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8 yrs ago
So tired, sleep why do you spurn me?!
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Hiya, AChronum here! Although I'm relatively new to rping, I have plenty of writing experience and love trying new genres and styles. I absolutely love high magic fantasy RPs and am pretty much willing to do anything so long as I can create a charaxter, not play an existing one, and develop lots and lots of backstory! I'm perfectly comfortable with all mature themes as well, although smut for smut's sake is out of the question.

Interested in an RP? Send me a PM and have a magically marvelous day!

Most Recent Posts


December 7th, 5:00am - The Sinnenodel Dorm


As the time of the party rolled around, Aaron brought each vampire into the dorm quickly, efficiently, and, most of all, with an air of energy and charm that was reserved for times he felt totally in his element. Vampires were invited to sit in their appropriate seat in the parlor while Aaron directed the mages into the living room. Bottles were stored neatly in the kitchen before Aaron returned once more to the door and repeated the process. While he didn’t blink about it, the other mages would have a clear line of sight into his bedroom considering there wasn’t a door to protect his privacy.

While Aaron organized everyone and everything, Varis entertained in the parlor after the first guest’s arrival. The usual barbs and traps beneath his words were kept neatly tucked away so the early conversation could be light and easy. No need to do battle until the whole court was present after all. He discussed little about the outside world for now, keeping topics firmly on the Academy, the recent Practical exam, and the Academy’s plans for Moon’s Mirror. Apparently, Ryner took the reflection part quite literally; once school was over, Ryner’s ice mages would create massive ice walls that would partially reflect the image of people walking by as some sort of reminder to be considerate of the untold stories those around you bear. Varis wasn’t sure if he loved the artistry or hated the thoughtfulness. Both probably.

Once all the vampires arrived, Aaron would start ushering in the mages in the center of the parlor for them to perform. Lilie (singing a song), Maddie (playing with fire), Max (creating art with metal), Salem (speed sketching), and finally Aaron (performing a cello piece) himself. Afterwards, the other mages were excused back to the living room for the duration of the event while Aaron prepared the blood tasting after cranking the phonograph in the corner. The music was soft and quiet, an orchestrational piece that was perfect for background noise to a conversation.



Location: Dining Room -> Outside -> Outside Havok and Polaris’ Room
Skills: N/A





James stopped dead in his tracks, mouth agape in horror, as every bit of metal ripped out of whatever was holding it and clattered against the roof. His first instinct probably should have been to check on everyone, make sure everyone was okay and in one piece, and then get their new people and the sick people out of the line of this bullshit but it wasn’t. It wasn’t even his second. Instead, his first instinct was to scream “What the fuck?!” as his blood pressure rose along with the metal as he saw more work added to the reconstruction efforts right before his eyes. His second instinct was to storm up to Polaris’ room, kick the door in, and demand some explanations but even as Sapphire made her way to do just that… he paused. It didn’t make sense that she would cause everything to float up. If she was disoriented or confused, her first reaction would be to defend herself or lash out. This didn’t achieve that goal.

James sipped at his coffee and considered what he’d been told about yesterday. To an outsider, Polaris vanished after a conflict with the Mutant Underground and the Sentinel after two of her team members were killed or incapacitated. Even if the evidence was circumstantial, the Mutant Underground was still the last ones to see her. Someone investigating her disappearance was bound to show up at some point or another and considering how their ceiling now looked like Colossus, James had an inkling of who it might be. They’d barely survived a fight with him in another world where their powers and training were far more developed. James didn’t like their chances.

As he thought about it, he’d made his way back to the table and put down his plate minus the lost silverware. He kept his coffee though and sipped at it still. If they were going to deal with some shit, he needed the caffeine. “So I’m pretty sure we have Erik to thank for this. I’m going to go outside and see if we can do something before this escalates. Otherwise, Sapphire and Havok will be at the top of the kill list.” James explained with another sip of coffee.

Harry had been enjoying his lovely breakfast when this all happened. His knife and fork were forcefully taken out of his grasp and flew towards the ceiling. His phone began lifting out of his pocket, prompting him to quickly grab it. He didn't know who Polaris was much less did he care until James had spoken up. There was only one Erik he could think of that fit the bill and it was one of Charles' dearest friends. "Well it would appear that I'm done with my breakfast so I'll join you." He stood from his seat, placing his napkin onto the table before looking at the newbies.

"You three stay inside. Barry will lead you all towards my room where it should be safe and away from this metal in case it comes crashing down. Barry, stay with them and Larry and Jerry walk perimeter to ensure no one else gets in. We don't know who or how many we are dealing with nor what they want. Got it boys?" They all replied in unison and immediately went off to do the tasks they were asked to do. Harry walked up towards James and gave him a bit of a squeeze on his cheek. "Lets go great our guest shall we?"

“Well hopefully we don't have a guest.” James muttered, slapping away Harry’s hand. They were definitely not on friendly enough terms for that. He dropped a kiss on Casper’s head as he headed out but stopped when he realized Sapphire probably needed to be notified. “Hey, would you mind letting Elsa know she’s got a target on her back? If I’m right and Magneto remembers everything we do, he’s going to remember what she did to Polaris.” James asked Casper, flashing him a thankful smile as he headed out with a little more urgency.

Harry gave James a very unamused look as he rudely smacked his hand away. He pulled out his phone from his pocket and began to text his lovely twin. "Hey, things have gotten interesting here with a chance visit by Magneto. Gonna go engage him and see what he's after and try a bit of diplomacy." He followed James out to the front of the building and took in the sight of Magento and his Brotherhood of Evil.

Outside, James just stared at where he found Magneto along with an assembly of others. He took a long sip of his coffee and really wanted to turn back time like thirty minutes when he was still comfortably in bed with his boyfriend. This was a problem because the Underground was not anywhere near equipped to handle a conflict right now, even if Magneto wasn’t in the picture. Right now he was wishing Harry had brought his clones with them so at least they looked a little more intimidating. Well, Harry wasn’t intimidating so maybe at the very least make them seem more capable.

“Good morning.” James addressed Magneto pleasantly. James was going to have to be careful here. Open honesty was probably their best bet here. James didn’t think he could control the situation as it was now so he had to figure out a way to open a line without provoking him. “I’m not going to lie and say I’m surprised but I am hopeful that we can find a resolution without violence. Just to make sure we are on the same page, are you here for Polaris?”

Magneto's helmet obscured the majority of his face. He floated in the air, the Brotherhood standing behind him on top of the ground that concealed the underground Underground base. "I am here for my daughter. You have five minutes to produce her before I take her by force. I do not care to shed mutant blood."

“Thank you. I appreciate it.” James replied, turning to Harry. “Would you mind running in and letting Sapphire know? She was at Polaris’ door last I checked.”

Harry nodded silently at James before he made his way back inside. A gay man's pace was already fast, but the urgency in his steps put even the caffeine addicts to shame. He beelined towards Havoks room, seeing Sapphire there as he cocked his hip and crossed his arms. "We have five minutes to give Magneto his daughter or there will be blood shed."

“Have you guys found a better way to handle the m-pox symptoms?” James asked suddenly, fully expecting his conversation to be ignored. He just hoped Magneto’s good will towards mutants would get him some answers, especially for Luna. “We’ve got some painkillers and anti-nausea meds but we don’t have anything that actually helps yet. Have you guys found a better way of alleviating some of the suffering?”


Music bounced around the bathroom, lively and spirited, as she finished the finishing touches on her hair. It helped settle some of the anxiety in her. It had been clawing up her throat all night, the very idea of walking into a dorm full of nobles terrifying her, but school had kept it under control. Her affinity instructor had been sympathetic to her plight and worked with her tirelessly on what she wanted to accomplish and it demanded all of her concentration; anything less and her stay at the Sinnenodel dorm would be cut short. That much concentration kept the sense of impending doom at bay until the door of the dorm shut behind her with an ominous thud and she’d rushed to get ready. She clipped the silver ring that would help support the high ponytail she’d made, a careful mix of mousse and hair spray keeping the curls intact despite the length, and turned her attention to the next task.

It was a delicate balance, making sure Amaris was the better dressed of the two and still looking presentable for the event. Amaris wasn’t one to dress up, making it clear she’d prefer something more casual when the invitations came in, and it showed in the simplicity of her choices. The Countess would still look stunning but it meant Maddie had to do some outside research to figure out what would benefit the Countess more. It took her longer than she cared to admit but it was an important event and she wasn’t about to let Amaris walk into the Sinnenodel’s game already behind. After pouring through enough fashion advice to last her a lifetime, Maddie decided a black A-line dress would work. She kept the neck high and the sleeves long with a lace flower design sweeping up from the waist and down the right sleeve. Paired with similarly colored heels and only two other accessories, she’d be a perfect contrast to Amaris’ modern style and should keep eyes on the Countess.

And it served another purpose as well. Maddie had told her about most of it, politely asking her for the money to cover the expenses because there was no way her family would be able to cover that cost on such short notice, but she kept a crucial piece secret. Along with the hair piece, she’d ordered simple silver and emerald earrings to match Amaris’ color scheme. She’d asked Amaris for her recommendations on a jeweler for that. But the third and last piece was probably the most important. It took a little bit of snooping but Maddie finally got all the pieces, or as much as the student body knew, of the Countess’ previous partners. One was supposedly sleeping with Aaron, which she found amusing because Aaron was as traditional as traditional got, but hadn’t been heard from again and the last one was viciously attacked. Both of them were taken from her, one less than loyal and the other leaving Amaris feeling helpless. The conversation about trusting Aaron sparked the idea. Maybe if she felt closer to Maddie, Amaris would be more willing to believe Maddie would consider her safety and privacy before involving herself in things after she saw what hung voluntarily around her neck.

The Marivaldi crest, carved out of delicate emerald and amethyst, rested just beneath the hollow of her throat on a silver chain. It wasn’t a collar but the solid black of her dress ensured the piece stone out against everything out. It was her own way of telling Amaris that she wasn’t just here because she had to be.
She checked herself one last time when Amaris called, smoothing out a non-existent crease, before picking up the small case of supplies she’d need for her display. She smiled when she stepped out of her room and curtsied briefly to the Countess. “You look beautiful, Ari.” Maddie complimented the Countess. The little gift bag caught her eye and she felt an odd pang of unease, knowing her blood was in a bottle inside. She knew that was required from the invitation but it was one thing to know you’d have to offer a bottle of blood and another to actually do it. Amaris preferred to feed directly from her and now looking at something containing the thing that kept her alive, she was certain she preferred it too.

Interacting with: @WeepingLiberty

James Kingston




Location: Medical -> Dining Room
Skills: N/A





James patted Luna’s arm while she spoke. If he’d watched her die, maybe he’d feel less like hovering but the fact of the matter is he didn’t just watch. He experienced right alongside her. He felt the chill from blood loss, he felt his limbs get heavy and sluggish, he felt his heart racing against the inevitable, beating hard enough to burst out of his chest, before the pauses between beats grew longer and longer and longer. He felt the panic, his lungs screaming because she couldn’t catch her breath, and that bitter cold that seemed to drag him down with her. He doesn’t know how much she remembers and he hopes for her sake something, the blood loss or her own telepathy, blocked it out. At least some of it. Because he remembered all of it. It haunted him, sometimes in the quiet of his work or at night when he closed his eyes. It clawed him out of bed at two am, tongue bleeding where he bit it hard to keep from screaming, and he stumbled out of his room and just paced downstairs for hours until he felt like he was safe in his own skin again. Safe and alive.

“You just got dealt a shitty hand. You’d do the same if I was in your place.” James said sympathetically. He’d panicked after the first time she’d jumped in but he was… comfortable wasn’t the word but he was used to it on some level. He’d never be comfortable but he couldn’t fault her for something out of her control. He finished cleaning her up, making sure to leave a clean towel under her head and a trash can next to her bed so she could vomit if she needed to. “I’ll get you some water and something easy to eat as long as you stay here and don’t go wandering off. Some food would make you feel better even if you can’t eat all of it.” James explained as he washed his hands, drying them off and giving her a critical look over. She looked so frail and weak like this. He didn’t like it and the worry wormed its way up his throat and settled there like bile. Something said he wasn’t going to be sleeping much tonight.

He left the infirmary and headed downstairs to grab some food. He could smell coffee and quietly thanked the heaven’s for Echo’s continued presence. As much as instant coffee satisfied his caffeine needs, real coffee did it so much better. Tunnel vision set in as he made his way into the dining room and the first thing he zoned in on was the french press. Talking was an unnecessary function when he existed, in that moment, only to drink the stuff he was pouring into his mug, sharp and bitter and perfect. He sighed happily after his first sip and then got to grabbing a few waffles on a plate, some water for Luna, and pocketed a banana. “Hey thanks Harry and team for breakfast. It’s awesome.” James wasn’t certain he’d ever learn all the duplicates’ names but thankfully they tended to group up so he could just address them as a whole. They all looked exactly the same so how the hell were they supposed to do anything else? He swung by Casper, giving his breakfast monstrosity a doubtful look but wisely kept his mouth shut, and pressed a quick kiss to his cheek before turning to Sapphire. “Hey, I’m gonna finish settling Luna in and then I’m going to catch up on some stuff I didn’t do yesterday. We aren’t quite out of pipe freezing range and gotta make sure everything’s still running at one hundred percent. Probably going to do some cleaning up too so once Luna’s recovered, we can finish patching up a few places in the walls. If you need me, just shout.” He told her, keeping her up to date with his plans and raised his coffee cup to the room in a vague goodbye and headed back up to the infirmary.

If he stayed busy, if he stayed moving and focused, he wouldn’t have to think that the little reconstruction team was mostly incapacitated. Cayden had been helping Luna and James, throwing himself into an unfamiliar (and usually painful because this place had been in bad shape) skill set just because they needed it. Keeping the work rolling meant he didn’t have to think about the empty bed that’d stick around after Cayden, he wouldn’t have to think about star gazing without his friend’s stories, he wouldn’t have to think about how his other best friend was dying of something he couldn’t fix. Someone had already died of m-pox and he couldn’t stop it. If this kept going, James wasn’t sure he could bring himself to suffer it again.


The evening prior had been a success on all fronts, Khaemtir believed. The meeting between Radaam’s family and his own had been more than a little awkward and even though his own family had been polite and kind, he didn’t need to be a sorcerer of the Crows to see there was going to be a full interrogation about the situation later. Radaam’s stilted introduction sealed his fate on that matter. And sure enough, as soon as his mother got him alone, it was rapid fire questions and demands. “Why was he so uncomfortable?” and “You should help your friends more!” and “Khaemtir Lagus Mantheo Maryatum, you had better help him settle in or you’ll bring shame to the family!” Never mind that he had an entirely new world to settle into and he was her flesh and blood. Honestly, the whole name was a little much considering not even a candle length’s more, he was entertaining the guy in question in their home!

Which was surprisingly fun. Not that he’d thought it wouldn’t be; if he had, Khaemtir wouldn’t have invited them over. No, he was surprised that it was more entertaining than he thought. Radaam was an awkward little―well okay, not so little―thing and it was quite the source of amusement. Khaemtir’s stories were fresh for him and he had an interesting outlook when he offered input. Not that he offered a lot but a conversation has to go two ways sometimes. Of course, Ishara came along as well which gave him an opportunity to barrage her with conversation when Radaam was looking overwhelmed. Not to mention, she gave them an interesting look into how something worked. Apparently, she’d been approached by a Cabal, a sort of informal Fellowship with the Cults. Khaemtir almost let a barbed comment slip, an unnecessarily nasty jab at ehr lack of tutelary, when she mentioned it. That ugly irritation reared its head again but his oh so wonderful sixty pound familiar decided it was a fantastic time to demand to sit in his lap, using one leg balanced painfully on his toes to give her enough height to pull herself up. She’d berated him silently for a solid five minutes after that.

But over all, a success! Friendships were formed, information was shared, and Khaemtir retired to bed more excited than when he woke. Now, here he was, drinking in the morning sun as it rose above the Dijat of Heka. The light positively danced between the pyramids, the result more spectacular than Khaemtir could have ever imagined. He couldn’t keep his eyes in one place for too long though, oohing and awing over every tulutary even as he judged them and their Sorcerers mentally with Udjebten. An activity which he immediately drew Radaam and Ishara into as soon as he caught sight and pulled the group together. And if he was doing it to avoid thinking about the massive, intimidating pyramid that signalled the end of a life and the beginning of something completely and utterly forgeign, well… only Udjebten would know.

He’d deny it with his dying breath though.

Eventually, tall, dark, and stoic showed up to guide them to Magus Dagon, leaving little room to converse. Not that that ever stopped Khaemtir, who immediately fell in step with the Sorcerer-Practicus and opened his mouth. He was a nervous talker, what could he say?

‘You could try nothing, little Khaem.’ Udjebten shot back to the accidental though form where she trotted next to him. ‘The good Sorcerer-Practicus does not seem to be a morning person.’ Khaemtir only spared her a dignified sniff and he felt her laughter in the back of his mind.

“That was amazing. How does it work? Obviously magic but does a person have to be a Sorcerer to interact with it or are the runes inherently magical?” Khaemtir asked Menes, who clearly had a singular focus. Tough crowd. Khaemtir was still on the fence though. Avoid or break through? His stoicism was definitely different from Radaam’s awkwardness but there could still be a good friend underneath that. Or a useful connection but Khaemtir liked to think friend was… well, more friendly! But those thoughts ground to a halt in the Hall of Prophecy. Ceremonial or not, it was an impressive room with impressive displays once you learned to breathe again. He couldn't’ imagine spending any significant amount of time in here was good for extended study but he figured that was to be expected. He didn’t understand a single thing on these tapestries but he had a bit of familiarity with the objects associated with them. He attributed the empty spaces to wear and tear; this amount of smoke couldn’t be good for any sort of fabric, especially old ones. He nodded at Menes’ suggestion, fully intent on looking into these. While Divination wasn’t quite the subject for him, understanding significant events of the Cult that took him in seemed an important task.

Khametir was going to follow up with questions but Menes’ polite, preemptive deflection was enough to keep those from spilling out. At least he knew which side of the wall he’d come tumbling down on. Menes fell firmly in the breakthrough group now. Maybe not immediately but once he’d figured out how things work in here, Menes would be having lunch with him once a week at least. “So what do we think guys? Ready to learn about everything?” Khaemtir beamed at Ishara and Radaam, gesturing back to the Hall of Prophecy. “I’d at least like to know enough to understand what I was looking at!” Of course, he turned his attention away just as they stopped at Magus Dagon’s door and he nearly found himself colliding into Menes if not for a last minute twist that had him stumbling for half a second.

Khaemtir, once Magus Dagon gave permission, slipped off his sandals and hung his cloak, bouncing over to a seat as he took in the room. Water, if I may sir.” Khaemtir replied politely, even as he itched to nose around. The lack of light was anything but annoying, the pleasant aroma mingling with the low lighting to ease tension out of the eyes and face. It was somewhere Khaemtir could fall asleep in no problem if he wasn’t as keyed up as he was. “The Hall of Prophecy was amazing. Are we permitted there freely or do we require permission? Sorcerer-Practicus Menes suggested we study them outside of our usual studies in the library but I imagine the Hall is an excellent source of motivation for doing so. Though, I guess that begs the question of why don’t we study them in our normal course of study. If they’re important to the history of the Cult, shouldn’t we?” Udjebten gave him a look from where she was still settling next to him and he promptly shut his mouth.



December 7th, 4:55am - The Sinnenodel Dorm





The night before Varis’ soiree was a hectic nightmare. He swore that everything that could go wrong did. Art he was having delivered specifically for the event was delayed, the crystal blood glasses he demanded come from his personal collection were the wrong ones, the Academy still hadn’t delivered the extra chair and side table (he blamed Ryner through and through), the boy’s clothes had to have been sent back because they were slightly off and they were supposed to come in literally hours before the party now, and he couldn’t find the damn ring he wanted to wear for the evening. He’d already written the school and excused Aaron and himself from Friday’s courses―excluding Treaty Law because that blind Noila wasn’t undoing all the hard work he’d done so far―so they could spend the entire night and early morning getting everything set up as they rolled in.

And he was glad he did because of course the Academy’s hired idiots almost ran the boy’s bathroom door through one of his original Nianarh paintings. He’d never been so close to killing someone in his life. Then, because Malek was indisposed handling another order of business, the shipping company that overnighted the proper crystal blood glasses was two seconds away from tossing his package on the doorstep but thankfully, he moved faster than a butterfingered mortal and he’d sent the moron back to his truck in tears. Getting the boy to look presentable was an ordeal in and of itself. It wasn’t the clothes. No, black made him almost look like a proper show mage but it was the accessories and the hair and the make up. He thought the boy could handle it himself but after a quick look at the end, Varis had to redo everything. Fixing the tie clip, fixing the watch on the boy’s wrist, completely redoing his face, the tie was sloppy, etc. It was never ending and it resulted in a session just like the night of his Lady’s visit: fully involved in every step.

But finally, finally, everything was done. Each chair had a portrait of a notable member of their house behind them from his own collection: Tennra Eve caught in the passion of her writing, Perion Astorio decapitating the traitor Donovan on the battlefield, Ralmevik Marivaldi dictating to a mage at a desk, Lady Sinnenodel because that was the only Sinnenodel worth of display in his presence, and Eris walking through the gates of Varis’ castle from a picture he liked on the security cameras Malek insisted they install. The Eve, Astorio, and Marivaldi pictures were selected just to irritate his guests. Tennra writing Varis’ favorite book on the natural inferiority of mages and humans, Perion to remind Victor what his Lord does to fake Astorios, and Ralmevik for the obvious sadistic fun. Eris’portriat had been made as a present to the actor several years ago but Varis had liked it enough that he kept it himself. And of course, Lady Sinnenodel above the seat of honor as the most important of the lot. Not that it would stay that way but he’d let her enjoy her ivory tower for now.

The sitting room was outfitted with dark leather chairs and rich cloth draped over the side tables with gold embroidery along the edges. He decided to keep with a simpler, older look, adding in an antique record player in the corner with an pleasant orchestration on the record, perfect for adding just a touch of background noise. Modern sound quality was fantastic and usually preferred for formal gathering when live music wasn’t an option but every one of these vampires were about his age. He specifically chose music from their childhood years, wanting to add just a touch of warm nostalgia to the room. The boy would have to crank it every record but that was the price you paid for ambiance.

And it would be good practice. Depending on how things worked out, Varis may well be destined to suffer through the boy’s presence as a show mage for the rest of his pathetically short life. He’d need to learn how to balance when to be seen and when to fade into the background. It would probably take a decade of work before he was capable of being able to do that without magic but Varis was very much a proponent of using whatever tool necessary to get the job done so he couldn’t fault the boy for that. Yet.

He’d figure out a way.

By the time Varis was satisfied with all his fussing, it was just about time for guests to arrive. He gave himself and Aaron one last look over. Both of them were dressed in matching suits, monochrome black for the most part and a rougher shirt to depth to the outfit. Aaron had a few gold accessories―a gold stud and chain ear cuff in place of the usual Sinnenodel crest, a gold ring, and a tie clip―but his hair offset the outfit well enough. Which he managed to tame into purposefully disheveled and left the ear with the earring visible. Not that it would help with his cardboard personality but every little bit helped, he supposed.

“Listen closely, boy. Tonight is your chance to prove that you aren’t as incompitent as I believe. It’s your first run as a proper, mostly proper, show mage and I will be taking notes.”Varis explained as he adjusted Aaron’s tie for the fifth time that night. “You know your job. Answer the door, invite vampires into the parlor, show the mages to the living room, and then retire for two minutes to organize the mages for their performances. Eve, Marivaldi, Eris, Astorio, you―that’s the order. Then, crank the phonograph and ready the blood. The colored crystal is for the cleanser, the clear for the tastings, and do not forget the tags I had you write out. I haven’t thought of a punishment yet but I can guarantee you, it’ll make everything else seem down right pleasant.” Varis went over the night for the millionth time this week as he fiddled with this and that on the boy. While Varis was, begrudgingly, sure he wouldn’t mess up on the technical details, Varis was more concerned about the role he needed the boy to play.

“And for the love of our Lady, do not put on that damn cut out smile you wear when you’re uncomfortable. A court mask is all fine and dandy but tonight your job is to be sweet. Charming. Interesting. Give them a real smile, figure out what they want to see, and be that. I want them head over heels for you in those brief moments.” Varis demanded, finally satisfied with Aaron’s appearance. It would be a touch of overkill, he knew, but he needed that sympathy for the boy at its height. He had a goal tonight and he needed as much ill will as he could get to make it all fall together. Flaunting the boy in the mage sympathists face would go a long way.

Which is exactly why they matched. Varis wore the same style suit, the same style tie, the same style shirt, but he boasted less gold. The only accessory they shared was the tie clip, a break for the eye, but Varis had even worn an earring on the same ear as Aaron: a diamond shaped onyx teardrop instead. If everything worked out, the big bad Sinnenodel would be exactly where he needed to be. He pulled out his pocket watch, the only silver on his person, and popped it open. Five minutes.

“Questions now or keep your tongue in your head.” Varis snapped the watch shut and tucked it away again.

December 7th, 5:00am - The Sinnenodel Dorm





The night before Varis’ soiree was a hectic nightmare. He swore that everything that could go wrong did. Art he was having delivered specifically for the event was delayed, the crystal blood glasses he demanded come from his personal collection were the wrong ones, the Academy still hadn’t delivered the extra chair and side table (he blamed Ryner through and through), the boy’s clothes had to have been sent back because they were slightly off and they were supposed to come in literally hours before the party now, and he couldn’t find the damn ring he wanted to wear for the evening. He’d already written the school and excused Aaron and himself from Friday’s courses―excluding Treaty Law because that blind Noila wasn’t undoing all the hard work he’d done so far―so they could spend the entire night and early morning getting everything set up as they rolled in.

And he was glad he did because of course the Academy’s hired idiots almost ran the boy’s bathroom door through one of his original Nianarh paintings. He’d never been so close to killing someone in his life. Then, because Malek was indisposed handling another order of business, the shipping company that overnighted the proper crystal blood glasses was two seconds away from tossing his package on the doorstep but thankfully, he moved faster than a butterfingered mortal and he’d sent the moron back to his truck in tears. Getting the boy to look presentable was an ordeal in and of itself. It wasn’t the clothes. No, black made him almost look like a proper show mage but it was the accessories and the hair and the make up. He thought the boy could handle it himself but after a quick look at the end, Varis had to redo everything. Fixing the tie clip, fixing the watch on the boy’s wrist, completely redoing his face, the tie was sloppy, etc. It was never ending and it resulted in a session just like the night of his Lady’s visit: fully involved in every step.

But finally, finally, everything was done. Each chair had a portrait of a notable member of their house behind them from his own collection: Tennra Eve caught in the passion of her writing, Perion Astorio decapitating the traitor Donovan on the battlefield, Ralmevik Marivaldi dictating to a mage at a desk, Lady Sinnenodel because that was the only Sinnenodel worth of display in his presence, and Eris walking through the gates of Varis’ castle from a picture he liked on the security cameras Malek insisted they install. The Eve, Astorio, and Marivaldi pictures were selected just to irritate his guests. Tennra writing Varis’ favorite book on the natural inferiority of mages and humans, Perion to remind Victor what his Lord does to fake Astorios, and Ralmevik for the obvious sadistic fun. Eris’portriat had been made as a present to the actor several years ago but Varis had liked it enough that he kept it himself. And of course, Lady Sinnenodel above the seat of honor as the most important of the lot. Not that it would stay that way but he’d let her enjoy her ivory tower for now.

The sitting room was outfitted with dark leather chairs and rich cloth draped over the side tables with gold embroidery along the edges. He decided to keep with a simpler, older look, adding in an antique record player in the corner with an pleasant orchestration on the record, perfect for adding just a touch of background noise. Modern sound quality was fantastic and usually preferred for formal gathering when live music wasn’t an option but every one of these vampires were about his age. He specifically chose music from their childhood years, wanting to add just a touch of warm nostalgia to the room. The boy would have to crank it every record but that was the price you paid for ambiance.

And it would be good practice. Depending on how things worked out, Varis may well be destined to suffer through the boy’s presence as a show mage for the rest of his pathetically short life. He’d need to learn how to balance when to be seen and when to fade into the background. It would probably take a decade of work before he was capable of being able to do that without magic but Varis was very much a proponent of using whatever tool necessary to get the job done so he couldn’t fault the boy for that. Yet.

He’d figure out a way.

By the time Varis was satisfied with all his fussing, it was just about time for guests to arrive. He gave himself and Aaron one last look over. Both of them were dressed in matching suits, monochrome black for the most part and a rougher shirt to depth to the outfit. Aaron had a few gold accessories―a gold stud and chain ear cuff in place of the usual Sinnenodel crest, a gold ring, and a tie clip―but his hair offset the outfit well enough. Which he managed to tame into purposefully disheveled and left the ear with the earring visible. Not that it would help with his cardboard personality but every little bit helped, he supposed.

“Listen closely, boy. Tonight is your chance to prove that you aren’t as incompitent as I believe. It’s your first run as a proper, mostly proper, show mage and I will be taking notes.”Varis explained as he adjusted Aaron’s tie for the fifth time that night. “You know your job. Answer the door, invite vampires into the parlor, show the mages to the living room, and then retire for two minutes to organize the mages for their performances. Eve, Marivaldi, Eris, Astorio, you―that’s the order. Then, crank the phonograph and ready the blood. The colored crystal is for the cleanser, the clear for the tastings, and do not forget the tags I had you write out. I haven’t thought of a punishment yet but I can guarantee you, it’ll make everything else seem down right pleasant.” Varis went over the night for the millionth time this week as he fiddled with this and that on the boy. While Varis was, begrudgingly, sure he wouldn’t mess up on the technical details, Varis was more concerned about the role he needed the boy to play.

“And for the love of our Lady, do not put on that damn cut out smile you wear when you’re uncomfortable. A court mask is all fine and dandy but tonight your job is to be sweet. Charming. Interesting. Give them a real smile, figure out what they want to see, and be that. I want them head over heels for you in those brief moments.” Varis demanded, finally satisfied with Aaron’s appearance. It would be a touch of overkill, he knew, but he needed that sympathy for the boy at its height. He had a goal tonight and he needed as much ill will as he could get to make it all fall together. Flaunting the boy in the mage sympathists face would go a long way.

Which is exactly why they matched. Varis wore the same style suit, the same style tie, the same style shirt, but he boasted less gold. The only accessory they shared was the tie clip, a break for the eye, but Varis had even worn an earring on the same ear as Aaron: a diamond shaped onyx teardrop instead. If everything worked out, the big bad Sinnenodel would be exactly where he needed to be. He pulled out his pocket watch, the only silver on his person, and popped it open. Five minutes.

“Questions now or keep your tongue in your head.” Varis snapped the watch shut and tucked it away again.



Dates: November 9th - December 6th







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