nonverbal starters; prompts featuring nonverbal scenarios.cherry: find blood on them.
It was another macabre, post-apocalyptic scene. Bodies lined the ground around them. Buildings were torn yet standing in place. Fire spread like water, dusting what little ground wasn’t covered in debris.
Even so, Ritsuka continued her search across the torn land for someone familiar. She might not have seen her brother, but she was still alive. That meant he was, alleviating that issue. But, she had yet to see any of her servants. Mashu wasn’t around either, and she couldn’t contact Chaldea.
She hopped over a piece of a skyscraper, continuing her search for anything familiar. It didn’t look like Shibuya or Shinjuku for that matter. The signs were in english this time around, and she couldn’t really read all of it.
It was frustrating, but she managed to find a familiar looking person up ahead. The messy blonde hair was sprawled all over the ground, and the red flames about them were gradually fading. Were those blue sparks part of a shield?
Her eyes lit up somewhat hopefully as she made her way towards them, recognizing it as the director. Instantly, that hopefulness was dashed. She reached out for her carefully, to shake her shoulder, only to stop half way.
There was blood leaving her mouth, stains on her clothes.
She wasn’t sure if it was the director’s or someone else’s, but she couldn’t be too sure. It — it might be the blood of her enemies, right? It’s not like she’d die twice on her, right?
Pulling back her hand, she looked at the director from head to toe, the wound on her stomach, the one she hadn’t noticed earlier, was still bleeding. The flames hadn’t cauterized it in the least, only warmed it. If she’d only paid attention earlier, she would be able to see that red outline about the director’s waist.
Ritsuka’s hands slammed against the ground, and she screamed.
Back in Chaldea, Ritsuka woke up with a start, gasping as though she’d been drowning. The after affects of the dream still lingered at the forefront of her mind as she brought her knees to her chest.
It was just a dream. It was just a dream.
She forced herself to exhale and inhale, repeating the action consciously a few times as she felt her heart beat return to a natural rhythm.
It wasn’t going to happen again.