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Magnus Corvane


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Location: The Black Spire • Time: Dusk

Interactions: N/A • Mentions: N/A

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🚨TRIGGER WARNINGS🚨


Graphic torture & mutilation

Forced familial cannibalism(of blood)

Pregnancy/infant death themes – harm to fetus

Captivity

Severe psychological abuse

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Time: Evening
Location: The Castle Dining Hall
Interactions:@Lava Alckon Farim @Silverpaw Wulfric
Mentions: @Oso Killian
Attire:Dress, Hair



“I was observing the most recent highlight of this banquet.”

Anastasia immediately craned her head to peek back toward the area she’d just floated away from. Her amber eyes scanned the scene—Hafiz, looking like he’d just lost a food fight to a goose; wine, duck, and what was possibly oil glistening across his shirt. Stratya stood nearby, calm as ever, casually petting a smug little puppy. Moments later, Rohit joined her, instantly making it a full-blown puppy party.

Her brows rose. Then her lips curled into a delighted little “o.”

He leaned next to Anastasia’s ear, and whispered with a smirk, “Do you think his owner did it on purpose?”

“You did not abandon Shahzade Farim just to ask me how I am, did you? Since so many people have taken their leave, why do we not find a room for our conversation, as well? If you agree, feel free to lead Shahzade Farim to the beige drawing room. I will join you in a moment.”

Anastasia tilted her head thoughtfully. “Or maybe the dog was just bored to death and needed something to do. Can you blame him?” She gestured subtly toward Hafiz, stifling a giggle. “Honestly, Wulfy, you’ve got to hear that guy talk. So boring. I’d fling myself at a table too if I had to sit through it any longer.”

She gave her brother a cheeky grin. “Poor doggy’s a victim of poor taste in conversation.”

Then she flicked her chin toward Farim. “Naaaah, he’s coming alright. I invited him along.” Her eyes lingered on the sight of Farim whispering something to Hafiz. “He likes to drop spicy little insults in his dad’s ear every few minutes. Had to take care of business first—it’s his thing. Oh, and we both wanted to see you. And talk about Callum. So we can go to the beige room for sure.”

As Wulfric stood, Anastasia popped up beside him with a grin that could’ve lit the room, and two thumbs up in greeting aimed at her parents. Then, she waited in place for Farim to catch up. However, it was then the doors creaked open. The clinking sound came next, and her brows arched the moment she saw him. Her eyes dropped to the chain in his hand, then back up to his eyes. She sat upright, frozen, as the chain dragged behind him like a cursed party favor.

And then the woman appeared.

Bound. Gagged. Barefoot. Dragged like a prize pig.

Anastasia’s mouth fell open, and it hung there. She stared in absolute horror for the entire time. Every bone in her body screamed that something was really wrong, but her brain was having a hard time assigning it a name. She glanced over at her parents, hoping for context, but her mother didn't seem at all concerned. Thus, Anastasia decided that it wasn't anything actually serious. Her eyes narrowed as the man finally spoke. She squinted hard, as if adjusting her vision might help decode whatever theater this was.

The silence of the room thickened, yet in her mind, cogs were spinning frantically. Farim's voice soon found her ear and slowly, she turned toward him. Her voice was low, shaky, and dead serious as she replied:“Okay. I don't know him. And I know I’m not the smartest person here but…” She looked back at the display, eyes wide. “Is this, like… a kink thing?”

“I mean the chains, the theatrics, the floor-length coat? Look I'm all for kinks. I don't yuck others' yums... But in the middle of a banquet is crazy. Even I wouldn't do that.” She gestured subtly, leaning closer as if afraid the man might overhear.

Then, suddenly, she laughed, soft at first, then shnorted.

“Gods. Caesonia's gotten weird.” She shook her head, brushing it off with the same ease she used to ignore most problems. Then she spun on her heel and flashed Farim an exaggerated wink. “Anyway, Wulfy wants to talk. Beige drawing room. "

Before moving, she swept by a side table and grabbed not one but two wine bottles like party favors. With one cradled under each arm, she shot him a grin. “Follow me please!”

She led the way out of the hall, pace light and breezy despite the eerie tension behind them. At the door to the beige drawing room, she paused dramatically and glanced over her shoulder. “Welcome to the beige drawing room." With a smile, Anastasia swung open the door, then looked back to inform Farim, “It’s beige.”




Location: Castle Dining Hall
Interactions: @Lava Alckon Farim @Rodiak Nahir @Potter Kira @Helo Rohit [@Citrus Arms] Stratya @JJ Doe Hala @Oso Killian




The moment her voice rang out, Hafiz stilled with narrowed eyes.

Captain Stratya Durmand had called his name like a challenge, like she had a right to summon him, as though “Grand Vizier Hafiz Kadir” were a title to be barked across a banquet hall like a butcher calling for scraps. The audacity of it crackled in his mind. His name was not meant to be hurled in anger. It was meant to be breathed, cautiously, in reverence or fear. And yet this... soldier, this knight in costume, dared to brandish it like a weapon.

His eyes didn’t move at first. His hands remained clasped, the curve of his mouth untouched by expression. But beneath that mask, the rage bloomed as the foolish woman spoke.

She spoke of laws. Caesonian laws. As if they applied to him. Still, it was a clever attack.
The publicness of it. The theatricality. She had turned him into a villain before an audience, stolen the narrative before he could spin it himself. That alone made his blood run hot.

But worse than her tone, worse than her accusations, was what she had implied: that he, Grand Vizier of Alidasht, should be held to the standards of peasants.

And she used the word disgusting against him? He had killed men for less.

His gaze finally shifted, slow and exacting. His smile remained absent, but his thoughts turned dark and fast as she hurried off to coo at an animal that was not her property.

Taken Nadim as though she had the right. As though the property of a noble house from Alidasht could be seized like some mistreated orphan in the slums. And not just any noble house.

Nadim belonged to Hala.

To Hala Sami, the child of Vali Malik Sami, one of the Sultan’s most loyal and dangerous men. A child he had personally trained, personally protected, and personally invested in.

“My father is the second wisest man in Alidasht, right behind the radiant Sultan, himself. But it is a weak and foolish man who mistakes violence for strength.” Hafiz glared with irritation hearing Rohit's voice and watched as he followed after Stratya. It was... astonishing.

And disappointing in the most specific way.

Because Hafiz had not entirely dismissed Rohit. He had, privately, believed the boy had potential—if he could be shaped. If he could inherit his father’s wisdom rather than just his charm.

But now Hafiz saw it clearly: Rohit wasn’t Navi Amar’s son. He was his shadow. And his shadow would rather stick up for a woman who stole someone's animal rather than his own countrymen.

"Her, disgrace you? " Hafiz’s head turned sharply, the motion too fast, like a scythe through tall grass. His eyes locked on Kira not with shock, but with a seething contempt.

She had spoken as if she mattered. And worse—she had spoken to him as if he did not.

"There have been more rumors and talk of you than her.Throwing that in her face is rude and unnecessary. It goes to show everyone who you are inside. I’m sure the talk of you hitting a dog will be in the paper, so everyone in Caesonia knows who you are,”

"Nahir is ten times the person you will ever be. " Hafiz glanced at his pathetic, trembling niece, who had been unmasked ever so easily, and found himself unconvinced. "Looks like you’re the one flailing in this dinner. How many scandals are you involved in now? Nobody is like you because they don’t want to be; you’re cold, cruel, and lonely. The sands of Alidasht have told tales of your misdeeds, Hafiz, and they’re not good. Nahir will always be better than you.”

Her voice still hung in the air. Rumors? Papers? Lonely? She dared imply he stood beneath his own niece?

Then, ever so slowly, Hafiz tilted his head, a small, venomous smile curling at the corner of his lips before the two of them could quite depart. “Do tell… pet.” The word slipped from his tongue like poison dripped into wine. “Just what rumors?”

He let the question hang in the air, daring her to answer, then began to whisper just for Kira to hear.

“That I am cruel?” he offered very softly into her ear, smiling wider.
“That I do not love?” He chuckled then—low, dry, and humorless.
“That I drink poison for breakfast and slit throats before prayer?”

He straightened slowly, his tone only sharpening. “I do. And I have.”

And now his voice dropped even lower than before.
“Because where I come from, little girl, rumors are not slander.”
“They are warnings.


The sound of his Farim's voice then found his ear before he could say much else. ”What was that about wisdom and restraint again? Shall I have the artisans capture the moment you get an entire room full of potential allies in a frenzy? Come now, even I think you are better than this. A man only rules through fear for as long as people are willing to be afraid. A ruler who feeds ego over humility begets only one thing…rebellion with passion. And passion…. Has killed more empires than it has built. But you knew that already, did you not?” The Grand Vizier did not turn to face him. He did not dignify the interruption with a scowl, nor a sigh. No, he remained still.

Hafiz had bled for his empire. Had whispered nations into obedience, and survived a thousand court intrigues while Farim was still learning to tie his sashes. And now the boy spoke to him as though he were a fool caught mid-tantrum. As though Hafiz Kadir—the Grand Vizier of Alidasht required moral correction from his son?

It was almost funny.

Almost

And like all bright, wayward students, Farim remembered the lecture—but never the lesson.
He spoke now like a critic, not a son. Like a foreign diplomat, not blood. And that, Hafiz would not abide. But Farim had not given Hafiz time to reply as he left rather quickly and there were other matters for Hafiz to attend to now.

A simple, crooking of his finger summoned one of the servants that had been brought along for his bidding. His expression remained unreadable, but the chill in his gaze was enough to silence even the murmurs nearby. He leaned in, speaking low enough that only the servant would hear.

“Find Hala Sami.”He allowed that first command to settle, as though it were an imperial decree. “Tell them that Nadim”— his voice grew even softer, darker, laced with cold amusement, “was used as a weapon by my niece, Nahir. She pushed him upon me at the royal table… in front of foreign royalty. A spectacle of disobedience and petulance.”

He watched the servant’s face pale, then continued, slower now. “Then a Caesonian knight seized Nadim as though he were an orphaned beast. Stole him away from our table. Lied to the court. Claimed I had struck the creature. Bey Rohit Amar supported it uncharacteristically. ”

A smile curled at his lips—something that might have passed for amusement if not for the hatred that simmered just behind it.

“Tell Hala to come immediately. Their pet has been kidnapped by a fool and traitor, and paraded like a martyr to earn applause from children.”

“If they value Nadim’s dignity… they will come now, before the dog becomes a pawn in someone else’s game.”

He waved a hand, dismissing the servant with the finality of a judge lowering the gavel.

“Do not delay. "

Then he rose and made his way toward the King and Queen.

However, he paused and slowed his movements as the doors creaked open. A stranger entered not with force, but with precision, dragging a spectacle in his wake. Hafiz did not sit again… but neither did he move forward. He watched. The game had shifted, and he intended to learn the new rules first.







Location: Cargo Hold
Interactions: Scratch / Val @Apex Sunburn Ezekiel @Helo


Callandra stirred with a groggy wince, her lashes fluttering against the swell of a headache. Her limbs felt heavy. Then, she became faintly aware of someone else carrying her. A warmth pressed against her side, and a firm, steady rhythm of movement bounced her. Through the haze of pain, half-lidded eyes tilted upward.

It was him.

In all his sharp glory, jaw set and gaze ahead, and for a moment he looked like the only thing tethering her back to the world. Her lip parted faintly, but she never spoke as she stared at him in awe. Is he really... carrying me?

Her head lolled as he set her down and the warmth of his body left hers, her head tilted dazedly toward the next shape that entered her field of vision—another familiar figure.

Her brow creased faintly, trying to bridge the gap between her thoughts and her tongue. She blinked at him slowly, confused and blinking stars away.

"I had... such a weird dream..."


Accepted on my end!



Time: Evening
Location: Castle Dining Hall
Attire: Dress, Amulet
Interaction: @Oso Cassius @JJ Doe Fritz @FunnyGuy Lorenzo/Alexander





“If you were poisoned, should you be out here eavesdropping rather than on your way to a doctor?”

His question brought a faint flush of embarrassment to her cheeks, mingling with her already heightened nerves. "I am not entirely certain that poison is the culprit," Charlotte replied quietly as she accepted the lens, her hands betraying her with a subtle tremor as she lifted them to her eyes.

"I’ve scarcely eaten nor drunk tonight, but the vividness of the hallucinations makes such a possibility impossible to dismiss. Symptoms like these—distorted perception, disorientation—are consistent with alkaloid-based toxins..." Her brow furrowed gently, the gears of her mind visibly turning behind her blue eyes as she studied the muddied edges of her aura through the lens. It was perhaps clouded. But still, she withheld any rash conclusions, though the chill twisting down her spine whispered otherwise."...Yet, regardless of what ails me," she added, her voice softening but the steel threading through it unmistakable, "I will not—cannot—leave my father at the mercy of that villain."

“These symptoms… do they feel similar to that night at the masquerade?”

Charlotte shook her head gently as she returned the lenses to Fritz. "No, dear. This is different," she murmured. Her gaze followed Fritz’s demonstration with the tumblers, the corner of her lips curling faintly as recognition stirred in her expression. Her expression grew tender, her voice a whisper filled with profound sincerity. “Thank you, Fritz. You always have a remarkable way of appearing precisely when I need you most.” She smiled faintly, a fragile, gracious thing that did not quite reach her eyes.

With that, Charlotte pressed the tumbler to the door. Her breath slowed, lashes lowering as she focused, allowing the muffled chaos beyond the wood to filter through—every word, every syllable sharpening into clarity:

“Don’t pretend to be foolish! You know exactly what this is about!”

“I… I don't, your grace… If it's about your shares with the Black Rose Trading Company, your hefty investment is more than secure, I assure you.”

“Oh! Hmm… let's discuss this matter quickly and then we can talk about you and Charlotte.”

Charlotte inhaled sharply, her heart suddenly loud in her ears. Lorenzo has an investment with the Black Rose? A hefty one at that? The revelation struck her like a slap, her breath catching painfully in her throat.

But before she could tumble further down that spiral, a hand landed upon her shoulder.

She gasped aloud, then her body recoiled on instinct. She looked over her shoulder, wide-eyed, until her gaze collided with his.

"Lottie..." It was Cassius, staring down at her with those eyes—those damn eyes she had only moments ago watched flicker with careless flirtation toward Kalliope. For a fleeting second, a cocktail of emotions bloomed within her: frustration, confusion, jealousy, and something she dared not name. But the chaos within her dulled as her gaze lingered upon his face.

"You shouldn’t be here. Not like this. I know you think whatever’s happening behind that door matters, and maybe it does... But right now, it doesn’t matter more than you." His eyes flicked briefly toward Fritz in a way that suggested he was trying to garner an ally in his pursuit, then back to her. "You look like you're about to fall over... your skin’s cold, your hands are shaking. Whatever’s happening to you... it’s not going to wait until you get the answers you want."

Her brows drew together once more, but this time not from fear—no, it was protest now, indignation flickering beneath the fragile veneer of her composure. There was a flood of responses rising inside her, a torrent of words she wanted to unleash. She wanted to say them all... To remind him she wasn’t some trembling damsel to be told where she should or shouldn’t be. That he, of all people, had no right—no right

But then Cassius took her trembling hands gently in such a manner that the tension melted from her features like frost beneath morning sunlight.

"Come with me. Please. Just for a little while... let me make sure you’re alright."

The words were soft, coaxing—utterly at odds with the man who had moments ago faced the entire court with fire in his veins. Yet, it wasn’t his words that dulled the blaze in her chest. Though the anger still simmered behind her eyes, the fight seeped from her shoulders, "Very well," she whispered, "In a moment… but first, I must be certain he’s safe." Her tone left little room for debate, as did the flicker of stubbornness that returned to her gaze. With that, she inclined her head toward the door, lifting the tumbler once more to her lips, determination painting her expression with resolve.

“Terrible. Absolutely terrible! She came back home with her eyes low and barely able to sit down to listen to how my performance went at the theater! I'm sure you heard. I won the damned thing! No contest!”

“And… what about now? Lottie. I she doing better? I believe I noticed her spea-”

“DON’T YOU!”

“Don't you dare say it, Deacon! Don’t you dare tell ME what you saw! Are you blind?! Do you not see that I am her father?! The only parent she has left… I saw everything she did tonight. I saw how she slowly crumbled away… She crumbled away and lost her self-worth while staring at her reflection in her wine glass… Do you want to know what else I saw, Deacon..? Hm?!”

"Lost... my self-worth?" The words left her lips in a fragile whisper, like the ghost of a thought spoken aloud before she could stop herself. Confusion furrowed her brow, as if the words themselves cut deeper than she could immediately process.

“What I saw was the moment my Lottie decided any man who could so much as breath… was worthy enough for her embrace. And it's all because of you… isn't it?”

Charlotte stared at the door, lashes trembling as tears welled in her eyes, blurring her reflection into something unrecognizable—a broken, desperate silhouette she refused to claim as her own. Is that truly how he sees me? The thought rang like a death knell in her mind.

“Lorenzo, I’m sorry. Truly, I am...but I am not the man who wounded her heart. That dove is too precious. A rare soul that young woman is... In truth, Charlotte was in a similar state at the art gallery as well. One moment, she was wallowing in something deep. Drowning in it. The next, she was preening over me. She even attempted to kiss me...but it was our first outing together and in the public eye… you and I, we both know how such an intimate exchange would look… with a married man at that. I was only trying to protect her in my refusal but… I do wonder now, Lorenzo. Who could have hurt her… Twisted her mind in such a cruel and awful way?”

So that was how Lorenzo saw her. A pitiful, foolish girl. So starved for affection she’d drape herself over any man who so much as breathed in her direction. Just another desperate, simpering whore. That was how they all saw her now, wasn’t it? Ever since that cursed ball.

And truth be told, she had thought she’d stopped caring. But she had been wrong. Because perhaps what some strangers thought in a gossip column hadn't mattered. But what her father thought did.

Her stomach churned violently, and for a moment, she thought she might
The sour burn of humiliation clawed at the back of her throat, but she swallowed it down bitterly, forcing it to stay where it belonged.

Had she been naïve to believe Lorenzo—her father—would see her? Understand her? And yet, here she was, still glaring at the door like a child, clinging to a hope already shattered in her trembling hands. Foolish, broken hope that he might see through Alexander’s honeyed lies. That he might believe she had not preened over that serpent of a man. That she had not tried to kiss him of her own will—that he had twisted her mind, not the other way around.

It was one of the moments where there was too much to say, so much so that she could scream. So much that it strangled the words in her throat. Only a suffocating silence followed as she pushed herself to her feet, skirts brushing the cold stone beneath her trembling legs. Her face remained the portrait of composure, but inside, something ancient and feral twisted. And when she rose, the mask cracked... not into tears, but something else. Every breath felt jagged, caught between fury and heartbreak, and in that breathless, unbearable moment, she braced herself to throw those doors open.





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Location: Sundown Row • Time: Evening

Interactions:[@Ithradine] Luther • Mentions: N/A

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The battered black Nissan Altima whispered to a slow crawl, headlights casting over the asphalt as Angel guided it smoothly into a dimly lit parking spot. She killed the engine and let silence wash over them. And in that stillness, the street just before them bloomed before her like a fever dream.

Neon splashed and spilled over brick walls, electric pink bleeding into soft violet, a bright green pulse melting into cobalt blue reflections. Lights twinkled and blurred, hung high in glittering strings like captured starlight overhead, transforming cracked pavement into something almost magical. For a fleeting instant, as she sat quietly behind the wheel and watched the neon blur gently through the windshield, it felt as though she'd crossed some unseen threshold—leaving behind a realm of blood and nightmares for a fragile illusion of glowing, seductive normality. She stole a brief glance at Luther, the soft lights painting his features in shifting shades of violet and cerulean, catching in his eyes. For that single heartbeat, he felt just as unreal and ethereal as the city, and she smiled faintly at him.

Angel had found herself here time and time again over the last few months, drawn like a moth to the flame of Sundown Row. Each visit, whether for a job, the fleeting illusion of normalcy, or even the darker thrill of seeking blood, felt like another stolen breath. Somehow, this neon-lit street always managed to enchant her anew, whispering sweetly of the life she could have lived—a life she knew, deep down, she could never truly hold onto.

When she finally rose and stepped from the car, it felt like surfacing from deep underwater. Reality flooded in with a sudden intensity that caught her breath. The air hummed, electric with anticipation and the faint scent of perfume, smoke, and something sweetly unnatural beneath it all. Music pulsed gently through the soles of her boots, rhythmic beats muffled yet somehow loud in the way it resonated through her bones.

People milled about, laughter spilling into the street, conversations murmured beneath the glow. At first glance, they could've been anyone: friends meeting after work, couples locked in whispered flirtations... But Angel knew better.

She saw it in their eyes—a glimmer too sharp, too predatory beneath painted smiles and whispered secrets. She saw it in the way some moved just a little too gracefully, footsteps too silent, gazes lingering hungrily as mortals brushed obliviously by. Here was the masquerade at its finest.

She let her gaze wander to a reflection of herself in a shop window, and for a moment, she barely recognized the woman staring back at her. And it hadn't just been the blonde hair, it was the entire illusion wrapped around her like a stranger’s skin. Neon reflections danced over her pale skin, painting her features in shifting hues. A white mini dress that hugged every curve of her figure, the fabric sparkling subtly like captured stardust. Her hair cascaded down in waves, framing a face adorned with makeup she barely remembered applying. Diamond earrings dangled from her ears, glittering softly. She tilted her head slightly, frowning at her reflection. She looked like she belonged here, like she was just another party girl, chasing the night, dancing to beats that hid the hunger in her bones.

But yet again, Angel knew better.
She always knew better.

Nonetheless, she turned to Luther with a grin that stretched ear to ear and quipped, "Smells like desperation..." She then wrinkled her nose dramatically, sticking out her tongue."Seriously, what cologne is that—Eau de Pupperoni?" Rolling her eyes as if the whole world bored her to death, she added, "Go, be free, chase something feral. Meet me at The Eclipse in an hour... Oh and, don't be a dick, Luther. I look too cute to fish your ass out of a dumpster."


Interested if it's still open


Yes we're particularly very interested in wardens!
If there is still room, how does a rogue Fae who is slightly or half mad since he broke an oath and was cast out and now wants revenge on the fae or someone that he made the oath with sound? Since my char realized he was betrayed, and rather than continue the oath. He broke it and now seeks vengeance.


We are currently open to wardens and lycan characters only! </3 Sorry!

Any muse for those races?


🌸 Race: Half-Elf 🌸
🦋 Class: Druidic Mystic 🦋
🍄 Location: The Bathroom🍄
🍃 Interactions: Meiyu @Tae Talis/Liana @Oso 🍃
🌼 Equipment: 🌼

🪷 Attire: Outfit 🪷

🪞 Gold Balance: 46 🪞
🌸 Injuries:
🌸


The air smelled of copper, sweat, smoke, and something far worse: the sharp, metallic tang of a life slipping away.

Talis's hand wandered blindly through the blood-slicked tile, pawing through broken glass and puddles of blood like a child lost in the dark. And Phia saw it through the haze of her own agony-through the feeling of her cracked ribs screaming with every breath, and through the pounding in her skull from the concussive rhythm of impact after impact. Her wounded arm hung numb and bloodied, but her good hand…

Her good hand was already waiting for hers.

Talis’s fingertips brushed hers. “You’re still here.”

Phia closed her hand around hers instantly, the blood slick on their rough fingers as they intertwined.

“Thank you… I didn’t think anyone would be.”

Phia’s throat tightened. Her whole face folded into a broken smile, full of sorrow and defiance against a world so cruel it had dared to make this girl feel abandoned at her end. "Of course someone would." she whispered, her voice cracking as if the idea of someone not being with her here right now was insane. Her forehead pressed gently to Talis’s, her breath shaking as it fanned against her blood-matted hair.

Then sudden movement caught her gaze. At first, it looked like a shadow beneath the girl’s skin, something cast by the flickering light. But shadows didn’t move like that. They didn’t spread like that either. Phia's eyes narrowed as they followed the slithering trail of the black ink traversing Talis from her wound, her brows drawing tight with dawning dread. They crept through her body like living things, like vines, winding beneath the surface of her skin, threading into her chest, her arms, her throat.

“I was so afraid she was going to kill you both… I’m so sorry…I never wanted to be such a burden to anyone.”

Amongst the pain came intense sorrow that made Phia shake her head vehemently, tears brimming in her eyes. Her head shook before she even knew it was moving, violently, desperately, as if to physically shake away the weight of Talis’s guilt. "Our lives are precious. All worthy of protection." Her gaze slid then at that moment as Meiyu spoke. She remained unblinking even as the woman relayed how she had her face smashed.

However, she then tensed as Meiyu knelt beside them. “You’re dying...I can’t save you. And unless she knows what this is…” She gestured to Phia first and then to the black veins. “Then any attempt to do anything could make it worse and make it more painful.”

Phia shook her head.“It spreads like a poison… but it’s not from any creature, any root, any leaf I’ve known.” Her fingers hovered just above the branching black, trembling. “It’s like rot.”

“But I can take the suffering from you. The fear. The burning in your chest. The cold in your bones... All I want in return…is the truth.”

Phia's eyes furrowed. Her gaze lingered on Meiyu, not with hatred, but with the quiet weight of recognition. Even as Talis lay bleeding out in her arms, her body trembling, her soul flickering like a candle about to vanish, this woman knelt beside them not to mourn… but to measure. To consider what she could take.

However, Phia didn’t curse her for it. Just as a vulture follows the scent of death, just as a wolf stalks the wounded at the edge of the herd, so too did this woman move with that same cold inevitability—a serpent in human skin. It was honest at best; just a creature acting within its innate nature.

Yet... There was also something hollow about it. Something unbecoming. Phia didn’t expect a serpent to act like a puppy, but she’d hoped, perhaps foolishly, that something with a voice and a name might act with more than just instinct. Perhaps she had been wrong to expect such… even outside the woods where nature had rules.

Phia returned her attention to Talis as the girl stirred with renewed effort, her voice as fragile as her body—barely more than breath held together by will. And now, Talis had revealed a crystal.

She felt a pang of heavy sadness in that moment, not just for the dying girl in her arms, but for the friendship that could never bloom. If she had known, if she'd only known they shared that joy of collecting crystals, they might have sat together beneath the trees, trading stories and stones like two girls unburdened by the world. “She took the bag... But not the prize. I hid it…that…made me feel brave.” She gave her hand a gentle squeeze, and a soft, broken smile tugged at her lips—the kind of smile that said more than words ever could.

Yes, it said. You were brave.

Phia continued to listen intently as she spoke. And then, Talis’s fingers opened. For a moment, Phia thought it was simply surrender...just one more thing slipping away. But slowly, silently, the crystal lifted from her palm and upward as if pulled up by a string. Then came the humming. Phia felt it more than heard it: a vibration through her ribs, her blood, her bones. The air in the stall had changed, thickening as if the world itself was holding its breath.

“I’ve been alone my whole life.”

Phia's gaze locked back on Talis, her brows knitting together once more. “Even when I wasn’t. Even with my family. Even at the academy…I was always invisible.”

In that moment, Phia wanted to assure her more than anything, but the words clung to the back of her throat, trapped behind the rising pressure in her chest as Talis spoke once more. “I’m scared. It hurts, and I’m scared, and I don’t want to die. But… I’m not alone anymore.”



Something flickered. Not in the room, but inside her.

A flash behind her eyes, sharp as lightning and gone just as fast, like a rupture in the present that was both sudden and searing. Phia knew not if it had been some sort of vision, or intrusive thought, but it felt as if it had been something from a dream long forgotten.

A hazy image of a face had come into view. Small, bloodied, and familiar in a way that hurt too much to recognize. Magenta hair soaked and dark, stuck in strands across a pale forehead. The skin was smeared with mud and blood, and her lips were parted in the kind of smile that broke a heart—a smile that didn’t belong to happiness, but to someone trying to be brave. She had freckles just like Phia, and lovely blue eyes like the sea. Those eyes, wide and young, were glassy with tears that never fell, half-lidded and dull in a way that only the eyes of the dying could be.

Her mouth moved, but no sound came. And then a small, trembling hand reached up toward her.

The image vanished before she could have seen more, but the hand reaching toward her face remained.

Instead, it was Talis who cupped her cheek as Phia's eyes dilated. Agonizing grief overwhelmed Phia, drowning her where she sat as tears spilled over Talis's bloodied fingers. Phia reached up to clutch at her hand with desperation. “No—no, you don’t have to be scared,” she whispered, almost choking on her own voice. Her hands gripped Talis tighter, trembling. Her whole body trembled as she leaned forward, brow resting against the girl’s. “You’re not alone. You’ve never been alone, not ever and not in the way that matters.”

Her words began to spill faster, a breathless tumble torn from somewhere deep and breaking. They came with an almost ruthless intensity, sharpened by the raw conviction in her eyes as she held the girl’s fading gaze.“There are spirits waiting for you in the trees,” she whispered, her voice trembling, thick with sorrow she could no longer contain. “The wind has sung your name every night since you were born. The earth remembers your footsteps, even when no one else did.”

Talis's body soon went still after a quiet thank you. Then a silence followed that was so still it felt cruel.

Phia let out a sound between a gasp and a sob as she pulled the girl’s body close, dragging her gently to her chest with the only strength she had left in her battered limb. Her good arm wrapped around her like a vine trying to hold back a landslide, while her wounded arm remained useless. With nothing left to anchor her, Phia sank with her, collapsing down to the blood-slicked tile, her shoulder smashing into the tile, her ribs screaming as she landed half on her side, half on her back, Talis tangled against her. Her injured arm twisted beneath her with a jolt of white-hot pain, and a sharp cry tore from her throat.

Blood smeared beneath them like ink spilled across parchment. Her hand slipped as she tried to right herself, her fingers scrabbling on the wet tile, but she refused to let go.

She lay there, breathless, hurting, wrapped around the girl who no longer breathed as she continued talking to her as if she were still there. “You... You don’t have to be afraid. Your ancestors... All of them. They’ve waited years just to hold you. To kiss your forehead. To wrap you in arms that never got the chance.”

Phia managed shakily, her eyes meeting Talis's still ones as if that might force her to wake up to hear her in that moment as she said, “...You’re going home now.”

The silence pressed in like a closing fist, and the stillness of Talis’s body was too complete, too final. It settled against Phia’s chest like stone, and the warmth was already beginning to leave her.

Phia’s stomach turned. Her throat closed. Her body shook so hard she thought she might break apart entirely.
In her mind, she whispered to the spirits, begged the wind, the trees, the stars, that maybe they could decide to breathe life back into the girl.

And still…

The world remained quiet. And Talis remained gone.

Then, Phia’s body slumped forward, her vision blurring as the edges of the world turned soft and far away. She curled instinctively around the girl one last time, as if her spirit refused to let go even as her consciousness began to fade.

Darkness folded in, and just before it swallowed her whole, a voice brushed her mind like a breeze through leaves.

Oh Ophelia, you'll always be my big sister.


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