The soldiers came in waves, their airships slicing through the misty skies like silent predators. Shadows darkened the streets of Rivermirror as armed men dropped from the skies, their boots hitting the ground with unrelenting purpose. Their mission was clear: retrieve the symbiote and relay core, and capture Argent and Hound—dead or alive. Failure was not an option. Mercy wasn’t part of the briefing.
The streets emptied as though the city itself had stopped breathing. The Seers had vanished without a trace, their usual defiance replaced by a chilling silence. Blanc’s hotel, the first location to be raided, stood eerily abandoned. The soldiers found nothing. No evidence of life. Not a single personal belonging. It was as if the building itself had never been inhabited.
The quiet streets of Rivermirror told a story of fear and survival. Nine years had passed since the war, but the scars remained. Now, with River’s soldiers parading through the city like it was their conquest, the memories came rushing back. Mothers pulled their children into the darkest corners of their homes. Businesses locked their doors. Schools closed their gates. The city fell into a deafening silence.
The unlucky few who lingered outside were met with violence. Interrogations escalated into beatings. Beatings escalated into executions. Blood soaked the cobblestones, the screams of the unfortunate fading into the oppressive quiet. A single strand of hair falling to the ground would have echoed in the emptiness.
For River, this was a calculated act. A demonstration of strength. Justice for their fallen commander. A reassurance to their citizens that order would be restored. But for Rivermirror, this was war. A battle for independence, for survival. Rivermirror was done living on scraps. They craved freedom and would achieve it by any means necessary.
“Blanc used to live here,” growled a soldier, pinning a trembling man to a damp brick wall in a shadowed alley. Rain trickled down the soldier’s helmet, pooling on the ground beneath his boots. He shoved a crumpled photograph of Argent and Hound into the man’s line of sight.
“They worked under him. Where are they now?”
The man stammered, his words stumbling over each other in panic. “I just sell vegetables, officer! I don’t know anything! I stay away from people like them!” His body shook as a dark stain spread across his trousers.
The soldier’s patience snapped. With a swift motion, he raised his shotgun, the barrel cold against the man’s forehead.
“Please, no! I swear I don’t—”
A deafening blast echoed through the alley. Blood splattered across the wall as the man crumpled to the ground, lifeless.
“Coward,” the soldier muttered, reloading his weapon.
The soldiers kicked down doors, dragging frightened residents into the streets. Screams echoed through the air as homes were ransacked, families torn apart. The streets became a war zone.
Evee, traveling alone and under the radar, slipped into River undetected. Among the many prestigious academies in the city, one stood out above the rest: Ebonspire Academy, renowned for producing the sharpest minds and future leaders.
Its exorbitant tuition made it a haven for the elite, primarily attended by nobles who could afford its exclusivity. However, its reputation drew students from across the globe, including neighboring cities and distant nations, making it a melting pot of ambition and privilege.
With its impenetrable security and esteemed reputation, Ebonspire was considered impossible to infiltrate. Undeterred, Evee made her way to a nearby bar to blend in and prepare her next move.
The best place to hide is often in plain sight, and Blanc knew this all too well. He chose to stay in a house owned by a seer living undercover in River, her identity concealed by a tattoo in invisible ink, just like Hound’s.
For four years, she had operated quietly, feeding Blanc invaluable political intel thanks to her influential position as a politician. But while she excelled in subterfuge, she was no fighter, and the weight of her current predicament made her heart pound with unease.
“Anna, you’re stressing me out with all that pacing,” Blanc said softly, breaking the tense silence. “Why don’t you sit down?”
Anna, gnawing on her nails, only paced faster. “There are other seers in River, Blanc! Why am I the one stuck with this? I’m fine providing intel, but now I’m hiding one of the most wanted criminals in my home. My sweet home! How long are you planning to stay here?”
Blanc chuckled at her rising panic. “Kicking your boss out of your sweet home, are we?” he teased, thoroughly amused.
“Why me?” Anna dropped to her knees dramatically, throwing her hands in the air in exaggerated despair.
“Because you’re the chosen one,” Blanc replied, his tone playfully mocking.
“I don’t wanna be the chosen one!” she cried, glaring at him with watery eyes, her over-the-top reaction drawing another chuckle from Blanc as he leaned back in his chair.
Gazier, the commander of Rivermirror’s most fearsome fighting force, unleashed his men with a single brutal order: eradicate the River soldiers. It was less about strategy and more about unleashing their pent-up rage and frustration. In Rivermirror, where internal disputes were common, there was one universal truth—they all hated the River soldiers.
The massacre began without hesitation. Gazier’s forces tore through the invading troops with merciless efficiency, exploiting the soldiers' inexperience and complacency after years of peace. The men under Gazier’s command were seasoned killers who had known death as intimately as a first name, their savagery unmatched.
Their mission wasn’t about heroism or protecting the people of Rivermirror. No, this was about feeding their insatiable thirst for violence. For Gazier’s men, the order to go rampant was the fulfillment of a dark and twisted dream.
The aftermath was a grotesque tapestry of blood and carnage. Streets, alleys, and homes were littered with the remains of fallen soldiers. Bodies lay torn apart, their lower halves separated yet futilely dragging their broken forms through the dust, leaving trails of entrails behind.
The chaos inspired others—ordinary residents who had never held a weapon—to join the slaughter, driven by pure, unfiltered rage at the invaders.
But amid the destruction, the true depths of human depravity revealed themselves. Two of Arlin’s daughters, young recruits in the military, were captured, violated, and ultimately bound for a fate worse than death, to be sold into the shadows of the sex trade once the fires of battle had burned out.
Evee, wearing revealing attire, was approached at the bar by a student.
“I noticed you from across the room and had to come over,” he said, “What’s your name, gorgeous?”
Noticing the emblem on his school uniform, Evee quickly responded, “Why don’t we skip the small talk and fast-forward to the part where I’m in your bed?” she teased, her boldness seeming out of place, yet the man, captivated by her allure, didn’t question it.
Before long, they found themselves in his dorm—inside the heavily guarded and monitored academy. He wasted no time pushing her onto the bed, his approach aggressive yet controlled.
Her cheeks flushed as he removed his clothes, revealing his impressive size. He climbed on top of her, moving with smooth, deliberate motions. Her tiny shirt came off first as their lips met in a passionate embrace, while he gently stimulated her.
In a flurry, she stripped off her miniskirt along with her underwear. As he reached for a condom on his desk, she halted him, locking him in place with her thighs and flipping him over to take the dominant position.
“I’m on birth control, no need to worry,” she whispered in his ear as she took him in fully, initially trembling from the pleasure.
He was so immersed in the moment, shock evident on his face, that he could hardly speak. She moved rhythmically against him, her eyes occasionally rolling back in ecstasy.
“Wait, I’m about to—” he finally managed, squirming.
“Inside me,” she urged.
“But it’s too soon. It’s only been a few minutes,” he protested.
“The best few minutes of my life,” she moaned, her grinding relentless. “Please, inside of me.”
He complied with her request, his eyes shut and mouth agape as he reached his climax, feeling her walls and the slickness that surrounded them. He kept his eyes closed, trying to regain his composure.
But then he felt an overwhelming heat—not from her, but something much hotter, almost searing. He opened his eyes, only to be met with red shockwaves radiating from her heart, her eyes glowing with intense heat. Her skin began to crack like stones under pressure. The shockwaves intensified, growing stronger until she could no longer contain them.
“Thank you, you’ve greatly assisted our cause,” she said, her voice sounding like the roar of flames. “Your life began from a woman’s body, and it ends in one, you lucky bastard.”
He barely had time to react before she exploded, engulfing his room, then his entire dorm, followed by all the neighboring ones. Before long, the explosion leveled the entire academy, shattering every protective measure in place…
The tension in the interrogation room was palpable, the dim light casting shadows over Commander Bleak’s stern expression. “You owe him no allegiance, Emily,” he said firmly, his voice cutting through the silence. “To my knowledge, he even defiled you.”The words hung heavy in the air, echoing in the isolated dark room, empty except for two chairs and the metallic table that separated them. Emily’s gaze drifted past the commander, landing on the one-way mirror behind him. Her disappointment was evident as she spoke, her voice laced with bitterness. “Unfuckingbelievable! And I thought I could trust you.”Behind the mirror, Daryl stood silently, his face a mixture of shame and regret as he absorbed her words.Bleak’s voice was steady as he pressed on. “What happened? Every detail, please.”“I already told you everything. What more do you want to—”“Tell me again,” Bleak interrupted, his tone polite but unyielding.Emily exhaled sharply, her frustration mounting. “He kidnapped me with hi
The roar of a gunshot cut through the air, breaking the suffocating silence. The commander’s backup, trained to respond without hesitation, immediately redirected their focus toward its origin.“Come on!” Evee called out, her voice sharp and urgent as she sprinted through the haze of chaos. She didn’t give Emily a chance to process or second-guess. Instinctively, Emily followed, her feet pounding against the ground as they disappeared into the smoke that choked the city.The devastation they left behind was unimaginable. With the destruction of Ebonspire Academy, River's hope for maintaining its supremacy had all but crumbled. What little control the soldiers had managed to maintain evaporated, replaced by an uncontrollable panic that spread like wildfire.The academy lay in ruins—a massive crater at its heart marked ground zero. The once-grand institution was reduced to rubble, with nearby buildings incinerated and structures within a three-mile radius fractured, barely standing. Ove
The name Evee sparked fear in every man’s heart. It had been a week since River soldiers stepped foot in Rivermirror. While most were able to migrate from the infected area, tens of thousands of River citizens were absorbed into the aftermath. Their houses burned, their families burned, joining the infernal. It spread like a virus until it annihilated a quarter of River.However, the city made a speedy recovery, restoring a makeshift balance. Despite the recovery, a lingering unease hung in the air like smoke that refused to dissipate.“They’re always a step ahead… almost like they survey us. What am I missing?” Bleak muttered, jotting on his whiteboard. The squeaks of the marker echoed through the dimly lit, isolated room. His gaze drifted over the scattered notes, connecting fragments of information like pieces of a puzzle. “What are you thinking, Emily? Leaving River will only complicate your sentence.”Bleak paused, his brow furrowed, as he connected the misplaced points. He recal
“Well, at least that’s what I thought initially, but you survived a dark symbiote. That changes everything,” Bleak stated, retracting his claws. “A possibility I planned for.”Hound circled him slowly, as if strategizing his next strike, waiting for the perfect moment. “Here without backup, not even a means of communication. You must be a man with a death sentence.”Bleak stood confidently in the center of the room, fully aware of Hound’s every micro-movement. “Why don’t you take a peep at the future? More specifically, a few minutes from now at Demi Hotel, room number 14.”Hound complied, using Bleak’s soul fragments—the strongest connection to the vision. One of his eyes began to burn rapidly, silver-lined smoke streaking from it as he continued to circle. His other eye remained silver, burning but steady. This new ability, part of his evolution, allowed him to scavenge webs of the near future while remaining conscious in the present.Then, his eye went dark. The darkness transition
Tears streaked his face with a precision that seemed almost artistic, each drop accentuating the anguish as he gently caressed Argent’s cold, pale face. His movements were slow, deliberate, as if savoring every fleeting moment of connection with her lifeless form. At a distance, the seers whispered among themselves, their eyes flitting between him and the others, their murmurs laced with doubt and suspicion about his loyalty. Despite the weight of their judgment, Hound lay there, unmoving, consumed by his grief for the remainder of the day.“A streaking silver flame, burning through the streets, destroying property and reducing citizens to ash without discernible cause... there’s only one person who fits the description,” Blanc stated as he entered the room, stepping through the shattered remnants of the door with his cane tapping rhythmically against the floor. Emily trailed closely behind him, her steps cautious, while Bleak staggered in after them, his face battered and bruised fro
“What am I doing with my life,” he whispered, his voice low and heavy. The words echoed through the dark, narrow alley, bouncing off empty walls and disappearing into the void. Only two others were present to hear him—his silent coworker and a terrified young woman clutching her purse, her wide, tear-filled eyes pleading for mercy.“I’ll give you anything—money, favors—whatever you want,” she stammered, her voice trembling and breaking with every word.“You hear that, Hound? Anything we want,” Puck said with a cruel laugh, his boots scraping against the gritty pavement as he moved closer. “What I want, sweetheart, isn’t in your purse. Can you give me that?”Her face paled, her lips trembling as she tried to reason with him. “I… my family values my honor above all else. Please, I’ll give you money, connections—I can even cover your academy fees. Registration opens soon, and I’ll pay for it all.”Unmoved, Puck continued his advance, closing the space between them until her back pressed
Off in the distance, a plank crashed to the ground. Footsteps followed—fast, frantic, and heavy with terror.Hound’s hand slipped into his pant’s pocket, pulling out a metallic syringe. Inside, a bright purple fluid fizzled violently, light dancing through the glass. Without hesitation, he jammed the needle into his forearm. The reaction was immediate. Black veins crawled across his skin, spreading like ink in water. Every hair on his body stood on end.His pupils turned silver, glowing against the darkness. He tilted his head, staring through the shadows. The world shifted under his gaze—what others saw as blackness revealed its truth to him.There, stumbling through the mist, was a boy. Dark hair, thin frame, sweat dripping down his pale face. He looked back constantly, his wide eyes screaming fear. But Hound wasn’t fooled. The boy’s soul flickered faintly in the dark, and at its center was a brand—clear, unmistakable.A gust of wind swept through the alley, carrying the shadows wit
“What do you wanna be when you grow up, son?” Davin asked, his voice warm, his hands rough from a lifetime of hard work resting on the worn wooden table. The dinner wasn’t fancy—plain white rice and boiled vegetables—but the love in the small home made up for what it lacked in wealth. Family was their greatest treasure.“He’s gonna be a great businessman one day, honey,” Angela chimed in, her tone hopeful. “And he’s going to make so much money we won’t have a worry in this world. Isn’t that right, baby?”Hound hesitated, his small hands gripping his spoon tightly. “I had another nightmare, Mom. I’m scared.” His voice cracked as he pushed the rice around on his plate. “I was… I was a bad person.”Davin smiled, soft and reassuring. “Come here, big boy.” He opened his arms wide, but Hound shook his head.“It’s okay, Dad. I know they’re just dreams. Like you always say,” Hound mumbled, shoving another spoonful of bland rice into his mouth.Angela’s smile softened as she watched her son. “
Tears streaked his face with a precision that seemed almost artistic, each drop accentuating the anguish as he gently caressed Argent’s cold, pale face. His movements were slow, deliberate, as if savoring every fleeting moment of connection with her lifeless form. At a distance, the seers whispered among themselves, their eyes flitting between him and the others, their murmurs laced with doubt and suspicion about his loyalty. Despite the weight of their judgment, Hound lay there, unmoving, consumed by his grief for the remainder of the day.“A streaking silver flame, burning through the streets, destroying property and reducing citizens to ash without discernible cause... there’s only one person who fits the description,” Blanc stated as he entered the room, stepping through the shattered remnants of the door with his cane tapping rhythmically against the floor. Emily trailed closely behind him, her steps cautious, while Bleak staggered in after them, his face battered and bruised fro
“Well, at least that’s what I thought initially, but you survived a dark symbiote. That changes everything,” Bleak stated, retracting his claws. “A possibility I planned for.”Hound circled him slowly, as if strategizing his next strike, waiting for the perfect moment. “Here without backup, not even a means of communication. You must be a man with a death sentence.”Bleak stood confidently in the center of the room, fully aware of Hound’s every micro-movement. “Why don’t you take a peep at the future? More specifically, a few minutes from now at Demi Hotel, room number 14.”Hound complied, using Bleak’s soul fragments—the strongest connection to the vision. One of his eyes began to burn rapidly, silver-lined smoke streaking from it as he continued to circle. His other eye remained silver, burning but steady. This new ability, part of his evolution, allowed him to scavenge webs of the near future while remaining conscious in the present.Then, his eye went dark. The darkness transition
The name Evee sparked fear in every man’s heart. It had been a week since River soldiers stepped foot in Rivermirror. While most were able to migrate from the infected area, tens of thousands of River citizens were absorbed into the aftermath. Their houses burned, their families burned, joining the infernal. It spread like a virus until it annihilated a quarter of River.However, the city made a speedy recovery, restoring a makeshift balance. Despite the recovery, a lingering unease hung in the air like smoke that refused to dissipate.“They’re always a step ahead… almost like they survey us. What am I missing?” Bleak muttered, jotting on his whiteboard. The squeaks of the marker echoed through the dimly lit, isolated room. His gaze drifted over the scattered notes, connecting fragments of information like pieces of a puzzle. “What are you thinking, Emily? Leaving River will only complicate your sentence.”Bleak paused, his brow furrowed, as he connected the misplaced points. He recal
The roar of a gunshot cut through the air, breaking the suffocating silence. The commander’s backup, trained to respond without hesitation, immediately redirected their focus toward its origin.“Come on!” Evee called out, her voice sharp and urgent as she sprinted through the haze of chaos. She didn’t give Emily a chance to process or second-guess. Instinctively, Emily followed, her feet pounding against the ground as they disappeared into the smoke that choked the city.The devastation they left behind was unimaginable. With the destruction of Ebonspire Academy, River's hope for maintaining its supremacy had all but crumbled. What little control the soldiers had managed to maintain evaporated, replaced by an uncontrollable panic that spread like wildfire.The academy lay in ruins—a massive crater at its heart marked ground zero. The once-grand institution was reduced to rubble, with nearby buildings incinerated and structures within a three-mile radius fractured, barely standing. Ove
The tension in the interrogation room was palpable, the dim light casting shadows over Commander Bleak’s stern expression. “You owe him no allegiance, Emily,” he said firmly, his voice cutting through the silence. “To my knowledge, he even defiled you.”The words hung heavy in the air, echoing in the isolated dark room, empty except for two chairs and the metallic table that separated them. Emily’s gaze drifted past the commander, landing on the one-way mirror behind him. Her disappointment was evident as she spoke, her voice laced with bitterness. “Unfuckingbelievable! And I thought I could trust you.”Behind the mirror, Daryl stood silently, his face a mixture of shame and regret as he absorbed her words.Bleak’s voice was steady as he pressed on. “What happened? Every detail, please.”“I already told you everything. What more do you want to—”“Tell me again,” Bleak interrupted, his tone polite but unyielding.Emily exhaled sharply, her frustration mounting. “He kidnapped me with hi
The soldiers came in waves, their airships slicing through the misty skies like silent predators. Shadows darkened the streets of Rivermirror as armed men dropped from the skies, their boots hitting the ground with unrelenting purpose. Their mission was clear: retrieve the symbiote and relay core, and capture Argent and Hound—dead or alive. Failure was not an option. Mercy wasn’t part of the briefing.The streets emptied as though the city itself had stopped breathing. The Seers had vanished without a trace, their usual defiance replaced by a chilling silence. Blanc’s hotel, the first location to be raided, stood eerily abandoned. The soldiers found nothing. No evidence of life. Not a single personal belonging. It was as if the building itself had never been inhabited.The quiet streets of Rivermirror told a story of fear and survival. Nine years had passed since the war, but the scars remained. Now, with River’s soldiers parading through the city like it was their conquest, the memor
The drizzle of rain added to the solemn atmosphere, soaking those who had gathered for Erlin’s funeral on the quiet afternoon. The gray skies wept alongside his three daughters, who clung to one another, their tears indistinguishable from the rain. Soldiers stood in formation, fists pressed to their hearts, their faces streaked with anguish they didn’t bother to hide. Daryl lingered at the edge of the ceremony, hands shoved into his coat pockets, his bionic arms a constant reminder of the price of failure. Beside him, his wife looped her arm through his, grounding him in a reality he wanted desperately to escape.“Erlin was a good man,” Bleak began, his voice steady despite the crackling in his throat. “To his family, to his friends, to his soldiers, and to this country. Let us not cry because he is not with us anymore. Let us be grateful because he lived.”“He shall forever remain in our hearts,” the crowd echoed in unison, their voices trembling.As the soldiers stood in a quiet sal
The overhead lights shifted to a menacing crimson, signaling the building's lockdown. With a deafening thud, all doors slammed shut. Argent, her task complete, moved stealthily from the mansion’s entrance to the next checkpoint at the River border.The only escape route lay in the hands of Mr. Dawson, whose fingerprints were now a gruesome souvenir in Hound's possession—both hands severed and hidden away. The acrid scent of burning flesh filled the air, remnants of a desperate act to keep Daryl from bleeding out. In the center of the room stood the Dawson family, Emily among them, bound and gagged as if they awaited execution, their muffled whimpers slicing through the tense silence.“I’ve been waiting for you, Erlin,” Hound’s voice reverberated through the dimly lit room. His guard mask lay discarded on the floor, revealing a morbid expression, one that seemed perpetually trapped between mirth and madness— the guard that followed him, pierced by his own sword.“Have we met?” Erlin as
The night crawled painfully into dawn, stretching each moment into an eternity. The soldiers, weary and disillusioned, began to vacate their posts one by one. Their vigilance waned under the weight of exhaustion, their eyes drooping with the false assurance that nothing would happen. River’s silence was deafening, like a mother whispering to a deaf child—calm, quiet, but ultimately fruitless.Inside the Dawson mansion, slumber claimed its inhabitants. Emily had fallen asleep on the couch, her face etched with the fatigue of restless thoughts. Mavis lay beside her on a makeshift mattress, her body curled protectively against hers. In the master bedroom, Mr. and Mrs. Dawson clung to their own fragile sense of peace, blissfully unaware of the storm brewing beyond their walls.Four contracted guards lingered outside the mansion's front entrance, their postures slackened from a night spent on high alert. The sleek copper armor they wore shimmered faintly in the dim light of dawn, the matte