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i like to rp. that's really all there is to say.

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Collab between @The Muse and @c3p-0h
Previous Day

Sometime around 1am | Location: The Royal Home

Part IV




Amaya’s regret was sharp and immediate as she watched the hurt reverberate through him.

Her words struck him like a blade, and Flynn’s face tightened, a faint grimace passing over his expression before he glanced away. His entire body tensed around her, and the fire that had burned so fiercely in him just moments before seemed to flicker, nearly snuffed out. Like running full speed into a brick wall, she had forced him to face reality.

The church. The prophecy. Their impending death. The way his heart ached for her, and how impossibly vast the distance between them could still feel despite how close she was now. He’d seen her layers peeled back one by one over the past couple months. He’d memorized her patterns and habits, watched her move like a ghost around him, always trying to slip away. He’d been carefully observant, intrigued, and took in whatever she allowed when he'd made an effort to know her.

But this fire he felt—how could she possibly feel even a fraction of it? She’d shut him out at every turn until she had no choice but to let him closer. Yet, even now, she tried to create a boundary. She didn't feel what he felt. She couldn't have, and the ache in his chest grew sharper.

With a growing sense of clarity, he realized that the feelings he couldn’t name had been shaped by what she perceived to be her duty.

His fingers curled along her face, tempted to pull away entirely. But then he looked at her again, feeling the way she leaned into him. Her words didn't match her body language. She'd wrapped herself around him, softened against him, even made the initial move. He could still hear her breathless under his touch, that intoxicating sound he had the power to command from her. It didn't feel like obligation, duty or pity that had driven her. It felt real.

Then again, Nyla had felt real too—bright and fleeting, burning hot and burning out. Had it really been so easy for him to forget her and the way she reciprocated his passion equally? His heart cracked at the thought. Was he just desperate for something—someone—to hold onto?

Reality had sobered him in an instant. The crack in his heart widened, but still he couldn’t bring himself to let Amaya go. She felt like glass in his hands—fragile, delicate, and so beautifully breakable. He could shatter her if he wasn’t careful, and she’d leave him bloody for it in return.

He finally exhaled, a quiet, defeated sound. “I suppose so,” he murmured, the heat in his voice gone, replaced with a flat, hollow tone. It made Amaya want to shrink into herself, into him, and pull the poison of her words out of the air.

He eased back into the couch, creating a small distance between their bodies, his hand slipping from her face to rest on her hips again—holding on just enough to keep her there but not enough to feel like a demand. Her hands didn’t follow him. They were empty with the space he used to fill, before she pulled them back towards her own body. His eyes were somber, reflecting a quiet sadness as he resigned himself to the idea that maybe this was as close as she’d ever let him get.

“Is that why you're here?” he asked, refusing to retreat back to walking on eggshells. His gaze dipped to where she was settled in his lap before lifting to meet her piercing blue eyes, bracing himself for whatever distance she might try to wedge between them.

Some part of Amaya, larger than she wanted to admit, felt betrayed that he’d proven her right. For all his passion and assurances, a single sentence had undone him. His question hurt – but it was a fair one, wasn’t it? Why had she said what she’d said, if not to make him pull away? Shame and guilt smothered her as the ache in her chest grew.

Amaya looked in his eyes and it was like seeing her own heart break. The parts of her that he no longer touched grew cold. It was painfully familiar.

In her desperation to know when and how this would all be ruined, she’d done it herself.

Her gaze dropped. The silence grew like the distance between them, punctuated by the crackling fire as it filled the air with smoke. Finally she managed a shake of her head, so small it was nearly imperceptible. It didn’t feel like enough.

“I –” Amaya cut herself off, the words stuck in her throat. She didn’t know how to lie to him anymore, and anything she could possibly say felt wrong. It was inadequate, or an excuse, or an explanation that was too raw to give. She watched the slow rise and fall of his chest. She couldn’t look up at him and bear witness to the hurt she’d planted, the distance she’d created.

“You didn’t deserve that.” It was weak and thin, like tissue paper held against the light of the moon. But it was the truest thing she could’ve said, even amongst all the thoughts she didn’t know how to voice. No matter how scared she was, Flynn had never once deserved her cruelty. “I’m sorry.”

His jaw clenched. He didn’t know what to say. The ache in his chest hadn’t faded, but seeing her fold under the weight of guilt felt worse than anything she could’ve said. Silently, he cursed himself for asking the question at all, for letting his pain spill out.

Amaya was so very tired. Every new hurt she’d gained today seemed to weigh her down all at once. She’d almost forgotten them earlier, when she’d been nearly asleep in his arms. The pain in her chest solidified. There was a burning weight behind her eyes. And she was still sitting on Flynn’s lap, like she belonged in his space.

She tried to swallow her emotions – at least long enough to remove herself and give him privacy. Careful not to touch him, Amaya pressed her hands into the couch and began to move away from him.

He acted without thinking, his hand darting out to catch her wrist before she could get a leg out from under her. The motion was quick, firm enough to stop her retreat but gentle in its hold.

“Amaya,” he breathed her name like a plea, begging her not to move any further from him. His heart pounded fast against his ribs, his fingers wrapped gently around her wrist, careful despite the desperation in his touch. He realized too late that he hadn’t thought through what to do next. He just knew he couldn’t let her go—not like this. The thought of trying to sleep with this hanging between them felt unbearable. Not when his own barriers had been stripped away, too, leaving him raw and exposed.

He couldn't rebuild them against her anymore—couldn’t even begin to try. Not when he found himself still craving her, even if she only stayed for the sake of duty. It would kill him, slowly and surely, but there were worse deaths than being beside her. He’d take it, even if every encounter left him bleeding.

“Please stay,” he whispered, the words weighted with more than just the physical act of keeping her there.

Stay when things got hard. Stay when it was messy and painful. Stay with him, in the moment, without closing herself off. Open herself to him. Let him in. Let him learn all the darkest parts of her. Give him the chance to stay before she made that choice for him by locking him out.

She finally looked at him again and ice met the sea. Glistening and breakable, turbulent and relentless.

His hand loosened around her wrist, giving her the freedom to move if she wanted, but his eyes never left hers.

Amaya saw her own ache reflected. Her emotions swelled, threatening to drown her.

Slowly, carefully, like she was mindful of all the ways they might break each other, Amaya looked down and gently pulled his hand from her wrist. She cradled its warmth in her lap, tracing her fingers lightly along the parts of him she’d seen but didn’t know. His skin, golden in the firelight. The calluses lining his fingers and palm. Faint scars and freckles that spoke of a full life under Aurelia’s sun.

Flynn’s skin tingled where her fingertips drew patterns, warmth spreading through him like wildfire. He let her do as she pleased, hand relaxed in her grasp as he watched her—helplessly captivated.

“I grieve the loss of things before they’re gone.” The admission stung like frost, reminding her of silent halls and a vicious crown — of blood splattered across pristine snow. But she didn’t know what else to offer him. “And this,” Amaya whispered, drifting her thumb along his knuckles. She looked back up at him, trying to be brave enough to meet his eyes. “This will hurt. Her voice broke, choked by fear and grief as a heavy tear slipped down her cheek.

He looked up at the sound of her voice, just in time to see the tear stream down her cheek. His chest clenched, a painful, powerless feeling wrapping tightly around his heart.

She wasn’t wrong—it would hurt, especially if they couldn’t find a cure before the clergy decided that their time was up. It hurt even before he’d found himself wrapped around her finger, and now it felt like there was even more at stake—more to lose if he let himself fail. But for him, the hurt felt worth it. Whatever time they had left, he'd take every moment she offered.

Straightening, he leaned in and lifted his free hand to her face. His thumb swept over her cheek, catching the tear, and he kissed the trail it left behind—slow and unhurried. Pulling back just enough to meet her eyes, his fingers lingered along her jawline, tracing the delicate angles of her face.

“Then let it,” he whispered, silently asking her to take his hand and leap off the cliff of uncertainty with him. Take the risk. They'd already lost so much. What else could they possibly have to lose, except each other?

His heart pounded rapidly against his ribs, vulnerable and bracing for more of that painful rejection he wasn't used to. But still, Flynn refused to retreat.

Whatever the church’s aims—whatever cruel plan had brought them here—he couldn’t bring himself to entirely hate it anymore. Not when it had led him to her. He’d never known someone quite like her—someone who could make him feel so raw and exposed while still leaving him wanting more. So he’d let it hurt. They could hurt together.

For a moment, he thought, perhaps the Goddesses had truly fated them together after all.

“Stay.” It wasn’t quite a demand, but it slipped out before he could think better of it. Then he kissed her, pouring all his longing into that gentle touch. He pulled back just a fraction, his breath brushing her lips as he whispered, “Let me stay.”

Let him mend her when it hurt. Let him kiss every broken piece of her. Let him hold and protect her. Let him love her.

Eyes shut, Amaya’s dark world was only the sound of his plea, warm and low like the crackle of the fire. It was only the breath he gave her, the gentle way he cupped her face in his hand.

His hand… filled with a heat that he wielded as second nature. He held it so lightly against her, little more than a touch when before it’d been firm and sure. It was like he’d finally realized he might burn her – or perhaps that she might leave him numb and bloodless. But still, he held her. Amaya found herself tilting her head again, leaning into it.

Her eyebrows pulled together, face tensing as she tried to fight back another wave of emotion. A shuddering breath escaped.

Flynn asked too much of her. So much of her life had been about weathering one pain after another. Hadn’t that been enough? Wasn’t it cruelty to ask her to choose to bear one that could very well shatter her?

Amaya turned her face into his touch, feeling the roughness of his calluses scratch against the delicate skin of her cheek. Her lips were still and soft against his palm. When she opened her eyes and let light back into her world, it remained as it was – small, fragile, and composed solely of Flynn.

He was beautiful in a way that stopped her heart. Or maybe he was just that moment between one beat and the next, the brief, quiet terror as she waited to see which would be her last. One day, that stillness would be all that was left.

Slowly, she nodded. The sharp edges of his hand caught on the curve of her lips.

Relief flooded through him, the tension in his shoulders finally easing. But Flynn watched her carefully, as he always did, looking for the words she couldn’t or wouldn’t say. There was more she wanted to say—he could feel it in the way she hesitated, how she shuddered against him, how her expression tightened. This was a small victory, but it felt bittersweet.

Amaya leaned into his body, more cautiously than she’d done before. He knew she must have heard the way his heart pounded—steady but quick, almost frantic—but he didn’t care. His arms wrapped around her and Amaya let herself be thankful for it. In the absence of his warmth, a chill had seeped through the meager layer of her nightgown and deep below her skin. The fireplace simply couldn’t compare to his embrace.

Sighing, she closed her eyes again and let him adjust the way they fit together. When he settled she pressed a kiss to the tender spot between his collarbone and neck. He closed his eyes, nerves alight and sparking in ways he couldn’t quite control. His hold on her tightened. All the better, she told herself, to chase away the cold. Nestling into him, she pressed herself closer in return.

Amaya stayed, and tried not to count all the reasons to pull away.

Collab between @The Muse and @c3p-0h
Previous Day

Sometime around 1am | Location: The Royal Home

Part II




Flynn’s breath was unsteady, his pulse thrumming in his ears as he looked up at Amaya, bathed in firelight, eyes sharp as ice and warm as embers all at once. One hand rested on her hip, his body angled into the couch, drawn into her intensity. He leaned into her touch, savoring this new sensation—being held by her, pursued by her. A hunger stirred deep in his chest. He wanted more. Needed more.

He didn’t want to talk about the High Priestess. He didn’t want to talk at all. The only thing he could think about was her—her lips pressed against his, the way she had pushed past hesitation and thrown herself into him. He wanted to pull her closer, to feel the warmth of her against him, to lose himself in this fire she had set.

With slow, gentle care, his free hand curled around her right hand, gently peeling it away from his face. He planted a kiss on her palm, then her wrist, his lips trailing slow, deliberate touches along her forearm as he considered his next words. Her voice had left no room for argument, yet he found himself delaying, as if each kiss was an unspoken plea to stay in this moment with him just a little longer.

But she had told him to speak, not asked. Demanded it.

And in this moment, he was certain he’d do just about anything she commanded.

His grip on her waist shifted lower, fingers pressing into the curve of her body. And then, in one smooth motion, as if she weighed nothing at all, he pulled her into his lap, settling her against him. A surprised sound escaped her, briefly dissolving into an airy laugh. Her arm, the one he had been kissing, now rested over his shoulder, and his hands found their place at her hips.

He looked up at her, his eyes dark beneath her shadow. "Can you keep a secret?" His voice was low, a whisper in her ear, barely rising over the crackle of the fire. Something flickered in her eyes as she tried to hide a shiver. She arched a dark eyebrow.

He was aware, distantly, that her guard was somewhere in the house, likely within earshot if they were careless. He didn’t want to keep things from her, but certain things would have to stay between them and only them. Though, right now, all he wanted was for nothing to be between them at all.

“From everyone but you, it seems,” she muttered, matching his volume. But her hand was soft as it drifted down from his cheek to the side of his neck. The accusation didn’t stick.

Flynn smirked, unable to hide his satisfaction at her answer. He held her gaze, letting the moment stretch as he tried to ground himself back down to reality—tried to focus on anything but the way she fit against him.

He was broad and solid beneath her, his hands burning through the fabric of her dress. Amaya was… not nervous, per se. But aware. The intensity of his eyes, the fullness of his lips, the rough edge to his voice. Her weight on top of him, her many layers shed, the few that still remained between them. She catalogued all of it, her attention pulled in countless directions, all of them leading back to Flynn.

His mind drifted to Tia—the way he’d cornered her with questions, demanded answers she had been reluctant to give. No wonder she had vanished when he’d needed her. His smirk faded, the amusement in his eyes slowly dimming.

“The High Priestess saw it in a dream.” His gaze flickered away, jaw tensing briefly before adding, “She’s a seer… I think.” He shook his head slightly, uncertainty evident. “She doesn’t seem to trust her dreams as visions.” He met her eyes once more. “But she saw the path to Lady Hightower’s discovery.”

Amaya was still as she tried to process this new information, emotions flickering across her face.

A seer.

It was an exceedingly rare gift. Valuable. Powerful, both magically and politically. Aurelian Priests and their dreams had gotten them to this mess in the first place. And they’d sent one to Dawnhaven? Why had she tried to hide behind clues and the Sage instead of ingratiating herself with Flynn?

That she didn’t trust her own visions was another point of confusion — Amaya had never known a member of the clergy to admit they were uncertain of anything. They posed themselves as a font of guidance and answers. Doubt was poison in a church.

Then again, the Sun faith seemed vastly different from what she was used to. Ranni flashed in her mind, nervous and trembling and blight-born. She would’ve been stripped of her station before the first meek apology escaped her in Lunaris.

Amaya’s eyes drifted, her thoughts racing. Questions clamored for the open air.

“What do you make of her?” she asked, refocusing on Flynn. He’d met her. He knew his clergy better. Amaya didn’t have all the pieces yet.

Flynn’s fingers toyed absentmindedly with the thin fabric of her gown, feeling its softness between his thumb and index finger. His mouth tightened as he gave a small shake of his head. Finally, he admitted aloud, “The Arch Priest can’t be trusted… I don’t trust him.” The weight of saying it felt oddly freeing, but it was followed by a sigh as his gaze traced the curve of her shoulder. “I don’t know if she can be trusted yet, either.”

He pulled his eyes back to hers before they could wander any further. “She shows more kindness than I’ve seen in the Citadel, but I… I don’t know yet. We’ll need to keep a close eye on her.”

He considered pulling her in closer, letting the conversation end there and dissolve into something else entirely. But there was still more. Always more. He shifted slightly beneath her, settling more comfortably against the back of the couch before speaking again.

“Regardless, Lady Hightower’s discovery needs to be taken to the blight and tested.” His hands instinctively tightened on her hips, a subtle, unconscious protest against the very thing he had laid out in his mind earlier that day. He had planned to lead the voyage himself, but that idea felt like it had formed a lifetime ago. Before she had been attacked. Before the world had irreversibly shifted beneath his feet.

“We’d need to send her and a few of the Sages out there to do it. With protection. A small force, nothing that will draw too much attention, but enough to keep them safe.” His focus remained on her face, watching for any shift in expression. “I can ask Orion to lead the expedition in my stead.”

Reaching up, he tucked a loose strand of dark hair behind her ear. “What do you think?”

Amaya’s free hand, the one still hanging over his shoulder and out of sight, curled into a loose fist as she caught his words.

“You intended to lead it.” And he didn’t anymore. Amaya’s voice was carefully neutral, her expression quiet.

Flynn nodded, his hand finding its way back to her hip as he lost himself in the steady way she looked at him. “I’ve rethought it.” he said, quietly. “My time is better spent here.”

Words formed on the tip of her tongue, her eyebrows drawing together slightly. He’d changed his plans because of her. He shouldn’t have needed to. But beneath her displeasure and tired shame, Amaya couldn’t help but feel grateful. Warm, despite the chill.

So she didn’t push.

Amaya sighed, her expression melting into something thoughtful as she watched him. Then she leaned into his chest. His arms instinctively wrapped around her as she nestled into him. Her head rested along the slope of his shoulder as her arms curved loosely around the back of his neck. She lay there, feeling his breath rise and fall like the tide.

“Then he seems the logical choice. If this discovery stems from the church and they’re not trustworthy, then there’s no telling what it leads to.” She was silently relieved he wouldn’t go — even without the blight poisoning the land and all the political and divine intrigue, the wilderness had never been easy to survive. “You’ll want people familiar with the Lunarian wilds, too. More have died from the cold than the blight.”

Flynn rested his head against hers, his eyes trailing the length of her back as he listened. She was right. “Do you have anyone particular in mind?” he asked, his gaze flicking to a nearby window. Large snowflakes were gathering against the glass, a sight that might have sent a shiver down his back, had he not been comfortably warm beneath her. But he dreaded the thought of sending men and women out into the cold—the ill-equipped Aurelians especially.

“I plan to talk to both Commanders tomorrow, if you’d like to join me,” he continued, his voice still quiet. “I need to make it clear that they have to work together while they’re here in Dawnhaven. We can ask Commander Volkov for specific people to volunteer, too. He should know who is best to handle the terrain.”

Amaya tried to remind herself that this wasn’t a trap. He wasn’t giving her a test she was meant to fail. He asked for her opinion, invited her to discussions, because he thought she might contribute — even if Amaya didn’t know how. She bent her arms a little tighter around him.

“All the guards I know are from the palace.” It was a whisper — too soft and vulnerable for the innocuous words. But throughout her life, guards had meant her father. Kind, or competent, or intelligent… whatever their merits, they had been above all, obedient to the crown. Sir Abel flashed in her mind again, as she’d known him — cold and distant, at the periphery of some of her worst memories.

“You spoke to a blight-born, once,” she said, hiding behind the change in topic. “He was from one of the wild tribes. No one knows the forests better than them.” And they were independent, disconnected from the palace’s influence. Amaya remembered his booming voice, the way his laugh had pierced through the walls. “And he has less to fear from the blight.”

"Ivor," he said, recognizing the blight-born she was talking about. "Good idea." Something bright bloomed in Amaya’s chest at his approval.

He closed his eyes, letting silence stretch between them. He was utterly exhausted, but for the moment, it felt like the world outside this room didn’t exist. Her heartbeat pulsed softly against his chest, like a dance in time with his own, and he breathed in the warm, subtle undertones of her perfume. He could have fallen asleep here, with her.

But his mind did as it so often did. Drifting, cataloging the day’s events. Eventually, an unwelcome image surfaced—Nyla. Standing in the cold outside the tavern, looking up at him with her own blue eyes full of sorrow and regret. The memory hit him harder than he wanted to admit, a sharp pang that lanced through his chest and made his heart miss a beat in their dance.

He opened his eyes, grounding himself in the soft feel of all Amaya’s curves against him. Forcing himself to focus on the fire crackling across the room, he tried to chase away the guilt gnawing at him.

Quietly, he grappled with whether or not he should say something—confess and risk unraveling the bond they'd only just begun to build. Desperately, he wanted to protect it. Their connection still felt so fragile—like one wrong move could shatter it and Amaya would cast him back out into the cold.

Something in him had shifted today. He craved what she so scarcely offered out. He’d been bathed in that rare, precious warmth that she held, and the thought of being out from under it again terrified him.

Yet, he knew keeping secrets could rot people from the inside out. He’d seen it in his father, in his mother—how lies and hidden truths poisoned everything they touched. He didn’t want that for them. Didn’t want to start their partnership on ground riddled with hidden pitfalls.

"Amaya..." he breathed, his voice low and hesitant. He glanced down at her, resting against him, her head turned away on his shoulder. Nerves coiled tight in his stomach. He wanted her to look at him, but at the same time, he didn’t. Maybe it would be easier not to see the inevitable shift in her eyes that threatened to slam a wall of ice between them.

"There's something else you should know, too..."

The words felt heavy, almost suffocating, but he made himself say them. He wanted to be brave enough to risk it—to be honest with her, even if it cost him the warmth he'd fought past endless barriers for.


Collab between @Queen Arya, @c3p-0h, & @The Muse


Location: Royal Residence



Flynn remained still near the banister, listening intently, half-expecting to see Elara ascend the staircase to return to Amaya’s side. But the approaching footsteps told him otherwise—hesitant, cautious, uncertain of their surroundings.

As the steps neared, flickering candlelight caught the curvature of horns, casting faint shadows against the wall. Instinctively Flynn grabbed the hilt of his sword, his heart skipping a beat at the sight in his own home. Sensing the Prince’s reaction, the guard stationed by Amaya’s door immediately unsheathed his own sword and stepped forward to meet whoever approached.

But then she came into view, and Flynn loosened his grip. The blight-born Priestess.

The very same he had seen earlier that day, practically offering herself to the Eternal Flame. Her blonde hair shimmered in the dim light, framing the horns that arched from her head. A slender tail curled behind her as she moved, violet eyes locking onto his.

Flynn’s eyes narrowed as their gazes met. He studied her, but remained silent as she closed the distance between them. The guard beside him remained in a tense, defensive stance, but eased slightly upon recognizing the robes she wore.

When she reached the top of the stairs, Flynn stepped back from the banister to fully face her. A beat of silence passed between them before he finally spoke.

“Where is the High Priestess? And Lady Hightower?”

Ranni nearly froze in place as the Prince met her gaze, and his eyes seemed to narrow in response. Was her presence here in particular not something he welcomed? Ranni’s own eyes went wide with surprise and she seemed about to speak up before he beat her to the punch.

”A-ah!” Ranni said, bowing her head in apology towards the Prince as she seemed surprised by his words. ”T-the High Priestess was occupied away from the temple, but I assure you; your highness, I am quite capable of offering aid in her stead,” she explained, offering a deeper bow of apology before straightening up. ”I-I was told what happened, but not how the Princess is faring… perhaps you would allow me to at least see what aid I can offer?” she asked, radiating out a feeling of genuine concern for the Princess’ wellbeing as she spoke.

Flynn’s lips pressed into a thin, irritated line at the woman’s response—or lack thereof. She hadn’t answered where Hightower was, didn’t even seem to recognize the name, and her explanation about the High Priestess was far from satisfying. Where had the High Priestess and his Lead Sage run off to?

His eyes assessed her for a moment, suspicion tightening in his chest. He was supposed to put trust in a blight-born? After everything that had just happened? His jaw clenched at the very thought, though a part of him told him not to give in to the prejudice he had been trying to fight against here in Dawnhaven.

At the very least, he had seen this woman with Tia and the Champion of Aelios earlier, so he assumed she was no imposter, but it didn’t exactly set him at ease.

A heavy sigh left him, his restraint unraveling thread by thread. He had fought back frustration all day and now it was beginning to slip through the cracks. Was there no one in this town he could rely on?

Without a word, the Prince turned sharply on his heel and strode past the priestess. Flynn’s gaze burned into the soldier, who still stood wary with his sword in hand, waiting for the next command.

Through clenched teeth, barely above a whisper, he ordered, “Find Hightower. Now.

The guard stiffened before nodding sharply. “Of course, Your Highness.” The man pivoted and hurried down the stairs, armored boots thudding against the wood.

With his back to the priestess, Flynn exhaled, dragging a hand over the lower half of his face as he tried to rein in his composure. After a moment, he approached Amaya’s door, his hand coming to rest on the handle—ice cold against his fingers.

Lightly, he rapped his freehand’s knuckle against the door a few times. “Amaya...” he called, “We’re coming in.”

Giving her a moment, he half turned, green eyes finding the priestess once more. He studied her for a beat, then asked, “I assume you are a skilled healer? What is your name?”

Ranni gave a quick nod in response, careful to remain quiet and non-disruptive as she looked towards the Prince. A sense of confidence and pride radiating from the Priestess, this being a field she knew herself to be adept. ”I am, High Priestess Tia herself trained me in the arts. My name is Ranni Soleil.” She responded, offering a polite and comforting smile.

Flynn gave her a curt nod before pushing the door open. Stepping inside, he held the door for the priestess to enter, his gaze settling on Amaya amidst all the flickering candlelight.

The room was still ice cold. Amaya’s facial expression was just as distant as it had been when he’d left, if not more so. A question lingered in his eyes, something he wouldn’t ask while in the company of another.

“Amaya,” he said, his voice softer than it had been moments ago. “This is Ranni. She’s a healer… a Priestess of Aelios.” Only then did he glance toward Ranni, his focus reluctantly pulling away from Amaya for a brief moment. “Hightower is on her way too. How’s the wound? Any changes?”

His voice washed over Amaya. The sound echoed somewhere inside her. She didn’t have the energy to search for that place, to follow that echo.

She didn’t react, not at first. She sat in the middle of her bed, fine blankets draped over her legs and pooled in her lap, face blotchy and tearstained. She was motionless, but it wasn’t the careful frigidity she so often used as a shield. No, she was simply too exhausted to move.

Trembling, she was helpless to the chill of her own magic. It was as vast and sprawling as her grief, a quiet ocean that filled her. There were no storms tearing through her, no blizzard to freeze her solid. Just the steady trickle that she barely felt and couldn’t stop, leaking out of her like the tears down her face.

She was staring at the water pitcher on the bedside table. It’d frozen solid, covered in a layer of frost. Cracks spiderwebbed over the ceramic. The whole piece was solid now, but it would shatter when the ice melted.

Amaya didn’t bother to wipe at her cheeks. Briefly, she considered telling them to leave. Would they, if she demanded it? Amaya found that she didn’t want to know the answer.

Finally, she turned her gaze away from the pitcher and down to her arm resting in her lap. The ugly bloodstain marring her sleeve, so thick it was nearly black. The jagged, scabbing wound. The pain she’d nearly forgotten about. It felt… trivial. Distantly, she knew that wasn’t the case. Her wounded heart was nothing compared to the very real threat that bloodied the streets of Dawnhaven. But how much pain and grief could she be expected to keep track of in a single day?

She looked up to find Flynn standing with a stranger at the door to her frigid room, and suddenly all she could see was the patient green of his eyes.

Amaya’s pain swelled like the tide, stealing the breath from her lungs and flooding her senses.

Tearing her gaze away, she focused back on her arm. A fresh tear dropped onto her sleeve, staining the fabric dark. Flynn’s heart clenched. The room felt colder. She tried to swallow around the lump in her throat.

Curling her fingers, she felt the distant arcs of pain in her arm. Then she looked back to the water pitcher and shook her head - an answer to his question. Amaya lifted her arm slightly in silent permission.

Flynn moved before he could think better of it, striding to her side. The bed dipped under his weight as he sat beside her, his hand finding the one she still held in her lap. His fingers wove through hers, warmth spilling into the spaces of her palm that the cold had claimed. But she barely reacted, her grip loose, her gaze averted, and the ache in his chest deepend.

With his free hand, he reached up, his thumb gently brushing against her cheek to wipe away the traces of her tears. There was so much he wanted to ask, but not here. Not with the Priestess watching. So instead, he whispered, his voice low and only meant for her.

“It’ll be okay.”

Amaya’s eyes shuttered closed as another languid tear rolled down her cheek. Soft and close. It seemed that every time her world fell to pieces lately, there he was, soft and close.

Flynn searched her face, longing for her to look at him, to give him something—anything. Even the guarded anger she used to wield against him would have been a relief. His hand lingered against her cheek, but at the sound of approaching footsteps—heavy strides, following closely behind a lighter step—his hand withdrew. Amaya finally looked to him, just as his eyes left her. It felt selfish to miss the weight of him, the softness and closeness. It felt cruel to leave her cold hand in his. Flynn turned his attention toward the door just as the Sage appeared, her expression grim.

“Apologies for the delay,” she began, “I was—”

The color drained from Eris’ face as her eyes locked onto the blonde woman standing in the room, dressed in the sacred robes of a Priestess. Horns protruding from her head, a tail flicking behind her.

Eris felt her heart plummet.

The breath caught in her chest, but she forced herself to forward, stepping fully into the room as the guard closed the door behind her, resuming his post outside the bedroom door.

"Where is Tia?" she demanded, her voice sharper than intended, reflecting the frantic feeling buzzing beneath her skin. "I—I requested the High Priestess. Who is this?"

Panic tinged every thought. Had she requested a High Priestess? Or did she simply ask for a Priestess, assuming Aliseth would know who she meant? Had Aliseth distracted her so much that she had failed this one task?

Oh, goddess. Did you mess this up, Pip?

Her brother’s voice echoed in her mind. Her pulse pounded against her ribs as doubt clawed its way up her throat.

Flynn narrowed his eyes, tension seeping into his very core. “Miss Tomae is busy, apparently.” he stated, his voice taking on a distant, cold edge. Something in Amaya tightened at the sound of his displeasure. She was suddenly hyper aware of where she touched him – how the weight of him tilted the mattress, pushing her arm into his. The stubborn warmth of his hand, curled around her own. She thought, briefly, futilely, of pulling away. Flynn kept his composure, though frustration clearly simmered beneath. The hairpins in Eris’ pocket no longer felt as comforting as they once had. “This is Ranni. A Priestess. A healer.” He briefly looked at Ranni before turning the full weight of his attention back to Eris. “You can still heal her, can’t you?”

The room seemed to take on a more hostile air as a new person, Eris, entered the room and nearly immediately took on a sharp tone. Complaining about expecting the High Priestess, and the Prince himself seeming tense in regards to Tia. Immediately, a burst of protective irritation burst from Ranni; radiating for a moment as she cast a look across the two. She nearly, very nearly, bit out in an equally sharp tone to protect Tia. Yet… she caught herself as she knew that Tia wouldn’t like such… inappropriate behavior out of the Priestess. Not when there was somebody who needed her help.

“I—I…Y—” Eris stammered, her throat dry as she forced the words out. Yes, I can.” she said more confidently this time, her voice quiet but firm enough to be heard. She did not want to be the object of the Prince's ire, of all people.

Her mind raced. If Ranni was truly a Priestess, then she had to be a skilled healer… right? But Eris had no way of knowing the full extent of her power. No way of ensuring that this wouldn’t cost Ranni her life. At least with Tia, she could be certain. But it didn’t matter now. For the crown, she had to work with what they had.

Steadying herself, she moved to Amaya’s bedside, lowering herself onto the mattress opposite Flynn. Gently, she took Amaya’s outstretched arm into her hands, her fingers warm against the Princess’ cold skin. Pulling her attention away from Flynn, Amaya watched the Sage as she drifted pale fingers over her arm. She kept herself from leaning away from the touch, even as her other hand curled into Flynn’s.

Turning her attention to Ranni, Eris asked, “Do you know detoxification healing?” Her voice was calmer now, more composed than she felt inside as she tried to summon the bits of herself that still remembered how to be a leader. The question was more for reassurance than anything. Regardless of the answer, Eris was going to guide her through it.

Ranni looked back towards the Sage, forcing herself to display a calm demeanor as she nodded towards Eris. Her tail, however, twitched in an obvious display of tense anxiety over the current air in the room. She gave a polite nod, stepping forward a small step. ”Both magical and non-magical means.” She said softly.

Feeling slightly more reassured, Eris shifted her attention to Amaya, her expression softening as she truly took in the look on her face—the sheer distress written in her eyes. That was what mattered. Not the Prince’s scrutiny, not her own fears. Amaya was what mattered right now. This was her entire purpose for being here. She would see it through, no matter the cost.

“Your Highness… may I place my hand on your chest?” She hesitated only a moment before adding, “I’ll need to hold your hand and put a hand on your chest, while Ranni places a hand on your wrist and the other on your back.”

The Sage’s questions, her hesitancy, her gentleness, left Amaya feeling uneasy. Whenever they’d brought a healer to her in the palace, there had only ever been cold orders and sterile efficiency. Why ask permission? Surely ‘no’ wasn’t an option, not if they’d already gone through all this effort of securing a Priestess.

Having one of our best sages walk out of this room to grab a priestess, who we don’t know, but is supposed to be our best sun-blighted hope is the exact. Opposite. Of fine!

The memory came to her unbidden. The force of Elara’s anger, her fear, poured into Amaya, drowning her again. She hesitated a moment before nodding. A new urge flooded her – to know this stranger they’d brought to her. Before she could lose her nerve, Amaya looked to the Priestess.

Recognition dawned. Ranni. Ranni Soleil. Sister to Dyna. The name had drifted through her mind unexamined when she’d been introduced, but Amaya remembered her now. This was the nervous blight-born she’d met at the feast, before…

Her arm pulled from Eris’ grasp. Amaya couldn’t stop herself from tightening her grip on Flynn’s steady hand, pressing into him like she could bury herself. His free hand moved on instinct, settling protectively against her back, his fingers brushing the curve of her waist. Whatever strength she sought from him, he would give it. Cracks spread along the water pitcher, thicker and more jagged as the ice’s chill deepened.

“You’re the mindworker.” It was little more than a whisper.

Eris’ hands hovered in the air where Amaya had slipped from her grasp, fingers curling slightly before she slowly lowered them to her lap. Her eyes flickered to Flynn, catching the sharp intensity in his green gaze—locked onto the Priestess.

Clenching her hands into nervous fists against the fabric of her coat, she too turned her attention to the Priestess, beginning to consider what abilities the blight may have given her.

The attacker hadn’t been the only blight-born today to invade Amaya’s senses with psychic magic. She’d brushed it off at the time, but Amaya remembered the foreign thoughts pressing in on her, the image of herself, cold and regal. Even now she could sense it, if she looked hard enough — a soft, subtle haze that drifted through her mind, tinting her thoughts. It was the odd, dissociative sensation of looking at herself, fragile and damaged, to be pieced together like broken crystal. It was weaker than the last time Ranni’d sent thoughts into her. Amaya didn’t even know that she’d recognize it, if not for her prior experience with it and her magic training. The familiar press of someone else in her mind, bending her emotions, sent her heart thundering, someone else’s poisonous blood pulsing through her veins.

Ranni moved in gently, her expression calm-yet-comforting as she looked towards Amaya. Forcing all thoughts, all worries, from her mind save for a single minded focus on doing whatever she could to help the Princess. She needed aid, and Ranni was unable to turn down somebody in need. Unknown to her, Ranni was also pushing out this single-minded and pure focus on helping Amaya’s recovery throughout the room…

Until Amaya recoiled from her presence.

The Priestess’ eyes went wide, her tail wrapping itself tightly around her own leg in sudden fear and lack of understanding as to what she’d even done. That whisper cut deep into Ranni’s mind, that she was… the mindworker? A sentiment that the Priestess found herself unable to comprehend, particularly how Amaya had seemed to figure out abilities Ranni had that she herself was only even barely beginning to comprehend. She knew she could feel other people… sometimes.

”W-what do you mean, your Highness? I apologize for whatever I’ve done to unsettle you, but… I swear I am what I say, a Priestess of Aelios, and I am only here to help Miss Hightower aid you.” She said, her tone betraying the confusion and lack of understanding for Amaya’s reaction. The same confusion the others would no doubt be able to see in her eyes as the Priestess frantically searched their faces for some kind of explanation.

”P-please, let us help you. If my presence makes you uncomfortable, I will leave the moment you are healed, but I can’t just leave somebody in need of aid.” She said, refocusing on Amaya in the desperate hope that the Princess would calm enough to at least let them handle her wound.

Flynn’s silence stretched as Ranni pleaded with them, his jaw tense as he bit back the impulse to lash out at both the Sage and the Priestess. Every instinct screamed at him to protect Amaya, to throw them both out of their home and shield her from further discomfort. The fear radiating from her as she leaned into him made his insides churn. Whatever she had already endured from this woman was yet another failure he incurred from leaving her side this morning.

His eyes shifted back to Amaya, worry lining his features. “Do you want to wait for the High Priestess?” he asked, as if Eris and Ranni weren’t even in the room. Amaya looked at him with wide eyes, again struck by the novelty of being asked. “Just say the word. I’ll send them awa—”

"Y-Your Highness, I would... I would highly advise against this." Eris spoke up, her voice wavering slightly, though she looked at him with conviction. "We do not know what that blight-born's blood could be doing, or will do. The Princess..." she paused, turning her gaze onto Amaya now. “Your Highness… you must be healed.”

In the haze of her cluttered, exhausted mind, fear brought Amaya sharp clarity. Her attention darted between the others and the growing energy in the room — the Sage’s nervous fluttering beneath a determined mask, how the Priestess seemed to collapse in on herself, how Flynn snapped between rigid anger and that careful gentleness he wrapped around her like a cloak with a quickness that left her dizzy. Amaya felt off-balance — she’d made the mistake of unguarded panic, and the whole room had shifted around her voice.

Flynn’s expression hardened as his attention shifted to the Sage, and for a moment, his anger flared. That “Astaros Fire” eager to rear its ugly head. He knew the danger, the uncertainty, but the fear in Amaya’s face was louder than any warning. He bit down again, reeling himself in with a deep breath—trying to peel emotion away from logic.

“You can’t do this alone?” he asked, his voice tight with restraint, though he already knew the answer. The lack of the sun left the Aurelians at a disadvantage, their power diminished by half, if not more. Aelios had damned them all.

Eris’ eyes dropped to her lap, shame creeping across her face as she shook her head. “No, Your Highness. I cannot. Not alone.”

Flynn briefly looked at Ranni, considering her presence—her offer of aid. “What did she do?” he asked, turning a softer gaze back onto Amaya.

A different scene played out in her mind. A memory. A different voice asked a version of that same question. The last time she’d exposed a blight-born using psychic magic against her, a man had been murdered as payment.

“I…”

She could feel the precarious balance of the room, waiting to shift again in response to the unspoken words lodged in her chest.

Ranni's eyes stayed wide, as if she were terrified she'd miss another sudden change in the room. The hostility, the distrust she could practically taste from the air bit at the fragile stability she'd built in her mind ever since she'd… changed. The Priestess seemed to visibly shrink further into her robes, taking a subconscious step back as if she were afraid of being lashed out at. The looks on the faces, and unspoken accusations towards her based solely off what she was left a sour, terrifying taste in her mouth.

She was a monster, afterall. She could see it in the terrified expression of the Princess, and the hardened look from the Prince. Tears started to well up in her eyes, with the young Priestess knowing not how to handle the fear gripping her heart.

Had Aelios lied to her?

The doubt rang deep in her heart, and for a moment Ranni wanted nothing more than to scream. To lash out and show the others in the room how… horrible and terrifying they were being toward her. Show them the very fear pouring into her mind in that moment.

Amaya pulled her eyes away to find Ranni. She took in the way the Priestess shrank into her robes, how her tail coiled defensively around herself, the blink of her wide, confused eyes. She was shocked and anxious, but she didn’t look like she’d been caught in the midst of some scheme. No, Ranni just looked scared. Something in Amaya’s heart softened — but she couldn’t afford to trust it. Not when the haze of magic still lingered in her thoughts, foreign and invasive. It drifted in and out of focus, like torchlight through fog. Her mind scrambled as she tried to grasp at it, to gather the intangible wisps so they could be removed, but with each clumsy attempt she grabbed nothing but air.

Was Amaya the only one affected? Or did Flynn and Lady Hightower, Aurelian as they were, just not recognize the magic for what it was? She couldn’t stop herself from leaning into Flynn, greedy for what she’d spent months guarding herself against. The weight of him, entwining with her hand, curving around her waist, made her want to fold herself into him. She wanted to tell him to send the others away, if only to see if he’d actually do it. But they couldn’t leave, not when the dull pain of her arm suddenly demanded her attention. Amaya shouldn’t have pulled away from Lady Hightower, when all she wanted to do was help. It nearly brought tears to Amaya’s eyes — the muddled, desperate urge to let them care for her.

It’s not real.

Amaya struggled to find the boundaries of what was her, and what wasn’t. The press of someone else in her mind, staining her, bending her, made Amaya’s heart rise into her throat, choking her with blood that wasn’t hers, as –

A sharp crack cut the air.

She felt Flynn tense, his larger frame securing her closer, curving more tightly around her as she gasped. Her hand, the one not encased in his warmth, was trembling. A small cloud drifted between her lips before dissipating in the candlelit air – how had it gotten so cold?

The Sage gasped, flinching at the sudden noise that sliced through the tension in the room. Her fingers dug into the fabric of her coat, heart pounding as her eyes snapped toward the sound.

On the table, the water pitcher was well and truly ruined. Coated in a thick layer of white frost, deep gouges separated the geometric pieces of ceramic. The once solid piece was now little more than tiles arranged and held together by a mass of ice, thin wisps of fog drifted off of it.

Amaya’s eyes widened as she looked at it. Realization struck her so suddenly that she was nearly lightheaded.

The Priestess audibly yelped and recoiled, crying out as she did. ”IMSORRYIDIDN-”

Thunk!

The Priestess’ words quickly cut off as she lost her balance, and tumbled to the floor. Falling heavily on her fear and nearly instantly throwing her hands up as if to protect herself from the attack that was surely coming. Why else would it have shattered…

Eris tore her gaze away from the pitcher, her eyes going wide at the sight of the Priestess crumpled on the floor. Opposite her, Flynn’s expression shifted with brief surprise, though he made no move to help Ranni, still focused on holding Amaya close.

Amaya, ripped from her thoughts by the sounds of Ranni’s panic, was now looking the Priestess over with stunned, thoughtful eyes. She made for a pitiful image – frantic and cowering on the floor, so certain that retribution was coming despite the fact that none on the bed had moved to strike her. There was an ache in Amaya’s heart. Was it real? Did it belong to her? Or was it another violation, forced onto her by the magic she could still feel?

She looked back back to the pitcher, shattered with the force of her own untamed magic.

“You don’t even realize you’re doing it,” she murmured as she watched the soft billowing of the fog. Amaya turned her eyes back to Ranni, eyebrows pulled together. “Do you?”

When no attack came, only the Princess’ softened voice, Ranni slowly lowered her hands. Peaking out with the eyes not of a dignified Priestess, but a traumatized and scared girl. Something in the Prince’s gaze softened, the fear in her eyes striking a chord deep within. For a fleeting moment, he was back in the palace, comforting a little sister who had once worn that same look.

The Priestess stared at Amaya for a long few moments, shaking her head slowly in way of a response. She remained silent, trying to gather herself enough not to break into tears or to scream whenever she opened her mouth.

Amaya took in the blight-born Priestess and her earnestness – contradictions wrapped around each other. Would Ranni turn violent if Amaya revealed her, as the attacker had? Something echoed in her mind, more instinct than answer. It didn’t feel like enough. But psychic magic was a dangerous thing, and if Flynn and the Sage were susceptible to it, and they didn’t realize… they needed to be made aware. She’d had catastrophic errors in judgement today, ones she could measure in blood spilled and tears shed. If Seluna had any mercy left, this wouldn’t be another.

Her next words caught in her throat, thick with fear and memories of what they might cost. Amaya’s hand tightened around Flynn’s, her whole body tensing. Her soft voice landed heavy in the tension of the room.

“Do you know you have psychic magic?”

Eris shifted her gaze from Ranni to Amaya, her brow furrowing. Psychic magic? Had she missed something? She hadn't felt any unusual presence in the air or pushing into her mind, though she knew Amaya would naturally be more attuned to such things. It made sense. And yet, she couldn’t help but feel a pang of shame for not noticing it first.

Ranni shook her head. ”I-I've started to figure out that I can… feel? Hear? Others.” She admitted meekly, still seeming guarded as if worried her words would bring the terrifying tension back in full force.

Flynn’s attention fixated on Ranni as she spoke, cataloguing her response carefully. A flicker of unease passed over his features—how had he missed the psychic magic that Amaya had noticed? After years of training to notice these things, how had he let it slip past him?

He glanced briefly at Amaya, trying to read her expression. What was it she had felt, that he hadn’t? What had stood out to her that he hadn’t sensed?

”I didn't know I was… influencing others. I-I-I'm sorry, Princess. I've not been… this… very long. I still don't know how it's changed me.” She admitted further, her voice shaky and interrupted by little non-vocal pauses that betrayed the Priestess to be on the verge of tears. ”I didn't mean to s-scare you. I-I'm not a monster like some of my kind.” She finished, voice remaining soft and guarded.

Amaya watched her move, taking in every flinch and tremor. The revelation of her magic landed softly, confusion clear. There was no rage. No violence, as there’d been with her attacker. Relief was palpable, even if Amaya didn’t know if she could rely on it yet. But she didn’t relax – not when she still felt Ranni’s magic, even after calling it out for what it was.

”I-If you're prepared to allow me, I'd like to prove that. By helping Miss Hightower.” She said, a small hint of the desire to help returning to her eyes as she looked between the Royals.

Yet… a little piece of her faith in others and even Aelios herself did not return.

Nor was she sure it ever would.

Finding her strength, Eris stood and took a cautious step toward Ranni. "You'll be safe here," she said quietly, her breath fogging in the cold air as she extended a hand—an offering to help the Priestess back to her feet.

“The Princess has been through... a lot, as of late,” Eris continued softly, her voice gentle, compassion flickering in her eyes for both Amaya and Ranni. She understood their fear all too well—the way Amaya recoiled from touch, how Ranni raised her hands as though she were bracing for a blow. “As I’m sure you have, too...” She added, her heart aching at the thought of Ranni’s recent transformation and the difficulties of navigating that

How painful and cruel this world was for them all.

Once Ranni was on her feet, Eris turned back toward Amaya, her eyes studying the Princess’ expression as she seemed to assess the Priestess. Nervously clasping her hands in front of her, she waited in silence for Amaya’s final judgment.

Ice blue eyes lingered on Ranni, careful and quiet. Her own panic was dissipating, though the bloodstains remained in the corners of her memory. Something new emerged from beneath the heaviness that had been layered throughout the day. Something familiar and unyielding.

Every stammer and sniffle from the Priestess made Amaya want to flinch, to console and soothe. But she didn’t move. Not when she still felt the soft touch of psychic magic. The wrongness of it kept her heartbeat quick, and her body tense.

Poisonous memories coiled around her, of feeling like a passenger in her own body, of the riptide of her emotions turned against her, of her perceptions turning untrustworthy and traitorous, not with force or violence, but with a thought. Amaya had never once been in control of her own life – but her mind was hers.

The boundaries of her mind had been violated on three separate occasions today – two of those had been by Ranni, intentional or not. She had apologized. But did she understand? Or did she think Amaya’s fear had more to do with what she was, rather than what she’d done? Did she know that even as she assured them she meant no harm, she was still intruding?

It was an impulse. Before she could think better of it, Amaya sank herself into Ranni’s magic, letting it wrap around her without resistance. For a moment she felt untethered, the sickening loss of boundaries leaving her formless. The small intake of breath she gave was the only sign of her discomfort. She tried to remember her body – the aches, the chill, the warmth. She tried to match her shallow breathing to the steady count of Flynn’s surrounding her.

Amaya had never had any real skill for psychic magic – or perhaps she’d just never had the stomach. But she’d sat obediently through her required lessons, and knew enough to detect and guard against it. She used that knowledge now to instead take hold of the psychic connection Ranni had accidentally forged.

If Ranni didn’t know the extent of her ‘influence’, if the paths she created were still invisible and undefined to her, then Amaya would give them definition. She would line torchlights through the fog, and show Ranni the road she’d been walking.

I’ve known monstrous humans, and compassionate blight-born. None of them are permitted inside my mind.

The message echoed through Ranni’s magic like a beacon, faint but undeniable. And then, just as the words began to fade, Amaya mustered her strength and pushed the magic out of her mind. If the Priestess needed an opposing force for her own magic to know itself against, she had it now. Walls came down, forming an unmistakable boundary.

And Amaya was alone in her mind once more.

Flynn barely had a moment to register what was happening before Amaya’s words crashed through him like a tidal wave, filling every corner of his mind, pushing out thoughts and feelings he had believed to be solely his own. The sheer force of it made him tense, his brow furrowing in discomfort. He had never liked psychic intrusions—never enjoyed the feeling of something foreign twisting through his thoughts without permission.

As Amaya’s presence faded, it left behind unmistakable traces—clear threads of magic woven through his thoughts, ones he hadn’t even noticed before. And then, that overwhelming need to help Amaya surged through him again. His jaw tightened as realization settled in. That feeling—it wasn’t entirely his own afterall. Not completely. Ranni’s magic had subtly wrapped around his natural instincts so perfectly that he hadn’t even thought to question it.

But now that he knew what to look for, he could feel the intrusion that had slipped past his defenses unnoticed. A flicker of frustration stirred—not at Ranni, but at himself. He should have caught this. Should have known.

He exhaled slowly, grounding himself as he refocused on the Priestess. Steadily, he reinforced his mental walls, methodically pushing her influence out of his mind. As his thoughts and feelings became entirely his own again, he made a note to brush up on his training. Even if it aligned with his own beliefs, he needed to be able to detect it. His father had taught him to fight against hostile intrusions, but never this. And this was a weakness to be fixed.

Amaya deflated where she sat – only to find she couldn’t move much at all. Flynn was still holding her, pressed so close that she would have blushed if she’d had the energy. He was as solid as the walls she’d formed, and instead of collapsing, Amaya found herself leaning into him. She shouldn’t have wanted to, she knew. After Elara –

Her hand was still in his, loose now, but intertwined. She looked at the mismatched pair, telling herself it was the psychic magic that had pushed her so close to him. Her tired eyes flicked back up to see the two women, still standing on the other side of the room. Eris was looking at her expectantly, waiting for her to tell the room which way to shift again. Her gaze moved to Ranni, and there was that softness in her heart again as she took in the other woman’s distress. It seemed that hadn’t been her magic’s influence, afterall.

Despite everything, there was an odd, hesitant sort of kinship. Amaya knew what it was to be ignorant and out of control of her own magic – the room was still frigid.

Amaya couldn’t bring herself to pull away from the heavy warmth curled around her body. She was too exhausted by the day, the grief, the magic. Whatever strength she’d had to define her will and make it known was gone now. Perhaps it hadn’t been her will at all, but rather the influence of Ranni’s wish for Amaya’s care. The thought soured.

She wanted to turn from the two healers, and give her answer only to Flynn, like it was something secret. He could be the one to command the room – he played the role so much better. But Amaya focused on Ranni. She didn’t let herself break the Priestess’ gaze as her fingers curved around Flynn’s unconsciously. .

Amaya nodded her permission, silent but clear.

Location: Amaya Selu



Amaya had lived her entire life within walls.

Layer by layer they encased her, making her small by their greatness. The border walls of the Lunaris capital, grey and distant; the polished white stone that wrapped around the royal grounds; the shining marble of the palace, walls folding over themselves in a frigid maze of hallways and empty rooms; the ice she pulled around herself, with careful practice and trembling hands. At some point it had become second nature – the ice came whether she called it or not, both prison and protection.

And she’d been contained. Held in place. Held together. Small, fragile, and ignorant, she’d seen her walls and thought them the boundaries of the world. She’d felt ice against her back and mistook it for a spine, seen the distorted fractures of her reflection and thought herself whole.

There had been warmth, once. Soft and tender, it had cocooned her so thoroughly that she thought even the chill wouldn’t touch her. But warmth was a dangerous thing – it melted the ice, left the walls thin and fragile.

This is your fault.

The words hadn’t belonged to her. Still, they echoed through Amaya, catching themselves along her fractured edges and making a home in what remained.

She saw soft blue eyes. Pale skin. White hair like moonlight, shining through the shadows. Blood.

Words seeped through the ice and again, Amaya stained them with her grief.

I can’t do this anymore.

Relief had been a breathtaking, guilty thing, when she’d learned that Elara would accompany her for the last few months of her life – at least she would be permitted to keep this last bit of warmth until the end. Her impending death, the role she’d been destined for all along, would come swiftly, and there would simply be no time or motivation for anyone to hurt her further. Why torment someone who was already dead?

But how cruel of her - to find joy in the upheaval of Elara’s life, her future grief, after a lifetime of trapping her behind the many walls that made Amaya’s world. She’d just been too blind, or naive, or needy, or selfish to realize how she sapped the warmth from everyone around her. That was why Amaya was alone now – not because of any torment her father had inflicted upon her. It simply cost too much to be with her.

I can’t be what you want me to be. Not anymore.

Perhaps she’d never lost anything at all. The warmth had been an illusion – an indulgence, too costly to sustain. How pitiful she was, to mistake obligation and duty for… what?

Love?

Did she demand what others could not give? Did she take? Desperate and uncaring, she’d pulled another into her prison to freeze beside her, and thought that her icy hand wrapped around Elara’s, turning her cold and numb, crystals growing along her skin, was love.

I think… I’ve always known.

Elara knew her, better than anyone left in this world. Perhaps even better than her mother had. Amaya used to think herself blessed for that.

Elara knew her, and it had broken her heart.

Perhaps she knew a truth that Amaya was only just now realizing: she was her father’s effortless cruelty, hidden behind her mother’s face.

And now, she was inescapably alone, with nothing but the shards of her own reflection, her ruined echoes forming a chorus around her.

The walls of her prison were gone, and so she collapsed with nothing to hold her together. The warmth, fleeting though it had been, had melted through her careful protection until it shattered at a touch, shards of frost scattered around her. She was a long-festering wound, alight with pain in the open air.

She had nothing left – no warmth to cradle her, no ice to shield her. There was only her grief, her hollow ache, and the burning brine of her tears as they cut familiar paths.

As the salt dried along her skin, the crystals formed like ice.



Interactions: Amaya Selu @c3p-0h

Collab between @SkeankySnack, @c3p-0h, and @The Muse
Location: The Crystal Cave

Part IV



The ground thudded with heavy footfalls, those that belonged to the giant blightborn, who trudged along blizzard laden ground with nothing to protect him from the elements. The air around him was thick, heavy and white as blinding snow obscured his vision. He had naught on his person, not even furs and leathers to shield him from the elements. Ivor was truly lost, wandering aimlessly, frozen to the core and starving for anything that could sustain him. An echo crossed the threshold of his mind, his eyes darted to and fro, his head whipping back and forth. What was this sensation? Fear? Ivor moved, he didn’t know where he was going, but anywhere was better than standing still. No matter where he stepped though, the echo only grew louder and louder, until it was but a roar ready to rupture his ears. He felt afraid, alone, where was his tribe? Why had they abandoned him?

When his eyes opened, he found himself in front of the creature he had felled in battle, the essence of the bear within. It roared with foul animosity, its intent writ upon Ivor’s psyche.

“Dead is the goddess! Gone is her scourge, her scorching light! Blessed is the dark! We shall bring forth the end; spill all the living’s blood!”

Ivor’s eyes shot open as his whole body jolted awake, he lifted his appendage to his face only to see his normal, big sized hand. Using said hand he felt across his entire body, realizing there was only flesh and some body hair, instead of a mass of fur and fat. He realized he was back to normal, having transformed sometime during their slumber. There was a sense of relief knowing he was awake once more, but dreams often held meanings. Whatever foreboding sense he got from the meaning, he’d have to wait to contemplate it as he looked down upon his two charges, both of whom he seems to have woken up when he moved so suddenly. Physically, both seemed fine, if not startled, but already it was an improvement from their situation earlier as Ivor’s face lit up with a smile, melting away some of his worries.

“Good morning friends!” His voice boomed and echoed in the confines of the crystal walls.

Zeph tensed beneath heavy furs as the silence he had been savoring was abruptly broken. For the past twenty minutes, he had been awake, listening to the occasional drip of water, the distant splash of killer fish, and the steady breathing of the two who had kept him warm for hours. His hazel eyes, which had been resting on the delicate features of Tia’s face, flicked upward to meet Ivor’s gaze. He forced a slight smile in return before shifting beneath the warmth of the furs, pulling himself into a seated position. The cold air hit him instantly, biting at his bare skin where warmth had once cocooned him.

Tia, suddenly very awake and very warm, scrambled to push herself up and away from Zeph.

"Morning," he muttered, his voice rough, stripped of its usual lighthearted tone. He ran a hand through his dark, tousled hair before pressing his fingers into his temples, shutting his eyes for a moment. Cracking one eye open, he peered at Ivor.

The giant was up and about, stretching out his limbs, muscles flexing and glistening in the light of the crystals.

‘Wasn’t there a bear?’ He thought, confusion setting in. Had he imagined it all? He had been that delirious?

His hand moved to his shoulder, where pain had once seared through him like fire. Now, there was nothing—only smooth, healed skin. Tia watched him, taking in the way he didn’t flinch at the touch, and how his skin color changed and reacted to the pressure he applied. His fingers traced where the wound should have been, but there was no trace of it, no tenderness, nothing. His gaze moved across Ivor’s body, remembering the wounds that had marred him. And yet, just like Zeph, he looked untouched.

Tia was a hell of a healer.

He had heard of the Aurelian’s prowess in the art, but to see it in action was something else entirely. His gaze flicked downward, catching the sight of the jagged scar along the left side of his abdomen—one that had never healed so cleanly. Her eyes followed the same path. A healer like her would have been useful then.

He exhaled, pushing himself to his feet and stretching, still only in his boxers. His body still ached, but it was dull—nothing compared to what it should have been. As he padded over to where his discarded clothes lay, he glanced back.

"Everyone feeling okay?" he asked, his gaze settling on Tia as he reached for his pants.

It was then that Tia realized she was still sitting on the cave floor, the furs piled around her. Without the small pocket of warmth they’d created, the chill was seeping into her again, doing nothing to help the stiffness she felt, or the way she wanted to curl in on herself and burrow back into Ivor’s fur. Her eyes flicked over Zeph, evaluating. She tried to just see a body.

Her eyes lingered on the familiar pink of scar tissue, jagged against smooth skin. She snapped her gaze back up to his and forced herself to nod.

Turning, she cast an appraising eye over the other member of their little group. Ivor, like Zeph, seemed to be adequately healed. If anything, he seemed to be doing the best of the three of them. Tia met his purple gaze, her heart jumping in her chest as she remembered the beast he’d transformed into. But he’d kept them warm. And he was smiling at her now, with his exuberant nature. Tia couldn’t help but give him a shy smile of her own, and a small nod of thanks.

He was also almost completely naked. As was Zeph. And Tia, while adequately clothed, was absolutely covered in their dried blood.

She sighed down at herself. Getting herself back into town while avoiding questions was going to be… difficult. What was she going to tell the twins? How long had they even been gone for?

Tia tried to swallow her worry and guilt as she looked down at her hands, covered in dark, flaking blood. The cold was already seeping back into her fingers.

At least they would be returning to town at all.

Something glittered in the periphery.

Tia didn’t move – not at first. She suddenly felt held in place, under the weight of something that burned and blistered where it touched her. It stilled the breath in her ragged throat. It erased the boundaries that made her, one by one.

She had eyes to see with, she reminded herself. They were still looking down at her hands. She could move them. She could touch, and feel.

She still wasn’t breathing as she turned her head to look at the small glowing gemstone, still sitting in a pool of diluted blood. Her golden dagger was beside it. Tia flexed her fingers in her lap, curling them in and out like she had to remind herself how to use them.

Then she reached out with a trembling hand to pick up the stone.

As Tia’s fingers closed around the gemstone, a shocking chill ran up her arm. To her alone, the glow of the gemstone pulsed, once, twice—then suddenly, a sharp crack echoed in her mind.

A voice, deep and filled with venomous rage, boomed from nowhere and everywhere at once.

"Insolence!"


The voice seethed with fury and the word slammed into her like a physical blow, rattling through her. It was not merely spoken—it was felt, reverberating through her very bones.

The gemstone grew scalding in her palm, searing into her skin. Images flashed through her mind—a vast, endless abyss, spires of obsidian reaching toward a sky that didn’t exist. A towering humanoid figure stood before a massive stone circle embedded into a cavern wall, its surface fractured and etched with glowing runes. The figure’s skin was dark as the night sky, ears sharply pointed. Golden eyes, burning with something ancient and wrathful, pierced through shadows.

Then, the gemstone pulsed again—harder—forcing the breath from her lungs. The vision shattered and the cavern returned to eerie stillness. The gemstone lay in her trembling palm, cool to the touch.

It rolled along the tilting valley of her hand. Then it fell back into the bloody puddle with a sharp clatter and a pink splash.

Tia couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t see anything but the gemstone – the imprint of blackness and gold and rage that had burned through her like it meant to turn her to ash.

No – Tia could breathe. But her chest was rising and falling at a speed that some part of her knew wasn’t correct. Icy air ripped through her ragged throat too quickly. Tia could breathe but she was suffocating as the gemstone’s fiery afterimage consumed all the air in the cavern.

Her whole body shook as she tried to scramble to her feet, only to catch on the end of her own bloodstained robe and fall backwards again. Her vision began to spot as she tried to push backwards, away from the gemstone laying innocently in its pool.

Half dressed—pants barely on, boots unlaced—Zeph’s eyes snapped up. Without hesitation, he rushed to her side, placing a hand on her shoulder to steady her before she backed straight into the frigid waters of death.

“What? What happened?” he asked, his gaze following hers, landing on the gemstone. “That? What is it?” his brows furrowed together, glancing up at Ivor for answers.

Mid stretch Ivor watched as Tia gripped the stone only to recoil from it a fraction of a moment later. His eyes widened as he began to run forward, but Zeph was faster, stopping the priestess before she dunked herself into the frigid pool with ravenous fish. He was on both of them shortly after, kneeling next to the two, his gaze found the small rock just as Zeph inquired of it. “Ivor do not know, it is what I found down there,” he pointed back into the pool, “There was a cave Ivor could not reach, deep in crack I found that rock.”

The giant stood and approached the stone, kneeling down to pick it up, he finally got a chance to look it over now that he wasn’t fighting for his life. Its textures and hues were similar to that of the crystals in the cave, yet this stone felt wholly unnatural in this environment. Its circumference and diameter felt too even, too precise, almost as if it were carved by a master jeweler and purposefully set there, only for Ivor to find it. Almost instinctively, the giant bit down on the gem, ensuring its authenticity. Tia’s eyes widened, panic shooting through her… only to turn into confusion when he didn’t seem to have any reaction to the odd gem.

Ivor turned back to approach the two of them, stone carefully held in between his fingers. He knelt before them and looked at Tia, “Miss Priestess, are you alright? You do not have to be speaking the words, just blink one time for good and two time for bad.”

Tia looked up at him, her breath still too labored, body still too stiff. Her eyes flicked back to the stone, and how it almost seemed to shine from within. Like waking from a dream, the stark emotions she’d experienced through the vision were already draining from her, leaving her disoriented.

Was she alright? Her eyes remained focused on the gem as she tried to take stock of her own body - fingers, hands, arms, shoulders, up and down, only to find that she was still simply and sorely herself. The gem’s images flashed in her mind again. Zeph’s hand was heavy on her shoulder, grounding her. Ivor’s form towered high like the spires she’d seen. Her mind spun, trying to make sense of the odd vision, the sensations, the voice. But she was too overwhelmed – too exhausted and cold, to even begin to know how to process it all. She couldn’t even identify her own embarrassment at causing a scene, though she knew it must’ve been there somewhere.

Finally, she looked back up to Ivor. Over her shoulder at Zeph again. Back to Ivor. She tried to smile – it didn’t work. So instead she just blinked once at him.

Zeph exhaled, tension easing from his shoulders. She was okay—or, at least, as okay as she could be. His gaze settled on the gemstone held between Ivor’s fingers, mind racing as he inspected what he could of it. Why had she reacted that way? Was this what she came here to find? Was it something she had lost? His lips parted to ask, but before the words could form, she began to shift.

After hours on the ground, Tia forced herself to stand on stiff, aching legs. Zeph hovered a hand near her arm, ready to catch her if she swayed. Even sitting, Ivor was still nearly eye-level with her. She tried to smile at him again, dusting her hands on her ruined robes. It was a little easier this time, at least. Tia forced in a slow breath to steady herself. Then she lifted the excess fabric of her belt. The sunrise orange fabric sat across her bloody palm as she looked back up at Ivor, silently requesting the gem back. Her hand still trembled, whether from the cold or her own frazzled nerves.

Ivor waited patiently, satisfied when she did finally blink, he gave a small smile. When presented with her outstretched, clothed palm he tentatively placed the gemstone within the open parcel. He waited a moment, ready to snatch it from her should she react the same way as before. It seemed though the cloth did it’s trick and was able to shield her from whatever pain it had inadvertently caused before. “Ivor is thinking, it may be time to return home,” he eyed her over, pale, bloodied, her expression wore tired, “Ivor means no offense, but you are looking really terribly right now.” His brow furrowed as he picked himself up to retrieve and don his furs on the cave floor. Her cheeks darkened, even as her eyes sparked with amusement and she huffed out a breath.

Zeph’s hazel eyes drifted over Tia’s body, taking her in. The memory of her bathed in golden light flashed in his mind. Gently, he took a strand of her blonde hair between his fingers—stiff and matted with dried blood. Eyes catching on the movement in her periphery, Tia turned slightly. She paused at the sight of the guard holding the filthy lock of hair. He inspected it briefly before letting it fall away and meeting her eyes.

“I think she looks tough.” he remarked, a small smirk tugging at his lips. “Like a proper warrior.” He stepped closer, nudging her gently with his shoulder in a playful manner before winking. Tia’s heart stuttered in her chest. Somehow, despite her bashfulness and nerves, a surprising new emotion flickered within her: pride. A shy smile came to life on her face, meeting his own. With that, Zeph turned and strode off toward his scattered clothing.

“Hah!” The giant laughed as he stuck his arm through the hole cutout, “Yes! The warriors three! We must tell Sya and the others, they shall sing many songs in our honor!”

Tia watched him for a moment, that fragile pride following after him. When she pulled back into herself, her smile was soft and thoughtful. But it drifted away, when she refocused on the gem in her hand. It felt too heavy – or maybe that was just the weight of her own questions and worries pressing down into her palm. The images flashed in her mind again. That searing hate. Tia chewed her lip, unsure of what she was supposed to do with this. Why had she been sent to find this? By whom? The Arch Priest’s warnings echoed in her mind again – her unreliable dreams. He’d warned of darker influences.

Tia’s fingers curled, cocooning the gem in a layer of fabric. Opening the edge of her robe, she slipped the gem into the inner pocket, pressed awkwardly against the stiff, folded pages of the Arch Priest’s letter.

Once fully dressed, Zeph stepped to where the spear lay half-submerged in shallow water. “Can’t forget your weapon… again.” he muttered, inspecting the pool for any ravenous fish that might be nearby and waiting to take a finger off. When he finally picked up the spear, he walked over to Ivor, the weight of it heavy in his hand.

“Here.” he said, offering the weapon to the giant. Just as the word left his mouth, his stomach growled. Loudly. Zeph grimaced and let out a heavy sigh. What he wouldn’t give for one of those sweet treats from the tavern right about now…

As Ivor reached out for the weapon, the audible echo of the man’s stomach in front of him, elicited a soft chuckle from him, probably the quietest laugh they’d heard from him yet. He finished reaching out for the weapon, firmly grasping it, and Zeph released the staff into Ivor’s care.

There was a faint sound – almost a laugh, though it was breathy and rasping. Tia brought the back of her palm up to hide her amused smile. Zeph’s eyes snapped to her, narrowing in a look that was half a glare, half a smirk—mock offense layered beneath obvious amusement. For a moment, he fixed her with an expression as if to say, ‘Oh, you think this is funny?’ His lips pressed into a firm line, fighting the urge to laugh along with her, but the glint in his hazel eyes betrayed him.

When she lowered her hand again her expression was controlled as she looked between the two men. Tia couldn’t help but feel responsible for them. It was their blood she was covered in, afterall. It was her mission they’d set out on. And though it seemed the danger had passed (she hoped… there was still the return trip to deal with) the men were still under her care.

And clearly one of them was hungry.

Tia glanced around, her dark eyes finding where her bag was discarded on the cave floor. It didn’t have much… a small biscuit and a mixed pouch of nuts and dried, candied berries. It was a snack, but likely wasn’t filling enough for the guard, with how much energy (and magic) they’d had to expend and how long they’d been out in this expedition for. Tia knew at least Ivor had… fed… but if she was honest, she felt the sharp pangs of hunger, too. The thought of having to trek all the way back to Dawnhaven in the snow without anything in her stomach was daunting to say the least.

But then her gaze caught on her golden ceremonial dagger — and the flickering fish swimming in the pool. She paused. Then she walked the few short steps to her dagger to pick it up off the ground. The metal was an icy shock against her skin, and Tia let out a short breath, a stunned white cloud fluttering in front of her. Steeling herself, she curled her fingers around it fully. The dried, rusty blood that coated her skin was a sharp contrast to the dagger’s glittering opulence. Tia felt dirtier somehow, with it in her hand. But she swallowed back her unease, straightening up again to smile at Zeph and Ivor. She held up the dagger in one hand, pointing to the pool with the other. She couldn’t fight or keep them from getting hurt, but Tia had other ways of caring for her companions.

“Fish?” Her broken voice bounced softly around the walls of the cave, offering itself to them.

The two watched as Tia made her way to the water, pointing at it with her dagger suggesting they eat the fish in the water. It was only fair since the fish did try eating them first, a big grin on his face as he nodded back to her, “Fish.” Clapping Zeph lightly on the shoulder he approached the pool of water and crouched, watching the fish as they lazily swam in the water. It was just the same as when he was first here, serene, calm, easy prey to catch so long as one wasn’t bleeding. Ivor’s eyes narrowed as he readied the spear by his side, watching, waiting for the perfect moment to strike. The giant fully allowed instinct to take over, his periphery fading as he focused on his target. Then, swiftly, a flash of steel pierced the water with nary a splash, retreating almost as quickly as it entered the water. As the blade emerged, a fish was impaled upon it, spluttering and flailing as it tried to ‘escape’ this deadly predator that had caught it.

Ivor stood up, planting the ball end of the spear upon the ground, fish corpse spasming on the bladed end. The man’s smile never ceased as he exclaimed to the two of them, “Fish!”

Tia blinked with wide eyes at the display, stunned by Ivor’s… efficiency. The fish flailed helplessly on the spear. Sparing a glance at Zeph (did he even like fish?) she hurried towards Ivor as she began rolling up her sleeves. The chill pricked at her bare skin, though she tried to put it from her mind.

It had been some time since Tia’d prepared a fish, but she knew she had to move quickly now that the process had begun. She wished she had a needle – even her hairpins, that she seemed to have lost at some point in the last week. But all she had was the golden dagger that glittered in her hand. It would have to do (Aelios, forgive me.).

The fish flopped in the air above Tia’s head. With her free hand, she reached up to wrap her fingers around its cold, scaly head. She pressed her lips together against the sensation – the slick scales, how it tried to fight her as she held it steady, muscles straining against her own. She took in a breath. Then she slid the tip of her dagger up into the fish’s eye. The fish flinched, spasming one last time, fins flaring at its sides. Then it went limp.

At least the dagger was sharp.

The blade was wider than the tool she’d used as a child, slicing the eye clean in half and cutting into the meat around the socket. Normally it would’ve been a sort of curved spike to pierce the brain, a…

Tia couldn’t remember the name.

She moved automatically as she pulled the fish from the spear, and walked towards the pool. A handful of slices with her dagger found the fish open and held over the water, blood and entrails splashing as they fell. Tia watched as the living fish frenzied again. Her eyes were distant as the fish cleaned the water, and soon enough went docile again.

…What was its name?

Ivor watched as the priestess removed the fish from his weapon, briefly considering consuming the aquatic soul before she began cleaning it for consumption. Then he thought better against it, the day had already been trying enough without more reminders that they lived among monsters. Ivor smiled, slinging the staff over his shoulder as he approached the entrance to the cavern. Stopping at the door he turned briefly to the others, “Ivor is going outside, need to see sky, see the clouds, feel the wind, make sure it is safe for journey back to Dawnhaven.” He nodded, “Eat, Ivor will be back soon.” With that the giant exited the cave, leaving the two alone with the other’s company.

Tia found a relatively clean and dry spot on the cave floor. Pulling out a small handkerchief, she smoothed it over the stone and placed the fish atop. Muscle memory took over as she sliced with the dagger. Though beautiful, it was an imperfect tool for the job. But she’d learned from a young age how to make do with what was available.

Food had been plentiful and varied at the Sunfire Citadel in Aurelia’s capital – but Tia had spent her childhood far away, in a poor Ember Isle temple. The villagers had little to spare. Fish had been a common offering when they sought Aelios’ favor, and even in the reverence of the temple, the keepers of Her flame couldn’t afford to give the entire gift to the Goddess. The girls had all been taught to clean and prepare a fish for eating, with and without fire.

Tia moved through the steps that she didn’t even know she remembered – slicing away the top layer of flesh, scanning for parasites with her magic, filleting the pink meat. It was almost meditative, the knife sliding through the fish as Tia searched her mind for bits of language she could no longer grasp.

Zeph watched in quiet curiosity as she worked, her movements steady and practiced, suggesting that this wasn’t her first time. He hadn’t expected an Aurelian Priestess to know her way around such dirty work. Was this something they were all taught, or did she pick it up elsewhere? Either way, it was another interesting piece of her he hadn’t anticipated.

His gaze dropped to the dagger she used—elegant, expensive, finely crafted. Not the kind of blade that was meant for gutting fish. Nonetheless, it got the job done with ease. She was far more careful with her cuts than he would have been, taking her time, ensuring precision. He would have worked faster—messier—but she treated the task with care. He found himself watching every motion a little more closely than he had meant to, filing the details away.

She blinked back to herself when the work was done. Tia looked down at the row of meat, little pink rectangles offering themselves up to her. There wasn’t much, but it was something. The fish hadn’t been very large, and the hole Ivor had pierced through it meant some meat was lost. The cuts were imperfect – slightly crooked here, uneven there. The corner of her mouth twitched up as she looked at the sparse meal she’d prepared. Something small and melancholic sat in the space behind her heart.

Sister Fumi would’ve offered her no praise for this work. But she would’ve eaten it all the same.

Remembering her two companions, Tia looked up to find the guard and the barbarian – she blinked, only finding one of them. Ah… right. Ivor had stepped out. Tia stilled at the way Zeph watched her intently, hazel eyes focused on her. Suddenly shy, she looked back down at her unseasoned, ungarnished meal. Then she forced herself to smile and look back up at her remaining companion. Tia gestured with an open palm towards the cut meat.

“Fish.”

Suspicion flickered across Zeph’s face and he eyed the pieces for a long moment. The fish here were strange, iridescent things that shimmered unnaturally in the water. Unlike any he’d seen before. Were they even safe to eat? Were they blighted? They certainly acted feral enough to be blighted. He crouched down beside her, leaning in to scrutinize the meat as if he’d somehow be able to tell just by looking. Tia faltered, leaning slightly away as her cheeks warmed at his sudden proximity. She watched his face for signs of approval… or disgust.

Zeph’s options ran through his mind. He could refuse, keep starving, and make the long, grueling trek back to Dawnhaven on an empty stomach. He always got so grumpy when he was hungry. Or he could eat and risk… death, maybe. Food poisoning, at best. Not the worst outcome, really. Maybe he’d get so sick they’d put him on bed rest for a week. Maybe he’d drop dead and never have to return to boring watch duty ever again. A win-win.

Zeph grabbed a piece of fish, tossed it into his mouth, chewed and swallowed. Decision made.

Encouraged, Tia gingerly picked up a portion for herself and ate.

“You sure know your way around a knife.” he remarked, giving Tia a lopsided smirk. “I’m sure the Prince will be glad for it.”

All the color drained from Tia’s face. She felt bled and gutted like the fish she’d just prepared, ceremonial dagger still dirty in her hand.

The dagger she was meant to slide between the Prince’s ribs.

Suddenly she wasn’t hungry at all. The small piece of fish sat heavy and rotting in her chest. Reality came crashing back into her, all her worries and problems and responsibilities. The Arch Priest. The jewel. The Queen. Her visions. Tia retreated back into herself, looking down at the row of fish meat.

Unable to look back up to the guard, Tia gestured with her open palm at the fish and then back up to him. She gave a quick, stuttering nod of her head. Tia couldn’t get back to her feet fast enough. Still not looking at Zeph, she started readying herself to leave this strange dream of a cave. Her mind buzzed frantically as she cleaned her hands and the dagger in the least bloody puddle she could find, gathered her things. Soon enough, she stood. Tia rolled her sleeves back down, heavy and stiff with dried blood, and curled her fingers tightly to hide within the cloth. At least that way she could keep from twisting them nervously around each other. She tried to appear more as a proper High Priestess, rather than a poor, filthy, foolish child.

Exhausted, bloodsoaked, and full of new secrets that she didn’t know how to voice, Tia waited silently for her escort to begin their trek. It was time to return to Dawnhaven.

Location: Northwestern Watchtower



Elio prided himself on many things; one of which was being a difficult man to catch off guard.

Pain, sharp and searing, burned the curve of his jaw, like fire catching along the arc of a dry branch. Finally – the spark he’d been waiting for all day. Elio had been expecting a swing. Maybe not at that precise moment, but he’d always made a game of goading and prodding, waiting to see what it would take for someone else to finally break. No, the punch itself wasn’t a surprise.

But the force.

Elio knew what Aliseth punched like, and it sure as fuck wasn’t that. Lightning fast, hard as granite… and a sucker punch? More oddities in Aliseth’s behavior that Elio didn’t care to examine right now.

Not when the little prick had just decided to use magic to clock him.

Elio’s eyes were back on the guard in an instant, alight with anticipation as crackling ozone primed every muscle in his body. His fingers twitched. The corner of his mouth lifted, nearly imperceptible, even as pain echoed through his jaw. It fueled his anger, his need for action. Amber eyes met Aliseth’s stony gaze for a charged moment, the breath before a storm could rip the sky apart.

But because everyone was a fuckin’ prude, they decided to put a stop to Elio’s fun before it’d even begun.

Hightower, that little slip of parchment paper, forced her way between the two men. In the next breath, Elio was forced backwards in a chaotic swirl of wind and snow. White filled his vision – and when it cleared, he found Aliseth on the opposite side of the sage, a trail of cobblestone grey cutting through the layer of snow where his feet had been pushed back. Elio refocused on the small woman blocking him now, eyes darting swiftly over her outstretched palms, how she had her back to him, the way her voice carried desperately through the unnatural night air. His mind worked, adding this surprising new facet to what he knew of her. Maybe there was some fight in her, afterall.

And then the little sapling of a guard took it upon herself to defend him, too. Elio was almost entertained. He could’ve laughed.

Charlotte hadn’t even finished speaking by the time Elio began to move. He stalked forward, eyes trained on Aliseth. He didn’t slow his stride as he approached the two women. Instead, without a falter in his step, Elio sent his magic down, through his foot and into the very ground he walked on. It shot forward, commanding the cobblestones directly beneath Charlotte and Eris. It was precise, subtle work. The stones raised and lowered in a wave that washed their steps to either side. The stones followed their stumbling footsteps, catching and directing them until the two women stood apart and his path was cleared. Elio’s eyes never left Aliseth as he stalked between Eris and Charlotte – he’d learned that lesson.

“Neither do I.” His voice was low and filled with promise as he answered Charlotte’s reprimand. His fingers were already curling into a fist. His muscles were already pulling his arm back, his eyes flashing, the blow –

Halting.

Elio’s fist froze a scant inch away from the side of Aliseth’s head. The guard hadn’t even flinched. Hadn’t moved a muscle, in fact. He just watched Elio with those cold eyes, waiting for the punch to land. Elio’s eyes narrowed, his eyebrows drawing together slightly.

The thing was, Elio hadn’t intended for this punch to actually hit. It’d just been a feint, meant to move Aliseth where Elio wanted as he dodged. Except… the dodge hadn’t come. It was like Aliseth wanted to get hit.

He was still staring at him.

Anger suddenly swelled in Elio’s chest — frustration at Aliseth and how he’d been acting all day, latent concern over Zeph, the restlessness he’d felt that beckoned him to shake off the dust and snow and make everyone remember exactly who he was… It all swirled together in a potent mix as Elio watched Aliseth, his fist tightening even further. But still, he didn’t move.

Something wasn’t right. Aliseth wasn’t right. The image of him from earlier flashed in his mind again, storming through the tavern, bags under his eyes, covered in blood that he still hadn’t cleaned off. Another image appeared — earlier, from a week ago. An indulgent smile that he tried to hide, rolled eyes, a soft voice.

Something new joined his swirl of emotions that Elio would never admit to: care. Fuck, but he cared that Aliseth had apparently gotten wrecked badly enough that it’d turned him into a little shit. This wasn’t just a bad mood or a loss of patience. Aliseth was different.

Elio’s fist didn’t uncurl. He didn’t relax. But slowly, inch by inch, his arm lowered until it was back down at his side again. His eyes darted between Aliseth, the damned care staining all his other emotions and only serving to piss him off even more.

“Get your head sorted, Seth.” It wasn’t soft, not exactly. But the words were low, held in the space between them. Elio forced himself to take a step back. “Before someone else gets killed.”

Elio watched Aliseth, this new version of him that he didn’t recognize, for a long moment. Then he turned, putting his back to the man that’d swung on him mere moments ago. He moved, following the path he’d carved for himself between Charlotte and Eris.

But as he walked between the two women again, Elio spared the sage a single glance — firelight eyes flickered, reevaluating. He held her gaze for the span of a single breath.

Then he moved on. For the first time in his life, Elio walked away from a fight.



Interactions: Aliseth Kain @Dark Light, Charlotte Hawthorne @SpicyMeatball, Eris Hightower @The Muse

Location: Guard Tower



Elio cast a glance over his shoulder as he descended the steps.

“And spoil my fun?” he tossed back at the guard, a note of humor in his voice. His mirth left him though, when he emerged from the guard tower to find a familiar figure stomping his way towards them. His smile dropped. Anger reestablished its hold over him.

“Look alive, Cadet,” he muttered, eyes never leaving Aliseth. When he was close enough, Elio brightened, his voice clearing a path through the falling snow.

“Guard Kain,” he called, smile wide and eyes sharp. “I was hopin’ to see you again. I wanted to thank you for pointing me towards the temple. Body wasn’t Zeph’s.” Elio watched him, taking in any hint of a reaction – confusion, guilt, smugness... any clue to whether Aliseth’s bad info had been a lie or a mistake.

In his mind’s eye, he saw that smile from the tavern again.

“Abel’s actually, may Seluna welcome his soul.” Elio’s gaze flicked over Aliseth’s shoulder, to find a lost little soul trailing after him. He paused though, as recognition flared: Hightower. She looked dazed and forlorn, with vacant eyes as she floated after Aliseth like a specter.

Elio found himself oddly… disappointed. He didn’t know her well, beyond the passing look or comment and her answering flustered blush. But he was used to seeing her move with a certain surety of purpose. She was meant to be the best in her field, as far as Dawnhaven was concerned. Wasn’t she their resident blight expert? And she all but shut down in a crisis?

Turning his attention back to Aliseth, Elio refocused.

“That blighter must’ve really fucked you up if you couldn’t tell them apart. Especially since I heard you and Zeph made a joint report to the old captain.” Elio faked a look of concern. He kept his voice loud, drawing the attention of any in the vicinity close enough to hear. “Is it the trauma that’s got you falling to pieces?” he goaded, lifting a hand to tap two fingers against the side of Aliseth's head. “Maybe you should go have a lie down. Seems you're not fit for much at the moment, and it'd be such a shame if the town had another highborn girl go missing on your watch.” Elio let the edge back into his voice, eyes flicking back to the sage.



Interactions: Aliseth Kain @Dark Light, Charlotte Hawthorne @SpicyMeatball, Eris Hightower @The Muse

Collab between @The Muse, @Qia, & @c3p-0h
Location: The Royal Home

Part III



Beyond the threshold, Elara stood in rigid stillness, her hands clenched into fists at her sides, the tension coiling through her frame like a vice. The steady, insistent drum of her heartbeat reverberated in her ears, a relentless cadence that refused to be silenced. Against her palm, she could still perceive the ghostly vestige of Amaya’s touch, a lingering warmth that once felt sacrosanct—now marred by the inescapable presence of the man within that room. The intimacy they had shared, once untainted and inviolate, now seemed eclipsed by an unwelcome reality, a fracture she could neither name nor ignore.

Not as a Princess but as you.

They were meant to be reassuring, those words crafted to offer solace, a promise that Amaya had found a champion willing to stand unwavering by her side in ways Elara never could (at least in ways that were enough for Amaya). And yet, the words did not soothe; instead, they festered, hollow and discordant, resonating with a quiet devastation she dared not voice.

The most lamentable aspect, however, lay in the irrefutable truth that Flynn’s assertions weren’t devoid of merit. His concern was well-placed and resonated with an almost palpable intensity. Amid her corporeal torment-an insistent throb in her ribs- and the smouldering ire roiling just beneath her skin, Elara discerned an undeniable reality: Amaya required Flynn’s presence as fervently as she herself craved companionship. And the sooner she accepted this, the better off she would be.

She didn’t want to go back inside.

Nonetheless, the moment came when…

The door emitted a lamenting creak as Elara reentered the room. Her gaze found Amaya immediately, flickering briefly to the hand still resting on Flynn’s knee. Something passed through her expression before she quickly schooled it into neutrality. Amaya lifted her hand away from Flynn like a reflex.

I brought the water,” Elara announced, brandishing the pitcher she had ostensibly retrieved as a pretext to escape the overwhelming atmosphere.

Flynn’s eyes briefly flickered to the empty spot on his knee, the sudden absence of Amaya’s warmth striking him more sharply than he’d expected. He glanced up toward her, noticing her gaze locked on Elara, before turning his attention to Elara himself. Tension thickened the air, suffocating in its weight. He wasn’t sure if it was Amaya’s magic, chilling the room, or his own selfishness that caused the shift—Elara’s interruption, the reason Amaya had pulled away.

“Thank you.” he said, straightening slightly and focusing his gaze on Elara. He wasn’t sure whether to address the tension that hung in the air or let it remain, but he was acutely aware of it. For now, he said nothing more, letting the moment stretch into awkward silence.

Amaya’s nerves grew, pressing against the boundaries of her body. The quiet calm of the previous moment evaporated. Elara captured her focus — the still way she held herself, her carefully neutral expression, how she hadn’t approached beyond entering the room and now stood so very far away like she couldn’t close the distance.

Amaya knew the words. They were thick and heavy in her throat.

“I shouldn’t have said that.” They were quiet, but they crossed the distance of the room, reaching for her only friend. Amaya held her breath, watching for any sign of forgiveness. “I’m sorry.” It seemed she couldn’t stop apologizing to Elara today.

Elara’s grip on the pitcher tightened, her knuckles blanching under the strain. A brittle silence stretched in response, but inside, her thoughts churned like a storm-tossed sea. Amaya’s apology was expected-inevitable even- but it did little to soothe the wound left by their earlier exchange.

Did she even understand what she had done? Or was this just another attempt to smooth things over?

Elara’s gaze drifted past Amaya to Flynn, sitting there as if he belonged-as if he had always belonged. The possessive way his presence filled the room, the quiet confidence with which he’d taken up space in Amaya’s life, gnawed at something deep within Elara that she couldn’t name.

But no. She could now.

Loss.

Sucking in a measured breath, Elara finally advanced, setting the pitcher on the bedside table. Upon regaining her stance, her gaze reconnected with Amaya’s, and therein, she detected something that resurrected her melancholic longing anew.

Guilt. And more alarmingly fear.

Amaya feared losing her, and Elara knew it.

But fear was not enough. Fear was never enough. And fear was never going to be enough.

The words were there just the same, resting on the tip of her tongue- I know, it’s alright, we’re alright- but they felt too much like surrender. Thus, her lips formed a muted line, and, after an oppressive pause, she inclined her head with the slightest gesture.

You should rest while Lady Hightower is still away,” she said at last, her voice offering neither forgiveness nor reproach, only a quiet suggestion wrapped in duty. Duty-because it was easier than facing what truly lay between them.

Amaya felt the shift in the air. It was subtle – but undeniable. Her blood stilled in her veins as something she couldn’t name started to crawl its way through her. Elara’s detached tone fractured something inside her.

Elara’s fingers brushed the periphery of the table and she hesitated a little before she retreated, reestablishing distance. “We’ll talk later,” she added, softer now, but with a finality that left little room for argument. Without waiting for Amaya’s reply, Elara turned her attention to Flynn, offering him the barest nod of acknowledgment-polite, distant, and a reminder that despite everything, her place in this room remained secondary to his. Her footsteps then ushered her to the window, where her gaze traversed the nocturnal expanse beyond, even as her mind remained detached from its landscape.

Was it more painful that she hadn’t left the room? Amaya couldn’t tell. Elara’s rejection – because that’s what it’d been, a rejection – created a new storm within her. It whipped up all her broken pieces, their razor edges tearing at her from the inside out, even as she tried to cling to Elara’s promise of talk.

Her face was blank. She couldn’t move. The only changes were the slight tensing of her brow and the way her pupils grew and shrank, as she grappled with this new reality where Elara stood on the other side of the room, and she didn’t look at Amaya with love and gentleness.

She wanted to go to her – to beg her forgiveness, to see the places she’d hurt Elara so she could make it right. But she was frozen in place. The blanket covering her legs was ledden. And Elara chose to stand apart from her, cold and beautiful as the winter, staring out the window.

Suddenly she realized why it hurt so much, why it was worse that Elara had remained: because without warmth, or concern, or even anger, there was nothing but cold obligation to keep her in this room. And for Amaya’s entire life, that was all she had ever known until Elara.

Amaya’s breath escaped her in a tiny wisp, barely visible. The water began to freeze in the pitcher beside her.

Flynn’s gaze shifted from Elara to Amaya, feeling the suffocating weight of unspoken words between them. The frozen detachment in Amaya’s eyes wasn’t entirely unfamiliar—it was a dissociation he had seen from her before, one that left him feeling helpless every time. Seeing it now tore at him, and a flicker of annoyance rose within him, directed at Elara for causing it in the first place.

But this wasn’t the first time he’d seen a standoff like this. Memories of his sisters flashed in his mind—fiery arguments, wounded silences, and the inevitable mending that always followed. This felt uncomfortable, but familiar.

He considered leaving, giving them the privacy they clearly needed. Staying might only make things worse. Nothing he said or did ever seemed to truly soothe Amaya—not really, not when it mattered most. The thought twisted viciously in his chest.

He tried to shake off creeping doubt, reminding himself of the way she had melted into him—the way she looked at him. That proved his insecure thoughts were wrong... didn’t it? Uncertainty gnawed at him, but he clung to the memory, hoping it outweighed the fear that he was wrong.

His sisters had always just needed time to cool off, but time wasn’t a luxury they had now. He briefly looked at the pitcher of water, ice crystals forming along the surface. No, they needed a push—space to bridge whatever divide had grown between them without his presence hovering nearby.

Flynn leaned in closer to Amaya, his hand reaching for the one she had pulled away from him earlier. “I’ll give you two a moment,” he said softly, his voice steady as he wrapped his warm fingers around hers. He gave her hand a reassuring squeeze before lifting it to his lips, pressing a gentle parting kiss against her skin. “I’m going to check with the guards on the search status,” His gaze lingered on hers, holding a silent promise that he would return.

Yet beneath that lay another unspoken question. Did she want him to stay? To leave? She gave nothing away, leaving him caught in a maddening uncertainty that was both frustrating and, in some strange way, exhilarating.

Slowly, he released her hand and rose to his feet, gathering his boots and slipping them on. His coat and sword still rested at the edge of the bed, waiting where he had left them. Flynn strapped the blade to his waist and shrugged his coat over his shoulders.

For a moment, he hesitated, his eyes flicking to Elara where she stood by the window, her back to them both. She remained distant, unmoving. Finally, Flynn turned back to Amaya, his gaze lingering on her one last time before he stepped toward the door.

“I won’t be long,” he said quietly as he opened the door. He could only hope he’d made the right choice—that giving them this moment would allow them to mend whatever rift had grown. Still, he intended to make it quick, if only for fear that Amaya would cover the entire room in ice by the time he returned.

Location: Guard Tower



“And you find this acceptable?” Elio cocked his head to the side. His eyes sharpened, even as his smile remained on his face. “All this fucking up? he asked, gesturing towards her with a lazy wave of his hand. “Better yet, fucking up and then lamenting to the world about it?”

Come on Darling, have some dignity.

Elio took a breath, ignoring all the questions she’d asked him, all the information she’d demanded. It wasn’t like it’d help her do her job, anyway, or stop her from embarrassing herself with her own insecurities. He looked back out over Dawnhaven. Tiny, busy bodies cluttered the streets, the ebb and flow of directionless crowd control. His patience was wearing thin. The second he’d seen her passed out he’d figured she wouldn’t have anything useful for him. Screw it. He was already pretty sure Zeph was alive, and he was getting tired of wasting energy looking for him, when he’d probably just fucked off to find some fun of his own.

Elio turned back to the guard, firelight eyes drifting over her. He took in the nervous way she shifted her feet, how her eyes measured the distance between him and her shield.

“You’re green.” The observation was as blunt as it was bored. “Unfortunately for you, it’s winter and the growing season’s passed.” Elio huffed out a breath of air that might’ve been a laugh. The small cloud billowed and dissipated, as his eyes watched her. “But I guess I feel bad for you, that you’ve got Hale as a partner,” he said with a cheeky smile that was anything but sympathetic. “So you can have this for free.” Elio pushed himself off of the post, standing to his full height again. His arms unfolded slowly, a hand raising as he began to count off on his fingers one by one. “A feral attacked. The princess is missing. Abel, one of your more reliable guardsmen, is dead. Town’s on lockdown. Culprit’s still loose.” Each new statement brought him another step closer to her, until he was close enough to pick apart the individual freckles on her face in the flickering firelight. He raised an eyebrow as he looked down at her, hand still aloft. Elio wiggled his fingers slightly.

“Best get to work,” he said, voice low. His hand dropped slowly, lest she get even jumpier than she already was. “Before someone pulls you like a weed.” He spent another moment looking at her, with her slate grey eyes. His smile widened.

Elio stepped away, turning back towards the ladder.

“You find Hale and he’s not dead, tell him Elio’s gonna kick his ass.”



Interactions: Charlotte Hawthorne @SpicyMeatball

Location: Guard Tower



“Oi, Azkona! You can’t –”

“Piss off, Tav.”

Frantic activity filled Dawnhaven, triggered by the tolling of the bell. The guards were buzzing around like flies over rotting meat. Citizens scurried through the streets, eager to find refuge, or else a big bad blight-born would huff and puff and blow them all away like crumbs. They were acting like crumbs.

Elio stalked his way through the streets, his path steady, his mind working. His conversation with the blighted girl played again in his ears, her words, the bits of the timeline he’d pieced together, Aliseth’s lies. He knew he couldn’t just take the girl’s words at face value, but he couldn’t just write it off, either. She’d given too much detail. And while it was still possible she’d used some kind of psychic magic to grab information, Elio just couldn’t see her as a threat yet. Not when a guard hated her so obviously, and the town was on such high alert. If she had proven to be suspicious in any way, she would’ve already been dealt with.

So where to go now? Secondhand information and suspicions were only so much to go on, and he wanted answers. He wanted action, now that he’d gotten a whiff of something brewing. The buzzing energy in the air pushed him forward.

Fuck Aliseth and his Moon Temple tip. Elio had half a mind to go check it out anyway, but the rage he felt when he’d learned Aliseth had lied about Zeph’s death still simmered in his blood. Trying to find this crime scene was another option, but one that would probably prove to be more trouble than it was worth. It’d likely be cordoned off by now, covered in guards trying to do damage control. It was one thing to blow off a passing guard’s orders to take shelter. It’d be another to try and muscle his way into an active crime scene.

The promise of a challenge almost made him want to try it.

But without the Moon Temple or the crime scene as options, Elio’s next thought was to go find Zeph. Verify that the little prat was alive, see what he knew, get into some trouble figuring out what all this mess was. Zeph would be game. He loved trouble.

A few quick brushes with guards verified that someone had seen him alive recently (I’m gonna snap Kain in half.) and someone else was pretty sure he and his new partner were scheduled for a rotation at the guard tower near the alchemy chambers. The tower loomed in the distance, growing taller and taller as Elio approached. The top glowed with the warm light of a fire, smoke drifting into the winter air.

He didn’t bother knocking. Elio let himself in, took the steps two at a time, emerging into the open top of the guard tower with its roof supported only by four wooden posts to find…

No Zeph. Just a single guard. Asleep.

Fuckin’ amateurs.

It really was impressive how consistently shit they were proving to be.

She was young. Clearly freezing, based on the way she huddled herself under her cloak, her nose and cheeks pink. Dark strands of hair tangled themselves around her face, and the sun had speckled her tanned skin.

Her eyes darted beneath their lids. Elio watched the way her eyebrows scrunched together ever so slightly, the way her body pulled in on itself under the fabric of her cloak as she started to wake herself. Crossing his arms, he took the moment to lean against one of the tower’s wooden posts.

The guard snapped awake. It was like she’d been dunked in water, the way she gasped and scrambled upright. Her eyes flew open, a blue so colorless they were nearly grey.

A dark eyebrow raised. The corner of his mouth quirked up in a dry smirk.

“Morning, sunshine.” Elio’s voice was bright and cheerful as he watched the guard sputter and reorient herself. No wonder the town’s security was absolute shit. At least this one was something to look at, even if her incompetence was pissing him off. “I take it you haven’t seen a Zephyros Hale recently, then?” His smirk grew. “Not even in your dreams?” Elio took a moment to examine the guard tower, looking over his shoulder at the streets below, as if he were only now considering its purpose. “Shame,” he said, turning his attention back to the guard. “Bet you could’ve seen plenty, this high up.”



Interactions: Charlotte Hawthorne @SpicyMeatball
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