AWAKENING: After a near-fatal accident, the sender awakens to the receiver by them.
the room was quiet, save for the steady, mechanical rhythm of the monitor and the faint breeze stirring the curtain by the open window. afternoon light pooled along the edge of the floor, soft and golden, but it barely touched her. emilia sat beside the bed, still as stone. one leg crossed neatly over the other, fingers laced in her lap. she hadn't moved in over an hour. she didn’t have to. she was waiting — and she hated waiting when it came to people she cared about.
the moment brandon stirred, she knew. before the monitor jumped, before his breath shifted — she felt it. the subtle change in the air between them, as though his body had finally remembered it had something left to fight for. his eyes blinked open slowly, light green, unfocused at first, then sharpening — and then they found her. she didn’t say anything right away. just met his gaze, ˢᵗᵉᵃᵈʸ and ᵘⁿʷᵃᵛᵉʳᶦⁿᵍ, letting the silence speak first. then, quietly, ❝ about time. ❞ not cold. not cutting. it was almost a joke — the kind that carried the weight of sleepless nights and quiet prayers she’d never admit to. her tone stayed level, but there was something just beneath it — that tired kind of relief you only feel when someone nearly slips away. she leaned forward, elbows on her knees, and let her eyes trace over him — the bruises, the bandages, the sharp contrast of his skin against the pale hospital linens. ❝ you almost didn’t make it, bran. ❞ his name, soft and familiar, wrapped in the kind of closeness she rarely allowed herself to show. it slipped past her defenses before she could second-guess it. she looked at him then — really looked — and let him see the sharp concern threaded through her quiet composure. she wasn’t here out of obligation. she was here because he mattered. ❝ they’ll say it was luck. that you’re some kind of miracle. ❞ a pause, just long enough for the words to land. ❝ but we both know better. ❞ her voice dropped, lower now, more honest than she usually allowed it to be. ❝ you’re still here because you don’t give up. ❞ another breath passed. she leaned back, just slightly, the distance between them still small. familiar. ❝ next time you try to die on me — ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ. ❞ the corner of her mouth lifted — not quite a smile, but something close. the kind of expression only someone who knew her well would recognize as affection. ❝ i don’t like the way the world feels without you in it. ❞ she timidly reached for his hand, leaned in and just sat there beside him, solid and still — a constant in a world that had tried to take him. and for now, that was enough.
emilia didn’t move. not when sayuri leaned in, not when that familiar, too-sure smirk tugged at her mouth, all sharp edges and thinly veiled provocation. it was the kind of smile people wore when they thought they’d won something. when they believed proximity could be mistaken for power. she’d seen it before — in nobles who mistook charm for cunning, in demons who thought a well-dressed threat could outmatch centuries of silence. she’d learned to wait. to let the theatrics run their course. sayuri’s voice lilted with practiced confidence, each word polished to provoke, laced with just enough mockery to test her reaction. the jab about the crystal ball was a tired one — she didn’t let it land. she rarely did. mockery was a poor currency to trade in when your opponent had learned to live without the need for validation. ʸᵒᵘ ʷᵃⁿᵗᵉᵈ ᵗʰᶦˢ, emilia thought. ʸᵒᵘ ᵇᵘᶦˡᵗ ᵗʰᶦˢ ᵐᵒᵐᵉⁿᵗ ᵖᶦᵉᶜᵉ ᵇʸ ᵖᶦᵉᶜᵉ. ᵃⁿᵈ ⁿᵒʷ ʸᵒᵘ'ʳᵉ ʷᵃᶦᵗᶦⁿᵍ ᵗᵒ ˢᵉᵉ ʰᵒʷ ᶦ’ˡˡ ᵖˡᵃʸ ᶦᵗ. she let a beat of silence pass before answering — long enough to be deliberate. then, with the faintest curl of irony at the edge of her voice ❝ you must be fun at parties. ❞ she shifted, not out of discomfort but control, creating distance with the kind of easy grace that said: i decide how close you stand. her gaze swept over sayuri again, not in challenge, but in quiet recalibration. the arrogance wasn’t surprising — what interested her was what wasn’t being said. the hints tucked beneath the performance. the weight behind the word business. sayuri wasn’t bluffing. that much was clear. but she also wasn’t being entirely honest — which made her interesting. ❝ i don’t need ᶠᵒʳᵉˢᶦᵍʰᵗ to recognize someone who likes the sound of their own schemes, ❞ emilia said, tone mild. ❝ or someone who confuses being clever with being in control. ❞ and yet — she didn’t walk away. because as much as sayuri was a disruption, a complication … she was also a window. and emilia had learned to pay attention when the world handed her one. ❝ fine. business. talk. ❞ she turned her back fully now, unbothered. ❝ just don’t waste my time pretending you’re doing me a favor. ❞ let sayuri think she had the upper hand for now. emilia wasn’t in the business of showing her cards until it mattered.
@ncantari, continued from here !
A smirk, subtle in both amusement and triumph, tugged at Sayuri’s lips at the witch’s blunt, yet truthful accusation. She reveled in both pride and immense satisfaction at the fact that her plan had worked, and at the vague acknowledgement of her wit. Of course she had planned this — known for her meticulous nature and aversion to chance, there was no way the ghoula would leave anything to fate, least of all let herself end up in such a compromising position if it weren’t for a larger scheme at play, a woven intrigue. Sayuri nodded, a gesture betraying her overflowing delight, her expression radiating the brimming confidence born of arrogance — of the firm belief that she held the upper hand.
❛ That’s where you are correct, ❜ she chimed, her voice laced with playful mockery. ❛ Didn’t see that one coming in that little crystal ball of yours, did you? Tsk. You know, I thought witches were supposed to have foresight — or is that just a marketing gimmick? ❜ Borrowing from the tired clichés and overused prejudices often hurled at witches, each of her words was designed to subtly undermine her opponent, to paint her as predictable and limited. Truth was, Sayuri had never bothered to delve beyond surface-level understandings of witchcraft, unwilling to concern herself with something that didn’t seem to directly affect her.
Leaning in, eyes gleaming with a predatory light, she closed the distance between them, invading Emilia’s personal space. ❛ But don’t look so sour. I wouldn’t have gone through all this trouble if I didn’t think you had something worthwhile to offer. So, how about we skip the dramatics and talk? Seems like the perfect opportunity to discuss business, don’t you think? ❜ For Sayuri, the word ‘business’ carried a weight of unspoken implications. It usually meant that she wanted something, as simple as that — and her negotiation methods were rarely fair.
she didn’t smile. not at his question, not at the way his words lilted so easily between implication and charm. the air between them had cooled by degrees, not with malice, but with something quieter — older. like caution pressed into silence. ˢᵒ ʷʰᶦᶜʰ ᶦˢ ᶦᵗˀ ᴬ ᶠᵒʳᵗᵘⁿᵃᵗᵉ ᵃᶜᶜᶦᵈᵉⁿᵗˀ ᴼʳ ᵖʳᵉᶜᶦˢᵉˡʸ ᵗʰᵉ ᵐᵉᵉᵗᶦⁿᵍ ʸᵒᵘ ʷᵉʳᵉ ᵐᵉᵃⁿᵗ ᵗᵒ ʰᵃᵛᵉˀ she heard it for what it was — not curiosity, not truly. it was a shift of the board. an invitation to let him steer the narrative, to hand him the reins under the illusion of shared conversation. her gaze stayed fixed on him, ˢᵗᵉᵃᵈʸ ᵃⁿᵈ ᵘⁿʳᵉᵃᵈᵃᵇˡᵉ. that, too, was a kind of answer. ❝ you’re very good at answering questions with more questions, ❞ she said at last, her voice calm, precise. ❝ though i suppose that’s the game, isn’t it? ❞ she didn’t wait for his reply — she didn’t need to. it was already written in the curl of his mouth, the ease of his posture, the too-smooth cadence of someone used to slipping through locked doors with words alone. ❝ i’ve seen people lie with less grace, ❞ she continued, her tone still unbothered, still measured. ❝ but rarely with so much ᴄᴏɴғɪᴅᴇɴᴄᴇ in being believed. ❞ she stepped forward then, slowly, allowing her presence to fill the space between them, not to intimidate — that would have been too obvious — but to remind him that she was not just listening. she was reading. every line, every pause, every carefully chosen word. a small silence passed between them, deliberate, weighted. then, her voice — quieter now, but edged with something steel-spined and certain ❝ i don’t trust men who smile while they’re being watched. ❞ she let that linger in the air like the last note of a spell, her expression unchanged, unblinking, as though she were waiting — not for an answer, but for something more revealing. a misstep. a crack in the veneer. a shadow, even slight, that might betray what he really wanted. because people like him never asked questions like that without a purpose. they didn’t speak in riddles unless they had something to hide — or something to gain. so she watched. and waited. because if this was a game, she intended to know all the rules before she moved her first piece.
" would you believe me if i said wrong place, wrong time ? "
the sorceress studied him carefully, her gaze sweeping over the pristine cut of his coat, the polished cufflinks, the effortless poise of someone who had never wanted for anything. his words were smooth, his demeanor composed — but there was something just a little too measured about it.
she let out a slow breath, eyebrows lifted as she regarded him with quiet scrutiny ❝ would you believe me if I said I didn't believe in coincidences? ❞
her voice was steady, laced with the unmistakable lilt of her sicilian accent and edged with quiet sᴜsᴘɪᴄɪᴏɴ — and yet ᴄᴜʀɪᴏsɪᴛʏ flickered beneath it. men like him didn’t end up in the wrong place at the wrong time — unless they meant to be there.
[ standing over a body ] " oops. "
the silence in the room was thick, clinging like smoke after a spell gone wrong. emilia stood a few feet away from the body, arms crossed, gaze fixed on the slowly spreading pool of blood with an expression that wasn’t quite surprise. she’d seen worse. she’d caused worse. but that didn’t mean she approved of this. not by a long shot.
yelena stood nearby, a smear of something dark on her cheek, chin lifted like she was daring the world to flinch first. ❝ oops, ❞ she said. emilia blinked once. ❝ oops, ❞ she echoed, voice flat. ❝ that’s what you’re going with? ❞ she took a few slow steps forward, her boots silent against the tile. the scent of blood mixed with gunpowder and bad decisions. she didn’t crouch, didn’t touch the body — just looked down at it with the weariness of someone who had cleaned up too many messes that didn’t need to happen in the first place. ❝ you could’ve walked away, ❞ she said. ❝ you could’ve handled it with a threat, or a promise, or even just silence. instead … ❞ she gestured loosely to the body with one hand. ❝ now there’s a corpse in the hallway and we both get to deal with the fallout. ❞ yelena didn’t say anything. she didn’t have to. emilia could read her like a spellbook left out in the rain — a little warped, but still legible. she sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose, more tired than angry. ❝ i know what it’s like to be angry. i know what it feels like when the world treats you like a mistake. but if you let that anger decide for you, you’re just doing their work for them. ❞ her voice softened, but the edge remained. ❝ you want a place at the table? fine. but you don’t get there by being reckless. you get there by surviving. ❞ emilia looked at her, really looked at her — at the hard line of her jaw, the heat behind her eyes, the tension in her hands. ❝ you’re not stupid, yelena. sᴏ ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ ᴀᴄᴛ ʟɪᴋᴇ ɪᴛ. ❞ then, after a beat, she turned toward the door. ❝ come on, ❞ she said over her shoulder. ❝ we need to move the body before someone sees. and next time? try not to make me regret standing beside you. ❞
" it's a good look on you. you should get covered in blood more often. "
the blood clung to her skin like a second layer, darkening the air around her with its heavy scent. emilia didn’t acknowledge it immediately, but there was a subtle shift in her posture as the words hit her ears.
❝ is that so? ❞
she replied, her voice as even as if she were discussing the weather — too calm for the weight of the moment. her eyes met accalia’s, sʜᴀʀᴘ and ᴄᴀʟᴄᴜʟᴀᴛɪɴɢ, as if measuring the space between them, considering her every word. ❝ you think this is a look? ❞ she added, her hand slowly rubbing the back of her neck. not to clean the blood, but to ground herself in the calm that, for a moment, seemed so out of place. ❝ i’ve worn worse. ᵇˡᵒᵒᵈ'ˢ ʲᵘˢᵗ ᵇˡᵒᵒᵈ. ❞ she took a step forward, not toward accalia, but into the silence that lingered. the weight of her presence settled, heavy and deliberate, like the calm before a storm. ❝ but it’s not a look. ❞ her eyes lingered on accalia’s, colder now. ❝ people forget how easily it can stain you — how it’s never really gone. ❞ her hands, still dark with it, reached for the edge of a nearby table, fingers brushing over the surface, more out of habit than need. she didn’t look back at accalia, but her next words came quietly, almost as an afterthought ❝ and people always think they can handle it. until it’s theirs to wear. ❞ there was a finality in her tone, but no aggression. just an inevitability. a warning, soft but clear.
DESTINED: The sender recognizes the receiver from a dream, a past life, or a vision.
there was something unsettling in the woman’s gaze … too sharp, too knowing, like she was seeing through skin and sinew to something older. emilia didn’t flinch under it, but she felt it all the same. that quiet pull in her chest. like something long buried had just opened its eyes.
❝ you’re looking at me like you’ve seen a ɢʜᴏsᴛ, ❞
she said softly, the corner of her mouth lifting, not quite a smile. her voice was calm, but edged in a subtle tension, like a wire pulled tight. she stepped a little closer, the candlelight catching in her eyes—brown and warm, but watchful. searching. ❝ or maybe just someone you thought you’d already lost. ❞ a pause, and then, gently —curiously : ❝ do i feel familiar to you? ❞ she didn’t ask with disbelief. she wasn’t mocking. if anything … she almost wanted to hear the answer. because deep in her bones, where memories had no names and time had no shape, emilia felt it too — the echo of something once lived. or dreamed. or promised.
there was a long beat of silence before emilia spoke ... long enough for the hush of the room to grow thick, broken only by the soft drag of linen over skin as she gently wiped the ʙʟᴏᴏᴅ from emory’s hands with a damp cloth. her touch was careful, practiced, almost reverent. as if tending to something fragile, not just flesh, but what still lived beneath it. ❝ i’ve asked myself the same thing before, ❞ she murmured, not quite looking up. her voice was low, warm in a way that didn’t try to comfort — but offered a kind of quiet understanding. ❝ what makes a stranger stop for someone like me. offer kindness when i expected none. ❞ the cloth, stained pink now, moved in slow circles along emory’s knuckles. her hands weren’t trembling, but there was tension in the way she held them — tension emilia didn’t force away, only worked around. ❝ maybe i see something in you. ❞ her eyes lifted then — dark and steady, but not searching. just seeing. ❝ maybe i don’t need a reason. ❞ she folded the cloth once more, exposing a clean side, her movements unhurried. ❝ or maybe i just know what it’s like to be afraid and have ɴᴏ ᴏɴᴇ reach back. ❞ her accent curled through the words like smoke — rich and unshaken. she tilted her head slightly, a subtle furrow in her brow that made her expression seem almost tender, though her gaze was sharp beneath it. ❝ i won’t ask for trust. i won’t even expect it. but questioning kindness doesn’t mean you don’t need it. ❞ and then, quieter — like a truth wrapped in silk, just for her : ❝ sometimes the right people show up when we’re most afraid to be seen. ❞
continued from here (@ncantari).
her brows furrowed as she observed the stranger, confused and curious at once. the woman's demeanour appeared to change with every passing minute ﹕ while she seemed guarded at first, she now looked soft and welcoming – almost motherly. it had a soothing effect on emory, disarming her and most of her defenses right with it. her shoulders relaxed, folding her hands to keep them from trembling and taking a calming breath. for the first time in the past hour she felt somewhat safe, but still she wouldn't let her guard down completely. she couldn't. ❛ why would you want to help me? ❜, she asked, wary of the stranger's motives.
lucrezia guides emilia's bloody hands under a faucet / water source and begins washing them clean.
the water was too warm. it made the blood feel thicker somehow — less like something to be washed away and more like something that had sunk too deep to ever really leave.
emilia didn’t speak. her eyes remained fixed on their hands beneath the faucet, the red swirling down the drain in ghostly ribbons. lucrezia’s touch was steady, reverent even, like a priestess performing a ritual rather than a someone scrubbing sin from skin. ❝ you don’t have to do this, ❞ emilia murmured finally, her voice low, almost hoarse. not from pain. from restraint. ❝ I'm not some frightened girl in ⁿᵉᵉᵈ ᵒᶠ ᵃᵇˢᵒˡᵘᵗᶦᵒⁿ. ❞ but she didn’t pull away. because for all the blood she’d spilled, there was something strangely disarming about lucrezia’s hands — so calm, so sure, as if she’d done this before. maybe she had. maybe that’s why emilia stayed still. why she let her. because only someone with her own share of ʀᴜɪɴ could understand what it meant to do terrible things … and still want to be touched gently after. her gaze finally lifted, meeting lucrezia’s with a quiet defiance — and something else flickering behind it. not regret. never regret. just … weight. ❝ are you always this gentle with ᴍᴏɴsᴛᴇʀs? ❞
[ annoyed Kami ] " you're getting blood on the my carpet. "
❝ I thought a little red might add to the … charm. ❞ her voice was smooth ᵘⁿᵗᵒᵘᶜʰᵉᵈ ᵇʸ ʳᵉᵐᵒʳˢᵉ but amusement flickered in her eyes as they finally met Kami’s.
❝ but if it bothers you that much … ❞ emilia tilted her head, studying kami. there was something about her — something in the way she stood, unimpressed and unshaken, that made the witch want to push just a little further. ❝ I suppose I could make it up to you. any preference? wine? a séance? a less ... dramatic entrance next time? ❞ a smirk ghosted across her lips, equal parts amusement and challenge.
❝ or ... ❞ her voice dipped lower, softer, like the start of a secret. ❝ you could just tell me what the spirits are saying about me. I'm sure they're pʎᴉuƃ to weigh in. ❞
❛ Looks like we're stuck together. ❜
with a subtle ᵇᵃʳᵉˡʸ ⁿᵒᵗᶦᶜᵉᵃᵇˡᵉ tilt of her head, the witch’s gaze grew sharp and focused as she studied the smug looking woman before her.
❝ stuck, huh? ❞
her voice was calm, but there was an edge of intrigue buried beneath the coolness. emilia had seen enough of the world to recognize that nothing was ever truly random. not with people who carried themselves the way her self proclaimed ally did.
❝ you wanted this. ❞ Emilia’s eyes lingered on the stranger, assessing, as if trying to unravel a hidden layer beneath her exterior before she continued. ❝ did you not? ❞ her posture remained controlled, wary, but there was an undercurrent of something deeper — something like … ᴵᴺᵀᴱᴿᴱˢᵀ.
" oh my god. oh my god, oh my god, what the fuck? is that what i fucking think it is? "
emilia's muscles tensed as she slowly turned to face him, her expression shifting into something colder. the air around her seemed to thrum with tension, as though she was measuring every word that came next. she was calm — too calm perhaps — her voice sliced through the air like a blade when she turned around to face the source of her irritation.
❝ keep your voice ᴰᴼᵂᴺ. ❞
her eyes ᵘˢᵘᵃˡˡʸ ʷᵃʳᵐ ᵃⁿᵈ ᶦⁿᵛᶦᵗᶦⁿᵍ were now frozen, and beneath the cold was a burning intensity — one that whispered of past battles faced. ❝ and don’t ask questions you don’t want the answers to. ❞ emilia took a small step closer, her presence suddenly feeling like a ᵂᴬᴿᴺᴵᴺᴳ.
❝ What did you do ? ❞
emilia’s fingers tightened at her sides, but her expression remained unreadable. a flicker of something — ᴅᴇғɪᴀɴᴄᴇ, ᴍᴀʏʙᴇ, ᴏʀ sᴏᴍᴇᴛʜɪɴɢ ᴅᴀʀᴋᴇʀ — passed through her deep brown eyes as she held his gaze. the silence stretched between them, thick with unspoken truths, before she finally spoke.
❝ what I ᴴᴬᴰ to. ❞
there was no apology in her tone, no uoᴉʇɐuɐldxǝ offered. If he was expecting ᴳᵁᴵᴸᵀ, he would find none. whatever she had done, she wasn’t about to justify it — not to him.
" would you believe me if i said wrong place, wrong time ? "
the sorceress studied him carefully, her gaze sweeping over the pristine cut of his coat, the polished cufflinks, the effortless poise of someone who had never wanted for anything. his words were smooth, his demeanor composed — but there was something just a little too measured about it.
she let out a slow breath, eyebrows lifted as she regarded him with quiet scrutiny ❝ would you believe me if I said I didn't believe in coincidences? ❞
her voice was steady, laced with the unmistakable lilt of her sicilian accent and edged with quiet sᴜsᴘɪᴄɪᴏɴ — and yet ᴄᴜʀɪᴏsɪᴛʏ flickered beneath it. men like him didn’t end up in the wrong place at the wrong time — unless they meant to be there.
❛ it looks worse than it feels. ❜
emilia’s gaze flicked to the figure standing before her, taking in the blood staining her sleeve and the fresh cut along her jaw. strangers though they were, there was something familiar in the way she held herself — shoulders squared, chin lifted, as if daring the world to see her pain.
❝ it looks worse than it feels. ❞
the girl’s voice was even — almost dismissive — but emilia didn’t miss the way her fingers trembled slightly at her side. the witch narrowed her eyes, hesitating for a moment before stepping closer. ❝ maybe. but you’re still bleeding. ᴸᴱᵀ ᴹᴱ ᴴᴱᴸᴾ. ❞