You all are the amazing! Thank you for sharing your incredible writing, art, and poems with us again — or for the first time! Your creativity continues to blow us away! We’ll be back in AUGUST!

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@daily-writing-challenge
You all are the amazing! Thank you for sharing your incredible writing, art, and poems with us again — or for the first time! Your creativity continues to blow us away! We’ll be back in AUGUST!
DWC Day 4: Inadequate/Bond
@daily-writing-challenge
Trixany and the Kaja-Cola Flava Girls are greeted by the new master of Castle Nathria...
Prince Renathal: GOOD EVENING *appears behind them, spooky venthyr voice*
Flava Girls: AAAAAAAAAaaaaaaahhh!
Trixany: Alright, Renathal. Playtime is over. You gave up your chance to become a real prince back in the day with your silly revolution! We're here to rescue Denathrius and you won't distract us.
Renathal: I know. I have multiple hearthstone-shaped lumps on the back of my head to prove it. *folds his hands elegantly* I had hoped that it was just a flagrant disregard of our No Throwing Into the Maw sign I had placed there since the last incident--
Shuga Slam: What's tea-time guy blathering on about?
Coco: Oh, you didn't play through Shadowlands. He got thrown into the Maw. By Denathrius. By the neck.
Renathal: AHEM!
Burmussia: Oof! Who says that anymore? And this is coming from a dame thoooousands of years old. *tosses feather boa over her shoulder*
Renathal: I appreciate your inadequate efforts to be fashionably late. However, we no longer support Sire Denathrius as our defacto dictator. He's been... deposed. What you've sashayed in here proposing to do to Revendreth, and all of existence is today considered... Illegal.
Trixany: I want the sword!
Mojo: Ya, mon! You give her dat sword Remornia or I shrink ya head! Unless you give me dat tea party, and maybe I won't be shrinkin' ya head?
Dhalia: Yessss...
Renathal: Oh! Well, tea party it is then--
Trixany: Ladies!! Stay focused. We have on our evil sunglasses for a reason. This is the Flava Girls' domination era. We are Christina Aguilera Filthy, we are Britney Spears Toxic. We are Lady Gaga's Disease! We're being bad Renathal, so give us the sword! We are freeing Denathrius, tonight. *finger snap*
Coco: New song lyrics sis?
Trixany: Oh puhlease. You know I don't do anything original. But give me a song to parody and it's done-done-done like Kpop Demon Slayers--
Renathal: Hrmph! You know, you may think us Warcraft vampires uncultured, but I am a fan of every singer you just mentioned. Really, I think any great pop star responsible for the eventual emergence of Chapell Roann's My Kink is Karma song, must have some good in them. That is, after all, the atonement process. Eliciting something divine out of someone deemed to be damned.
Sandy Dunes: Why that song? That's not a vampire song.
Renathal: It's simply my favorite. I play along on my saxaphone. Would you like a demonstration?
Sandy: Um no. Hashtag sad fox ears.
Trixany: We will fight you for that sword! Come on girls, it's six against one!!
Renathal: No need. As I said, you have inspired me to have a change of heart about your girl band, but I need to be sure. I need us to truly bond, as allies! If you pass my little test, I shall grant you whatever your heart desires. Though if you fail--
Shuga: *raises hand* Can I wrestle that bear-gargoyle in front of everyone if we fail?
Renathal: ... well. That's more entertaining than the Maw, I suppose. So, yes.
Trixany: Heeey, why were you down in the Maw again anyway, Renethal? In the exact spot Denathrius thrust you in? Karma kink? Chapelle Roan punishing her lover? You have a thing for that cage, don't you?
Renathal: Far be it for YOU to judge me, Trixany Cuomo. I know your sinstone. The many despicable things you did with Kael'thas Sunstrider back in the Outland could have filled a graveyard of them.
Trixany: Woohoo! On with the Castle Nathria game show! *cheers*
Renathal: Are you certain? You could turn back now and go home. That is, atone. I, for one, would prefer the revealing, juicy talk show full of Kael'thas-Trixany secrets.
Trixany: I said we're fine playing your damned weird vampire party game so let's get to it already.
Trixany: And it better not be another boring Venthyr daily quest out here that I've already done.
Renathal: No need to be hateful in your fake Judgment armor paladin class set.
Trixany: ... ...
Renathal: That's just from the Warcraft anniversary, isn't it.
DWC Day 3 Shock/Reflect
@daily-writing-challenge
Meanwhile, Trixany is still on her phone while the Kaja-Cola Flava Girls hike through Revendreth...
Coco: Ugh! My little Goblin feet ain't made for all this walkin in the spooky woods--
Dhalia: *forsaken drawl* Fine day for it, isn't it? I love the sallow moonlight through the shades of weeping trees, the bloodied river, and how we can't tell if it's the soft crunch of leaves beneath our feet or the crushed bones of the slaughtered...
Coco: I wanna take the road, Trixany! Or at least one of those carriages.
Shuga Slam: No can do. We gotta stay low, in our warpaint. Off the roads. We're in enemy country now.
Sandy Dunes: Ugh, hate all of this. Hashtag tailswish! *and actual vulpera tailswish*
Coco: Shuga Slam is going all demonic Horde Orc on us--this ain't Elwynn Woods! Trixany? Trix, will ya get off ya phone and take charge again? They're drivin' me crazy!
Trixany: Sharpen, no! Stop being a jerk. That would harm my brand way too much for you to redo your entire trp right now!
Sharpen: *muffled, over the phone* Himbos aren't trending like they did years ago and I was thinking of changing it up a bit. There's more to me than my playful side, that's all.
Trixany: Stoppit! I can't believe you're doing this to me right now. You know that I'm already under a lot of stress and that I trapped myself in the afterlife to revive a god of death and fix my talk show with Kael'thas...
Sharpen: Did not. Um. Tell you to do all that?
Trixany: It's like you're breaking up with me all over again by refusing to be a himbo any longer when my entire Team Trixany blog depends on that!! Fine, erase me from your trp for all I care! BUT I'M HIDING MY AT-A-GLANCE ABOUT YOU!! When people mouseover me they are gonna see nothing in the Sharpen slot, nothing about my himbo best friend because you are nothing to me now, gone!!
Sharpen: Well, fine. I stopped holding your orange juice a long time ago anyway, and you never even changed that icon.
Trixany: Argggh!! *yells into the phone, clicks it off*
Trixany: *looks up* What are we doing here in the lobby of Castle Nathria? Denathrius was last seen trapped inside his sword Remornia at Sinfall. We were supposed to look for Remornia clues there.
The Flava Girls: *all show signs of being covered in leaves, mud, wildlife scratches*
Shuga: I saw a scary bear-gargoyle, and I was about to wrestle it! But then, there was also a guy claiming he wanted help us. He looked like Renethal. Said he'd ride ahead to the castle and make us some tea.
Burmussia: I thought the castle sounded like a resort, a fancy, turn-of-the-millenia getaway. Perfect acoustics for practicing my tap dance routine.
Mojo Jojo: I wanted da tea party.
Dhalia: Yeah! I heard Shadowlands tea parties in the world of the damned are legendary.
Trixany: So you all chose the man, not the bear-gargoyle, and kept on hiking through the deadly wilderness?
Coco: On closa reflection, I think I woulda chosen the bear. *crosses her arms*
Omg sinful shoes
Meanwhile, the Kaja-Cola Flava Girls are still in Revendreth and being pop stars... @daily-writing-challenge
Trixany: I've started going shoe shopping on Pinterest. But I just pin the shoes and I never buy them. I just collect them.
Coco: ...
Trixany: It's like my Pokémon really.
Coco: You're crazy.
Sandy Dunes: *tiny vulpera foxlike squint, looks at Trix's comm screen* What happens when you want to evolve them?
Coco: AI.
Trixany: Do I have to? There are so many on here. I have like the whole internet as my pokédex!
Sandy: If they don't evolve, then it isn't like pokemon. Hashtag tail-swish!
Trixany: Well, I mean, I'm not making the shoes fight till they pass out, either.
Coco: Lame.
Mojo Jojo: I dunno, mon. Dis could work. You be havin' winter types, that's snow boots. Summer sandals. Spring... rainboots?
Black Cherry Dhalia: *Forsaken drawl* For fall, she could collect cute platform studded ankle boots. That scream and slime and smoke dry ice whenever you take a step. Very Hallow's End too, mhrmm.
Coco: Huh??
Trixany: Oh! I just caught those... Looks like Steve Madden had them.
Coco: *eyeroll* Ugh, Steve Madden has everything.
Trixany: I know! It's like the Safari Zone of shoe hunting!
Coco: But none of it even fits!
Trixany: But again sis, we're not wearing the shoes. We are simply looking at them, pictures. Because it's Pinterest! So I can get all the ill-fitting Steve Madden I want! BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAAA!!!
Coco: Aren't we supposed to be trapped in dramatic Revendreth trying to resurrect a god of death just so you can get your damned toxic talk show back outta Kael'thas' clutches?!
Shuga: ...
Mojo: ...
Burmussia: ...
Dhalia: ...
Sandy: ...
Trixany: Well, after we dramatically threw our hearthstones into the Maw like Prince Renethal, I got distracted playing on my phone.
Coco: Worst, most vivid fourth wall breakin we've eva had on hea, I swear!! 🤬
DWC June Day 7
Xo had worn many names before she learned which ones fit, "Kali…" Yes, that seemed about right. That seemed to be the one that drew the most smiles from men willing to toss themselves away for a night.
For a season, under Selmak’s direction, she became a woman of the night. It was not the worst work she had ever done. Not by far. Men were remarkably willing to render themselves fools when they believed beauty had made them safe. A lowered voice, a tilted smile, a hand poured delicately over the rim of a hearty glass - these were often sharper tools than any blade. Xo learned quickly which questions to ask, which silences to leave open, and which lies deserved a soft laugh instead of a correction.
She had endured many little horrors in service of the role. Wedding rings twisted off the fingers before entrance to the inn, leaving behind a pale chokehold upon the fingers they once lingered. Perfume applied with the desperation of a man trying to outrun his own sweat. Poetry recited by men who mistook length for talent. Boasts of war, trade, politics, and lovers, all delivered with the same grave confidence and very little evidence.
Through all of it, Xo remained exquisite. Then Lord Something-or-Other sat at the edge of the bed and began unlacing his boot.
Xo watched with the calm expression of a trained professional, though every instinct in her body went still. The first boot came free.
There were many ways to horrify a woman.
This, she decided, was among the most horrific.
“Are you well, my dove?” he asked.
Xo placed one delicate hand over her heart, not because she was moved, but because she feared her spirit was attempting to flee through it.
“Quite,” she said, with the kind of smile usually reserved for such occasions. “I am simply… overcome.”
@daily-writing-challenge
DWC June Day 6
The kitchen was quiet except the for strict ticking of the clock which hung upon the wall above her. Xo sat at the kitchen table in a silk slip and short robe, one bare leg tucked beneath her. The robe had loosened at one shoulder sometime during her reading, though she had not cared enough to fix it. Before her sat a glass of red wine, a scattering of parchment, and three open books weighed down by whatever she had found close at hand: a corked vial, a silver spoon, and a little blue jar of dried dreaming glory. The hour had slipped past respectable study and into obsession, though she would have called it research if anyone had been there to accuse her.
From the top of the page, the ugly word glared back her, "undeath." It began to feel less like diagnosis and more like accusation.
"Continuance", she wrote beneath it. "A state of remaining after confirmed cessation of life." She stared at the sentence until the ink blurred. Smaller notes were scratched within the margins, small annotations to decorate an already-worn text. "Soul-lag. Delayed or lack of sensory response? Possible separation between flesh memory and spirit reintegration." Her fingers drifted to the stem of her wineglass. It all sounded clinical on parchment. Almost elegant.
The fire in the kitchen hearth burned low. A kettle sat nearby, forgotten after her evening tea, though she had not bothered to drink more than half of it. Nightly ritual. Tepid tea - a cup held between both hands because it had always been that way before. She could at least still taste the spice, sweetness, and bitter herbs.
But the warmth had become something her mind remembered more than her body understood these days.
Firelight still looked beautiful. A lover’s hand still carried weight. Sun through the window still painted gold over her skin. Yet none of it reached her properly. None of it sank in.
Pressure, yes. Texture, yes. Heat, no.
Xo reached for the wineglass and found it empty. “Mm.” The small sound broke the silence.
She pushed herself from the chair and crossed the kitchen for the bottle. Its dark silhouette waited on the counter where she had left it, half-full and generous in the way all wine became generous after midnight. She brought it back to the table and tipped the mouth over her glass. A clink ushered the crimson flow to either mask or catalyze the desperation which kept her anchored awake.
That was when she saw the steam. Only from the corner of her eye at first. A pale thread slipping upward. Xo paused mid-pour.
The wine continued for half a breath too long, rising higher than she intended before she righted the bottle and set it down. Her gaze moved toward the hearth. The kettle sat where it had been all evening. Dark-bellied and still, no flame beneath it and yet steam continued to curl from its spout.
For a moment, the alchemist in her reached for reason first. Residual heat. A trick of the room? A draft carrying vapor from somewhere else. Wine and tired eyes conspiring with too many pages about ghosts and vapors of beings.
Then the steam bent against the air. Xo went still. The pale ribbon twisted upward, not scattered by the draft but gathering through it. It folded into itself with unbearable patience, layer over layer, until the shape suggested a bowed head beneath a veil.
Not enough to be seen, but enough to be known.
Her blackened fingers tightened around the neck of the bottle. The obsidian-turned rune on her afflicted hand flickered pathetically at first.
It began as pressure - a dull, deep ache in the first finger he had touched, where the stain had started so long ago after the shipwreck. She had thought it no more than bruising then. A strange discoloration beneath the nail. Merely a little black crescent where no wound had opened.
The ache spread through her knuckles. Then into her palm. Xo inhaled sharply. Heat followed. -Real- heat. Not the soft hum of Light beneath her painted runes. Not alchemical sting. Not the phantom memory of warmth her mind conjured when she sat too close to the fire and pretended it comforted her.
This was heat with teeth. It bloomed beneath the blackened skin, slow and cruel, first like a coal pressed under the flesh, then like molten wire threaded through the bones of her hand. It crept over her wrist and climbed the darkened length of her forearm in a tightening spiral.
The glass slipped from her grasp, striking against the table. Wine spilled over, bleeding across her notes.
Xo did not move to save them. She clutched her arm. A sound tore from her before she could swallow it - a whimpering filled with fear. The heat rose again. Her knees weakened. She caught herself against the table, breath shuddering through clenched teeth as the burn crawled higher, finding every place the mark had claimed. The blackened veins beneath her skin pulsed once, then again, each beat dragging fire with it.
Her eyes stung before pain gave her permission to weep.
All those nights beside the hearth, watching flame fold into flame and feeling nothing but the idea of warmth. All those embraces where she had rested against another body and remembered, dimly, that touch was meant to carry warmth as well as weight.
A lover’s hand at the small of her back. A mouth against her shoulder. Fingers threading through hers beneath blankets. The ordinary mercy of being warmed by someone who wanted her near. Now warmth had returned as torment.
The first true heat she had felt since resurrection came from something that hated her.
Xo bowed over the table, teeth bared, one hand gripping the edge hard enough to make the wood creak. “No,” she whispered. The steam thickened. The kettle began to sing a nearly taunting and mocking tune.
A thin, almost-human note threaded through the kitchen, too low to be pressure, too soft to be warning. The sound slipped over the table, over the spilled wine, over her ruined notes.
In the steam, the suggestion of a head tilted.
“There you are.” Her arm burned hotter. The searing of the mark had climbed farther than she remembered. Black crawled past the bend of her shoulder, following the branching lines. Almost like claws flexed toward her throat.
The steam shifted. Something like a hand unfolded within it.
“You imitate life beautifully.”
Xo forced herself upright. Her face had gone pale. Sweat gathered at her temples, shocking in its own right. She could feel that too. The damp warmth at her hairline. The sting of it along her neck. The humiliating proof of sensation returning only because he had chosen to make a lesson of her.
“You are not welcome here,” she uttered through her clenched jaw.
The steam shivered, amused. No mouth formed, yet she felt the smile.
“Here…” The word passed through the kettle’s thin cry.
“Body. Breath. Name. All these little rooms you lock yourself inside.”
Xo’s fingers curled inward. Pain flashed white-hot through her hand. She nearly buckled.
The entity watched just as it had watched her in the wreckage, when the sea was full of floating dead and torn wood, when souls drifted upward like loosened threads and every lost thing had a direction but her. It had come for passage, not for her. She had not been there to be claimed.
That had been the insult. Not that she belonged to him. That she did not belong anywhere he could understand. Living. Dying. Dead. Delivered.
Xo had been none cleanly enough. An error in the crossing. An anomaly. And he had marked her for it. For ownership, investigation… punishment. The burn tightened around her arm until her vision blurred. Xo closed her eyes in a feeble attempt to steady herself. For a breath, she saw the shipwreck again, the cold sea, the flurry of bodies. She remembered the terrible hush after screams.
A shape among the dead, simply present where passage gathered. It had turned toward her through rain and salt and ruin. She remembered one black fingertip reaching from the abyss, touching hers. She remembered thinking it colder than death.
“You defy what should have been,” it whispered, accusation pulsing through.
Xo opened her eyes. The kitchen swam around her. Wine crept over the table and dripped steadily to the floor. Her notes on undeath darkened under the spill, ink crawling from the page in red-black threads.
“I am not yours,” she whimpered.
The kettle screamed. The burn shot upward. Xo cried out then, truly cried out, as the claws around her seemed to close. Heat surged toward the tender hollow of her throat. The psychopomp leaned closer through the steam.
“No,” it whispered. “That is the problem.”
Her knees struck the floor. The impact rattled through her body, but it was nothing compared to the fire in her arm. She clutched it to her chest, shaking, hating the tears that spilled hot over her cheeks. Hot, even her tears felt hot.
A laugh broke from her, ragged and miserable. Of course. Of course this would be how warmth found her.
Not through love. Not through morning sun. Not through the simple mercy of her nightly ritual, but through violation.
Through a mark left by a thing that could not decide whether to study her, punish her, or pull her apart until she became legible.
The steam hovered above her. “You suffer because you remain unresolved.”
Xo’s breathing came in short, uneven pulls. The words sank deeper than pain. Unresolved. As though she were a failed equation. A spoiled tincture. A soul left improperly shelved.
Her anguish sharpened into fury. She lifted her head. The kitchen was still hers. The table was hers. The spilled wine, the ruined notes, the cold hearth, the useless kettle screaming without flame - all hers.
Even the arm. Even cursed. Even burning. Still hers.
“You do not get to solve me.”
The steam recoiled slightly. Xo reached for the edge of the table and dragged herself upward. Her hand shook violently. The blackened fingers barely obeyed. Heat licked each knuckle, each tendon, each terrible line of shadow crawling toward her throat.
She stood anyway. It watched her as it always had, attempting to understand as it always had. Attempting, perhaps, to find which part of her could be turned into a door.
Xo looked at the kettle, the steam, and then at the handle. Her voice came softer this time, more hoarse.
“You are not death.”
The kettle’s scream thinned. Xo swallowed against the ache in her throat.
“You are only the errand boy, the clerk who lost the page.”
The steam twisted once, violently, as if struck by a draft that did not exist, then unraveling, dissipating into the room.
The kitchen fell silent once more. Wine still dripped from the table.
Xo remained standing for several long breaths, one hand braced against the chair, the other cradling her blackened arm. The burn settled, but did not vanish as if it were waiting.
For the first time since death, Xo could feel heat beneath her skin.
And she hated how much she wanted to call it living.
@daily-writing-challenge
Reconcile
DWC 2026; Day 7 - Horrify/Render
Continued from here
@daily-writing-challenge
How many years had she spent suffering nightmares and heartache since the last time she had been in the presence of the Red Temple worshippers? Too many, in Susan's opinion. A bitter kind of pain that left a stain on her heart, on her mind... It had festered in her mind and overwhelmed her sensibilities to this point. Where she is hastily shuffling through the dark and grim hallways of an ill begotten castle on the coasts of Drustvar, aimlessly wandering whilst dipping into every room she possibly can gain entry to in search for a suggestion that her daughter were here.
At one point she'd find herself nearly accosted when entering one room to find a pair of cultists in a compromising position of worship, one that has her double taking at the absurdity before shutting the door behind her and hustling to the next available door.
This one she doesn't find a single person inside, but there was certainly a presence to the room. Susan was compelled to stall, her head raising to eye the walls of endless art of a similar, singular style. Near a window overlooking the ocean would be a large easel, it's shelf carrying a sizeable canvas that had the beginning of a new tracing in pencil.
It was easy to assume an artist lived in this suite at once point, part of her had to wonder how anyone could sleep in these conditions. The slime of mold building across an untreated ceiling, moss and plantlife slow to coil and grow from between the cracks of stone architecture that was the walls and floors. She'd hum to herself, turning in preparation to leave this room to it's silence, only to turn to find a girl no older than ten standing in the doorway behind her.
A surge of emotion leapt from her chest into her throat, nearly choking Susan as she tried to swallow. The cloaked Susan and the girl freeze as they make some form of indirect eye contact.
Gold met gold as the eyes of child and mother meet, a flash of recognition exchanged between them. Though as suddenly as the girl had started to look too closely she would disengage, shaking her head.
The pretty little brown haired girl with a bow in her hair was the spitting image of Susan in her youth.
"What are you doing in here?" The girl sounds positive miffed, a sly quip to her tone as she forces her way into her room, shoulder checking the cloaked figure, "Ought you be helping my mother?"
Susan's head shot up then, staring in suspicion after the girl as she carries her fresh glass of water toward her easel. A horrifying reality of the life her daughter had been raised to believe came crashing down as
"Your mother?" Susan sounds in utter disbelief.
"Are you daft?"
Susan grits her teeth into a tight bite, grimacing after the child.
"Quite the opposite."
"Oh," the girl laughs, "A joker are you? What, did she send for me or something?"
At once Susan could feel the karma of having ever been a smart mouth child coming to bite her in the ass. It takes everything in the woman to not get snippy.
"...she hadn't. Though I wonder if I should be helping her--," Susan speaks candidly, beginning to side step toward the exit of the room as she considers the next potential course of action. To find this woman and render her lifeless? To take a bloody fight straight into the arms of the Red Temple worshippers? Or to get Vivian out of here as soon as possible?
It felt like the answer was really quite simple the longer the mother thought upon it.
The Madam refrains from saying anything outright but she clearly hesitates, finally spinning on her heels and turning back toward the child. She'd reach her hands up and gently coax the hood of her stolen cloak from atop her head toward her shoulders. At once the little girl would be forced to recognize the strong genetical makeup in the woman's face much resembled her own.
Vivian swallows, but doesnt make a sound otherwise. The paint supplies she'd started to mix would be forgotten as she takes in the face staring back at her.
"...when you were but the unborn, your mother was abducted from her life in South Western Pandaria," Susan begins to explain, her eyes softening as she looks toward the girl. With such a start to an explanation the girl falters, golden eyes widening in disbelief. "For a week the people that have raised you, those dressed in garb similar to this," Sue tugs at the red cloak around her figure before admitting, "They hurt and tore your mother to shreds, forcing your premature birth by the end of her stay with them."
"Bullshit," the child spits, her voice carrying the sharp edge of a young vipress, her words like venom as she points to Susan, "You are a liar, and a poor one at that-!"
"The baby born from that improperly performed caesarean section had a birth mark," Susan bit back, the sheer willpower of her voice bringing the child to stall and stare in a heightening of uncertainty. "A half crescent shape on the side of your hip. Just the slightest discoloration, but still..."
It was the girl's turn to swallow thickly, her eyes dropping as she tries to make sense of the explanations. Before long, Susan would approach the girl slowly, though would not touch her when close enough to.
"What happened to my real mother, if Tesse isn't my mother? Why didn't she look for me sooner?"
Tesse. That name Susan would put to the back of her mind for later usage before eyeing the bright eyed little girl over. At once Susan raises her arms from her sides, hands making a sweeping motion to her being.
"While this isn't when I wanted to rescue you, I never gave up on the dream of one day finding you... Right now, your real mother wants you to follow her to the passage way leading out of here before these people make their grand escape."
There it was. The admittance of who she really was had Vivian staring up at Susan with curiosity, standoffish still. A moment lapses where the Gampre girls would look at eachother. Before Susan was ready, the girl's hand reaches forward to collect the woman's, a look of fright and determination twisting her features up. The decision had been made.
There would be no time to waste. Glancing through the open doorway leading into the halls again Susan would pry her hood back over the top of her head, turning to lead her daughter through the threshold and back whence she had walked from.
For the first time in ten years Susan was holding the hand of her first born again, guiding her out from under the watchful eyes of the cultists.
She could only pray they would make it back to the others without trouble...
DWC June 2026
Day 7 Horrify/Render
A gentle breeze grazes Ruzzell’s cheek as he relaxed under an oak tree. Sunlight filters through the canopy above, offering moments of soothing warmth in the shade. The garden outside the sanctuary was secluded and relatively quiet. A songbird twittered far off somewhere, and the soft strumming of someone practicing their harp was the only disturbance to his peace. For once, he had felt at complete peace in Silvermoon. No negative thoughts, no immediate threats. Just sunshine, warmth, and healing.
Taking a deep breath, a deep stinging felt in his shoulders and neck. He immediately reaches for his healing potion; a special blend made in recent years thanks to the Lightbloom. The familiar red liquid had a bright amber glow to it, reminiscent of a sun-kissed sky. He drinks his medicine and soon the pain eases away. Warmth flowed through his body as he began to relax once more.
“Mr. Goldgrin, how are you feeling today?” the nurse asked from the garden wall.
Turning in his wheelchair, he glanced up to the woman and smiled brightly.
“Oh, just swell! I think I’m ready to leave this place!”
“Sir, you are still recovering from a serious injury! It’s been only a week since you’ve been admitted.” she said with concern. Ruzzell laughter turned to groans of pain before smiling again. “You need to keep drinking your healing potions. The Lightfused Tranquility Bloom is what’s neutralizing that Voidbound poison in you.”
“Yeah, right...” he says as he finishes his honied tea. “Mind getting me some more tea, please?” He smiled brightly and offered her his tray.
“Of course, Mr. Goldgrin. I’ll be right back.” she says as she takes his cup and walks back into the clinic. Walking back into the kitchen, the nurse reaches for some more freshly baked cakes and biscuits, snacking on a madeleine cookie. Pouring some more tea into the delicate cup and cutting some lemon wedges, she carefully balances all the items on the tray and slowly walks out with practiced grace. “Alright, here we are Mr... Goldgrin?” Upon returning, she finds an empty wheelchair under the tree.
Silvermoon had gone under great renovations over the years, but many of the streets and neighborhoods remained relatively the same. Ruzzell knew the quickest route out of the garden and was already shambling halfway across town back towards the Bazaar. Though weak, he could still walk; it wasn’t his legs that got minced up after all. Rapier slung low to his waist and his pack dragged along on the ground, he wandered through the open courtyard towards the market stall. Playing in a small field of wildflowers, Dawn looked up and gasped, calling out to her mother.
“Mommy, mommy! Look! It’s Ruzzell!”
Her mother was looking over some ripe melons when her ears twitched, hearing her daughter call out for her. She saw the familiar green face of her hero marching through the flowers as her daughter hugged the goblin tightly.
“AH! Easy there Princess! I’m still a little sore from those bad guys!”
The girl let go of his neck and shied away with a blush. “I’m sorry, Ruzzell! I’m just so happy to see you’re alright!” Looking over the goblin with his sword and wounds, she thought up something quick. “Oh! I got a gift for you! Just close your eyes, Mister! No peaking!”
Pausing at the surprise, he chuckled weakly and nodded. He sat down on the grass and closed his eyes as he waited. A few minutes pass before feeling tiny hands wriggle in his hair as she put something on his head. “There! I made you a crown Ruzzell!”
Opening his eyes, he’d see a hastily woven crown of wildflowers sitting on his head. His heart warmed up from Dawn’s gift, seeing her smile brightly at him. “This is an AMAZING gift, Dawn. Thank you!” He reached out to gently pet her head, then turned to see her mother walk up to them. “Heya Dawn’s mom!”
The mother holds her bag of groceries before her as she dipped her head down in respect to him. “Ruzzell, you saved Dawn’s life and my own. I am forever in your debt.”
Blushing, he scratched his cheek shyly. “Aww, I just did what any sensible person would do. I saw a child and her mother in danger and just... I had to act.”
“Well, what you did was incredibly brave and I can’t thank you enough for being our hero.” Raising her hand to her heart, she beams brightly down to him. “I forgot to give you my name. I’m Jadira Summersong.”
“A pleasure Jadira!” he got up and reached out to shake her hand.
“Those were some incredible heroics you pulled off by the way. Where did you learn to fight like that?” she tilted her head curiously, Dawn returning to play in the flower patch.
“Oh, I’ve always been a fighter! Been a Bruiser, then trained with the Shado-Pan for a bit. But that stuff back there was what I learned here in Silvermoon.”
“Oh my, you must have had an impressive teacher to teach you all that, Mr. Goldgrin!” she blushed, covering her mouth.
“He’s a pretty good fencer! Jestirion is his name. Told me he’s a Sword Master that’s been serving the decades! Was sorta surprised at how willing he was to take me on as his student.”
Jadira’s face grows pale as she nearly drops her bag, falling down to her knees. Her eyes begin to tear up at the mention of that name. Ruzzell and Dawn gather close to check on her.
“H-hey! What’s wrong?” Ruzzell placed a hand on her shoulder.
“T-that’s... that’s my late husband’s name... I can’t...” she quivered her lip, cheeks flushed red now. The goblin searched her face incredulously.
“Daddy?” Dawn looked to her mother and then back to Ruzzell in confusion. “Mr. Ruzzell, that was my daddy’s name... He died years ago protecting Silvermoon.” The light in the child’s eyes lessened as she hugged her mother in comfort.
This didn’t make any sense. How was her late husband his instructor? Surely, this was just a coincidence. Perhaps a common name among the blood elves.
The mother pulls Ruzzell in for a deep hug in appreciation and understanding. “I don’t know how... but I think my husband sent you to save us that day.”
Hugging Jadira, he’d ease up and let go of her, his mind still baffled at the meaning of this. “Sorry, I... I need to check on something. I’ll come back in a while, I promise.” Placing his hands on her shoulders, he looked her in the eyes stoically, and she responded with a solemn nod.
Getting up uneasily, he pats Dawn’s head once more and shambles off with his sword and bag towards The Walk of Elders. Slowly, his arms began to ache as the effects of the potion began to wear off. Rummaging in his bag, he finds another healing potion and bites off the cork to down it. Wounds restored, Ruzzell had the energy to continue his journey down the ancient streets he once patrolled. Passing through Wayfarer’s Rest, he spots the corner where his old deed once took place. A lone lamp post stood tall; a replacement for the one that was destroyed so many years ago. This was where Ruzzell encountered the Void creature that was M’azzon. At the base of the lamp was a weathered plate with an etching that read “Dedicated to the incredible but true heroics of Ruzzell Goldgrin, who fought off a demon threat on The Walk of Elders.” Looking around the street for a moment, he searched but couldn’t find trace of anything out of the ordinary. No whispers. No coldness.
“I ain’t done with you bastards yet... Come at me again. I’ll be waiting!” he barked out into the empty street. No replies at all.
Continuing down the road through the Royal Exchange, he’d made it to Falconwing Square. There in the far corner of the training grounds was the quartermaster for the Blood Knights and Farstriders of Silvermoon. Shuffling up to the counter, Ruzzell sees no one. Ringing the bell on the counter, he begins to make a ruckus.
“Yo! Some customah service here, pronto!” Ding! Ding! Ding!
Causing a scene, a stuffy young man with bifocals stumbles out from the back, wiping his hands on his apron. In a panic, he quickly answers but sees no one around. “H-hello?”
A green hand reaches over the counter to ring the bell one last time. The clerk peers over the ledge to see the familiar goblin once more.
“Ah, Mr. Goldgrin! I was wondering when we’d see you again! Requesting another sparring session with our runeblades?
Flustered, Ruzzell stepped back. “What? No! I’m here to see my instructor, Jestirion!”
The man scrunched his nose and pushed up his glasses in puzzlement. “Jestirion? We don’t have an instructor here by that name. You’ve been here the past month requesting training with one of our runeblades.” Ducking down under the counter for a moment, the elf pulls up a ledger and thumbs through a few pages before turning it to Ruzzell. “See here? This is your signature, the dates, times checked in and out, and the runeblade in question.”
Pulling the ledger closer to him, he sees that it was indeed signed out in his handwriting. He pushes the book back in disbelief as the clerk looks him over.
“Were you wanting to schedule another session, Mr. Goldgrin?”
Hesitant, Ruzzell nods and signs the ledger once more. An exchange of coins and terms is rendered, and within a few minutes the clerk returns from the armory with a sheathed rapier, handing it to the goblin. Ruzzell looks at the weapon, then back to the clerk who looks expectantly at him. “Oh, you are free to take the sword to the courtyard, or anywhere within the city limits. Just be sure to return it on time or there will be an additional late fee.
Walking alone with the runeblade in hand, he continues towards The Shepherd’s Gate and out into the gardens leading into Eversong Woods. He tried to recreate his path towards the apple tree he remembered sparring with Jestirion. The sun dappled through the boughs of the canopy over the secluded garden. No one was around. Only Ruzzell and the runeblade in his hands. As he unsheathes the sword, a faded inscription on the hilt read the name: “Jestirion Summersong”.
The blade pulled out of the scabbard all on its own and floated by magical means in the air. Striking into a practiced pose, Ruzzell recalls now that familiar stance. He draws his own rapier in turn to spar with the blade.
Swipe, Clash, Thud!
Ruzzell’s sword was knocked out of his weakened hands. He sat down in the cool grass of the garden, looking up to the enchanted blade as it assumes a triumphant gesture, tip pointing skywards into the sun. Looking up, the light blinded him temporarily, and for a moment he saw the Jestirion standing there, clutching his sword.
“Thank you, Ruzzell...”
Just as soon as the vision came, the glint of the blade shifted again and the vision was gone. Suddenly, it all made sense to him. Knowing exactly what he must do now, he would get up on his feet once more, holster the runeblade, and then make his way back to Falconwing Square to purchase the blade outright.
Ruzzell returned to Dawn and Jadira later that day with Jestirion’s blade.
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Gloom /Allure
Day 1: May 31
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There had been very little reason to commit to the Call of the Sunwell in its time of need. Not for her kind. The Light readily rebuked the Graveborn and the Void hissed at her like a rabid shadowcat. Admittedly the Void invaders were more amusing to toy with, but there was only so much interest a blind hungry beast could keep before it simply became another chore. Like burying the mindless dead so far shuffled off the mortal coil.
June 2026, Day 7
Horrify - Brynehorn Fiske
This will be a connected, multi-character view into the early events of Stormblood in FFXIV. Spoilers will be put beneath the break when needed.
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TW: none
Spoilers: Stormblood ending
He had never stood here before, but standing here, at the top, above even the seat of power in Ala Mhigo, it felt like home. His hand drifted, out over the buds of the flowers, the dew that clung to them coating his fingers, rubbing them together as he marveled at the fact that dew even managed to make it up here. Open air, exposed to the sun, warm…
And tainted.
June 6 / DAY 7 HORRIFY / RENDER content warning(s): none!
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Tolls
DWC 2026; Day 6 - Anguish/Heat Continued from here @daily-writing-challenge
Tw; Blade fights, wounds, blood
The stress of not quite knowing what awaited them at the top of the stairs, at the opposing end of this hidden passageway was the true agony of it all. There was no way to plot, plan or predict what awaited them. The group didn't risk a peep between one another having put themselves behind enemy lines the second they entered this stairwell.
All that kept Susan moving forward is the fact her feeling of will hadn't squandered, and no new welling of fear wound her belly into knots. She felt... Certain. As if all the stress, pain and warring had finally culminated to this moment that awaited them.
She was dedicated to seeing this day through the worst it had offered.
As the door leading out from these stairwells became close enough to touch, there is a collective inhale between the five hooded beings before the leader of them all, Emillie, pushes the door open. At once they'd be spat out onto a covered patio, a final leading up of a sloping bridge would have the group walking blindly into the face of adversary.
Before any of them could comprehend it they'd be halted in place at the sight of three distinct figures standing in wait at the lip of an elegant square walkway, watching the group expectantly. Harsh glares are cast over their beings, inspecting their tattered, soiled robes with displeasure.
Suddenly Susan could feel the tightening in her chest at the sight of one such being... A throbbing in her left eye socket would bring her to flinch backward, as if pained by the haunting memory of a wound.
It is with much exerted effort that Susan didn't lash out then and there, recognizing the feminine features of the kaldorei standing with an indignant expression to her face.
In Susan's mind played the visions of this very elf who hadn't aged a day since Susan last saw her, nearly ten years ago. She could see it clear as day, the pointed mockery in the woman's face as she laughed and taunted over her body. The night the cultists had begun her weekend of unimaginable torture was one she'd never outrun.
Pain caused by the will of other's is a sort of lasting ache that might never heal. Even worse, their permanent scars wouldn't make it easier to heal, even a saint might harbor a grudge. And Susan Amian Gampre was the furthest fucking thing from a saint.
From that burning anguish in her thorax warmth swelled through Susan's figure, her eyes and nose stinging with emotion. Beneath the thick fabric of her cloak her hands tighten into fists, knuckles whitening.
"Are they all dead?" The kaldorei asks, looking particularly frustrated to even be asking.
It was evident then. Their covers hadn't been totally blown. In fact it seemed this trio hung upon the words of the gathered on the success of finishing the threat before it became an issue.
At once Emillie's head bobs in a swift nod, the gesturing brings the shoulders of the trio to loosen and sag as their postures relax. The human man and draenei woman would depart without a further glance, but the kaldorei... She had paused, eyeing the five over with an unreadable expression. Before long she would give up her suspicions with a scoff heard, calling over her shoulder as she trots after her companions, "Make yourselves useful, we leave within the hour."
Knowing eyes glance amongst eachother before quickly lifting their torches to guide themselves through the walkways.
There is some distance applied before anyone dares to speak up as they start their searching, having made a swift entry through the back end of the courtyard into the servants quarter.
"Ought we split up? A group looks suspicious, I imagine," the dwarven adventurer among them whispers harshly over the matter, her brown eyes nervously glancing around the perimeter as they enter what looks to be a kitchen area.
"Frankly, there is safety in numbers. But this would be faster. An hour is how long we've got," Emillie prattles, her eyes swiftly bouncing around the edges of the room before turning to eye her companions. "You lot remember the way back to that passage?"
There is a collection of nods, each individual looking amongst themselves before Emillie would exahle a soft, "Alrigh', try to avoid a fight. If you must, dispatch and hide the body quietly, quickly."
A simple enough rule, one Susan hoped could be maintained in such a strained situation.
"An hour," Susan confirms, nodding to the four others before starting off in her own direction, leaving no time for further bull shitting or argument if one could be dreamed up. Her mind was set upon finding her daughter, or if she was lucky? She'd find that kaldorei first and put Oswan's one rule to the test.
Which ever came first would determine how quietly they'd make it out of this castle.
Day Seven DWC 6/6/26 Horrify/Render
Elutia pulled herself up that night at the Silvermoon port, but her heart was heavy. It‘s been weeks since her run-in with Lady Ravenwood, and she found out who Mellanthios is. She tries to reach out to him, to locate him, but it is as if he has disappeared into the very void itself. Perhaps he had. A part of her wants to hunt him down; another knows if he doesn’t want to be found, he won’t be.
She knew he would reach out when he was ready. Lady Ravenwood said as much. Now she felt as if she were always looking over her shoulder. Waiting. Wondering. She isn’t scared, of course. She doesn’t fear death. Truthfully, she didn’t think he wanted her dead.
Unless, perhaps, he has also been brainwashed. Perhaps that is the long game, for him to be the one to render the actual retribution for what happened to Dementri Ravenwood. Frankly, she doesn’t know, and the not knowing is driving her crazy.
Weeks go by, and she throws herself into her work with those trying to save Silvermoon and the world as a whole. Some of what she sees is enough to horrify even the most veteran of fighters. It feels like the more they eradicate, the more that comes. She is exhausted, pushing herself to her limits. Many times dropping from exhaustion. But no matter how much she does, how much she tries to keep herself busy. He is always in the back of her mind.
So she returns home, the last place she saw him. Perhaps he would show up there. Though if everything she knew is so, he will have completely accepted the dagger. She isn’t sure how powerful that will make him, especially since he is trained heavily by Lady Ravenwood, who is almost an anomaly in herself. There is no telling how she has enhanced him or how long she has been training him. It had to have been years, probably from the moment she received the letter from Emperria.
She makes it home and pauses in front of the door, taking a deep breath. The house is dark. Most of the occupants are gone. They were also a part of the war effort that she had just left. She enters the house, able to see well even in the dark. She makes her way to the living room and doesn’t even bother turning on a light, and sits down with an exhausted sigh.
A voice, soft and deep, breaks the silence of the room, making her tense immediately and on guard. But it is a voice she recognizes.
“Welcome home, Grandmother. I think you know why I am here.”
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DWC June 2026 - Day 7 - Horrify / Render - Mesandrèaux
It was about as unglamorous as she thought she could get: still dressed in her clothes from the previous night, sitting on the edge of the bed in the hostel's communal dormitory, holding her head. She'd awoken moments ago to someone gently shaking her awake.
~~~
"You're having a nightmare. Time to wake up." The Lightforged draenei's tone was supportive and concerned. Messy had blinked awake, but to vision that swam and blurred, blackening at the periphery. Oh. _Oh_. She sat up on the edge of the bed with the other woman's helpful hand and took deep breaths. Not a nightmare. Not a hangover, no matter what it looked like. No, it was the aura she had come to expect when Sight was impending. Her stomach was tight, her head was pounding, and her heart fluttered with a lingering palpitation. The woman sat with her a few minutes, until she was such Messy was stable, then provided a wash basin and a towel in case she would need to vomit. She apologized for needing to leave, promising to check on the nightborne later as she headed toward the door. She thoughtfully kept the lights off--the rest of the occupants had left for the day already. Messy had wanted to tell her that it wasn't a hangover, that she hadn't even drank any alcohol the night before--though she had smelled of it after getting splashed an enthusiastic fan at the fencing exhibition match last night. Messy wasn't sure why she felt shame that the other woman would think she was a drunkard--there were plenty of youths who stumbled into the hostel late at night inebriated. She just hadn't been one.
She swallowed hard and turned her face up, opening herself to her Goddess and silently promising to do Elune's bidding. Sight struck her immediately, freezing her in her seat and her eyes glowed with unfocused Light appearing before her in runes and cryptic symbols. Her mind did not see the same divinity manifested. She saw great blue fungal caps creating a canopy over ethereal machines and works. She saw familiar wrapped figures moving about their business. Ethereal arcane batteries piled high. Conduits thrumming with power arcing through them. It felt purposeful. It felt imminent. A wrapped head turned toward her point of presence. It started toward her, gaining momentum with the snap and rustle of arcane power so associated with them. A foreign moon--White Lady--hung in the sky and brightened, drawing her awareness, and pulled her toward it; rocketing her perspective out of the vision. Messy collapsed over her legs and felt too heavy in her body. She trembled, unable to do more than focus on her breath for more than a minute. When she had gathered herself, it wasn't the basin she reached for, but her sketchbook and colored pencils.
~~ "Ahhh, that looks like Naigtal. I have never seen those particular mushrooms elsewhere. I have fought there, though it was a Legion world, not Ethereal." The Lightforged gently corrected, looking at the rendering Messy had put to paper. She had been true to her word and returned to check on the young Priestess of Elune.
Messy looked over to her slowly to keep her head from feeling like it was going to rupture. Her voice was hoarse and her shoulders tired. "This is today." "No," the draenei shook her head and smiled reassuringly, "the Legion is vanquished and the Ethereals have no presence there. Rest." Mesandrèaux considered fighting, trying to warn, trying to convince. But the simple confidence of the other woman was heavy and familiar. So, her own pulse felt like it was beating against the inside of her skull, she simply answered, "Oh," and laid back down on the bed.
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DWC June 2026 - Day 7 - Horrify/Render
“That smells delicious,” Jes’champe said as he walked into his kitchen and smirked at Nahi who was in short shorts, a tank top and an apron with no shoes. He had gotten to play hero when her stove went out while she was cooking brunch for her and Irenthalas. While she was trying to figure out what was wrong Irenthalas had reached out to him to come and help figure out what was wrong. Which was clearly an attempt at matchmaking as the two men had known each other long enough for Iren to know that he didn’t know how to fix anything, that is what repairmen were for.
The horrified look on her face as he stepped through a portal on her patio was amusing and he didn’t hide that fact in the least. Her step-father had explained why he was there but the look on her face turned into a scowl and turned it on Iren instead of him at least. As it was clear Nahi had been working hard on the dishes so he suggested that they just move everything to his estate. Her beautiful violet eyes rolled but she capitulated when Iren started picking up ingredients, and that it would be a shame to waste everything.
She had been practical and agreed, even if she wasn’t happy about it, so they all ferried the brunch makings to his kitchen, and a pitcher of sangria had somehow ended up on his white shirt, the fact that she bumped into it as they came through the portal was a poorly veiled way of letting him know she was unhappy with him for interfering. The excuse that she must have tripped coming through the portal was a blatant lie, Nahi was too graceful to trip over nothing, plus she managed to move away just enough to get nothing on herself.
Nahi looked at Jes’champe, she had mostly forgiven him for his interference, it wasn’t his fault Iren still hoped that the two of them would begin to see each other, felt it was the perfect mix as he cared for them both. She loved her step-father but they were going to have words when alone again, because she wasn’t looking to become involved with anyone, let alone Jes who she knew was not opposed to them deepening their connection.
The bacon on the stove was rendering out, she had to start it again as it was what was on the stove when it went out, luckily nothing else was started when it happened. “Thank you, and tell your chef that I am grateful for the use of his kitchen.” Yes, she ignored the fact that it was Jes’s house, she was well aware that the kitchen was the chef’s domain and Jes was afraid to overstep as his chef was a treasure. Nahi spent a lot of time in the kitchen when she stayed, she adored the chef and he would teach her things he was working on.
She thought to apologize to him for the sangria that she had absolutely spilled on him on person, but she really wasn’t sorry for it and, even though she hated lying, it had made her feel better. The new stove was an expense she hadn’t been ready for so maybe she would call Key and see if he could fix it, if anyone could it was him, and she knew he would not gouge her on the price. Was it childish to take her frustration out on him? Most definitely, but he could take it, he was a big boy.
Moving behind her, he made a cup of coffee just the way she liked it, and set it next to the stove for her, then followed with a melon mimosa. “Do not worry about it, you know he likes you enough that he won’t mind you being here cooking.” Leaning against the counter far enough away from her so that he wouldn’t end up with more food on his clothes, intentionally or not. “You should come by and tell him yourself, or just stay over. We could order dinner later.”
She already had tension in her shoulders and his suggestion made that worse. “I can call my massage therapist in, let you relax a bit after what happened.” They had known each other long enough that he knew the things that would convince her to stay.
Then the other thing that would help was Iren and he decided to do so, “Yes Nahi, you should. If I had an extra room in the pool house I would roll out the red carpet, but as Jes already has, it is covered.” He smiled winningly at her, “We can make sticky caramel brownies later.”
After HoT Fest Nahi had planned on taking a few days to just relax, but her mind wouldn’t settle, so she had gone up to the Tasty Pastry to work on Fire Fest plans, and her performance. This brunch with Iren was supposed to be her time to decompress and then the stove, nothing at all was coming together enough for her to find some peace. She on,y had to make it through Fire Fest, then she had nothing to do until the Gala, unless the sky fell again, which was possible.
At the appearance of the coffee and mimosa next to her, she smiled up at Jes and offered a heartfelt smile, “Thanks.” He looked good, really good, the light blue shirt she had spilled the sangria on had been replaced by a black one, and he knew she liked how he looked in black. There wasn’t anything in his closet she didn’t like him in, the man had exceptional taste.
Her first instinct was to turn him down, even when Iren spoke, he was on her list for this whole situation, but one of the things Nahi loved about when Jes would ask her to go with him for an event, was getting to spend time on his estate. In trying to put distance between them, she had to admit she missed some of the benefits, the way he took care of her was one of them.
“Sure, I can stay until tomorrow.”
Maybe one day of doing nothing wouldn’t hurt.
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(Mention of @keyalinvendel @jeschampe-vidroth ) (Divider by @uzmacchiato )
June DWC - Day 7 Horrify/Render
A large stewing pot simmered over an old and worn, but well maintained, stove that Ries knew kept a steady temperature better than some of the more modern ones. She trimmed the "grapes" off the ends of the rockwrack she had scooped up off the beach in the early dawn, and piled the rest of the seaweed's fronds into the roiling water to cook down into a mushy paste. It didn't take long for her alchemy kitchen to smell like brine and hot pond water.
The ventilation was great in here, so that didn't stay bothersome for long. She smiled a bit as a new, up-beat and brassy song started on the record she'd picked up from a little shop she'd stopped by on her trip to Booty Bay. That vacation had been a gift that continued to give! The scratching of her pencil was all but drowned out as she rendered the strange shape of the algal bladder pod on her paper, adding it to her anatomical reference drawings of rockwrack leaves and stems. The water-warped pages before this one were filled with graphite and watercolor sketches of the botanicals she had found beneficial for her practice and the recipes for custom salves made for specific client treatment plans.
Her mother had been the one to insist on drawing lessons, and the act of putting pencil to paper would always bring back fond memories. Of course, she also had many other pages of drawings of this seaweed in particular in her book, but she needed to have a bunch of options to pick the best one if she was ever going to publish her work someday.
Sure, it'd been twenty years since she'd had the thought to put together an official manuscript. That didn't mean it wouldn't happen eventually. Things just kept coming up.
The tip of her paring knife sliced through the outer shell of the squishy pod, allowing her to get to the gel inside. Ries squeezed the goo out into the glass collection jar she had purchased for this purpose and rubbed what was left on her fingers into her cuticles. Her sister, Syrah, would be horrified. She had viscerally hated anything sticky, gooey or slimy on her skin. This, she knew, would have been her hell had she survived the scourge. But, it was an excellent salve for skin hydration, but she could mix in concentrated essences of other herbs to make pretty fantastic topical balms that had positive effects. Sanguithorn and peacebloom helped to relax the muscles, winter's kiss provided a many hours long sensation of cooling and fire lily did the same with warmth.
A single salve pot took six or seven pods to fill. It was nice that she only needed a few to send home with clients this week. The rest of the seaweed she'd use in other formulations — it was a great ingredient for the face mask cream she liked to slather on at the end of a long day to keep her complexion bright. Her father used to join her for her skin care routine in the evenings. Every now and again she'd catch Syrah doing his nails. Retired gangster or not, Ries was never sure if he had ever fully given that lifestyle up after having children, no one ever doubted how much he loved his daughters.
A slow, warbling jazz track started up as she tossed the empty bladder shell into the bubbling pot. As lonely as it could be being the last one left in her family, she still had an awful lot to live for. Like her manuscript — eventually —, new clients at the Shielded Mind and friends she had yet to meet.
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day 7 - render
read more about this week's daily writing challenge here! @daily-writing-challenge word count: 1602 content warnings: drug use (light, before on-screen events) summary: The age-old question of "how did it get this way?" doesn't scare Rae as much as it used to. She doesn't mind that.
(ooc note: this marks the first dwc i've FULLY completed (LET ALONE ON TIME??)!!!! thank you so much to those who commented, liked, reblogged and gave feedback this week, i love you i love you i love you. HOORAY SEE U NEXT TIME <3)
— ··« ◊ »·· —
Raenessa was certain of very little in life, these days, but as she laid on her back in the spire she'd claimed for an outdoor reading nook in her new home, listening to the ocean waves crashing against the sand, it very quickly settled onto her shoulders that she was in a state of becoming.
Granted, that could just as much be the surprisingly-excellent weed that Elrosil grew talking, but little else had felt quite so true, recently. As starkly accurate. She closed her eyes, feeling the sun-warmed stone at her back and shoulders, the faint aches in various points in her body where old pains refused to unlatch fully, the restless feeling in her chest that screamed go, go, go, go at every opportunity. She felt every bit of it - and, for once, she wasn't afraid.