like something long-buried had been told to wake.

“Everyone,” he said, his voice calm, unwavering, “find safety. Now.”

He walked forward. Steady. Certain. The way only someone who’s done this before walks. The way someone who was created for moments like this walks.

One of the assassins looked up.

Too late.

With a low mechanical hum, Bastion’s left palm split open...plates retracting to reveal the gleaming core of his Titan Chain.

And then it fired.

The chain screamed through the air like a whip, a blur of metal and intent, slamming into the assassin’s chest with a brutal thud.

Bastion pulled.

The chain reeled in with a grinding snarl, heavy links clinking against themselves as they devoured the distance. The assassin was yanked forward, limbs flailing, dragged across the deck like a marionette with its strings violently snapped.

Bastion’s eyes flared brighter now, glowing with cold clarity.

“You will cease your destruction or you will cease to exist.”

He wasn’t shouting. It wasn’t rage. It was a statement. A fact. A warning for all of them.

The assassin struggled against the pull, heels scraping the deck, cloak whipping behind him. It didn’t matter.

Bastion advanced.

Each step thudded like a war drum. Deliberate. Inevitable. His focus sharp enough to cut through stone. There was no emotion in his eyes. No fury. Just the memory of what he was made to be.

His right arm reached back...gripping the hilt of a blade sheathed along his spine.

It slid free with a hiss of frost.

The weapon shimmered with an unnatural chill, as if carved from frozen dusk. Forged from cerulean ice that refused to melt, the blade left streaks of cold across the deck as it passed, steam curling where it touched warm wood.

The assassin was nearly upon him now.

Bastion raised the sword with calm precision. There would be no more warnings. Just the clean, quiet promise of the end.

And then he struck.

Hard.

And final.


Location: Hiding in the Stall For Dear Life
Interaction: @Tae Meiyu @princess Phia




Talis clung to her satchel like if she held it tightly enough none of this would be real. Her knees were still drawn up against her chest but even tighter now, breath coming in shallow, shaking waves, the cold of the metal stall seat biting into her legs as the sounds outside twisted into something dark and sharp.

When Liana spoke, Talis froze. She didn’t recognize the voice, but the intention was clear.

Then came the response. It was the sweet, strange, wonderful girl, who had smiled at her and called her lovely and promised to walk beside her, as one. And now she was out there, standing between someone dangerous and a girl she barely knew.

Talis shut her eyes tightly.

She was going to die.

Of course she was.

She had known that since the beginning, since the moment she made her choice, since the night she walked out of that lab and sealed every door behind her. She had accepted it. She had made peace with it.

So why did it hurt so much now?

Because you’re a coward, she thought, lips pressed tight against her knees. Because you got scared and you started hoping maybe it wouldn’t come to this. Maybe you’d be lucky. Maybe you’d just disappear and no one would follow.

The sounds outside shifted again. Someone laughed. Someone raised a voice. Someone stepped forward.

Talis gritted her teeth and clutched the satchel tighter, her heart pounding loud enough to drown it all out.

You knew the risks. You did the right thing. You did what no one else would.

Her breathing hitched, and she had to bite her sleeve to stay quiet.

Even if they kill you, even if they burn you for it, you were right. You were right. You were…

But even that truth could not stop the tears.

And more than anything, more than fear or regret or the thousand ways she had imagined this moment, she found herself thinking of Phia. That strange little pink-haired hurricane of a girl who had offered her kindness without hesitation.

Please don’t let her get hurt. She doesn’t deserve this. She was only trying to help.





Mentions/Interactions: Phia @princess, Meiyu @Tae, Talis @Oso

From the center of the room, Liana tilted her head as Phia stepped forward and leveled that staff between them. A flash of pulsing blossoms curled into the wood and the girl’s voice was steady. Bold. Firm.

“You won’t be meeting anyone until you explain yourself. And until you do, you're not taking another step.”

Then came the warning about the beans. The line landed like a strange little stone tossed into deep water.

Liana blinked once…And then she smiled.

Not the cold smirk from before. This one was slower. Amused even, but still dangerous.

Her voice when it came was soft as velvet and smooth as blood over glass.

“You know… I truly admire conviction,” she said gently, letting her gaze fall on Phia. “So few people in this world still know what it means to stand for something. Even fewer are willing to bleed for it.”

She stepped to the side, only slightly, just enough to change the shape of the tension in the air. Her movements were precise and graceful, the kind of grace that comes from knowing exactly what one is capable of. Her blades remained in her hands but her posture never turned aggressive. Not yet.

Her gaze slid to Meiyu next, assessing and intrigued, a flicker of something like appreciation hiding in the corner of her eye.

“You came for her. That makes her interesting. That makes her mine—at least for now...And as much as I love a good bloodbath, I prefer to know why before the painting begins.”

“And you. Clever girl. You know how this ends and still choose to dance in the fire.” She exhaled with nonchalance. “Very few things impress me. You may count yourselves among them, if only for a moment longer.”

She looked between them now, the two young women standing in her way, one radiant with conviction and the other cloaked in sharp curiosity, and there was something almost reverent in her expression. Almost.

“It really is a shame,” she added, her voice softening further, almost wistful, “that I might have to kill such very pretty girls.”

Then, in that moment, as though she had planned it down to the very second, the explosive blast from the cargo hold erupts. The ship rocks violently from the detonation just as Liana's knives blur into motion.

In a flash of black and silver, she threw her daggers. One towards Phia, the other in Meiyu’s direction. The air cracked as she moved, blades catching the bathroom light as her cloak snapped behind her like a shadow come alive. The space erupted into motion.

The Devil had made her choice.




The time for talk is over. Combat has been initiated. I will reach out to those in this scene so we can discuss and make any necessary rolls before continuing.

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