Athena’s Sacred Tree Academy–or simply AST Academy to its students–was not only known for its silver-gray uniforms or the logo depicting a large, white owl with an olive branch on its beak but for its topnotch teaching and picturesque school buildings that the students and staff alike enjoy; popular and well-spoken despite the fact that it was still considered as one of the newest academy’s to be built in the country… it only goes to show just how well its reputation precedes itself.
It was an international academy after all; and the academy welcomes anyone with a love for learning no matter what their race, their religion and socioeconomic status with open arms.
The academy was beautiful and its reputation does not disappoint, of that, Proserpina, goddess of shadows, will not deny as she stood in front of the large clear-glass windows in the President’s office overlooking the school’s towering front gates with her arms crossed as she observed the plethora of students in silver-gray uniforms that were milling about in groups, in pairs or sometimes alone as they come in and out–but mostly out, it’s getting late, after all–the skies overhead was a cotton candy pink and a splash of soft orange, casting the office she was in with growing shadows seemingly to dance about around her thanks to the setting sun… or maybe that was just her patience wearing thin.
‘What was taking Athena so long?’
Proserpina had been invited here by the goddess of wisdom herself when she happened to slip out to Demeter some of the issues regarding her younger half-brother’s neglected education, no thanks to a certain leech that must not be named.
And while Proserpina was grateful for Athena’s insistence to have William under her school’s care (it was no issue, Athena personally founded the academy, anyway), she was beginning to grow bored of waiting for the older goddess to come back from her stupid meeting with some of the academy’s higher-ups.
Without any other options left, the newly turned immortal goddess turns away from the large window as she starts to scour through the bookshelf right next to her.
The bookshelf was a dark mahogany, the same material as Athena’s work desk and it was literally as tall as her (and she wasn’t even a short woman), filled with serious-looking books of different colors and sizes but still managing to look well-organized so Proserpina took ample care as she allowed her gloved fingers to brush by the books here and there, silently mulling over which one she will read because she fully intended to get lost in a story to pass the time now… because glaring at her baby brother’s future schoolmates might be considered as a sign of hostility by the older goddess.
And oh, trust me.
You wouldn’t want Athena as an enemy.
Each of the books looked like they are all older than her judging by the smell and the worn pages inside, one page even literally crumbled to ashes in her hands, much to her horror, when she browsed through rather impatiently (she immediately stuffed it in the back of the shelf, half-praying to Hades that Athena will not notice the little blunder) but despite the books’ obvious age, they were all still well-preserved; free from dust and seemingly handled with care and love that only a lover of books could provide.
However, whatever admiration Proserpina had for Athena’s personal book collection immediately went up in flames when she discovered that none of the books in Athena’s office even have titles on their spines, let alone in the book cover.
She can only differentiate them through their sizes and colors so she has to diligently flip through each book’s first few pages to find out what the content of the story were even about.
Proserpina goes through each book on the shelf slowly and mechanically, flips through the pages to try and find… at least something that will catch her interest–there was a story about the origin of soul mates, the concept of rebirth, the rise and fall of Elder Gods, Trojan War–only to no avail.
It seems that most of the books Athena has been more on about history, serious matters than what is to be considered anything appropriate for a light reading.
And don’t get her wrong, Proserpina is fond of reading as much as she is of breathing and any other time she might be interested to tackle any of those topics but right now, she was looking for… well, at least something that will amuse her because she might end up setting the room on hellfire just for the heck because that is how she is so bored out of her mind right now.
So Proserpina moves on to the next row, then the next one, and the next one, on and on until she was literally kneeling like a child on the floor when she finally comes across a book third to the last on the bottom row in between a skinny book and leather bound one; the book was silver-gray, small and light in her hands and the cover seemed to have some sort of glossy material in it as it twinkled when she turned it here and there…
‘Kind of a child’s storybook,’ she noted.
The book was almost as big as her palm and seemed to have pages as what one would expect from a novelette.
She carefully opens it up to the first page–not wanting to have a repeat of another destroyed book because a destroyed book was a crime against humanity, truly heartbreaking–and almost instantly, her eyes gleamed in intrigue at what she sees.
A Grim Fairytale: The Story of Corruption.
Finally, Proserpina thought, sitting down in Athena’s swivel chair, the small book in hand, something interesting.
How curious though, she mused to herself as she moves on to the second page–that there was no author’s name unlike the others, not even the usual Anonymous penname that most of Athena’s books had but there was a preface with a dried blue flower still tucked inside, clearly preserved with care (is that an anemone? She wasn’t sure and she didn’t want to touch it)… oh wait, that was wrong.
This was a dedication.
It goes like this:
‘To my beloved,
Lifetimes may have passed but here, this story remains. It may be left unread, unspoken and unheard of for a very long time… and though kingdoms may rise and fall anew, here it shall stay, and in here, we shall live again in the minds and hearts of those who had never witness a tale that should have never been in the first place.
Here, I write to you, to my love that shall never be again. Here, I write to you, so you will live again, if in nothing else but memories of mine and others.
…before I forget.
Then maybe, maybe I shall be forgiven.’
The next words are smudged, incomprehensible.
“Wait a minute,” Proserpina glanced at the other books then at the one in her hands, suddenly feeling an odd chill running down her spine, “Thanatos… is this story for real?”
The god of death was curiously silent for a few painstaking moments and when Proserpina was about to give up, thinking that he was not going to answer, his voice came out as a sigh… like a mournful whisper.
‘…Most stories are,’
Proserpina stares at the word ‘beloved’.
The ink looked like it had been smeared.
Like a teardrop has fallen and stained the page.
“Whoever this was, this… beloved,” the young goddess finally deigns to say, when she was certain that her voice will come out steady, gloved fingers gently brushing over the faded word, knowing the words to be the truth before they even passed her lips, “…they certainly must be gone a long time ago.”
* * * * *
‘To my beloved,
Lifetimes may have passed but here, this story remains. It may be left unread, unspoken and unheard of for a very long time… and though kingdoms may rise and fall anew, here it shall stay, and in here, we shall live again in the minds and hearts of those who had never witness a tale that should have never been in the first place.
Here, I write to you, to my love that shall never be again. Here, I write to you, so you will live again, if in nothing else but memories of mine and others.
…before I forget.
Then maybe, maybe I shall be forgiven.’
This story of yours and mine, I pray to be rewritten.
The story that begins here.
Once upon a time, in a land that was said to be ravaged by ice and snow for seven months straight, there was once a kingdom in the north that was now no more. And in this kingdom of ice and snow, there was once a queen named Eleanor.
Now, this Queen was said to be the fairest in all the land... with a hair that was the shade of morning dawn and eyes of the clearest, bluest summer skies.
And this spectacularly harsh winter, she and her beloved husband, King Arion, were expecting their first child. They were waiting ever since for this joyous moment, for their child to be brought to this world, they had spent months planning and preparing a grandiose celebration in the wake of the child's birth, one that would be befitting for the next King or Queen that will govern and protect the land and its people.
But it so happens, one gray morning, while the beautiful Queen was taking one of her daily walks within her maze-like garden that was filled with the loveliest of flowers when the weather is much agreeable, the pregnant, beautiful Queen suddenly happened to caught sight of a blooming deep, red rose. How it had managed to survive and bloom in this unforgiving time of the year is surely beyond her! Nonetheless, she still approached it, captivated by the sheer beauty of the rose.
‘Oh,’ she had thought, smiling prettily and without thinking, she reached out to grasp the chosen flower, ‘How lovely!’
Just as the Queen's delicate fingers made contact with the stem, intending to pull it, she let out a startled gasp, releasing it just as quickly as pain pricked and bloomed, and a trickle of red ever so slowly poured.
Thorns!
Pale and hurt, the Queen can only stare in mute horror as a droplet of blood from her finger fell on the snow-covered ground like a teardrop from the winter heavens.
She blinked slowly, her mouth opening briefly in awe as she stared, inching closer towards the offending flower, her shadow casting over the ground like a sudden blanket of darkness–like the seemingly never-ending night sky encasing the very lands she and her husband ruled because the pristine white snow and the stark red blood under her shadow made such a pleasing combination to her eye, it was quite a curious sight to see that the Queen found herself completely enthralled.
It looked like a masterpiece!
She chuckled then, at her own clumsiness, at the pretty sight of the white snow and the redness of her blood mixed together under the darkness of her shadow that the Queen cried, as if in prayer to the heavens:
“Oh, but if only my child will be as fair as snow, as dark as shadow, and as red as blood!”
It was just a silly wish.
A silly, innocent wish
Oh, but the poor, poor Queen, beautiful, foolish Queen!
Did she not know?
Had she not heard?
Be careful what you wish for!
...because what was seemingly a silly, innocent wish uttered as a passing fancy is still a wish. One that the heavens did not took heed, but the Devil himself had heard–and granted!
Alas, the Queen did not know indeed.
Thus, the beautiful, ignorant Queen stood up, holding her bleeding fingers to herself as she gazed at the blooming rose for the last time with a light smile on her face before going on her merry way.
She did not know it yet… oh no, not yet… but that had been the fateful moment wherein a mother had unknowingly foolishly condemned the child inside her womb.
* * * * *
Unbidden, a wry smile formed in Proserpina’s lips.
So the story is about a cursed child?
“…Sounds familiar,” she muttered.
* * * * *
A week later, the child was born right when the clock itself struck three whilst the unforgiving winter winds roared outside the palace walls as if knowing what’s to come, as if in outrage.
The winds had been raging and whistling its eerie song, the cold snow falling in large flurries of white all over the land, blanketing it in its blinding whiteness just as Demeter had once done so long ago whilst waiting for her beloved Persephone to come home, when she cursed the Earth to never flourish once more until her daughter returns, when the humans paid the wrath of a goddess and a mother for a sin they did not even commit.
The snowstorm was at its climax.
It was winter at its finest.
And the Queen, oh the pitiful beautiful Queen, shivering and weak from the birth of the kingdom’s awaited heir–all but cowered from the small bundle that was her own child, the child she had once dreamed and prayed for ever since she became wife and queen.
But now, she had taken just one look at the infant and oh, how she refused to touch, let alone look at it a second time!
The healers looked at one another in uneasiness at the strangeness that unfolds before their very eyes while the nursemaids flocked nervously around their stricken Queen, trying to calm her down in vain as her husband, the King marched straight into the room urgently. Like any father, he had been pale and trembling with worry for his wife and newborn child.
“My queen,” he says, holding her lovely face, gently, as to not startle her, “My love, whatever is the matter? Are you alright? Is our baby alright?”
At the mention of their child, the Queen bursted into another round of fresh tears again, lips and fingers shaking, and she wouldn’t dare to meet her husband’s eyes, “Milord, forgive me, this is… this is all my fault… my fault... please forgive me,” she sobbed, before pointing a shaking finger to the direction of the small bundle, “But... but the... the child... the c-child...”
As if on cue, as if it had known (speak of the devil and it shall appear), the small bundle began to unveil itself as the infant began to move its arms about in apparent discomfort of being covered, revealing hair as black as shadows with a skin that was pale as snow.
Such a sweet face the babe possessed, it would have been considered angelic and beautiful at first… but oh, but the eyes!
The Queen screamed in pure, unadulterated terror while the King and the others who were present can only stare with wide, horrified eyes and that was the moment when all hell breaks loose as the infant opened its mouth and began to wail–
Outside, the winds howled loudly just as the stricken Queen Eleanor and the infant continuously wailed its praise of horror, both in despair for its birth.
(…if only the child's eyes are not as red as blood)
“Merciful God, how can this be? How could You let this happen to me?” Queen Eleanor cried to the heavens in despair, “How could I have given birth to a demon?”
( In its cage, something sneers and laughs.)
(“But mother, haven’t you wished for me?”)
. . .
‘But did you know, my love?
I learned that in some countries, you kill a monster right when it was born… before it even has a chance to truly live, to hurt someone else and while some may think it to be cruel and unjust, I believe this to be the greatest mercy of them all, a mercy that was taken from me.
It was rather… amusing how there are people in this world who kill a monster but only when it kills someone else… and they are hailed and remembered by the world as heroes.
Hypocrites, the lot of them.
And yet… in some places, some people chose to release the monster, in a forest, somewhere in the seven seas or… or in a kingdom, abandon it anywhere–it was all the same in the end, it was left to the world’s mercy (or lack thereof), forever alone and set apart, forever, calling and crying for others of its kind, hoping that maybe… just maybe… they were not alone.’
I–The Poisoned Apple The young Princess drops a single, red rose on her mother's grave as is her annual tradition during the dawn of her birth. As she watches the flower, such a stark red it was amidst the monochromatic stone of black and gray be covered with powders of white–her mother’s final resting place–she releases a breath and notes that this marks Queen Eleanor's fifth death anniversary before she spins on her heel, turning around to leave. Like any other year, today was cold. (She hopes her mother wasn’t cold down there.) Her small footsteps barely resounded on the snow-covered ground, her cloak of black fluttered behind her like a pair of raven wings, her long dark hair flying behi
II–Ashes of Innocence ‘Poisoned by my greedy stepmother,’ the Princess thinks miserable and wistful in her last waking moments in this cruel, cruel world that allows little princesses to look at Death in the face before they could have lived just a bit longer. She feels the poison's after-effects beginning to burn painfully inside her mouth almost instantly, ‘…what a wretched way to go. But I suppose it cannot be helped now,’ The Princess shall be graceful with this loss. In pain, she closed her eyes, resigned. ‘Let me die.’ Her dying wish was that death will be as easy as s
III – Garden of Corpses The Princess was not fond of going outside, the sunlight was too unbearable for her and even on winter, she had to wear a thick and furry cloak for the sake of keeping whatever little light there is away from her skin. So, she made up excuses after excuses that she has no business outside until her public appearances become near to nonexistent, until she was a rumor within a rumor–unless she was forced to make an appearance as the heiress of the crown–rare though it may be (no one would be glad to see her out and about, anyways…) but she was fond of flowers… so she made it a point to be seen at least daily, briefly, if only just to tend to them… her flowers, her garden. She twirled a daisy before plucking it's petals one by one, watching them being blown away by the winter winds away from her. The Princes
IV – Mirror, mirror While Sir Sanscroft was on his way to meet his old friend, King Arion after so many years and a thousand miles between them, the Queen herself was rather… preoccupied throwing a hissy fit inside her quarters. “That blubbering fool, what in the world is he thinking? Was he even thinking at all?! Why did he not even bother to consult me with these kinds of things? Had he finally lost it?!” she screeched, hurling an expensive vase violently across the room with a sweep of her arm and watching it crash into millions of pieces on the wall with little to no satisfaction before she rounded next to the closest item she could reach, “First, he had named that demonic brat of his as the crown princess, now he wants her to… to get a fiancé?! If worse comes to worst; what if the girl grows old enough to produce her
V– Anemone The Princess steps inside the palace grounds, her head rising slightly, and she narrowed her eyes as she took in the sight of the place that had been her home for oh, the last godforsaken decade. Such an awful thing to refer to my prison as such, the Princess scoffs, tugging at her hood a bit higher from the traitorous sun that was dangerously peeking in and out from the clouds overhead as dawn was close to approaching. She briefly nodded her head in acknowledgement to the guards who were stationed right in front of the palace gates, all who were automatically bowing right before her presence as is proper, never mind the odd hour of her appearance. Regardless of age, here and now, they have no right to question her. Her dark cloak was fluttering around her like a pair of raven’s wings as she
VI – The Little Knight Thirteen years old Jin Sanscroft smiled as he watched the clear skies and birds of white flying free over the vast, deep blue sea, the setting sun just shimmering ahead. It looked like the birds were going to a place where the ocean meets the sky, and he… He remembered this place. He remembered looking at the same view... This, this was home. A hand suddenly rested on his shoulder. Surprised, he turned around and his smile grew wider. She wasn't pale and sickly as he remembered during her last moments on earth. Her skin was rosy and her brown eyes were aglow with life he had never thought that could be
VII – The Little Princess His first instinct screamed at him to approach the little girl and quickly help her out–but the second he tried to make his legs work, her screams seemed to increase in volume as though she was actually being skinned alive inch by bloody inch. And like any regular living being, Jin Sanscroft’s fight, or flight response immediately kicked in at that one moment. Though this time, the flight response won over his reason at the next second and much to his mortification much, much later on, he was ashamed to admit that he quickly turned tail and ran away as fast as he can from the room without a second thought; the girl's pained screams still echoing in his ears on and on as he ran blindly, her pained noises resounding in the hall like a poltergeist, the guilt instantly inflating in his chest like a bunch of rocks, weighing him do
VIII - The Friendship “Excuse me!” Jin quickly called to a fortunately passing servant he caught quickly sight of once he reached the now-familiar painting of the juicy red, apple. Red, red, red… (Seriously, what’s up with that?) The servant, a young lady that was clearly older than him, stared back at him with startled, confused eyes before she paled the second she realized that the young guest had… he came from there, “What were you doing there, milord? You shouldn't be anywhere near those rooms! That place is–” “…irrelevant,” Jin interrupted her firmly, waving a dismissive hand, “Look, I need you to fetch me a physician as soon as possible. There is a little girl in there and I believe she's in dire need of medical attention. This is an em
“The stars, they said goodnight So, sleep till morning light Someday, I'll stay And dream for eternity With you… O beloved from above Until then It's only a matter of when When he draws near To take thee away O beloved from above Your hymns, I shall sing with love Until time passes me by So don’t kiss me goodbye Grant me another chance Spare me a second glance Let me… be with you again Beloved…” . . . . . . When Sir Hans Bathory finally came to, the world was already burning down all around him. And there’s nothing stopping it even as he sees the first, blindingly bright rays of the sun. Utterly confused and feeling panic and something like despair bubbling up from within the depths of his chest, the feeling of wrongness roaring everywhere around him, the knight finally gathers the strength, the courage to stumble and search through the torn-apart castle, one hand crawling and clawing at his neck (because he was so sure he was supposed to be dead–) while the other
“Do you know what it is like to live but not be in control? To watch your ‘self’, your own body living a life that was supposedly yours… to becoming nothing more but a vessel of a parasitic being you weren’t even fully aware of that was just there, watching and waiting… simply existing inside you?” Proserpina says nothing to that merely cants her head a touch in a barest hint of a nod because really… she understands. Because this is the curse of things that should be dead but still failed to die… for as long it still had its consciousness, a vessel… it would continue to exist, would continue to remain. …until the end of time. And as the young goddess continues to appraise the being that disturbingly looked far too human than the others residing within the depths of Tartarus… she thinks it was like staring at herself in years she didn’t even want to think of.
Proserpina turns to the next page, squinting hard. When the next words makes absolutely no sense and still doesn’t change at all no matter how much she stares and wills for it to change, the goddess of shadows finally blurted out the words that probably will make sense out of it all because seriously– “…What the hell?” “What is it?” another voice piped up. Her entire body jolted. Quickly, the young goddess turned to look behind her with a deer in the headlights look in her face… but it was only her younger brother, William, standing by the doorway, a black knapsack carelessly slung over one shoulder, a hand in his pocket while the other was loosely holding his phone, looking over at her with a weirded-out stare. Embarrassingly enough, it took her a moment or two to final
XLI–A Grim Fairytale The bats screeched then, erupting into a violent waterfall of darkness raining down upon them and an ungodly roar of outrage seemed to fill the entire world just as Jin felt himself crumble to his knees once more, white noise instantly filling his head as the white-hot pain consumed him. For a moment, Jin felt one of his hands blindly, weakly pawing all over on his side, on the floor that was becoming stained quickly with blood… his blood. “Now, it would never have one of our own,” he heard Sir Hans Bathory saying above him, his voice shaking with what seemed to be remorse and trepidation at once, “That demon would never ever have you, who bear the blood of Sans…” Jin can vaguely feel a familiar, cold darkness creeping and licking at the fra
XL–An Execution Jin Sanscroft yanked his uncle close to him as they rounded another hallway before the old man could be mauled by an ungodly maw while firing a round of bullets towards the other beast that suddenly leapt from the shadows out of nowhere with his other hand. He could feel Sir Ainsworth speaking over the commotion, but he couldn’t hear him. His eyes were firmly locked upon some of the beasts that were snarling and gnashing their teeth at him. And the beast’s eyes locked upon him. Red eyes, those eyes… its eyes looked like Aria’s on that day she tried to kill me, Jin thought with a sense of growing dread more than a passing thought as he lowered the pistol, just as the beast fell to the ground with a loud thud. Inaudibly, he swa
XXXIX – Judge, Jury, and Executioner “...Do you hear that, though?” her smile seems to grow a touch wider. Sir Hans Bathory paused as well, a bit disturbed upon hearing the sound of upcoming footsteps and Queen Ysabel’s cries and pleas well as it was growing louder and louder–they, whoever had the Queen, they must be coming close to the throne room–yet he did not dare to move nor take away his gaze from the demon standing right in front of him. The enemy was just sitting right there– “It’s the sound of an animal being led to slaughter…oh, such music to my ears,” she… the demon was practically moaning in sheer pleasure as she closes her eyes for a moment, as though relishing the ungodly screams before they opened, regarding him once more with those surreal eyes of blood, “Which reminds me: don’t you hav
XXXVIII – A Prophecy to fulfill Ysabel all but stumbled forward clumsily in her heels with Sir Quentin leading her with a firm grip by the arm, “Are you sure you know where we are going, you fool?” He didn’t answer. She scowled, “We’re lost, aren’t we?!” “No, no milady I was just… I truly apologize for the inconvenience, but this is the safest route we can take in the palace wall, out of sight from everyone,” the knight replied, looking around a bit too frantically for her tastes, “…and safe from those creatures,” She bit her lip, opting to keep her mouth shut, cradling the sack she brought with her containing all the jewelries and gold she managed to steal and gather from her vault and the King’s chambers–it was fortunate they had not decided to clean her deceased husband’s chambers just y
XXXVII– The Prophecy Sir Hans Bathory frowned upon finding the throne room vacated. Not to mention, it was quiet–too quiet to be even considered normal. If the knight hadn’t known any better he would have assumed that the Queen and her cronies had all but fled the palace by now, abandoning her people to their fate to the beasts, gone to who knows where. Now, by all means, Sir Hans wasn’t political savvy but that doesn’t mean he was plain stupid, he had known all along that the Queen was up to no good (he’d still choose the witch over any other day than having to actually bow his head to a demon playing human) but still… it was kind of annoying to be stuck in this current predicament without an authority figure. Especially since they were all looking at him for guidance…
XXXVI – Unveiled “What is the meaning of this?!” The mirror watched on in glee as Queen Ysabel with her usually fashioned dark blonde hair now completely messed up and her gown wrinkled as she frantically paced back and forth in front of her distorted reflection, her hands running through her tangled locks as she continued to panic. News of the kingdom being invaded in the middle of the night by demonic beasts that simply won’t die had finally reached her ears in the midst of her supposedly victorious celebration, the people being hunted and devoured like livestock as they speak, the land pillaged and stained with blood and the only thing protecting her right now from them are the palace gates and very few of her men armed by mere swords and bows, becoming less and less– “Why is this happening? Wh