The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter One- The Binding
List of Chapters
- Masterpost (All Chapters)
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
- Chapter Four The Intermissions ( A Filler Chapter)
——
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 3634
____
The people of Amarune said that their planet sang.
It was not a song of instruments or voices, but of the world itself—an endless hum that lived in bone and blood. Vyra, the radiant current that threaded through all life, pulsed in every crystal vein, every flowering tree, every Amaralian heart. On most nights, it was a subtle rhythm, an eternal undercurrent. But on this night, it deepened into something more. It was heavy. Expectant. It carried the weight of destiny.
Above the capital city of Luminaris Spire, twin moons gazed down with pale fire, silver and violet light washing over crystalline towers shaped like blossoms caught mid-bloom. Rivers of Vyra glowed within those towers, streaking upward like veins of starlight. From high balconies, one could see the entire city alive with color: Vyra lanterns drifting in the air like floating suns, Amaralians in garments woven with reactive fibers glowing to reflect their emotions—gold for joy, violet for reverence, silver for awe.
They had gathered for one reason.
“Selara! Selara! Selara!”
The chant thundered up from the plaza, rising to the very spires, echoing through Vyra channels until the world itself seemed to vibrate with her name. To her people, the princess was not merely a daughter of the crown. She was prophecy fulfilled. She was salvation.
For tomorrow, Princess Selara Veyara would become the Source.
She would surrender her body to the Binding to the Veins. Her life-force, tested since the moment of her birth, would feed the planet itself, ensuring Amarune thrived for centuries without weakness or decline. Her name would be etched into every archive, carved into every tower, sung in hymn until the moons dimmed.
It was, they said, the greatest honor Amarune could bestow.
And yet in her high chamber, with the chants of her people ringing like thunder, Selara felt only dread.
____
She stood before a wall of translucent crystal, the moonscape glowing beyond, her hand pressed flat to the cool surface. The Vyra responded immediately, flaring in faint violet light beneath her palm, eager to claim her. It always had been.
Her reflection gazed back at her from the crystalline wall, both alien and familiar. To her people, she appeared every inch a princess—wrapped in ceremonial splendor, untouchable. Robes of deep amethyst cascaded in layered drapes around her body, each seam threaded with glowing silver runes of protection. A tall, ornate collar framed her throat, and across her brow hovered a delicate circlet crowned with a single Vyra crystal that pulsed in time with her heartbeat. At a glance, she was regal, sacred, destined.
But this was not truly Selara.
Beneath the weight of cloth and crystal lay the form her father had forced her to conceal since birth. Her Amaralian body was not flesh but radiance, as though sculpted from galaxies themselves. A slender, elongated silhouette glowed with deep amaranth violet, every curve shimmering with drifting constellations of starlight. Veins of neon magenta and lavender streaked across her form like rivers of fire, flickering and pulsing like living constellations beneath her skin. Around her shimmered a faint halo of energy, scattering sparks that clung to her chest, hands, and feet where her glow was brightest, as if her very body were alive with rhythm.
And her eyes—her eyes were the most striking of all. Irises burned with a saturated, magenta-pink hue, neon-bright and edged toward violet, so luminous they seemed carved from raw light. The brilliance of them stood out violently against the black pools of her pupils, creating a gaze both beautiful and unnerving, as though she were not simply looking at the world but through it. The color was unearthly, ethereal—powerful in its intensity. When Selara turned her eyes upon the universe, it felt as though she pierced it open.
From her head streamed ribbons of luminous energy, rippling backward like solar flares caught in motion. They shifted constantly—at times radiant and fiery, at others liquid and fluid—forming the crown of a being suspended between matter and light. Even in stillness, she seemed to pulse in rhythm with the heartbeat of the cosmos.
Selara was a constellation given shape, luminous and transcendent. And yet, her father had commanded her to hide all of it—her glow, her power, her very self—beneath robes, collars, gloves, and crowns, as though she were a flame too dangerous to be seen. To Amarune, she was sacred. To herself, she was imprisoned.
And her father had ordered her covered since childhood, afraid of what a single unguarded touch might ignite. Her gloves, her collar, her endless layers of ceremonial fabric—all shackles meant to ensure no accidental Amaranth Bond would ever tie her to another. She was to be a Source, not a woman.
____
Selara’s magenta eyes dimmed faintly as she drew her gloved hand from the crystal. She felt like a caged flame.
The chamber doors sighed open.
King Theryn Veyara entered, the glow of his blue Vyra aura preceding him. His robes were plated with crystalline armor, runes glowing faintly at his chest, his presence filling the room with gravity. He had once been a man of warmth—stories told of his youth, of laughter, of his bond with Queen Aivara—but decades of leadership had hardened him. He carried himself not as a father, but as a sovereign.
And yet, when his gaze fell upon Selara, something flickered there—something old and buried.
He had loved once.
He had known the Amaranth Bond. With Aivara, his queen, he had felt what no Amaralian could feign: the true link of heart and soul, the Eternal Flame. She had been fire where he was stone, gentle where he was unyielding. She had taught him that leadership was not merely command, but care. He had loved her.
But he had loved his people more.
When Aivara refused the procedure—when she saw the danger of altering the child in her womb, when she feared what forcing Vyra into unborn veins might do—he had stood against her. He had told himself it was duty, not betrayal. He had ordered her captured. He had allowed the council to proceed.
Selara was born powerful beyond measure. Aivara was not. The queen had died bringing her into the world.
____
The pendant Selara now wore, a shard of crystal bound in silver, was all that remained of her. Some said Aivara gave it willingly as a final gift. Others whispered it had been hidden away by a nursemaid loyal to the queen, smuggled into Selara’s hands when she was old enough to understand. Selara had never known the truth. She only knew the pendant was warm in her palm when nothing else was.
She pressed it to her chest now, its edge sharp against her skin beneath the gown.
Her father’s voice pulled her from her thoughts.
“Tomorrow,” he said, his tone ritual, rehearsed, inevitable, “Amarune will endure because of you. The Binding will secure our people for centuries. Your name will be carved into eternity. You will be sung forever.”
Selara turned from the window, meeting his gaze head-on. Her voice was quiet, but it cut cleanly.
“And what will be left of me?”
For the briefest moment, something flickered in Theryn’s eyes—regret, perhaps, or the ghost of the man Aivara once loved. But it vanished as quickly as it came.
“What remains of you,” he said slowly, each word heavy, “remains in us. You will live forever, Selara. But not as yourself.”
The silence that followed was colder than any void.
____
He stepped closer, his hand heavy on her shoulder. His touch was firm, meant as reassurance. To Selara, it pressed like a chain. She stiffened beneath it, her glow dimming.
When he withdrew, he turned and left without another word, his robes whispering against the crystalline floor. The doors closed behind him, sealing her in silence.
Selara stood trembling, the chants of her name echoing faintly through the crystal walls. Her father had loved once. He had known the Eternal Flame. But even that had not stopped him from choosing Amarune over Aivara. And now, he would choose Amarune over her.
Her hands clenched. Her pendant burned warm against her palm. She whispered into the silence, “Aruna’shai… Aruna.”I love you. Love.
The words were not for her father. They were for her mother.
Outside, the celebration grew louder—music swelling, lanterns rising higher, voices chanting her name. To Amarune, this was the eve of salvation. To Selara, it was the night of her burial.
____
The sounds of the city reached even the highest chamber of the palace.
From the plaza below, drums thundered in a steady rhythm that mirrored the planet’s pulse, deep and resonant. Crystalline strings chimed high above them, singing sharp and pure, filling the air like starlight poured into sound. The crowd swelled with voices, their chant rising in waves:
“Selara! Selara! Selara!”
Every syllable carried upward through Vyra channels woven into the architecture of Luminaris Spire, the towers themselves acting as conduits, amplifying her name until the very walls of her chamber quivered. Vyra lanterns floated overhead, drifting on unseen currents, casting violet and silver halos across the city. Their glow reflected in the crystalline streets below, where Amaralians pressed shoulder to shoulder, their garments alive with reactive light. Anticipation shimmered gold, reverence burned silver, pride glowed violet. To the eye, the crowd was a living aurora.
And all of it was for her.
Selara turned from the window. The sound pressed against her ears, the light against her eyes. She felt smothered, not celebrated. Their joy was not for her life, but for its ending. They did not cheer Selara Veyara. They cheered the fountain she would become.
The weight of her robes bore down on her shoulders. She moved across the chamber, the gown’s layered drapes whispering like liquid light against the floor. Each step was an echo of duty, each thread a shackle. Her magenta-pink eyes caught the glow of the crystal walls, the neon hue so striking it seemed to paint the chamber brighter. Yet to her father, to her people, even her eyes were dangerous—too radiant, too evocative of the Eternal Flame. They had ordered her gaze to be lowered in public, taught her to conceal even the direction of her stare.
____
She sat at her desk, a low arc of crystalline stone carved smooth, and laid her gloved hands across its surface. Here, hidden beneath ceremonial bindings and endless protocol, was her rebellion.
Scattered across the desk were pages of intercepted transmissions: blueprints of combustion engines, sketches of towering human cities, photographs of crowded streets. She had built the receiver herself, splicing together scraps of disassembled devices smuggled from the engineering halls. Officially, she was forbidden from such work. Her father had barred her from all hands-on creation, declaring it “beneath the dignity of a Source.” But Selara had always hungered to learn. She had pulled the transmissions through the Veyora’s star-beacon network and hidden them in her chamber, sifting through fragments of alien worlds late into the night.
And one night, while rerouting the channels, she had intercepted something strange. Not crystalline archives or flawless projections, but fragile sheets of thin paper bearing human faces. A Veyora-shan. A magazine.
The first time she held it, she whispered the word aloud, tasting the foreign syllables. Her tongue shaped it awkwardly, but she kept it. Magazine. Imperfect, temporary, fragile. Amaralians would have dismissed it as waste, but to Selara, its impermanence was what made it alive.
The clipping she treasured most lay at the center of her desk. Smudged slightly at the edges, ink uneven where she had pressed it to Amaralian crystal-paper, it still burned brighter in her eyes than any archive she had ever studied.
The caption read: EBONY – Beauty of the Week: Janie Burdette.
Selara lifted the page with trembling fingers, her magenta eyes burning brighter as they traced every detail.
Beauty.
It was a word she had whispered to herself many times since discovering this fragile artifact. Amarune had its own word, Shairen—used rarely, reserved for symmetry, for function perfected. But here, in this human woman’s smile, Selara had glimpsed something different. Beauty was not function. Beauty was not duty. Beauty was freedom.
____
She had studied the image for hours, sometimes days. The luminous warmth in Janie Burdette’s eyes fascinated her, so full of a life lived and claimed. Her skin reflected light not with the clinical gleam of Vyra but with the softness of flesh, with the richness of something fleeting and therefore precious. Her smile was imperfect in its humanity, yet more powerful than any statue carved on Amarune.
To Selara, Janie was not just a woman. She was proof. Proof that existence could be chosen. That a life could belong to itself.
She whispered the word again, softly, reverently: “Beauty.”
Her thoughts drifted to the pendant at her chest. She unclasped it and held it in her palm: a delicate teardrop-shaped gemstone that glowed with a soft, radiant pink hue, suspended from a fine silver chain. Its faceted surface caught and scattered light in subtle flashes of lavender and magenta, as though it held a fragment of crystallized starlight. Four small prongs of silver cradled the stone in a minimalist setting, its brilliance left unobscured, timeless and unyielding.
It was not merely jewelry. It was her mother.
Stories told of Queen Aivara’s gentleness, of the fire in her eyes when she challenged the council, of her refusal to allow experiments on her unborn child. Selara had been told those refusals were treason. That her mother had offered her life willingly, “for the greater good.” But in secret whispers, she had learned the truth: Aivara had been taken. Forced. Silenced. Her death during childbirth had not been sacrifice but consequence.
And yet, her pendant remained.
Selara clutched it tightly, her gloved hand trembling. Against her skin, it seemed to hum faintly, as though echoing her heartbeat. She wondered sometimes if her mother had touched it last, if her fingers had left some fragment of love etched into the crystal. She had once found it hidden in a box of old garments, tucked away by a nursemaid who had looked at her with wet eyes and whispered, “This was hers. She would want you to have it.”
It was more than an heirloom. It was proof that Aivara had lived. Proof that she had resisted. Proof that Selara’s life was not hers to surrender.
Her neon-magenta eyes lifted from the pendant to the magazine page. One relic from her mother. One from a world she longed to see. Both reminders that she did not belong to Amarune.
Outside, the festival raged brighter. Vyra lanterns filled the sky like stars set loose, music echoing as the crowd sang her name. Amaralians believed the Source was already theirs, that tomorrow would mark the beginning of their endless salvation.
But Selara Veyara knew the truth.
It would mark the end of her.
____
The moons reached their zenith at midnight, twin orbs crowning the sky like pale guardians. Their light poured through the crystal walls of Selara’s chamber, washing her in silver and violet. The hum of Vyra, ever-present in Amarune’s bones, deepened into a thunderous resonance, as if the entire planet were holding its breath for the dawn of her Binding.
Selara sat alone at her desk, the pendant and Veyora-shan clipping spread before her like two halves of a choice. Her gloved fingers traced the teardrop gemstone, its radiant pink glow soft but insistent, as though alive. Her magenta-pink eyes reflected in its facets, twin fires burning brighter than the stone itself. She thought of her mother’s touch, imagined it pressed into the chain, a final act of resistance hidden in plain sight.
The magazine clipping lay beside it, edges curling slightly, ink smudged at the corners where she had pressed too often. Janie Burdette’s smile glowed faintly in the moonlight, her gaze steady, daring. Beauty. The word throbbed in Selara’s chest like a second heartbeat.
The pendant whispered of the past, of sacrifice and chains.
The clipping whispered of the future, of choice and freedom.
She knew which she would claim.
But fear wrapped her like a cloak. Her magenta eyes dimmed as she pressed both items to her chest, breathing in shaky bursts. What if the portal failed? What if she was cast adrift in nothingness, her body torn into stardust? What if Earth was not what she imagined—what if it rejected her, as alien as her people had always claimed outsiders to be?
Her father’s voice echoed in her skull. What remains of you will remain in us. You will live forever, but not as yourself.
Her mother’s silence echoed louder.
Selara rose. The ceremonial gown, heavy with runes and tradition, slithered from her shoulders and pooled at her feet like chains shed. Beneath, she wore the suit she had crafted in secret—sleek, close-fitted, woven with thin Vyra channels she had etched herself. Its surface glimmered faintly violet, light enough for speed, strong enough to endure hyperspace. Against her collar, she fastened the pendant, the teardrop stone resting warm against her skin.
The gown lay abandoned. She did not look back.
____
She moved through the palace corridors like a shadow. Guards stood at every archway, their armor glowing faintly, but none stopped her. They bowed their heads, believing her steps were part of ritual preparation. No one imagined the princess would defy destiny. No one believed she could.
Selara’s footsteps carried her downward, deeper into the palace’s hidden veins. The air thickened with the scent of ozone, sharp and metallic, tinged with the sweetness of Vyra blossoms cultivated in the inner courtyards. The hum of energy grew louder the deeper she went, vibrating in her chest, until she felt her own heartbeat syncing with it.
At last, she reached the chamber she had discovered as a child: the Core of Echoes. A place where Vyra pooled raw and untamed, restless beneath the planet’s crust. It was forbidden, unmarked on maps, guarded only by the assumption that none would dare approach.
Selara dared.
She stepped inside. The chamber pulsed with violet light, crystal walls jagged and alive, veins of Vyra writhing like serpents beneath translucent stone. The air was charged, thick enough to raise gooseflesh along her arms even through her suit. Sparks danced across the floor in lazy arcs, crackling against her boots. It felt less like a room and more like the inside of a star.
Her breath caught. Her hands shook. But she dropped to her knees, pressing her palms flat against the crystalline floor.
The Vyra answered instantly, flooding upward in a violent surge of light. Her magenta eyes blazed neon, her entire body igniting in radiant glow. Her luminous hair flared behind her in streams of living energy, whipping and sparking like solar fire. The chamber trembled, shards of crystal rattling loose, the hum rising to a deafening pitch.
Selara gritted her teeth. The portal would not open easily. The Veins resisted, demanding her submission. They wanted her for the Binding, not for freedom.
She screamed and pressed harder. Streams of violet-pink light erupted from her hands, etching a burning circle into the floor. The air warped above it, twisted, split. A crack of amethyst fire tore through the chamber, silver threads webbing outward like lightning.
The portal began to form.
Her veins burned as though molten Vyra raced through them. Sweat streamed down her brow. Her muscles trembled, every nerve screaming. She felt as if she were tearing herself in half. The pendant seared hot against her chest, its pink glow blazing in tandem with her eyes. Her mother’s defiance surged through her, urging her onward.
She thought of Janie’s smile. Beauty.She thought of her mother’s whisper. Love.She thought of her father’s silence, his chains of duty.
And she roared, “No!”
____
The portal burst open like an eye.
Amethyst fire licked its edges, silver tendrils writhing at its core. It pulsed in rhythm with her heartbeat, her fear, her will. Its light was blinding, spilling across the chamber like dawn breaking in a place that had never seen a sunrise.
Selara staggered to her feet, gasping. The chants of her people thundered faintly above, echoing even here, her name sung as if she already belonged to them. Her father’s shadow stretched long over her mind, but her mother’s pendant pressed sharp and warm against her skin, grounding her.
She looked back once. Her chamber. Her people. Her prison.
She whispered low in Amaralian, “Vyra thal’in.”
May your Vyra shine.
Her farewell.
Then she stepped into the light.
____
Cold struck first—the endless void of space, airless and merciless. But her body adapted, Vyra weaving over her skin like a cloak. She did not choke. She did not freeze. She was Amaralian.
Her form blazed in the darkness, a humanoid constellation trailing violet-pink fire. Her magenta eyes cut through the void, burning brighter than stars. Her luminous hair streamed behind her in radiant arcs, marking her path like a comet streaking across eternity.
Stars wheeled infinite before her. She turned once, saw Amarune glowing like a jewel in the distance, twin moons watching in silence.
Then she faced forward. Threads of Vyra stretched outward, rivers binding world to world. And there, faint and flickering like a candle in the dark, she felt the pulse of the planet she had studied through stolen nights.
Earth.
Her lips curved into something between a sob and a smile. She launched forward, violet fire exploding in her wake, streaking into hyperspace.
Behind her, the portal collapsed with a thunderous crack, sealing the path.
And so the princess who was never meant to rule, who was never meant to live for herself, tore her destiny apart with her own hands.
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic) - (FIC IS COMPLETED)
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
____
List of Chapters
Arc One (COMPLETED):
- Chapter One- The Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
- Chapter Four The Intermissions ( A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Five – The World Watches
- Chapter Six – The World in 1964 ( A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Seven– The Pendant Ultimatum
- Chapter Eight – Daughter of Amarune
- Chapter Nine – The Choice of Flames
----
Arc Two (COMPLETED):
- Chapter Ten – The Fallout of Fire
- Chapter Eleven – Court of Chains
- Chapter Twelve – The Violet Flame
Chapter Thirteen – The Betrayal
- Chapter Fourteen – Into the Source
- Chapter Fifteen – Daughter of Fire
- Chapter Sixteen – The Fractured Crown
- Chapter Seventeen – Between Worlds
- Chapter Eighteen – A Home of Fire and Light
- Chapter Nineteen – Naivar: A New Thread (Final Chapter)
___
Meet Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune
Inspirations behind her:
Real-Life:
Donyale Luna
Janie Burdette
Donna Summer
Eartha Kitt
Lauren Walker
Marpessa Dawn
Twiggy
Fictional:
Starfire (DC Comics)
Blackfire (DC Comics)
Gwen Tennyson (Ben 10 Franchise)
Jean Grey (MCU)
Psylocke (MCU)
Tool used:
Photoshop
Canva
Pintrest
BeFunky
Fotor
Google Images
Fontiko
Reading numerous of articles on (Culture and historic events of the 1960s- make up, clothing, hair, decor, Civil rights movement, ect. Fantastic Four First Steps, screenwriting of the movie, character development, and cinematic effects),
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Nineteen – Naivar: A New Thread (Final Chapter)
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- The Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
- Chapter Four- The Intermissions (A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Five- The World Watches
- Chapter Six – The World in 1964 ( A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Seven– The Pendant Ultimatum
- Chapter Eight – Daughter of Amarune
- Chapter Nine – The Choice of Flames
- Chapter Ten – The Fallout of Fire
- Chapter Eleven – Court of Chains
- Chapter Twelve – The Violet Flame
- Chapter Thirteen – The Betrayal
- Chapter Fourteen – Into the Source
- Chapter Fifteen – Daughter of Fire
- Chapter Sixteen – The Fractured Crown
- Chapter Seventeen – Between Worlds
- Chapter Eighteen – A Home of Fire and Light
----
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 5873
----
The Baxter Building always had a particular hum in the mornings. Not the heavy, mechanical thrum of Reed’s labs when experiments ran long into the night, or the battle-alarms that sometimes jolted them into action before breakfast. No—this was a gentler sound. The kind that belonged to coffee percolating in the kitchen, Franklin’s sneakers squeaking across the polished floor, Ben’s gravel-voiced humming of some old Brooklyn tune he only half-remembered.
Selara breathed it in as she padded barefoot down the hall, her hair loose for once, damp from her shower, catching light in faint violet undertones only the bond made visible. She wore a soft, borrowed shirt of Sue’s and leggings Reed had absentmindedly ordered online in bulk, claiming they were “practical base layers.” On Amarune, mornings had been heavy—measured by the low throb of the Core, by expectations that pressed as surely as gravity. Here, mornings felt like release.
The smell of pancakes drifted out of the kitchen, syrup sweet and faintly smoky. She smiled before she even crossed the threshold.
“Morning, Starlight,” Johnny said instantly, perched at the counter as if he had been listening for her steps down the hall. His hair was still rumpled, curls sticking out in a way that made him look younger, softer, though the fire at the corner of his grin was as bright as ever.
Selara tilted her head, mock-serious. “You greet me as if it is a secret code.”
Johnny grinned wider. “It is. Classified. Top-tier. Only you and me.”
“Uh-huh,” Ben drawled from the stove, wielding a spatula like a weapon. “Code word’s ‘starlight,’ translation’s ‘kid’s got it bad.’” He flipped a pancake with one massive hand and winked at Selara. “Eat fast, tomorrow’s the big day.”
Her cheeks warmed despite herself. She sank into one of the chairs at the long kitchen table, folding her hands in her lap for a moment, feeling the bond hum faintly like a harp string at the back of her chest. Tomorrow. She had known the concept of ceremony all her life—Amarune’s bonds written in fire, eternal, undeniable—but she had never known this: the anticipation of something chosen, not decreed.
Sue swept into the room in her robe, hair pinned up in the kind of bun that somehow managed to look both effortless and impossibly neat. She leaned down to press a kiss to Franklin’s head as he sat already sketching at the table, tongue caught between his teeth as he drew.
“Good morning, sweetheart,” Sue murmured. Then, catching Selara’s gaze, she smiled—warm, steady. “You slept well?”
Selara nodded. “Better than I expected. Dreams… quieter.” She hesitated, then added softly, “Your home feels like a shield.”
Sue’s hand brushed her shoulder, mother-light and unspoken promise. “That’s what it’s meant to be.”
Reed appeared next, juggling three datapads, his glasses slipping down the bridge of his nose. He muttered something about “energy spillover calibrations” even as he reached for coffee without looking, nearly pouring it into the wrong mug until Sue gently redirected his hand.
“Sit, Reed,” she said firmly. “You can save the world after breakfast.”
Ben barked a laugh. “Amen.”
The table filled with plates—pancakes stacked like towers, scrambled eggs steaming, toast charred on the edges the way Johnny liked it. Selara watched the easy rhythm of it all, the way plates slid back and forth, forks clinked, conversation overlapped. No one announced assignments. No one issued decrees. It simply… worked. A family’s gravity, holding itself together.
—-
Franklin slid his sketch across the table toward her. “See?”
She leaned closer. He had drawn the Baxter rooftop—a simple version, just outlines—but in the middle he had scrawled two stick figures holding hands. One had flames for hair. The other had a glowing halo.
Selara pressed a hand to her lips, touched beyond words. “Little star,” she whispered, her eyes soft. “You see more than most.”
Franklin grinned, gap-toothed. “That’s because I’m smart like Daddy.”
Reed coughed into his coffee, flustered. Ben laughed so hard he nearly dropped the syrup.
Johnny leaned across the table, tapping the edge of the drawing. “Hey, you forgot the part where I look cooler than everyone else.”
Franklin rolled his eyes with all the gravitas of a seven-year-old. “You’re fine.”
The room broke into easy laughter.
For a moment, Selara simply sat back, let the sound wash over her, let the warmth soak into bones that had once only known cold duty. Tomorrow would be momentous, she knew—ceremony, vows, an entire world watching in its own way. But this—this was the heart of it. Syrup on plates. Franklin’s bright chatter. Sue’s calm command. Reed’s distracted genius. Ben’s gravel-voiced jokes. Johnny’s eyes catching hers across the table, fire soft as dawn.
Her family. Her forever.
—-
The Baxter Building had been transformed.
The top floor, usually humming with machines and chalkboards filled with Reed’s equations, had become something softer. The team had pulled in strings of light, draped them along the glass walls until the city outside shimmered like a thousand stars beyond reach. Chairs lined the space in neat rows, white ribbons tied at their edges. A stretch of pale carpet rolled straight to the arch Sue had insisted on building—woven from flowers and crystal, both Earth and Amarune in one frame.
It smelled faintly of roses and steel. Of family.
Johnny tugged at his collar for the fifth time, earning a sharp slap to the shoulder from Sue. “Stop fidgeting,” she whispered.
“I’m not fidgeting,” he muttered. “I’m… adjusting.”
“You look fine,” Sue said firmly, smoothing his lapel as though he were still ten years old and about to trip over himself at a school recital.
Ben grunted from behind. “Kid’s sweatin’ like he’s about to face Galactus again. Relax, matchstick. She already said yes.”
Johnny shot him a look but couldn’t deny the way his pulse hammered, the bond humming through his chest like a tether pulled taut. Selara was near—he could feel her, the quiet steadiness of her presence brushing against him like the tide against a shoreline. But he hadn’t seen her yet. Not today. That was the rule.
Reed checked his watch, glasses slipping. “Five minutes,” he murmured, more to himself than anyone else. “Ceremonial time sync is—ah—within margin.”
“Margin?” Ben snorted. “It’s a wedding, Stretch, not a rocket launch.”
Sue ignored them both, her eyes already bright. She had spent weeks pretending to keep things practical—flowers ordered on time, guest list contained, Franklin’s suit pressed and ready—but Johnny knew she was bursting inside. This wasn’t just his wedding. It was her family’s expansion.
The hum in his chest grew louder. He turned.
And then she appeared.
Selara stood framed in the doorway, and for a moment the entire room forgot how to breathe.
Her gown was lace and light, the fabric whispering over her skin like it had been woven from moonlight itself. The bodice curved elegant and strong, the off-the-shoulder sleeves puffed delicately before narrowing into sheer lace down her arms. The veil crowned her hair in a soft halo, pearls catching the light. Her lips were painted a deep, bold red, her eyes alive with something more than fire—something steady, luminous, unshakable.
She looked like every Amarune myth come to life. She looked like herself.
Johnny’s mouth parted. His heart tripped over itself. For once, words failed him completely. The bond carried what his voice couldn’t: awe so sharp it felt like flame catching new air.
Ben stood at her side, suited but still unmistakably stone. He cleared his throat, his gravel voice softer than Johnny had ever heard. “You ready, kid?”
Selara nodded once, though her eyes flicked to Johnny’s, and in the bond her answer came clearer: Always.
Ben offered his massive arm. She slipped her hand into the crook of it without hesitation. Together, they started forward.
The room rose to its feet. Sue’s hand tightened on Reed’s arm. Franklin leaned so far forward in his chair that Lynne had to tug him gently back. Johnny couldn’t move—he was frozen, undone, every nerve lit by the sight of her crossing the aisle toward him.
Ben walked slow, steady, carrying the gravity of a brother who had fought too many wars and was still awed to be trusted with this one. When they reached Johnny, Ben turned her hand over, pressed it into Johnny’s, and whispered low enough only Johnny could hear: “Don’t screw this up.”
Johnny swallowed hard, nodding. “Wouldn’t dream of it.”
Selara turned fully to him then, her hand fitting into his. The lace of her sleeve brushed his skin, and the bond sang—bright, undeniable, a promise stitched into their very bones.
The officiant—an old family friend of the Richards, steady-voiced and calm—welcomed everyone, speaking of commitment, of choice, of the strange blessing that comes from finding home in another person. But Johnny barely heard the words. His eyes stayed on her. Selara, radiant and sure, the veil framing her like a crown she chose instead of one forced upon her.
When it was time for vows, Sue gave Johnny a subtle nudge.
He cleared his throat, hands trembling slightly as he held Selara’s. “Starlight, I… I’ve always been the guy who runs into fire without thinking. But you—you’re the one who taught me what it means to stand in it. You’ve seen the worst of me, the reckless, selfish parts, and you stayed. You didn’t just stay—you loved me anyway. You made me braver. You made me better. And I promise, from this day on, I’ll never let go. Not of your hand, not of your heart. Forever, in every language we’ve got.”
Selara’s breath caught, her eyes shimmering, but she lifted her chin and spoke steady. “Johnny Storm, on Amarune forever was a cage. A bond forced, a destiny written in hunger. I was afraid of it all my life. But you showed me a new forever. One made of choice. Of laughter. Of your terrible jokes. Of family around this table. I choose that. I choose you. Not as Source. Not as duty. As myself. As your Selara. Forever.”
Her voice cracked on the last word, but she did not falter.
Sue was openly crying. Reed’s throat bobbed as he adjusted his glasses. Ben swiped at his face with the back of his massive hand, grumbling something about “dust in the room.” Franklin clapped his hands together, beaming.
The officiant smiled softly. “Then by the power vested in me—and by the bond already written in your very being—I now pronounce you husband and wife.”
Johnny didn’t wait for permission. He pulled Selara in, kissed her, and for a heartbeat the bond flared bright violet beneath their skin—light spilling through lace, through flame, through everything. It wasn’t the dangerous supernova of the throne chamber. It was softer, warmer, a shared spark that kissed the room with its glow.
Applause erupted. Ben whooped. Sue laughed through her tears. Reed clapped exactly three times, then kept clapping because Franklin told him to.
Johnny pulled back, forehead against hers, whispering through the bond and aloud at once: Aruna’shai.
Selara’s smile broke like dawn. “Aruna’shai,” she whispered back.
And just like that, forever had never felt so possible.
—-
The Baxter Building had been transformed.
The top floor, usually humming with machines and chalkboards filled with Reed’s equations, had become something softer. The team had pulled in strings of light, draped them along the glass walls until the city outside shimmered like a thousand stars beyond reach. Chairs lined the space in neat rows, white ribbons tied at their edges. A stretch of pale carpet rolled straight to the arch Sue had insisted on building—woven from flowers and crystal, both Earth and Amarune in one frame.
It smelled faintly of roses and steel. Of family.
Johnny tugged at his collar for the fifth time, earning a sharp slap to the shoulder from Sue. “Stop fidgeting,” she whispered.
“I’m not fidgeting,” he muttered. “I’m… adjusting.”
“You look fine,” Sue said firmly, smoothing his lapel as though he were still ten years old and about to trip over himself at a school recital.
Johnny shot her a look but couldn’t deny the way his pulse hammered, the bond humming through his chest like a tether pulled taut. Selara was near—he could feel her, the quiet steadiness of her presence brushing against him like the tide against a shoreline. But he hadn’t seen her yet. Not today. That was the rule.
Reed checked his watch, glasses slipping. “Five minutes,” he murmured, more to himself than anyone else.
Sue, her eyes already bright. She had spent weeks pretending to keep things practical—flowers ordered on time, guest list contained, Franklin’s suit pressed and ready—but Johnny knew she was bursting inside. This wasn’t just his wedding. It was her family’s expansion.
The hum in his chest grew louder. He turned.
And then she appeared.
Selara stood framed in the doorway, and for a moment the entire room forgot how to breathe.
Her gown was lace and light, the fabric whispering over her skin like it had been woven from moonlight itself. The bodice curved elegant and strong, the off-the-shoulder sleeves puffed delicately before narrowing into sheer lace down her arms. The veil crowned her hair in a soft halo, pearls catching the light. Her lips were painted a deep, bold red, her eyes alive with something more than fire—something steady, luminous, unshakable.
She looked like every Amarune myth come to life. She looked like herself.
Johnny’s mouth parted. His heart tripped over itself. For once, words failed him completely. The bond carried what his voice couldn’t: awe so sharp it felt like flame catching new air.
Ben stood at her side, suited but still unmistakably stone. He cleared his throat, his gravel voice softer than Johnny had ever heard. “You ready, kid?”
Selara nodded once, though her eyes flicked to Johnny’s, and in the bond her answer came clearer: Always.
Ben offered his massive arm. She slipped her hand into the crook of it without hesitation. Together, they started forward.
The room rose to its feet. Sue’s hand tightened on Reed’s arm. Franklin leaned so far forward in his chair that Lynne had to tug him gently back. Johnny couldn’t move—he was frozen, undone, every nerve lit by the sight of her crossing the aisle toward him.
Ben walked slow, steady, carrying the gravity of a brother who had fought too many wars and was still awed to be trusted with this one. When they reached Johnny, Ben turned her hand over, pressed it into Johnny’s, and whispered low enough only Johnny could hear: “Don’t screw this up.”
Johnny swallowed hard, nodding. “Wouldn’t dream of it.”
Selara turned fully to him then, her hand fitting into his. The lace of her sleeve brushed his skin, and the bond sang—bright, undeniable, a promise stitched into their very bones.
The officiant—an old family friend of the Richards, steady-voiced and calm—welcomed everyone, speaking of commitment, of choice, of the strange blessing that comes from finding home in another person. But Johnny barely heard the words. His eyes stayed on her. Selara, radiant and sure, the veil framing her like a crown she chose instead of one forced upon her.
When it was time for vows, Sue gave Johnny a subtle nudge.
He cleared his throat, hands trembling slightly as he held Selara’s. “Starlight, I… I’ve always been the guy who runs into fire without thinking. But you—you’re the one who taught me what it means to stand in it. You’ve seen the worst of me, the reckless, selfish parts, and you stayed. You didn’t just stay—you loved me anyway. You made me braver. You made me better. And I promise, from this day on, I’ll never let go. Not of your hand, not of your heart. Forever, in every language we’ve got.”
Selara’s breath caught, her eyes shimmering, but she lifted her chin and spoke steady. “Johnny Storm, on Amarune forever was a cage. A bond forced, a destiny written in hunger. I was afraid of it all my life. But you showed me a new forever. One made of choice. Of laughter. Of your terrible jokes. Of family around this table. I choose that. I choose you. Not as Source. Not as duty. As myself. As your Selara. Forever.”
Her voice cracked on the last word, but she did not falter.
Sue was openly crying. Reed’s throat bobbed as he adjusted his glasses. Ben swiped at his face with the back of his massive hand, grumbling something about “dust in the room.” Franklin clapped his hands together, beaming.
The officiant smiled softly. “Then by the power vested in me—and by the bond already written in your very being—I now pronounce you husband and wife.”
Johnny didn’t wait for permission. He pulled Selara in, kissed her, and for a heartbeat the bond flared bright violet beneath their skin—light spilling through lace, through flame, through everything. It wasn’t the dangerous supernova of the throne chamber. It was softer, warmer, a shared spark that kissed the room with its glow.
Applause erupted. Ben whooped. Sue laughed through her tears. Reed clapped exactly three times, then kept clapping because Franklin told him to.
Johnny pulled back, forehead against hers, whispering through the bond and aloud at once: Aruna’shai.
Selara’s smile broke like dawn. “Aruna’shai,” she whispered back.
And just like that, forever had never felt so possible.
—-
The applause still echoed as the ceremony shifted into celebration. The Baxter’s great hall had been reconfigured while the vows were said—Sue’s doing, no doubt, with Reed’s architecture quietly backing her. Where the arch had stood, the arch now became the backdrop for a long table set like a feast. Lights glittered overhead in warm strands, mingling with faint violet glow woven in by Selara herself. Earth and Amarune, woven together in detail after detail.
Ben was the first to break the formality. He clapped Johnny on the back so hard the younger man nearly staggered. “Congrats, matchstick,” he rumbled, his grin uncharacteristically soft. “Never thought I’d say it, but… ya done good.”
Johnny laughed, adjusting his footing, Selara’s hand still in his. “Thanks, big guy. You sure you’re okay with me marrying? You had dibs on being everyone’s favorite.”
Ben rolled his eyes but didn’t argue. “You’ll never outrank me with Franklin. Don’t even try.”
Speaking of Franklin—he was a blur as he darted past chairs, straight into Selara’s gown, hugging her legs with fearless affection. “Aunty Star, you looked so pretty!” His eyes shone like he had just watched his favorite hero land in real life. “And now you’re really family.”
Selara bent, scooping him into her arms despite the lace sleeves, veil shifting as she pressed her cheek to his hair. “Little star,” she whispered, voice trembling with joy, “I would not be anything else.”
The bond hummed with Johnny’s warmth beside her, that same sense of pride and awe echoing through him as he watched her hold his nephew like he’d always known she belonged here.
They moved toward the long table. Reed, practical as ever, had insisted on keeping the guest list small. The Future Foundation’s closest allies, a few dear friends, Lynne Nichols seated with Franklin when he wasn’t orbiting Selara. It wasn’t the kind of wedding meant to impress a city—it was meant to feel lived in. Home.
Sue took charge, ushering Selara and Johnny into their seats at the center. She floated in her role with the same grace she carried in battle—balancing details, steadying chaos, making sure plates and glasses were always full.
Dinner began. Ben piled his plate with half the table’s worth of food. Reed dissected his portion with quiet efficiency, though his eyes lingered on Selara often, like a scientist trying to document a miracle he couldn’t quantify. Sue leaned across occasionally to remind Johnny to eat between his jokes.
Conversation spun around them, laughter layering over the clink of cutlery. Franklin wriggled out of his chair more than once to dash around the room, carrying scraps of cake back to Selara as though he alone could make sure she was fed properly. She accepted each offering with radiant patience, whispering thanks and planting soft kisses on his hairline.
—-
Finally, Ben stood, raising his glass. “Alright, listen up!” His gravelly voice silenced the table better than any formal toast ever could. He cleared his throat, shifting uncomfortably. “I ain’t good at this stuff. Speeches, feelings… y’know. But… today’s somethin’ else. Kid here—” He jerked his thumb at Johnny. “—he’s been drivin’ me nuts since the day I met him. Reckless, loud, burns too bright for his own good. But then… he found someone who burns just as bright. Maybe brighter.”
Selara’s cheeks colored. Johnny squeezed her hand beneath the table, grin boyish but eyes damp.
Ben continued, his voice softer now. “Selara, you walked into this family when you had every reason to walk away. You coulda let the world break you down, but instead you lit it up. And I ain’t talkin’ Vyra, or powers, or any of that. I’m talkin’ heart. You’re the real deal, kid. And if anybody deserved this knucklehead, it’s you. And if anybody deserved you—” He paused, eyes flicking at Johnny. “—well, maybe not him, but he’s the one who got lucky. And I’m proud of ya both.”
The table erupted in applause, laughter mingling with sniffles. Johnny leaned over, calling out, “Thanks, Uncle Ben.”
“Don’t push it, matchstick,” Ben muttered, but his grin betrayed him.
After dinner, the lights shifted. Music filled the hall—not Amarune hymns, not Earth’s grand orchestral marches, but a blend. Sue had worked with Selara to find something that straddled both worlds. Strings wove with faint chimes of crystal. It shimmered, haunting and lovely.
Johnny rose, tugging Selara gently to her feet. “Dance with me, starlight?”
Her smile answered before her voice. “Always.”
They stepped into the cleared space, the world falling away until it was just the two of them. The lace of her gown brushed against his suit, her hand warm in his, the bond flaring steady and strong. They moved clumsily at first—Johnny’s nerves turning his feet into chaos—but Selara guided him with patient grace. Soon they were gliding, laughter spilling between them, eyes locked as though the rest of the room didn’t exist.
Johnny leaned close, whispering into her hair, “You realize every time I look at you tonight, I’m falling in love with you all over again.”
Selara’s laughter was quiet, caught between tears and joy. “Then keep looking, Johnny Storm. I have no wish for you to stop.”
The bond thrummed—alive, undeniable.
Around them, the family watched. Sue leaned into Reed’s side, finally letting her tears fall freely. Reed’s arm slipped around her waist, steady and tender. Franklin danced in circles with Lynne nearby, occasionally darting close to Selara’s gown, pretending to join in. Ben stood at the edge, arms crossed, trying to look unimpressed—but when Selara threw him a smile mid-spin, he wiped at his face again, muttering curses at the dust.
When the song ended, the room erupted in applause once more. Johnny kissed Selara’s hand, bowing low with exaggerated flourish that earned a roll of her eyes and another laugh.
It was messy. It was perfect. It was theirs.
And for Selara—for Johnny—for all of them—this was forever made visible: laughter, family, love strung across a city skyline that had once seemed impossibly distant.
—-
The reception mellowed to a warm hum. Music slowed, shoes disappeared, jackets were traded for blankets, and the city outside the tower softened into a sea of lights. Selara’s smile had turned from bright to gently luminous; the bond carried Johnny’s joy like a hearth under her ribs, steady and human and hers.
“Don’t drift off yet,” Sue said, passing behind Selara’s chair with a conspirator’s glint. “We’ve got one more thing.”
Ben groaned happily. “Awright, showtime.”
The living room dimmed. Reed fiddled with something on a low cart and a slim cone of light lanced the dusk. Not a flatscreen—this was older, tactile: a 16mm projector, its reels already threaded with care. The machine purred to life, the smell of warmed dust and celluloid pricking nostalgia Selara didn’t know she owned.
A black-and-white title flickered onto the wall. Then a man in a suit stepped through smoke, voice cool and uncanny, like a door cracked into a different kind of night.
“You unlock this door with the key of imagination…”
—-
Selara’s breath broke softly. “Rod Serling,” she whispered, reverent.
Johnny squeezed her hand, grin tilted boyish. “Your first Earth birthday,” he murmured. “We did it right.”
On the coffee table lay the rest of the surprise: a neat stack of film cans labeled in Sue’s careful hand (The Twilight Zone: curated reels), a vintage press kit Reed had tracked down, and a small black star map of the night over New York—tonight’s sky, pin-pricked silver and violet, Amarune’s twin moons etched in the corner as a secret inlay only she would catch.
“For your wall,” Sue said, handing over the framed map. “So you always know where home looks like. Both of them.”
“And this,” Reed added, a little shy, offering a narrow box. Inside, a slim silver bracelet with four tiny insets—amber, pale blue, violet, and clear—each stone cut to a different facet. “Four for four,” he said, clearing his throat. “And one more for you.”
Selara laughed wetly. “You keep making me cry,” she accused, not trying very hard to stop them.
“Good tears,” Johnny said, kissing her temple as the projector ticked on. “Mandatory Earth culture.”
They piled close for the screening: Ben slouched into the big chair, plate balanced on his belly; Sue tucked herself around Franklin, who valiantly fought bedtime and lost in stages; Reed perched on the armrest, watchful and secretly sentimental; Johnny and Selara curled together on the rug, her head on his shoulder, his cheek against her hair. The film wove its eerie kindness across the wall—strange men at strange crossroads, choices framed like doors. Every time the theme swelled, Selara felt something in her chest answer: the part of her that had always lived between worlds, now invited to belong in both.
Between reels, Ben fetched cake. “For the birthday girl,” he said, setting a slice in front of her the size of a small moon. “Make a wish.”
Selara met Johnny’s eyes and didn’t close hers at all. “Already made,” she said softly. “And already granted.”
They watched until the reels clicked empty and the projector spun down with a contented sigh. In the hush, Rod Serling’s last cadence seemed to linger in the plaster. Family settled deeper into couches and blankets, talk dimming to murmurs. Selara pressed her palm to the star map’s glass, the chill touching her skin. Two skies, she thought. One life.
Johnny’s whisper brushed her ear. “Happy birthday, Selara Storm.”
The name lit her. “I like the way that sounds,” she said.
“Me too.”
They sat with that—quiet, complete—until the city’s glitter felt like it was shining for them alone.
—-
Months Later
Winter folded into a tender spring. The Baxter Building learned the rhythm of a marriage: two toothbrushes sharing a glass, two mugs side by side (Johnny’s scorch-scarred, Selara’s tracing heat without burning), two coats on the hook—plum and navy—like vows in fabric. Selara taught the building her cadences; it adapted without fuss. She laughed at sitcom reruns, asked solemn questions in the middle of commercials, learned to operate the fickle window latches, and hummed old Amaralian work songs under her breath as she folded laundry with a reverence that made Sue smile in the doorway.
Lessons grew layered into their days. Selara began to teach Johnny her language with the same seriousness she gave to holding a shield in a storm.
“Okay,” he said one evening at the kitchen island, pen poised. “Hit me.”
She tapped the notebook, letters like constellations. “Aruna’shai you know. Vyra you know. Today: Shivra—thread.” She drew it in the air with a fingertip; the bond hummed. “’Tavri—to join; to become with.”
“Shiv…ra…’tavri.” He shaped it carefully, teeth grazing his lower lip as if the word might burn. “How’d I do?”
“Beautifully,” she said, and meant it. She showed him again: soft tongue on the vri, breath on the shiv. He repeated it a few more times, then scribbled SHIVRA’TAVRI in big, block capitals and underlined it like a favorite lyric.
“Sentence?” he asked, eager. “Use it in a sentence.”
Selara smiled. “Soon,” she said, and tucked the notebook away.
He narrowed his eyes playfully. “That’s not fair.”
“Wives are not fair,” she said gravely. “It is our function.”
He laughed and kissed her over the counter, a quick, warm press—domestic, perfect. The city was all lit windows and sirens; the kitchen was lamplight and the clink of cutlery and the scent of orange peel where she’d zested it into the batter to show Ben that pancakes could be art
—-
Evenings became their sanctuary. Franklin sometimes camped out, Lynne Nichols dropping him off with a wave and a reminder about bedtimes that everyone ignored. He and Selara built elaborate marble runs across the lab floor, Reed stepping over them like an elephant negotiating teacups. Ben taught Franklin to shuffle cards; Sue taught him to shuffle adults. Johnny taught him to say please with charm; Selara taught him the Amaralian word for patience (which, to Franklin’s delight, sounded suspiciously like tickle if you got the vowel wrong).
And slowly—so slowly that even Selara’s careful listening almost missed it—something new began to glow at the center of the bond. A second pulse; a tiny echo with its own shy rhythm.
She carried the secret like a candle protected by both hands, sheltering it through errands and rescues and days in socks. She listened to it when night was quiet enough. She learned its beat: not Amarune’s hunger, not Earth’s noise, but a small, steady becoming. When she was certain—when the glow spoke not as a maybe but as a yes—she chose her moment.
—-
The night she told him, rain pressed against the windows in a fine, insistent mist. New York smelled newly washed; traffic noises had edges. Johnny had cooked (he called it cooking; Ben called it “creative reheating”), and the kitchen still held the ghost of garlic. They abandoned the dishes to their future selves and migrated to the couch with a blanket that had survived three different apartments and at least one minor meteor shower.
“Lesson?” he asked, eyes bright. He’d brought the notebook even though half his Amaralian vocabulary currently lived in his grin.
Selara took it, thumbed to a blank page, and wrote Shivra’tavri again, this time in the flowing script her mother had taught her. She turned the notebook so he could see.
He leaned in, breath warming her wrist. “Thread…joins… family,” he translated, pleased with himself. “Right?”
“Close,” she said, and her voice shook, and that was the first hint.
“Selara?” Johnny’s expression softened, all that brittle showman light dropping away to make room for awe. He set the notebook aside like it might bruise if he breathed on it.
She took his hands, placed them over her heart the way one sets something valuable down where it cannot fall. “Shivra’tavri,” she said again—careful now, the vowels exact, the cadence ceremonial. “I’m pregnant.” She smiled through tears. “Literally—a new thread joins our family.”
For a heartbeat he didn’t move. Then the grin arrived—reckless, incandescent, helpless—and with it a laugh full of tears. “You’re—? We’re—?” He tried to stand and sit at the same time, failed at both, and ended up gathering her to him with a sound that had no English word and three in Amaralian.
She laughed into his shoulder, the bond answering like a bell rung gently; the small rhythm within it bopped back, as if pleased to be included.
Johnny pulled away just far enough to frame her face in his hands. “Are you okay? You feel okay? Do you—what do you need—do you need ice cream—do Amaralian moms crave… starlight? Do we have to go outside and—”
“Johnny,” she said, dizzy with him, with it, with joy. “Breathe.”
He breathed. It came out as a giddy wheeze. “Right. Okay. Breathing. Shivra’tavri.” He tasted the word again, reverent now. “A new thread.” He pressed his forehead to hers. “Our thread.”
She nodded, cheeks wet. “I wanted to tell you in our language,” she whispered. “Because you have been learning it, and because this is ours before it belongs to the world.”
He laughed again, softer. “I’m learning for keeps.” He swallowed, then said—shyly, beautifully—“Aruna’shai.”
“Aruna’shai,” she echoed, and kissed him, slow and certain.
—-
They told the others the next morning. Sue cried first and longest, clutching Selara like a blessing she fully intended to protect with both hands and a force field; Reed launched into a delighted, apologetic lecture about prenatal monitoring protocols and interspecies harmonics before remembering he was a person and hugging Selara so carefully it nearly undid her; Ben whooped and promised the child two things: “the best pancakes and the worst jokes”; Franklin sprinted in circles until Lynne made him sit and breathe and accept a celebratory blueberry muffin like a knight receiving his crest.
Johnny spent the day walking into rooms and forgetting why he had come, then remembering, then grinning like the sun remembered him back. Once, Selara caught him in the hallway, palm pressed flat to the wall as if listening to the building breathe. “Practicing lullabies,” he said when she asked. “Don’t worry, I’ll stick to humming. Words are a work in progress.”
“Your Amaralian is perfect,” she said.
He looked at her like that was the same as saying I love you and the bond agreed.
That evening, when the tower’s windows poured gold into rain and the city felt close enough to hold, they curled on the couch with a blanket and the old projector out for another run. The film’s beam cut the room into a private galaxy. Rod Serling strolled into frame, cigarette smoke writing cursive around his head.
“You unlock this door with the key of imagination…”
Johnny slid his hand over Selara’s as if turning a page. “Hey,” he whispered. “What’s the Amaralian for… home?”
She smiled, the word already warm on her tongue. “Naivar.”
He mouthed it, then said—clear, proud—“Naivar.”
Selara pressed his hand to her stomach, where the faintest shimmer answered. “Naivar,” she repeated softly. “Ours.”
The projector ticked. The rain whispered. Family, full of plans and questions and laughter, moved through the apartment like a tide. In the small, bright space where the bond sang, a new thread joined—not a chain, not a crown, just a soft, insistent yes.
Forever, Selara thought. Not the Amarune kind, hard and hungry. The Earth kind: chosen daily, taught patiently, spoken in two languages at once.
She tipped her head to Johnny’s shoulder, let the film draw its strange doors in light, and felt the future open without swallowing her.
Outside, New York went on being itself—impossible, ordinary, shining. Inside, the Baxter Building learned another secret melody and hummed along.
And between them—between worlds—Selara lived where she had always belonged: in the place made by love.
----
Author’s Note to Readers & Taglist
I want to take a moment to thank everyone who’s read, supported, and tagged along with this story. 💜 I’ve been writing for years, but I’ve never written a fanfic this long—and actually finished it. This project has reignited my passion for storytelling in a way I didn’t expect, and I’m so grateful to have shared that journey with all of you.
If you’ve ever wanted to see your own ideas—whether for characters, stories, or worlds—brought to life, feel free to message me. I’d love to support fellow writers, readers, and visionaries in practicing and creating together. (There will be some exclusions—smut being one—but we can talk more in messages if you’re curious about other boundaries.)
Thank you again for walking with me through Selara’s story. 💫 Here’s to many more. 🩷
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Four- The Intermissions ( A Filler Chapter)
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- Th Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
____
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 3197
____
The Baxter Building slept in long, even breaths: elevators exhaling, radiators ticking like polite clocks, H.E.R.B.I.E humming a lullaby to the outlets. Selara did not sleep. She lay on her back and listened to the building’s song until the notes repeated, then rose and padded barefoot into the living room, her cream robe belted over a soft, borrowed nightdress. New York’s winter haloed the windows with a faint salt-blue glow.
She wanted noise she didn’t have to manage—stories that moved without her power bending them. On Amarune, narrative was sung; on Earth, it flickered.
She found the switch to the television by watching how Sue’s thumb had pressed it earlier and copied the motion exactly. The set woke like a small startled animal: a white flare, a narrowing eye, then steady light. She sat primly at first, ankles crossed, hands folded on her knees as if waiting for a ceremonial procession. A commercial for a washing powder paraded across the screen with the confidence of a general. She made it through half a newscaster’s baritone about snowfall totals before restlessness tugged at her spine.
She tried sitting cross-legged on the couch. Then sideways. Then with her feet tucked under. Finally, with analytic sincerity, she slid backward until her head hung off the cushion and her hair fell toward the floor like a dark waterfall. Upside down, the world’s edges seemed to relax.
The dial hissed beneath her fingertips as she clicked through worlds: a western’s dust and honor, a late-night preacher, a rocket-shaped logo that tugged something inside her chest. She paused. A star field. A man’s voice, wry and exact: “You’re traveling through another dimension…”'
____
Her silvery-gray eyes, green-shot even in the dim, widened. “Rod Serling,” she said carefully, reading the name, tasting it. The cadence of the monologue soothed some part of her that Amarune’s ritual had only ever tightened. He spoke as if he knew there were doors everywhere, and that most people were too hurried to see them. He spoke about space as if it were not only distance but moral weather.
She almost floated, just from listening. Then she did.
Her body rose three inches without her permission; the couch cushion sighed with relief. She righted herself, chided her own buoyancy (“Kareth, be polite,” she whispered), and then surrendered to the position that made the most sense: upside down over the couch’s arm, legs folded lightly, pendant pooling at her throat like a second moon.
She watched two episodes in a row, enthralled. In one, a man escaped to the moon and found only himself; in another, a neighborhood ate itself in fear. She smiled at the edges of both. How does this human know the shape of fear’s gravity? she wondered. How does he make it look like a map? By dawn she had decided, with the logic of the sleepless, that Rod Serling must be either an alien or a prophet. Possibly both.
____
“Okay,” Johnny said from the doorway, voice rough with too little sleep and too much wonder. “This is easily the best thing I’ve ever seen.”
She angled her upside-down face toward him, hair a curtain around her cheekbones. “You are up early.”
“You’re up… not at all,” he countered, walking in with the cautious stride of a man who has promised not to touch. He stopped at a respectful distance, hands tucked into his robe pockets. “You don’t sleep?”
“I can,” she said. “I did not want to. The box told stories with light. There was a Rod Serling. He knows space. He must be not human.”
Johnny snorted, then caught himself—she was quoting sacred text as far as she was concerned. “He’s very human,” he said, coming around to sit on the far cushion and mirroring her posture with his head tilted off the edge too. Blood slid to his temples; he laughed. “He just knows how to make people listen to the parts of themselves they try to walk past.”
Selara considered this. “I like him. He says the line about doors and keys and… something with the dimension. He makes fear… elegant.”
Johnny turned his head, still upside down, and grinned. “I would pay good money to watch you meet Rod Serling.”
She blinked, solemn. “I would ask if he is from my father’s council.”
“Keep that question in your pocket for the press conference,” he said, rolling up to sitting in one swift motion. “C’mon. If we’re both vertical, we may as well be eating.”
“Eating is not required,” she began, also sitting, then stopped as he arched a brow.
“It’s also not required to wear a seatbelt, if you want to test fate,” he said lightly. “But Sue’s making waffles. That’s less a meal and more a sacrament.”
“Waffles,” she repeated, an Amaralian lilt turning the word into a poem.
“Yeah,” he said, pleased. “Waffles.”
____
Breakfast gathered the way ocean does—slow, inevitable, then all at once. The kitchen steamed. Franklin appeared with hair pointing three different directions and H.E.R.B.I.E trailed him with a plate like a fussy usher. Ben hummed under his breath while measuring batter as if the secret lay in the hum. Reed stirred syrup on low heat, having discovered that the stove’s medium could indeed be a small god if neglected.
“Good morning,” Sue said, approaching Selara with that efficient kindness she wore like a cardigan. “How was your first complete night as a resident?”
Selara brightened. “There was Twilight Zone,” she said. “Rod Serling is either prophet or from my planet.”
Ben barked laughter. “Kid’s already got taste.”
“Plate,” H.E.R.B.I.E announced, angling a warmed dish toward Selara. “Caution: waffles are deceptively porous. They are syrup traps.”
“Syrup… traps.” Selara’s eyes went huge. “Danger.”
____
“Delicious danger,” Johnny corrected, sliding into a chair beside her and sliding back an inch when he realized beside felt too close. “Try butter first, then syrup, then syrup and butter together.”
She accepted a square of Ben’s gold-crisped architecture and watched Reed pour warm amber from a small pot. The syrup pooled in the waffle’s squares like captured suns. She cut a small bite, then a larger one, then a laugh slipped out of her without her permission—an honest bell of a sound. Her eyes flashed luminous at the edges.
“Good?” Sue asked, already smiling.
“So good it changes the city,” Selara said fervently. “I see everything differently now.”
Ben thumped the counter in approval. “I like her.”
Franklin, chewing, held up a syrup-dripped thumb. “Me too.”
____
When the plates were mostly crumbs and joy, Sue set her mug down and shifted into business. “Speaking of public delight,” she said gently, “we should talk about a press conference. The city deserves to hear from you—on your terms. We’ll set it up. We’ll help prepare.”
Reed nodded. “We can role-play questions. Practice answers that are true but do not compromise security. Boundaries,” he added, glancing unconsciously at Selara’s gloves, “are a form of kindness.”
Johnny lifted a hand. “Also, PR doesn’t have to sound like a dental appointment. People like her because she’s her. We teach translation, not disguise.”
Sue arched a brow. “That’s the plan. And wardrobe,” she said, turning a shrewd, fond eye toward Selara’s beloved plum. “You cannot be the Girl in Plum forever. We’ll go out later and find options you like.”
Selara’s fork paused midair. “Ward… robe?”
“Clothes,” Sue translated. “More than one. Warm. Pretty. You pick. We pay.” She offered it like she was offering a country.
Selara swallowed. “On Amarune, my clothing was… decided. Robes to cover. For ritual. For safety.” She looked down at her hands. “I studied your fashion. I do not know what I am allowed to wear.”
“You’re allowed to wear what feels like you,” Sue said simply. “We’ll cover what needs covering and keep the joy.”
Johnny bumped his chair back with a grin. “I call translator duty. Emotions-to-English. Also English-to-Emotions. I’m bilingual.”
“You’re shameless,” Ben said.
“I’m efficient,” Johnny countered.
Selara watched them volley like family that had learned how not to bruise each other by accident. It ached and soothed at once.
____
The mall was a small universe beneath a ceiling that believed in fluorescent constellations. Selara moved through it like an astronaut, touching the air, reading the gravity of mannequins’ still lives. Sue steered without hurrying, naming fabrics, teaching prices, translating looks.
“You say when,” she said, hovering a cream cape-coat over Selara’s shoulders. “Too much? Too little? Too not-you?”
Selara faced the mirror and watched the woman within assemble. “I am not used to seeing my arms,” she admitted. “Usually everything is… robe.” She touched the sleeve reverently. “But this feels like… a story I would like to tell.”
____
Johnny lingered a fixed distance away, hands in pockets, eyes bright, making commentary just under helpful. “That one says I can ruin you at chess and you will say thank you,” he observed of a violet trench. “That one says I know Rod Serling personally and he sends me fruit baskets,” of the cream-and-magenta cape. Sue tried not to smile and failed.
There were moments of unease. In a shoe store, Selara stepped into heels and her balance rebelled against the math. She grabbed for the air; Sue’s hand was there, steady, and Selara learned to place toes first, then heel, like a ceremony.
“You okay?” Johnny asked from the threshold, careful not to crowd the lesson.
“Yes,” Selara said. “I have walked across vacuum. I can learn ground.”
“Essay title,” Johnny murmured, and got eyerolled into silence by Sue.
They found silhouettes that made sense: long sleeves, high collars, gloves like grace notes; covered legs in opaque tights that let color run uninterrupted from hip to shoe. Selara reached for amaranth and violet by instinct, then surprised herself by loving powder blue, then surprised herself again by the warm mischief of pink. Once, Sue held up a leather jacket that looked like a dare; Selara slid into it and looked unexpectedly dangerous and unexpectedly pleased.
“Johnny will combust,” Sue said lightly.
Johnny, from behind a rack, said, “Already did. Quietly.”
By the time they turned toward home, Selara’s arms were looped with garment bags—violet and cream and powder blue and red beating like small hearts. At the register, Sue put a hand over Selara’s when she reached hesitantly for a borrowed coin purse.
“This is a gift,” she said. “From me. From us.”
Selara’s throat tightened. “Thalen-vyra,” she whispered. Light given. Light kept.
____
They made her do a fashion show because love is sometimes a silly thing. H.E.R.B.I.E cleared the living room like a stage manager. Franklin built a front-row seat out of cushions and declared himself applause captain. Ben found a whistle and Sue removed it from his mouth before he could discover what noise it made.
“Okay,” Johnny said, taking position beside the record player like an emcee who’d been handed the only job he ever truly wanted. “Ladies and gentlemen and robots, presenting: a girl who can outshine the Schraftt’s sign with just a look—Selara Veyara.”
The first look—
Outfit #1—made the room inhale. The amaranth-violet dress over a crisp white blouse, lavender bow tied at the throat, matching tights, black heels. The color draped her like an oath she had decided to keep. Her eyes, pale-silver, greened at the edges with pleasure.
“Shairen,” she said softly to Sue as she turned. “Beauty.”
“Beauty,” Sue echoed, and clapped first.
Outfit #2 brought the leather jacket into the room like a mood shift: warm patterned blouse beneath, black mini skirt, knee-high boots. She wore it like a secret she’d finally decided to tell.
“Dangerous,” Ben approved.
“Focused,” Reed said, surprising himself.
Johnny put a hand to his heart and pretended to faint. “I’m fine,” he assured the ceiling. “No one panic.”
Outfit #3 was sugar and mischief: pink plaid dress over a white turtleneck, white tights and white boots, a structured handbag, a pink hairband. She tilted her head and the earrings winked like small, delighted triangles.
“I feel… like a bright song,” she admitted, cheeks flushed.
“You look like the chorus in a universe that needs one,” Johnny said, and Sue elbowed him lightly and fondly.
Outfit #4 was cinema: black sleeveless mini with sheer tights, cream coat with fur collar and bow, long white satin gloves, layered pearls, lipstick the color of cherry cordials.
She was a movie and its premiere at once.
“Princess,” Franklin breathed.
“Always,” Sue murmured, and Selara’s smile trembled, just for a second.
Outfit #5 startled the room into laughter and admiration—psychedelic patterned mini, long-sleeved red turtleneck, turquoise tights, shiny red ankle boots, ribbon and ring and a winged sweep of liner.
She did a tiny shimmy at Johnny’s urging and then blushed at her own daring.
“Rod Serling would cast you as a cosmic hitchhiker,” Johnny declared.
“Rod Serling is invited to the living room but not anywhere else,” Sue said, dry, and the room laughed.
____
Outfit #6—red mini over a rainbow-striped turtleneck, sheer black tights, black knee-high boots—felt like sunrise deciding to go dancing.
Outfit #7—the form-fitting purple jumpsuit with darker side panels and gloves
—made H.E.R.B.I.E announce politely that it had updated Selara’s file under gladiator angel.
Outfit #8—the cream bodysuit under a dramatic cream-and-magenta cape—looked like a comet taking a day off.
Outfit #9—the high-necked, long-sleeved amaranth-violet dress with matching tights under a floor-length trench—deepened the room’s color as she stepped.
Outfit #10—powder blue bodysuit with gloves, full-length pants, fur-trimmed coat—made her gleam like winter done right.
Outfit #11—the pink gingham mid-calf dress under a matching coat with enormous sleeves, belted tidy—made
Franklin stand and deliver a bouquet of paper roses he had created an hour earlier, just in case.
____
Between outfits, there were small, necessary catastrophes. In #1’s heels, on her second pass, she misjudged the edge of the rug and pitched forward with a small, startled sound. Johnny moved without thinking—two steps, hands out, catching her by the upper arms before gravity could write its cruel joke. Cloth to cloth. No skin. The contact hit them like heat hits a cold room—everything aware at once.
“Easy,” he said, voice gone low. His breath shortened, then steadied. “I’ve got you.”
Her eyes lifted to his—metallic, a little wild, reflecting him in miniature. For a heartbeat, the room fell away. It was just the person who had been fire and learned softness, and the person who had been destiny and learned choice.
“I am—” she began.
“Perfect,” he said quickly, because he saw shame gathering like weather and wanted to disperse it. “And learning shoes. Which might be sorcery.”
“Not sorcery,” H.E.R.B.I.E said primly from the corner. “Leverage.”
____
They stood there a second longer than politeness allowed and less than longing demanded, then separated with the ruefulness of people who could do hard things on purpose. The room remembered to breathe again. Franklin, oblivious to any tension but excitement’s, stomped his feet to demand more fashion. The show went on.
By the end, Selara stood again in her own beloved plum, hands fidgeting inside gloves with new nerves. The applause rolled around her like a warm tide. Her smile kept its shape; her chest felt tight.
“You okay?” Sue asked gently, stepping close enough to be privacy in public.
“I feel… embraced,” Selara said, then frowned. “And also the opposite. I cannot find the English. On my planet, verash—when light touches you and you are seen and it is good, but also… a lot.”
“Overwhelmed,” Sue supplied. “Exposed. But safe.”
“Yes.” Selara’s lips quirked. “Overwhelmed. Exposed. But safe.”
____
Johnny hovered at the edge of the room, undecided between letting her breathe and being the person who made the air easier to breathe. He chose the second with unpracticed grace, coming to stand a careful arm’s length away.
“Hey,” he said, voice half-stage whisper. “You just turned a living room into Paris and also Mars. That’s a lot of miles. You’re allowed to feel like a balloon.”
“A balloon?” Selara echoed, amused.
“Full of helium and applause,” he clarified. “You don’t gotta float away. We’ll tie a string.”
She laughed, the sound small and miraculous after the wave of feeling. “You make the fear lazy,” she told him.
“That’s the nicest false compliment I’ve ever gotten,” he said. “Walk?” He tipped his head toward the corridor—no roof this time, just a loop past H.E.R.B.I.E’s charging bay and back.
____
They walked. Their hands did not brush. Their shoulders did not accidentally find each other. The air between them felt charged anyway.
“I do not understand Earth customs about… liking,” she admitted as they passed a framed schematic Reed had labeled absolutely not for publication. “On Amarune, the Bond is… total. Before that, there is very little. I want… smaller maps.”
“Smaller maps,” he said, turning the phrase like a coin. “Okay. The short version? You can like a person and not—” he gestured helplessly—“not set the planet on fire. You can tell them by saying it, or by showing up, or by bringing waffles to their door at 7 a.m.”
“I did like the waffles,” she said solemnly.
“See? We’re halfway married,” he teased, then sobered at her look. “Kidding. Bad joke.”
She considered him. “I will ask Sue about… more of this,” she decided, as if signing a treaty. “Customs. Rules.”
“She’s great at rules,” he said. “I’m great at what to do when you break them.”
She stopped at the corner, pendant glinting against her throat. “Johnny.”
“Yeah?”
“Thank you for catching me.”
His grin gentled into something private. “Thank you for letting me.”
____
They returned to the living room where Franklin was inventing a new game that involved H.E.R.B.I.E, a tape measure, and Ben’s patience, and where Reed was already sketching a podium-height for a press conference he pretended not to be excited about. Sue met Selara’s eyes and saw what had been decided: clothes chosen, a press conference accepted, a lesson requested.
“Tomorrow,” Sue said softly, “we’ll practice answers and walk you through the steps. And tonight, if you want—we’ll watch The Twilight Zone together. I’ll make tea. You can tell me which episodes feel like home and which feel like warnings.”
Selara’s smile went bright and certain. “I will sit upside down.”
“Of course you will,” Sue said, laughing.
“H.E.R.B.I.E,” Franklin commanded, tugging the robot into his orbit, “make the toast float again!”
“I will not,” H.E.R.B.I.E said with robotic dignity, and then, after a beat, “unless a responsible adult supervises.”
Ben rolled his eyes and sat down hard enough to make the couch complain. Reed checked the stove twice. Johnny looked at Selara like a man who had decided to be patient even though patience felt like wearing someone else’s coat. And Selara stood in the middle of a room that had seen stranger miracles and thought, with deep, Amaralian certainty, Thalen-vyra—light given, light kept.
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Two- The Arrival
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- Th Binding
____
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 6971
____
The first thing Selara learned about Earth was cold.
Not the jeweled cold of space, clean and absolute, but a living cold that crawled between stones and under doors, that tugged at hems and stung the tips of ears. It came salted with the breath of the sea and laced with a thousand earthborn smells—hot oil from griddles, old brick steeped with rain, wet newsprint and coal dust, perfume and exhaust and roasted chestnuts from a street cart whose coals snapped like small, delighted stars. The city below was a lattice of electric veins, neon signs flooding the winter dusk with magentas and blues, Checker cabs flicking their roof lights like fireflies, steam unrolling from manhole covers as if the ground itself exhaled.
She fell toward it all as a violet comet.
High above Manhattan, Selara dragged a ribbon of Vyra behind her. Her magenta-pink eyes burned neon against the night, cutting through cloud and vapor, reflecting shards of the city’s light back at itself. She had never seen a world like this. Amarune was a cathedral of crystal and ceremony; this place was heartbeat and argument and laughter and a thousand kinds of music at once. Radios murmured from apartments she flashed over—Sinatra easing into “The Way You Look Tonight,” a DJ bragging about a new British band on Ed Sullivan (“Sunday night, don’t miss it!”), a clipped-voiced announcer reading arrests from a sit-in in the South. Somewhere below, a saxophone bent a note so tender it felt like a hand on her cheek.
She banked, slowed, and slipped between two buildings, folding light around herself as she descended. Fire escapes clanged. A newspaper swirled past her like a frightened bird. She landed in an alley washed half-gilt by a bar’s neon sign—an amber martini glass that winked and winked and winked. For a heartbeat the Amaranth princess stood there in her true radiance, a living constellation haloed by steam, and then she exhaled and let the Vyra dim. The glow sank into her bones. Her outline softened. She vanished.
____
Invisibility was not her favorite trick; it felt like lying about the sun. But until she knew what these humans did with wonder, it would have to do.
She moved down the alley in silence, the soles of her boots whispering over grit and damp paper. Somewhere, a radio behind a cracked window argued about the Civil Rights Bill; somewhere else, a television laughed. Selara followed the sound of laughter until the alley spit her onto a street churned by evening: men in brim hats hunched into overcoats, women in wool and gloves and lacquered hair, kids in scarves dragging their mothers toward a candy shop window. Snow had fallen days ago and blackened at the curbs; every car wore a rime of salt. A bus roared by with an ad for *Camel* cigarettes plastered along its side like a dare.
She let the invisibility fall and wrapped the air around herself like a shawl. People blinked, glanced past her, then accepted her in the way a city learns to accept everything. She kept her head down. Her pendant—Queen Aivara’s teardrop—was warm against her skin beneath the suit. Her heart thudded.
A window of televisions arrested her in the next block.
They stood shoulder to shoulder behind the glass like obedient moons. In each, a different world unfolded: a man in a thin tie speaking solemnly, a variety show with a chorus line of women whose smiles never faltered, a black-and-white city street like the one Selara stood on, except cleaner somehow, like a dream of itself. In the center screen, a newsreel cut to footage she knew: four figures in motion, each trail distinct—elastic silver, invisible force, orange stone, and living fire. Titles scrolled: FANTASTIC FOUR AVERT DISASTER ON PIER—NEW THREATS RISE. A corner inset chyron flashed: PUBLIC DEBATE CONTINUES.
Selara moved closer to the glass, breath misting the pane. She watched the fire-man spiral upward, bright as a flare. She knew his file, had watched from the Veyora: Johnny Storm—The Human Torch. Unpredictable, cocky, heat signature extraordinary, heroic trajectory inconsistent but trending upward. The city loved him, feared him, argued about him. He laughed a little too big. He dove when he should have hesitated. His flames looked like freedom to her.
In the reflection of the TV glass, the winter-street people walked by her face and did not see an alien. They saw a question mark, a girl in borrowed shadow. And in the screens, the team moved with battered grace: Reed’s reach precise, Sue’s force shimmering like a mother’s stern hand, Ben’s patience a mountain’s, Johnny’s fire writing diagonals across the sky.
____
They help, she thought, and the thought settled in her chest the way a bead of mercury settles in a groove. They help people. The word people vibrated inside her like Vyra: messy, numerous, necessary.
A newspaper stand—glass-lidded, dented and brave—leaned half a block down. The man behind it wore a cap and a cigarette like punctuation. Selara drifted that way, careful, as radios blazed snippets of a day she did not yet speak. “Freedom riders—” … “Beatles’ plane—Kennedy—Idlewild—” … “Johnson vows—” The newsstand offered a riot of ink and paper: The New York Times, Daily News, Amsterdam News, Jet, Ebony, Life. She knew the black magazine before she touched it. Even in Amarune’s archives the word felt warm.
She lifted the topmost *Ebony*. The man inside the booth looked up. “Gotta pay, doll.”
Selara froze for a fraction and then offered him the only currency she possessed: attention. She tilted the magazine slightly, let her magenta gaze—dimmed now to a deep rose-brown human mimic—lift to his. “Pay,” she repeated carefully. “Yes.”
He eyed her gloves, the way she stood too still. He shrugged, named a number. She opened her empty palm and found only air. Loss pinched at her chest, absurd and sharp. The vendor’s expression softened by a degree. “You can look,” he said. “Just don’t wrinkle it.”
____
She bowed—too formally, but he took it as a joke and snorted—and stepped aside with the magazine. Photographs bloomed under streetlamp glare: a sunlit smile on a stoop, a church hat worn like a crown, a dark-skinned girl with her chin lifted, a winter coat cut like a promise. She turned pages as if touching a living thing. *Shairen,* she thought, the Amaralian word for beauty too cold for this. *Beauty,* she corrected, an Earth word warming in her mouth. Here was a geography she could travel by—the curve of a cheekbone, the set of a mouth that said *mine*, the hair coiled into shapes that defied smallness.
She had thought her “kareth”—the human face and body she would weave on arrival—should be camouflage. Now she understood it would be declaration.
Selara stepped into the shadow between the newsstand and a barber’s neon scissor in the window and closed her eyes. She pulled Vyra in until it hummed in her bones and poured it outward, shaping. Muscles reorganized with a whisper like silk pulling through a ring. Bones adjusted, not breaking but remembering other possible answers to the question *what are you*. The luminous streams of her true hair gathered, cooled, braided into matter. The faceted light of her alien gaze dimmed to a smoldering magenta, but deep inside the pupil, a thread of magenta kept vigil. Skin drew over radiance like dusk over a field; when she opened her eyes, the alley light kissed a smooth deep-brown face, model-sleek and astonished by itself.
She tried a smile. The city gave it back to her in the newsstand glass. She adjusted the hair—large, soft waves, as if she had been combed by an ocean—and selected a coat from nothing, a deep plum with a nipped waist and a hem that swung when she turned. Gloves—yes, always. A pillbox hat—she tilted it, because the women in the magazine did not apologize for taking up space.
This was not theft. It was homage. It was translation. I see you, and I will be seen.
“Hey, you,” the vendor said, a little more kindly now. “You gonna read all night?”
She closed the magazine. “Thank you,” she said, careful as a first step. The consonants bruised her tongue; the vowels warmed. She meant more than the words carried. He waved her off with a benevolent grunt and turned to sell a racing form to a man who smelled like winter whiskey and good intentions.
____
A roar lifted from farther downtown, not traffic—not exactly. The neon along Broadway shivered, then steadied. The televisions in the window snapped from commercials into urgency: Times Square—unidentified assailant—stay back—police establishing perimeter— A shock of movement in the central screen showed a thing shuddering up from the intersection of Seventh and Forty-Third as if the street itself had learned to hate its leash. It was as if ironwork had been given appetite: a spined, jointed mass cobbled from ripped manhole lids, scaffolding, valve wheels, and a city’s worth of bad ideas. Where it touched streetlight, sparks fanned like angry bees. It howled a sound nobody had taught it and took a swing at a billboard for Bond Men’s Clothes, shearing the corner and sending letters falling like loose teeth.
Selara’s head tipped. The world around her sharpened, the way it always did when pain might bloom. She half-stepped toward the screen, then past it, then into the street, as if a thread had been tied to her sternum and now pulled and pulled.
Somewhere over the rooftops, a ribbon of fire flared.
She broke into a run.
____
The city accommodated her the way it accommodates destiny: a cab swerved with a honk and a curse; a policeman lifted a baffled hand and then dropped it; a boy with a toy ray gun said “golly” and forgot to breathe. Selara reached the seam where Times Square begins to warp the air, where light becomes a substance and the world’s advertisements lay hands on your eyes, and she heard the first scream—pure, astonished terror—and then another, the clatter of a vendor’s cart scattering pretzels and paper boats.
The thing in the street had learned a second skill: it had found a bus.
It lifted the vehicle the way a child lifts a beetle, curious and careless, and the bus made a sound that was almost human. Passengers inside flailed and pinned like moths. The creature seemed to decide the bus should be elsewhere and flung it—not to kill, exactly, but not to spare. It arced toward a cluster of onlookers frozen by the complicated math of fear and awe.
Selara didn’t speak. She didn’t think. She made a wall.
Vyra bloomed from nowhere, a transparent curve brightening from faint rose to near-white, and the bus hit it like a drum. The shield sprang backward, the sound slapping the buildings and returning as a chorus of glass. The bus skidded down the field of force, turned, slid like a seal, and came to rest upright—askew, dazed, but alive. One woman inside slapped her palm to the window and sobbed with relief.
“Move,” Selara said, her English assembling itself from scavenged edges. The word came soft but sure. “Run.”
They ran, as people do when given permission to live.
The construct—call it a beast—twisted toward her, iron spines flexing, face reminiscent of a riveted anglerfish. Selara let the shield flower wider to push civilians away and then stepped through it, hand raised. Her magenta thread flared bright within her crafted bright pale green eyes, and the creature shied as if it had glimpsed the true shape of the thing that faced it. She didn’t want to break it. She wanted to ask it who built you, and why do you hurt. But a streetlight ripped from its root shouted the answer in sparks: not a child; a weapon.
“Hey!” a voice cut the cold. “Try someone who hits back!”
____
Fire scissored the night. The Human Torch hit like a line drawn by a daredevil—down one side of the creature, a white-hot stroke that left molten commas. He pulled up smartly and hovered, fire wrapping him like a flag. “You folks good?” he yelled toward the newly upright bus, grin crooked, voice edged with breathlessness and adrenaline. Cheers answered. He turned and saw her.
They stopped—both of them, absurdly—as if someone had pulled a film-frame taut.
Johnny Storm’s face read as young even wrapped in fire—those shoulders that hadn’t learned to be humble yet, that mouth that found the joke faster than the rule. But his eyes, blue as gas flame, struck hers like a thrown match finds tinder. Between them stretched all the oxygen a city could spare. She felt the danger flare—the old fear lodging in her ribs: the Bond. Skin-to-skin could write forever. She jerked her gaze away first, not because she was weak, but because she knew how strong she was.
“Okay, mystery girl,” he said, voice softer now that sound had shrunk to the space between two hearts. “We’ll talk after. Promise.”
He dove before she could warn him that promises were contracts in some languages.
“Spidey arms! A little help!” Johnny shouted upward, and an elastic reach snapped into the frame of her vision—Reed Richards, all clean geometry, flinging himself like a perfect problem set. A massive hand the color of quarried dawn—Ben Grimm—rose beneath Johnny as a launchpad. And then a tremble in the light—Sue Storm—laid an invisible lane along the creature’s flank. The team moved like a chord: reed, string, drum, and fire.
The beast countered with raw, ignorant strength, batting at the invisible plane, wrenching its shoulders where slag crusted. It scooped a handful of street—a real handful: asphalt, pipe, electric line—and flung the mess into the crowd. Selara’s shield snapped up again, wide as a curtain, catching debris and turning it into harmless rain. The effort ate at her, a draining sweetness she knew too well. The city roared, not all fear—some delight, too, because New York loved a show even when the show tried to kill it.
“Containment,” Reed called, voice carrying the way a teacher’s voice carries down a hall. “We need containment.”
“I got it,” Sue said, and the world grew heavier. Air thickened and took a shape, an invisible box cinching in. The beast shoved and met a wall it couldn’t see and—predictably—went for the error in the equation: Sue herself. Its plated arm scissored, the angle ugly and certain.
____
Selara moved without moving.
A Vyra spear found her palm like a memory; she stepped into the path of the arm and slid the spear between plates with a surgeon’s disbelief in death. The limb jammed, whined, then failed into harmless shudder. The creature turned on her—no soul in that motion, just instruction—so she gave it a different problem: she opened a doorway the size of a manhole directly in front of the thing’s face.
It looked into a slice of deep space and hesitated, as anything born of a city must when confronted with the void that is not a city.
“Now, Ben!” she called, and the big man didn’t ask how she knew his name. He cannoned forward with a grunt like a church door and smashed through the hinge of the creature’s neck while Johnny welded along the seam. Reed’s arms wrapped, Sue’s pressure held, Selara’s portal winked shut, and the thing’s angry geometry lost its math. It went down with a sound like a factory closing.
Silence broke, then re-knit itself as applause.
The screen at One Times Square—giant and self-satisfied—caught the last moment and replayed it in a loop she could feel in her teeth. Her human face—new, still being invented—flashed there between a Schrafft’s ad and a news bulletin about the Beatles’ plane landing at Idlewild. She did not expect the feeling that rose in her: not pride, exactly, and not fear. Recognition. The city saw her, and the seeing made her real.
Johnny cut his fire and dropped onto the newly broken street with the careful step of a man whose body cooled fast and liked warmth better. He walked toward her with his hands open, public-relations smile deployed, but something uncertain in the tilt of his head—as if approaching a deer that has learned hunters.
____
“Hey,” he said, close now. Up close his jaw carried a shadow of stubble, his hair burnished at the edges with heat. “That was—uh—what’s the word—insane.” He laughed, then swallowed the laugh, like he had learned recently to be gentler. “I mean, good insane. I’m Johnny.”
Names were spells here. She needed one that meant *I am here, but I am also more*. “Selara,” she said. The name felt like a bell rung in the wrong temple. She added, searching, “From far.”
“Yeah?” The smile tipped wry. “I kinda got that.” He lowered his voice. “You okay?”
Okay. A word like a glove with too many fingers. She could not answer it as a person and remain safe. She did the other thing her people did when words curved away: she reached. Just the edges of his mind, a brush of surface—language, this city’s grammar, its slang—the "dig" and "square", the way you good" could carry a dozen meanings and a dozen kinds of love. She had meant to take only that, but Johnny Storm’s head was a constellation of bright hurts and old sun. She saw a hospital room as fast as a spark runs along a fuse, a woman’s hand loosening on white sheets, a boy swallowing a grief that looked like rage because he had not learned yet that there were other flavors.
Selara recoiled, as if burned.
____
Johnny flinched, breath catching. His eyes glassed, blue blurring at the edges, shock and anger igniting together. He took a step back. “Hey—what did you—how—don’t—”
She raised both hands, palms out, gloves shining. “I—I am sorry. We use mind—” She groped for the word and found a formal one first. “Telepathy, for learning, for language. Not hurt. I do not wish to hurt.” She shook her head hard enough that the pillbox hat threatened to leap. “No touch. Safer. Where I am from, skin means… forever.” The last word broke like a knuckle on a door.
He stared at her, chest lifting and falling fast. Under the showman’s grin she saw a boy who hated being seen without choosing it. For a heartbeat, she thought she had ruined everything. Then the surface of him softened, not because he forgave easily but because he understood badly-kept promises too well.
“Okay,” he said, the word different now—flexible, making room. “Okay. Just—ask. Next time.” He dragged a hand through hair that still steamed faintly in the cold and tried on a small smile that didn’t quite fit yet. “And—thanks. For the help. Reed’s gonna want to—uh—talk to you. He does that. A lot.”
____
Reed was already striding toward them, long as a question mark, eyes lit with interest and a dozen hypotheses queued behind his pupils. Sue angled across the asphalt like a solution. Ben held a corner, the way big men do when they’re kind, scanning for trouble that hasn’t learned their names yet.
Selara’s pulse picked up. Her pendant warmed against the base of her throat until it felt like a living thing, a reminder. You are made of vows, it seemed to say. Do not make new ones by accident.
On the giant screen, the loop caught again: a girl in plum with gloves raised, a wall of light catching a bus, a city believing for one second in miracles without arguing the cost. The crowd, close now, pressed in—not all suspicion, not all joy. She caught fragments—“who is she?”—“did you see her eyes?”—“golly”—“beautiful”—“alien”—“keep back.”
She had learned something crucial in her first hour here: America in 1964 was building a future in one hand and swinging at ghosts with the other. She had no wish to be the reason anyone bled.
“I go now,” she said, voice soft but final. She couldn’t say home because she had burned that bridge with her own power. She couldn’t say with you, not yet, because destiny liked to etch itself in systems she didn’t trust. “Thank you,” she added, because it mattered to say thank you in the language of a place that might be hers.
Johnny took a step, instinctively, like a moth remembering heat. “Wait—just tell me—”
Selara’s eyes met his, and the magenta inside them flared for a second, quickly transitioning to a pale, silvery-gray with the faintest green undercurrent. He stopped. She saw the way his mouth opened and closed, as if he could taste the word forever and wasn’t sure whether to love it or spit it out. She did the kind thing. She turned and sprang upward, air becoming a slope only she could see, Vyra gathering around her into an invisible ribbon.
____
“Flame on,” Johnny said, very softly, and fire caught him like an old friend. He lifted after her.
They climbed the face of a building like two different ideas of light. Selara darted around a water tower, skimmed a laundry line that clacked its clothespins like grandma’s knitting needles, hopped the lip of a roof and landed beside a tar bucket and a forgotten ladder. The city spread behind her in constellations of its own invention, every window a confession, every siren a psalm. She folded her hands to keep from touching her own face to make sure it still existed.
Johnny landed a heartbeat later, fire dimming down his arms like sleeves. He kept his distance, hands visible, a boy who had finally learned—recently, painfully—that some creatures spook easy.
“Look,” he said, breath making ghosts in the cold, “I know the thing we fought wasn’t—normal—, but neither are you. And that’s not… bad news.” He squinted, trying for gentle, and found it. “You saved people. You saved me, probably. Reed’s gonna have a thousand questions. Ben’s gonna ask if you eat. Sue—” he smiled, unguarded now—“Sue’s gonna make you tea. It’s a thing.”
Tea. She hadn’t learned tea yet. She nodded anyway.
He risked a step closer. “Just—before they get here—can I ask you one?” His voice lost all the flame-boy swagger and went straight to the place that had flinched when she’d brushed his mind. “Who are you?”
“I am Selara Veyara,” she said, discovering that names gathered gravity when spoken to people who might keep them safe. “From Amarune. From very far.” The English curled and uncurled at the edges of her cadences, but the meaning came true. “I saw you… on the Veyora. On—” She reached for the earthword. “Television.” She tipped her chin toward the city. “You help.”
He breathed out a laugh that had been waiting for a home. “We try.”
She turned the word we over in her mouth like a coin, felt how it could buy a future if you were careful with it, how it could cost one if you weren’t.
Sirens braided the air below. Reed’s voice, thinner now with distance, called Johnny’s name. Sue’s field lifted a ladder softly against the parapet, a careful invitation. Ben shouted something about pretzels. Selara felt the city change temperature around the choice.
She wanted—oh, she wanted—to say yes. To stand in a kitchen with light on linoleum and learn that tea could be sweet or not, that people talked with their hands when they were happy, that families could be assembled on purpose. But fate, which had already tried to carve itself into her bones once tonight, still had its hands out. And her father’s reach, across light-years, felt longer than she preferred to admit.
____
“I cannot,” she said, and the words hurt both of them. “Not now. Not until I know—” She didn’t finish. The language didn’t have the right shelf for what she meant: until I know whether being near you puts you in a story that ends with me losing you or you losing yourself. She tried again. “Danger comes. Always. I will not give it your address.”
Johnny looked at her a long heartbeat. He had no idea yet who she was beyond a name and a kind of light. But he knew something about danger that refused to write return addresses. “Okay,” he said, and meant I hate it but I respect it. “Then—can I at least—” He hesitated, the boy and the man arguing. “What do I call you? When I’m… bragging? To myself?”
Her mouth tugged, the ghost of a grin. “Call me Selara.” She touched the pendant through her coat, found her mother there. “For now.”
“Selara,” he repeated, trying it on, finding that it fit. He nodded once, as if they had agreed on something more binding than permission.
The ladder reached the roofline, Sue peering over with eyes that could turn mother or storm in a blink, Reed behind her already forming an apology for the questions he could not help but ask. Ben held a paper bag lateral to his face like a ridiculous olive branch. The city breathed.
Selara stepped back.
“Tell Reed,” she said softly, “containment was good. Angle of vector—” She caught herself and simplified, smiling with half her mouth. “Nice box.” She dipped her head to Sue. “Your lane. Clean.” To Ben: “Strong like home.” And to Johnny, her voice falling to a private register that somehow carried more heat than his fire, “You burn beautifully and do not know it. Be careful with your heart.”
Something like a blush ran through flame. “Yeah,” he said, suddenly nineteen in the worst and best way. “You too.”
____
Selara turned without turning—bent light, took three steps and was gone, a suggestion where a girl had been. She rose into the night, skimmed the radio chatter like a swallow trying on languages mid-flight. Somewhere, a DJ promised the Beatles would change everything. Somewhere else, a preacher promised change would require more than songs. She threaded herself between those promises and let the city hold her secret for one more hour.
Behind her, on a rooftop on a winter night in 1964, a boy made of fire watched the sky and felt, for the first time in a long time, a new kind of warm.
---
He watched the sky until the fire inside him cooled to something habitable. Then voices climbed the ladder—Reed first, long and earnest; Sue behind him, breath misting in white curls; Ben last, steady as a stoop.
“Report,” Reed said, even as his eyes searched the dark the way astronomers search a patch of sky they’re sure contains a planet. “Johnny?”
Johnny kept looking where she’d gone. “She called herself Selara. From—way out. Opened a portal like it was a door she’d mislaid. Shields, constructs, the whole nine. Smart. Fast.”
“Alien,” Ben said, not unfriendly; just a man refusing to put frosting on a fact. His orange brow furrowed. “And a kid.”
“Not a kid,” Sue said gently. She tucked a loose curl behind her ear, studying the space as if Selara might be hiding inside the cold itself. “Young. But deliberate.”
Reed paced a small loop, the way a mind paces. “She didn’t disintegrate the automaton. She impeded it at joints and power seams—nonlethal intent toward a nonliving system, but still… ethical bias toward preservation.” He pushed a breath through pursed lips. “Language acquisition on contact—telepathic assimilation, likely. A cloaking matrix. Force constructs with visible spectrum emission—Violet to near-UV. Thermal damping around Johnny’s proximity—did you notice? Your flame ran cleaner, hotter.”
Johnny looked down at his hands, flexed them. “Felt like—like a tailwind.”
“Good,” Ben muttered, almost to himself. “We like good.”
“And her eyes,” Sue added. “Did you see them?” She didn’t mean the alien blaze Johnny had glimpsed downtown; she meant the eyes Selara had chosen for this city: a pale, silvery-gray with the faintest green undercurrent, metallic and luminous, framed by liner that made their edges blade-sharp. On her warm skin they looked otherworldly and right at once, like coins struck from a strange mint and still legal tender. “Not human-typical,” Sue said softly. “Beautiful.”
Ben grunted. “Beautiful don’t mean safe.”
“No,” Sue said, meeting his gaze. “But it isn’t the opposite either.”
Reed clasped his hands, made himself stop pacing. “Hypothesis: energy signature consistent with a coherent, planet-scaled field—she called it Vyra. If she’s a conductor more than a generator, it would explain the ease of her constructs and her durability in vacuum. And if that’s so, the… implications are significant.”
“English, Stretch.”
Reed smiled ruefully. “She’s plugged into something bigger than herself.”
Johnny let out a laugh that had too much ache along the edges. “Join the club.”
Sue touched his sleeve. “You all right?”
He hesitated, then went honest. “She reached. Into my head. Didn’t mean to, she said. I believe her.” He shrugged, not casual at all. “Still felt like walking into a room expecting air and finding ocean.”
Sue squeezed once, steady. “That’s not nothing.”
“No,” he said, and looked back up at the sky. “It isn’t.”
Ben tipped the paper bag. “Pretzel?”
Johnny blinked. “You brought pretzels to a robot fight?”
Ben’s mouth twitched. “I ain’t an animal.”
They ate anyway—shared warmth and salt on a roof while sirens sorted themselves below. Reed outlined a plan to triangulate residual energy. Sue said, “Or we could invite instead of trap,” and the team hung in that old, workable disagreement where everyone was a little bit right. Johnny finished his pretzel and kept his gaze on where the dark had swallowed a girl who had told him to be careful with his heart.
____
By morning, ink had made opinions.
Daily News ran MYSTERY GIRL SAVES TIMES SQUARE over a photo that caught Selara mid-turn, coat flaring like the petal of a rare flower. The New York Times used UNIDENTIFIED SUPER BEING AIDS FANTASTIC FOUR; SOURCES DEBATE ORIGIN and surrendered half a column to a physicist who did not know what to do with the word beautiful. Amsterdam News led with SHE LOOKS LIKE US—WHO IS SHE?, framing the same image as possibility instead of problem. On a radio in Harlem, a preacher asked whether angels needed passports. Downtown, a bartender taped the Jet cover to his mirror and told anyone who’d listen that the city had a new kind of star.
At the Baxter Building, Reed set three detectors humming like thoughtful bees. Sue kept coffee cycling and the phone lines civil. Ben went for bagels and returned with a paper sack the size of a child and one rumor: a girl in plum had been seen near Forty-Eighth buying tea like she’d never bought anything.
Johnny pretended to read the papers and actually paced. He had slept two hours because flame sleeps less and because his head did not like being borrowed. Every time he closed his eyes he saw hers—those metallic, sea-glass irises, reflective and light-struck. He’d never seen eyes like that on a human face, and maybe that was the point: the face might be a costume, but the gaze told a truth.
“How do we find her without making her feel hunted?” Sue asked.
“Beacon,” Reed said. “If Vyra interacts with terrestrial fields, we might… hm.” He trailed, already scribbling.
Ben bit a bagel, shrugged. “Want my vote? We let Johnny wander. He’s like a magnet for trouble and girls with good sense.”
Johnny pointed. “I resent the order.” He grabbed a coat. “But not the conclusion.”
“Keep your comm on,” Sue called, already smiling because she knew he would and pretending she didn’t see him rolling his eyes even as he slid the device into his pocket.
He took the elevator down and the day took him.
____
Selara discovered that, for a planet that sang in crystal, Earth sang in paper.
She spent the early morning walking and reading without knowing the name for either pleasure. Newsprint left a ghost on her gloves; Life magazine felt like a window held in the lap. She watched a couple argue kindly in a diner booth and lean across a checkered tablecloth to end the fight with laughter. She learned coins. She learned that a hot pretzel pulled from a cart in February tasted like forgiveness, especially when dipped in mustard that made your eyes water and your mouth understand mercy. Vyra hummed faintly through flour and salt and human hands; she didn’t need it to sustain her, but the echo delighted her the way a song you don’t know can still be your favorite.
She stood in the doorway of a record store until the clerk shooed her in or out and chose in. A Marvin Gaye cut poured low from the turntable. The clerk—cat-eyed liner, beehive tall enough to be ambitious—tapped a nail on the counter. “You looking for something, sweetheart, or you picking by cover art like the rest of us?”
“I am… learning,” Selara said. The clerk’s gaze went approving at the coat, the gloves, the poise.
“Then you start here.” She dropped the needle on “You’re a Wonderful One,” and Selara felt the record bite into the air and spin filament into silk. Love, sung as a simple machine: input, output, voltage across a human heart. She filed it beside Shairen and Beauty under the private heading Reasons to Stay.
____
Outside, the city lifted its face to a scrap of pale sun, and Selara felt Vyra everywhere—weak in brick, bright in pigeons, resilient and stubborn in street trees caged by iron. Humans carried it the loudest: harried and brave, luminous at the edges, complicated as galaxies. She could have walked forever in that music. But a shadow moved across her mind the way a cloud moves across a field: her father’s search would not be slow. Freedom here required strategy, not just distance.
And then she felt him.
It wasn’t telepathy, not in the invasive Amaralian sense. It was recognition, like a tuning fork finding its note. A warmth threading the cool day. Selara lifted her head like an animal catching scent and turned just as Johnny Storm stepped around the corner with his hands tucked into his pockets and his mouth set in a hope he didn’t dare name.
“Hi,” he said, stopping as if any closer would break a rule they hadn’t invented yet. His hair was tamed by cold, his grin by sincerity. “Couldn’t decide between ‘fancy meeting you here’ and ‘do you always save buses on Tuesdays.’”
Her lips curved. “You make… joke.”
“I do that,” he admitted. “It’s either jokes or fire, and I figured jokes get me yelled at less in public.”
They stood a second inside the small weather of this new shyness, two powerful beings acting like kids on a sidewalk because that’s what the moment asked for.
“I brought tea intel,” he said, producing a small paper sack as if it were evidence. “Sue says start with lemon if you’re wary. Honey if you’re brave. Milk if you want to start a fight in this city.”
She took the bag reverently, as if he had handed her a custom. The gloves brushed his fingers—cloth to cloth, safe—and something like a current flickered up both their arms anyway. He saw her eyes then, close: the pale, silvery-gray with that ghost-green undertone, reflective enough to carry his shape in miniature. Framed by her liner, they looked like minted moons. He forgot his next line.
“You are kind,” she said, and meant the larger thing. “I am sorry for the… mind.” She touched her temple lightly. “We should ask next time.”
“We should,” he said. “And we will.” He stuck a hand out, remembered skin, turned it into a small, theatrical bow instead. She laughed—quick, surprised, delighted—and he looked mortally pleased that he’d caused that sound.
“Can you walk?” he asked. “I promise not to lure you into a lab. If Reed wants to talk, I’ll make him come to the sidewalk like a civilized scientist.”
“I can walk,” she said. “I can run. I can… fly.”
“Brag,” he said, grinning. Then, softer: “Walk with me?”
____
They moved softly into the churn of traffic and talk, pedestrians parting and reforming around them. Johnny pointed out a shoeshine stand like it mattered, because it did; he translated a taxi driver’s entire philosophy from three honks and a gesture; he showed her the spot in Times Square where he’d almost blown a billboard once and where Reed had made him fix it letter by letter as a lesson. She listened with a concentration most people reserve for maps out of forests.
“You don’t… need to eat, do you?” he ventured, as they passed a deli window humid with soups.
“Need? No.” She tilted her head. “Want? Sometimes.” Her mouth turned in the suggestion of mischief. “Pretzels want me.”
“I get that,” he said. “Pretzels want everyone.”
They paused at a cart anyway. He bought two and pretended it wasn’t his last dollar until tomorrow. She watched his hands—without telepathy this time—and mirrored how he salted and tore and laughed when mustard fought back. The vendor nodded at her coat, raised his brows at her eyes, then decided both belonged to the city now and looked away.
____
“Why New York?” Johnny asked, after a while. “Of all the dots on all the maps?”
She considered and chose accuracy. “Because I watched you. On Veyora. On… television.” She tasted the word again; it was becoming hers. “You help. And you make big mistakes but then you fix them. Your city forgives you by… arguing. It felt like a place with room.” She gestured, encompassing honk and steam and a man arguing earnestly with a pigeon. “I like places with room.”
He didn’t even try to hide how the words hit him. “Yeah,” he said, voice low. “Me too.”
They walked one more block inside that truth. Then the air changed the way it changes before a storm no one can see. A faint, distant pressure touched the back of Selara’s neck—familiar, precise as a signature scrawled through space. She felt Vyra shiver in the city’s bones.
Her father was looking.
____
Selara stopped mid-step, head lifting toward a point that wasn’t on any skyline. Johnny’s expression sharpened without asking. “What is it?”
“Search,” she said. “From far. Not here yet. But close like… whisper through keyhole.” She put a palm to the brick of the nearest building and bled a little Vyra down its spine, listening to the planet listen back. “He uses… cultural ways. My people can track by custom. By the shape of what you do.” She looked at the tea bag in her hand and almost laughed. “Tea tells him nothing,” she said. “That is good.”
Johnny’s jaw set. “You don’t have to run alone.”
She looked at him, at the way fire and promise cohabited behind his eyes. “I do not want to run at all.” Her voice gentled, almost apology. “But I will not make you target.”
He thought and then did a brave thing: he didn’t argue. “Then you set the rules,” he said. “Tell me what’s safe and I’ll fit inside it. For now.”
“For now,” she echoed. The words sounded like a bridge being built where people could meet in the middle and not drown.
A gust brought snow smell and the slow clang of a freight elevator somewhere in the bowels of a building. The city did what cities do: kept going, regardless. Selara tucked the tea into her coat, laid her gloved hand briefly over her pendant as if assuring the memory inside it that she was being careful, then tipped her face up to Johnny’s with that small, sideways smile that had already started to move furniture inside him.
“Walk me to a roof?” she asked. “It is easier to say goodbye to a city from the top.”
“I never say goodbye to this place,” he said, but nodded. “C’mon. I know a ladder that squeaks like an old man but doesn’t break.”
They climbed. On the tar above the street, wind spoke a cleaner language. Selara turned to the edge and watched Manhattan make its morning promises—delivery trucks like patient whales, steam like prayers, a sky the color of tin warming toward afternoon. She stood with her hands on the parapet and breathed in all the small Vyra the planet made without knowing the word for itself.
Johnny hung back, two paces, hands loose at his sides. “We’ll see you again, right?”
She could not promise, but she could choose honesty that felt like a promise’s seed. “If the city makes room,” she said, “I will step into it.”
He smiled, crooked and too bright. “We’ll save you a chair.”
She gathered light the way a seamstress gathers cloth and stepped backward into it. For a blink the eyes she’d chosen for Earth—the silvery-gray shot with green—caught the sun and flashed metal. “Be careful with your fire,” she said.
“You be careful with your forever,” he answered.
____
Then she was gone, the air smoothing shut as if it had always been flat.
Johnny stood a long time staring at nothing, the pretzel bag turning into a joke in his cooling hands. Below, the morning editions shouted their invitations to panic or hope. He waited for the panic and chose hope.
Far across the rooftops, on another building whose name did not matter, Selara sat with her knees drawn up and unwrapped the paper sack. A tea bag, lemon-scented. A note, handwritten in a blocky patience that surprised her: ASK NEXT TIME. STILL GLAD YOU DID. —J. She smiled into the winter light and let the lemon steam her face. The Vyra in the water was small and domestic and perfect.
She didn’t need any of it to live. She wanted all of it to stay.
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Three- The Crossing
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- Th Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
____
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 5470
____
Time did not pass in New York so much as braid itself—steam with sirens, headlines with weather, arguments with music. February peeled forward day by day, and the city tested the new story it had been given the way it tested every miracle: a little applause, a little suspicion, a lot of noise.
They began calling her the girl in plum.
Sometimes Lightshield. Once, in a tabloid with a taste for drama, The Violet Valkyrie. A columnist at the Amsterdam News tried Comet, then abandoned it when he noticed she rarely arrived in flame or flash but in the sudden fact of safety—an invisible wall appearing between falling masonry and astonished shoppers; a manhole turned to a soft mouth that swallowed a live wire before it could teach a child grief; a bus driver whose steering locked and found his hands guided by a force that turned his panic into a neat curb kiss. She drifted at the edges of fights the Fantastic Four couldn’t avoid and turned catastrophe into inconvenience, then inconvenience into nothing at all.
She did not stay for interviews. She didn’t pose for photographs. Cameras caught her anyway—the coat swinging like an argument won, the gloves lifted as if conducting a chorus only she could hear, those pale, silvery-gray eyes with the thin green undertone reflecting a thousand lights. The papers printed them large and the radios argued small. Mystery Girl: Threat or Ally? Is She From Here? Should We Care?
____
Johnny didn’t argue with radios. He went looking.
He found her three times in two weeks and pretended it was accident. Once on a roof in the garment district, where she had just guided a toppled water tower back into its cradle as neatly as a midwife settles a head. Once on the Queensboro Bridge, where she stood in the service lane with both hands raised, coaxing heat and pressure from a truck’s fissured tank while he hovered two yards away, unwilling to flame too close in case his fire turned problem into funeral. Once in Washington Square, late, when students played folk songs and she held a cup of coffee she didn’t need to drink, face lifted to steam as if it were prayer.
Each time she stayed a little longer when he asked questions and deflected a little gentler when he pressed. She did not tell him where she slept. He did not tell her that not knowing made sleep a rumor at best.
The Baxter Building collected these sightings like a patient teacher collects partial homework. Reed chalked her energy signature on lab glass until the numbers began to look like music. Ben grunted ethics and cooked bacon. Sue said, “Be kind,” and meant it the way other people mean laws.
The fourth time, the fight found them both without prelude.
A thing had crawled out from under Grand Central’s ribs—more stubborn than the Times Square automaton and more cunning in the way that bad lessons teach. Its hide looked like hungover steel; its mouth had the bite radius of a bad dream. It took an early interest in the ceiling, which meant the sky, which meant planes, which meant grief in headlines. It roared, and the station threw its echo back in a voice the size of a cathedral.
“Contain her!” a cop shouted, pointing at nothing in particular, and Selara had the distracted thought that the city still had not decided which her it meant in moments like this.
“On your six!” Johnny yelled, and here was the new choreography: his arc of white-hot as warning, her wall blooming without visible hinge. The creature’s shoulder hit her shield and skated sideways with a teeth-on-tin screech. Commuters went from statues to running people again. A child waved at her with both hands as if she were a parade; his mother dragged him backward, torn between gratitude and the sensible desire to get him out of the way of death.
____
Reed and Sue were two minutes out. Ben was parking a cab illegally and promising to return it cleaner than it had begun. Selara took the first minute alone.
“Friend,” she called, knowing it was a lie but liking how the word changed her voice. “Slow.”
It lunged.
She didn’t step back. She bent space an inch and watched it miss her by an inch and a lifetime. It hit a pillar and learned humility briefly. Johnny cut a line of heat across the joint of its jaw and learned, again, that some metals enjoyed being welded as much as they enjoyed breaking.
“Up and left,” Selara said, and he was; at this point the word we had become something neither of them needed to name to obey. He trusted the direction written into her tone, and she trusted his speed. Trust was a dangerous Verb in her people’s history—it summoned oaths when you whispered it; it braided souls if you said it wrong. Here it felt like a street corner currency: useful, negotiable, valuable even when counterfeit.
____
Reed arrived and distributed instructions like salve. Sue arrived and made walls that held; then she made a floor where no floor had been, tilted it, and invited the creature to consider gravity as a destination. Ben arrived last, leapt from the cab with an apology to the upholstery, and reminded the thing that men made of orange rock had more patience than any train schedule.
When it was done—when police closed their circles and gave the public an exit through which to pour its adrenaline and live—the team fell into a loose diamond in the center of the concourse, breath making white flags in the cold draughts of the station. Selara stood at one point of the diamond, gloved hands tucked into her coat like a student hiding a superior test score. She had loved the ceiling—the constellations drawn there in pale teal and gold—and she had saved it unscorched on purpose.
“Nice moves,” Johnny said, grinning under the ash streaks. “You keep returning my life to me.”
“Do not lose it,” she said, deadpan, and the corner of his mouth tipped; she was learning jokes at the same rate she was learning English tenses, and sometimes they braided perfectly.
“That projection,” Reed said. “The lateral displacement of—”
____
“Reed,” Sue said, which was married shorthand for you are beautiful when you are a chalkboard but perhaps begin with hello.
“Hello,” Reed said, blinking, and then, sincere, “thank you.”
“You are welcome,” Selara answered, because courtesy in any language soothed the air where fear had rattled.
They left by the Vanderbilt Avenue doors into a winter afternoon the color of dirty silver. Photographers popped at the edges like impatient stars. The crowd didn’t entirely cheer and didn’t entirely boo. New York, as ever, set its jaw and watched.
“Would you—” Reed began.
“No,” Selara said gently.
“Tea?” Sue tried, smiling, because she had learned that sometimes you could bait a trap with kindness and catch a friend.
“Later,” Selara answered, because she had learned that deferral was not refusal and that Sue could hear the difference.
They separated there, like magnets that agree to live in the same drawer without sticking, and went about the business of being necessary. Selara took to the high places again. Johnny took to the places where action smelled imminent. Reed took notes. Ben took a bus, because he liked paying exact change and saying “afternoon” to strangers who wanted to smile at something they could name. Sue took a breath, then another, then went to find the girl in plum whose eyes reflected green when she looked at the sky like a question.
____
She found her on a tenement roof off Second Avenue, sitting on a tar patch with cross-legged certainty, pendant in her gloved palm. A laundry line ran from a metal hook to an old pipe; shirts moved in the wind like tired ghosts. The air smelled faintly of cabbage and steam heat and half a dozen dinners that had begun in love and would end in dishes.
“Company?” Sue asked softly.
Selara looked up, startled only because she had been deep in the kind of listening that is more prayer than surveillance. Seeing Sue, she relaxed that spare inch she hadn’t realized she was holding between her ribs and spine.
“You move quiet,” she said. “Not like fire.”
Sue laughed. “That’s the nicest thing anyone’s said about me in weeks.”
She crossed the roof and folded herself down beside Selara, careful not to crowd, careful not to be formal. The city shouldered on below them; a siren learned restraint on a cross street and became a rumor instead of an event.
“The thing in the station,” Sue said after a while. “You pushed your wall between it and the ceiling.”
“Yes,” Selara answered, as if they were discussing knitting. “There were stars painted. I did not want to shame them.”
Sue turned her head, studying the clean line of Selara’s profile. The eye color—pale and silvery, green-edged—caught even a flat winter sky and made its own light. “How old are you?”
“Nineteen by your calendars,” Selara said. “Young, where I am from. Young and not. Time is… long there.”
“Do you have—” Sue began, then stopped. She had learned not to assume worlds matched. “Families?”
“Yes,” Selara said. “Bonds. Bonds stronger than… anything else. If we touch with skin—” She broke off, not because she was embarrassed but because the word forever sometimes scraped going out.
Sue nodded slowly. “You’re afraid of that.”
“I am afraid of ending someone,” Selara said simply. “And I am afraid of being ended. I ran because ending was the only gift I was meant to give.”
Silence settled between them, not uncomfortable. Wind worried the shirts on the line. Steam rose from a vent two buildings over and unfurled like a banner no one had meant to hang.
____
Sue could have given the speech she had practiced in her head—the one about safety and science, about houses that had held stranger weather than this, about the way the Baxter Building took in strays with supernovas for hearts and managed not to burn down on Tuesdays. Instead, she said, “I have a child.”
Selara’s head turned too fast, a sparrow-flinch. “A child?”
“A son,” Sue said, and the shape of the word changed her mouth; love set the musculature of it. “Franklin. He’s seven.”
Selara’s breath caught in the smallest involuntary sound. She hadn’t meant to reach; she had promised herself after Johnny. But the word child cracked something primal and the Vyra in her ran toward it the way water finds a low place. She brushed Sue’s mind without meaning to, and suddenly the roof was holding two images at once: the laundry line; a sleeping boy with a cowlick that defied reason; the late-night fluorescent glow of a kitchen where a woman planned rubber-band routes to school and therapy and the grocery store around the schedules of villainy and science and grief; tiny socks in a drawer; a nightmare undone by a hand on a hot forehead; Mama, breathed like a spell.
Selara gasped and flinched back, hand to her mouth. “Forgive. I did not—I did not ask.”
____
Sue had gone stiff the instant the brush hit—mother instinct and telepath’s reflex locking shoulders. Now she made herself breathe through it, made her hand gentle where it had tightened on her own knee.
“You touched,” she said, voice even. “And I didn’t like it. Do you understand why?”
“Yes,” Selara whispered, miserable. “It hurts to be seen with no door between.”
“It does,” Sue said, and a soft laugh broke in the middle of the words. “And—when I was younger—before the powers settled into the shape I can carry—I did it too. I heard things I shouldn’t. Took shortcuts I hadn’t earned.” She tilted her head, eyes bright but wet at the corners. “You learn to ask. You learn to close the door when you must. I can help, if you want the practice.”
Selara looked at her as if the roof had shifted from tar to glass to water in one breath. “You will teach me to make fences?”
“And gates,” Sue said. “Because not everything deserves a fence.”
Selara’s gloved fingers clenched around the pendant. “I looked and saw your child,” she said, helpless honesty pouring out the way light leaks through a seam. “He is… small sun. A star that breathes. You would do anything,” she added, almost in wonder. “Anything. My mother would have. My father—” She stopped. The wind pulled at the shirts on the line, making them nod like a row of grandmothers. “My father chooses the many. I am one. I do not fit inside the math.”
Sue reached out and put her hand on Selara’s sleeve. Not skin. Cloth to cloth. Enough. “I’m sorry,” she said, and the two words were as complete as any apology can be when it cannot undo the world.
A long minute breathed. Somewhere, a radio argued baseball like it mattered, which in February made it a beautiful lie.
____
“Come stay with us,” Sue said finally. “At the Baxter.”
Selara stiffened, breath backing up like a train forced to reverse on an incline. “I will bring danger. My father—he searches by habit. By who I am. By what I love. He will find your door and knock with armies.”
“We have had worse company,” Sue said, soft as steel. “We will have worse again. The difference could be that this time you are not alone when it arrives.” She smiled a little sideways. “Also, Reed will pace holes in the lab floor until he learns your energy field. It would be a favor to the maintenance staff.”
That pulled a laugh from Selara that sounded like a bell struck through velvet. “You are… different from many,” she said. “You are careful and also brave.”
“I’m a mother,” Sue said simply. “The job requires both.”
Selara looked down at the pendant, at the teardrop stone catching small, insolent winter light. “I do not want to make a family into a target.”
Sue squeezed her sleeve. “We’re a target when we brush our teeth,” she said. “This building is a lighthouse. What matters is who we pull out of the dark.”
Selara swallowed. Her gaze slid out over the city—blocks like language she was still learning, bridges like promises made of steel, smoke writing delicate cursive across the afternoon. She had been sleeping on rooftops and in the soft pockets of unused air above stairwells, eating pretzels because they tasted like forgiveness and drinking tea because it tasted like being invited. She could keep doing that until the search beam found her and pinned her to the concrete. Or she could walk through a door and be counted.
____
“My language has a word,” she said at last. “Thalen-vyra. It means… you have been given shelter by the light and now you hold a piece of that light in return.” She lifted her eyes. “I will try to be good shelter.”
“Deal,” Sue said, standing. “I’ll tell Reed to stop talking to glass for ten minutes and find a spare bedroom.”
Selara rose too. The pendant swung and caught against the zipper of her coat with a small, declarative sound.
“Thank you,” she said, Amaralian cadence rounding the syllables so it sounded like something a little older than English. “I will come. But if danger knocks, I will leave before it sits at your table.”
“Or,” Sue said, smiling, “we can tell it to eat outside.”
____
Everything in the Baxter Building had a label, even if the label only existed in Reed’s head. Elevators had floor plans and fallback plans and—because life with Ben required it—sarcastic plans. The kitchen hummed with devices that looked ordinary and did not behave that way if you turned the dial past medium. H.E.R.B.I.E patrolled corridors with a fussbudget’s dignity and a Siamese cat’s suspicion of closed doors.
Selara stood just inside the lobby, hands clasped at her waist, and tried not to look like a queen entering a village disguised as a girl. The elevator doors opened like a sigh. She stepped inside and then out again immediately.
“It is a box that climbs,” she said, delighted and dismayed. “A vertical travel shell.” She looked at Sue, eyes shining. “We ride it?”
“We do,” Sue said gravely. “And sometimes it misbehaves, so hold onto the rail. Ben and gravity have a complicated relationship with this building.”
As if summoned, Ben’s voice floated down the shaft: “I heard that.”
The car ascended with a mechanical purr. Selara braced for centrifugal forces that never came and then laughed softly at her own caution.
The doors opened onto the floor that had taught the press to use phrases like state-of-the-art. Reed stepped forward with a smile that had a seam of apology running down its center.
“Selara,” he said, and the way he said the name—careful, respectful, like he was setting down a delicate instrument—made her like him despite the chalkboard gleam in his eyes. “Welcome.”
“Hello, Reed,” she said, and watched his mouth go surprised because he had never told her his first name. “I learn names by listening,” she added, not quite sorry, and he nodded as if she had offered a theorem he could admire without proving.
“H.E.R.B.I.E,” Sue said, as the robot wheeled up with important little noises. “Say hello.”
H.E.R.B.I.E’s light blinked the way eyes would blink if eyes were spinning diodes. “Hello,” it said, in the crisp voice of a machine that prided itself on proper diction. “I am Highly Efficient Robotic Binary Interface Entity. You may call me H.E.R.B.I.E. Do you require cataloguing, guest pass registration, or a lecture on safety protocols?”
Selara crouched without thinking, bringing her gaze level with the sensor band. “You are alive?” she asked, not childlike but scientist-solemn. “A small Vyra inside circuits?”
H.E.R.B.I.E hesitated for the briefest microsecond—processor cycles deciding whether to be offended. “I am… operational,” it said at last. “I possess routines that simulate curiosity and… care.” The last word came out slower, as if the machine had found it in a drawer with soft things and didn’t know yet where it belonged.
“Then I will treat you as alive until you tell me otherwise,” Selara said, and H.E.R.B.I.E’s light flickered in what even Reed had to admit was a pleased way.
____
“Come see the kitchen,” Sue said, half to re-route Selara’s awe so it didn’t short H.E.R.B.I.E’s circuits, half because she wanted to be the first person to show this girl a refrigerator.
They walked into a room whose windows gulped down city and returned it as light. Selara stopped in the middle and turned in a slow circle.
“This is a… Vevran hearth,” she said, pointing to the stove.
“That is a stove,” Sue said. “It heats things you want heated and explodes things you forget you have heated if you leave them unwatched. We treat it like a slightly dangerous uncle.”
Selara touched the fridge with one gloved finger and delightedly withdrew when the compressor kicked on. “It hums,” she said, as if that were a compliment. “A Ky’tha keep. Cold room box.”
“Fridge,” Sue supplied. “It’s where hope goes to be checked on later.”
Ben arrived with a grocery bag, set it on the counter, and tipped his hat as if anyone in this family wore one. “Welcome to the madhouse, kid,” he said, beaming. “I got bagels, cream cheese, and one of those fish things Reed swears ain’t bait.”
“Lox,” Reed said from the doorway, aggrieved. “It’s delicious.”
“Fish ribbon,” Selara said, trying the lox with scientific neutrality and then with a second bite that wasn’t neutral at all. “Salty joy.”
Johnny slid in on that syllable like he’d been cued by an orchestra. “Salty joy?” he said, grinning. “You just named my autobiography.” His gaze jumped to her eyes out of habit; even without the Times Square floodlights, they held that pale, reflective silver with the sliver of green, like coins just pulled from water. He held his hands up at chest height, palms out. “No touching,” he said, and the joking in his tone didn’t erase the way respect had taken root under his skin.
Selara looked at him and then at his distance and nodded once, grateful in a way she didn’t put sound on. “No touching,” she agreed, and then pointed to the toaster, which had just performed its miracle with an immodest ding. “What is this Vorren-flame cradle? It burns bread in a beautiful way.”
“Toast,” Franklin announced, barreling into the room with a cowlick and a drawing clutched in his hand. He stopped dead, all seven-year-old, all wonder. “Hi.”
Selara turned and the moment bent. Some recognitions happen behind the eyes and take time to travel to the mouth. This one occurred everywhere at once. Vyra met whatever the world called the field that lived in Franklin Richards’ bones, and two bright things decided not to be afraid of each other.
____
“Hello, small sun,” Selara said gravely.
Franklin squinted. “I’m not a sun. I’m a boy. My name is Franklin.”
“Franklin,” she repeated. “A star that breathes.”
He seemed to consider this as a scientific possibility, then grinned. “Wanna see my rocket? It’s made outta oatmeal tubes.”
“I will see all your tubes,” Selara said solemnly, and Johnny made a sound that might have been a cough and might have been the laugh he didn’t want to let entirely out in case it bumped something precious.
“Introduce later,” Sue said, gentle but practical. “Now we feed the star and the rest of you fools.”
____
They fed them. Bagels were cut, and toasters learned pace, and tea steamed in mugs like patience. Reed, who had meant to ask Selara ten consecutive questions about quanta, found himself buttering two halves of dough for Franklin and humming “You’re a Wonderful One” under his breath. Ben told a story about the time he almost joined the Navy and got lost in Hoboken instead and ended up marrying a woman’s cousin for six days by accident. H.E.R.B.I.E recited a short lecture on toaster safety that ended with Johnny winking at it and H.E.R.B.I.E, against all best practices, sounding pleased.
Selara ate as if tasting the city in small, deliberate bites. She didn’t need any of it. She wanted all of it. Her language leaked in the seams—calling the elevator a tallen-lift, the teabag a zolri-leaf pouch, the plate a round-still—and Reed, to his credit, translated out loud only when she asked him to.
“Where will I… be?” she asked finally, cup cradled in both hands.
Sue set her mug down. “We have a spare room. It used to be storage. We will pretend we never stored anything boring in it.” She hesitated a fraction. “You can make it yours.”
Selara nodded once, decisively, the queen flickering through the girl like a lighthouse through fog. “I will make it good shelter,” she said. “Thalen-vyra.”
“What’s that mean again?” Ben asked, because he liked the taste of foreign words and because he believed learning them made him less alone.
“Light given,” she said. “Light kept.”
Johnny pushed away from the counter, restless without heat. “Wanna see the roof?” he offered, too casual. “It’s the best room in the building.”
“Johnny,” Sue warned.
“What? There’s a guard rail now.” He tilted his head toward Selara, invitation flickering like campfire. “It’s where the city makes sense. Or pretends to.”
Selara looked at Sue, looked at Franklin, looked at the door. “I will go,” she said. “And then I will sleep.”
Ben barked a delighted laugh. “You hear that, Matchstick? After the roof, we let the lady rest.”
“I can rest any time you want me to,” Johnny said, and ducked when a potholder flew with precisely Sue-level velocity past his ear.
____
They walked the corridor together—H.E.R.B.I.E trundling ahead like a chaperone with wheels, then peeling off to scold a maintenance panel for humming off-key. The elevator carried them up with its freshly labeled safety features. The sky met them immediately: tin-blue, gull-sliced, honest. The wind did what wind always did on the Baxter rooftop—flirted with trouble and then thought better.
Johnny stopped two strides short of the parapet and turned to face her. “You don’t have to thank us,” he said, hands out at his sides.
Selara tilted her head. “For what?”
“For the thing you’re going to thank us for,” he said, and now he was smiling in a way he rarely let people see. “For making space. For making room. You’ll want to. You don’t have to.”
She thought about it. “I will thank you anyway,” she said at last, and his smile deepened because he liked people who did what they wanted even when given permission not to.
“Look,” he said, nodding toward the skyline. “You can see the Empire State from here if you squint and pretend.”
She did, and she could, and she didn’t need to pretend. Light ran there like a clean blade in winter. She lifted her face and her eyes—those pale, metallic irises with the ghost-green undertone—caught enough of the city to throw it back. The pendant at her throat warmed as if remembering a hand that would never hold it again.
“My father searches,” she said quietly. “I feel it sometimes like a pressure on glass. Thank you for… thicker glass.”
Johnny’s throat worked. For a moment the boy who had lost his mother and built a survival mechanism out of jokes and speed looked like a man who had chosen to be honest instead. “You don’t have to run alone anymore.”
She turned her head toward him, and the distance they kept—glove to glove, breath to breath—felt both sensible and like a cliff edge. “I do not plan to run,” she said. “But if running happens, I will leave before your house burns.”
He shook his head, slow. “That’s not how this works.” He swallowed, then added, a little helpless, “I don’t know how this works, but I know that isn’t it.”
Her mouth curved. “You are sassy when you make vows you do not understand.”
“Occupational hazard,” he said.
____
They stood in a silence that wanted to be more and could not be yet. Far below, a bus sighed at a stoplight. Somewhere, a saxophone practiced scales that would be a song someday.
“Do you sleep?” he asked suddenly, because the night would soon be too cold for jokes not bundled.
“Not like you,” she said. “I rest when the music in the world is gentle. Tonight it is… softer.”
“Good,” he said. “Then you can dream we didn’t burn the bagels.”
“You burned one,” she said, precise. “The black one.”
He stared. “You were in the room?”
“I am always in the room,” she said, deadpan again, and he laughed properly this time, the sound running ahead of the cold like a scout.
When he sobered, it was like watching flame turn to banked coal. “Hey,” he said, awkward suddenly. “Can I—say something—without you panicking?”
“I do not panic,” she said, which was both true and an evasion.
“Okay,” he said, nodding, “but if you did—this would be the moment.” He took a breath. “I like you. Not because you saved buses. Not because you glow. I liked you in the way you told me to be careful with my heart and then didn’t ask me to hand it over to prove I understood.” He winced, a little. “I am very bad at subtle.”
She considered him in profile, as if someone had given her a complex, beautiful machine and told her to decide whether to keep it. “I am very bad at simple,” she said, and he laughed again, softer.
“Okay,” he said. “Then we can be—” He shaped the word with care, old fear in his knuckles, new hope in his mouth. “Patient.”
“Yes,” she said. “We can be for now.”
They stood there until the wind decided it had made its point and moved on. H.E.R.B.I.E beeped once from the stairwell, not impatient so much as pragmatic. Johnny opened the door, stepped back to let her walk through first, and did not look at his hands as if they had become dangerous. She did not look at his either.
____
That night, the spare room learned it was no longer storage. Sue had slid a quilt onto the bed that did not match the curtains and therefore counted as home. A dresser had found new confidence. Reed had pretended not to compute the torque limits of the lamp on the nightstand and had adjusted them anyway after everyone left.
Selara stood just inside the door and considered the space like a problem with too many beautiful answers. She took off her coat and hung it on the back of the chair with ceremonial care. She set her pendant on the windowsill and let the streetlight turn it into a small, stubborn star. She unlaced her gloves and laid them palms down, as if blessing the wood.
She did not need to sleep. She lay down anyway, because rest here was not a surrender to Amarune; it was a choice made in a place where people argued the future into being while bread rose in ovens in the kitchens below. She listened to the building hum—elevators making tired confessions, pipes telling gossip, H.E.R.B.I.E singing robot hymns to outlets—and let her body remember what calm could look like.
Somewhere on a different floor, a child laughed in his sleep. Somewhere nearer, Johnny’s footsteps lasted three beats past the door and then went away, like a man teaching himself the hard trick of leaving.
____
Selara turned her face into the pillow and whispered in her language a phrase that had no exact English twin: “Shai-vara sel.” The light and I are at peace.
The city exhaled. For the first time since she had stepped through a tear in the universe, the princess who had not been born to rule closed her eyes without listening for chains.
____
In the morning, New York did what it always did with newness—it made it ordinary in print and extraordinary in story. A columnist wrote a piece titled On Seeing the Girl in Plum Buy Milk. The Daily News photographed her shadow trailing Sue’s through a bodega aisle and called it a trend. The Times ran a sub-headline that said with bureaucratic solemnity: Unidentified Female Resides Temporarily at Baxter Tower, Sources Say.
In the kitchen, Ben read the paper upside down and snorted. “Resides temporarily,” he mimicked. “Like we ain’t all temporary.”
Reed set down the measuring spoon and brushed sugar from his palm. “It’s not wrong.”
“Neither’s this,” Johnny said, flipping a page and finding a picture in which he was not looking at the camera because he was looking at Selara instead. The photographer had been lucky or kind. The shot had caught that moment on the roof in miniature—distance carefully kept, eyes talking louder than mouths. Johnny’s expression looked like a secret endeavoring to be good.
Sue poured tea and slid the mug toward Selara, who held it like a ritual object and breathed lemon into her bones. “If you’re going to be photographed,” Sue said, half admonition, half resigned affection, “we will get you a better coat.”
“My coat is… good,” Selara protested, and then looked down and laughed. “But I accept the human custom of too many coats.”
____
Franklin ran in and skidded, socks seeking to continue to the next borough. “Show her H.E.R.B.I.E’s trick!” he demanded. “The one with the toast!”
“No,” H.E.R.B.I.E said primly from the counter, where it was pretending to be a breadbox. “That was an accident. The toast was not supposed to learn to hover.”
Selara’s eyes went bright. “Hovering bread,” she said reverently. “This planet is excellent.”
Johnny leaned on the counter and watched her delight move through the room like a known song returning. He didn’t reach for her hand. He didn’t try to kiss a mouth that had taught him he would have to learn patience if he wanted anything worth keeping. He did exactly what he said he would do: he stood where she could find him when she needed an answer to a question she didn’t yet know how to ask.On another floor, Reed’s instruments hummed and drew their graphs and whispered to each other: Vyra. Vyra. Vyra. Far beyond the river, in a sky not visible from any window, a pressure moved across nothing and learned the names of the roads it would need to follow. In the middle of the city that promised everything and delivered half, a girl in plum learned how to laugh with hot bread in her mouth and lemon on her tongue.
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Nine – The Choice of Flames
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- The Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
- Chapter Four- The Intermissions (A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Five- The World Watches
- Chapter Six – The World in 1964 ( A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Seven– The Pendant Ultimatum
- Chapter Eight – Daughter of Amarune
____
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 10074
----
The Baxter Building was not quiet, but it was heavy. The kind of heavy that settles in after too much has been said and not enough has been solved. Machines still hummed in the walls, cars still hissed along the avenues below, but in the living room, silence stretched tight across them like a taut wire.
Selara sat very still, hands folded in her lap, her gloves creased from being twisted one too many times. Her pendant—what remained of it, jagged shards cracked and dulled after she crushed it the night before—lay on the table in silence. It no longer pulsed, but she still felt the ghost of its heat at her sternum, as though her father’s voice had carved itself into her skin.
Reed leaned against the console, arms folded, his glasses slipping low down the bridge of his nose. He looked like he was thinking about equations, but the twitch of his jaw betrayed him. Sue had one hand resting on the back of Selara’s chair, the other curled around a mug gone cold. Ben sat planted on the couch like a wall of granite in a world of shifting sand. Johnny paced like a fire barely contained in a hearth, quick steps back and forth across the carpet, shoulders tense, every other turn punctuated with a mutter too low to catch.
Finally, Sue broke the silence. “We can’t stay here and pretend it didn’t happen.”
Reed’s gaze sharpened. “Agreed. If Theryn has eyes on her through Amaralian tech—or worse, allies already moving—Earth is compromised by her mere presence. Waiting invites escalation.”
Selara’s silvery-gray eyes flickered up, rimmed with exhaustion. “Then you agree with him. That I should go.”
—-
Johnny stopped dead mid-step, spinning toward her. “No. That’s not what he’s saying.” His voice cracked like a flame on dry kindling. “He’s saying if Theryn’s coming for you, we don’t just sit on our hands while you walk into his trap alone.”
Ben grunted, leaning back. “So what—you’re thinkin’ field trip? Pack our bags, hop a bus to Amarune?”
“Not a bus,” Reed said dryly. “But yes. We need to go there. Together. Assess the political structure, gauge the threat firsthand. If Theryn wants to bring the fight here, better we cut him off at the source.”
Selara’s breath hitched faintly at that word—source. She wrapped her arms tighter across her ribs, as though warding off chains. “You do not understand. To stand in his court is to kneel.”
“Then don’t kneel,” Johnny shot back. “Stand. With us behind you.”
Sue’s voice gentled, but there was steel under it. “Selara, you don’t have to face him alone. Family means we do this together. That’s non-negotiable.”
—-
Selara stared at the cracks in the table where her pendant had shattered. For a long time, she said nothing. The hum of the building filled in the silence, steady as a pulse. Finally, she exhaled, slow and reluctant. “You will regret this. But if you insist… I will open the way.”
Ben raised a rocky brow. “Open the way? Kid, we ain’t exactly takin’ the subway.”
Selara tilted her head, her expression flat, almost deadpan. “I am Amaralian,” she said simply, as though the words explained gravity itself. “I opened a portal once already. That is how I came here.”
Reed blinked, caught between skepticism and fascination. “You… what? Inter-dimensional transport? With your own energy?”
Sue sighed into her coffee, the corners of her mouth twitching despite herself. “You really should stop being surprised at this point, Reed.”
Johnny grinned crookedly. “Wait—hold on. You’re telling me all this time you could’ve just… opened a door?”
Selara shrugged, as if the most extraordinary admission in the room were the least worth remarking on. “Of course. How else would I travel between worlds?”
Ben let out a low whistle. “Portal. Just like that, huh? Like hailing a cab.”
Selara’s gaze flicked to him, dry as desert stone. “A cab refused me last week.”
That earned a bark of laughter from Ben that softened the edges of the room. Even Johnny cracked, shaking his head, muttering, “Starlight’s got jokes.”
—-
But then Selara stood, smoothing her gloves with the same care one might use before a funeral. She walked toward the wide windows, her footsteps quiet on the polished floor. The others followed, some hesitant, some stubborn, until the whole family stood pressed together at the glass, staring out at the Hudson glinting under late afternoon haze.
Selara lifted her hand. The air around her palm shimmered as though struck by heat. A faint line of violet split the atmosphere just above the river, jagged as a crack in glass. It hummed low, a note beneath hearing, until it swelled—unzipping the world seam by seam. The split widened into a gash of light, violet and amethyst and colors Earth had no names for, hues that tasted metallic and pressed like static against their teeth.
The portal was alive. Its edges rippled like liquid crystal, folding inward and outward at once, refusing Earth’s geometry. Within, another world bled through: veined with impossible color, threaded with light that moved like breath, a horizon that bent like molten glass.
Wind rushed from it, lifting hair, tugging at coats, rattling Reed’s notes. It carried scents not of Earth: sharp ozone, salt like storms at sea, crushed crystal dust, and something floral and electric at once, like orchids burning.
The Hudson reflected its shimmer, rippling violet across its surface, as though the river itself had been stained with light.
—-
“Holy…” Johnny breathed, eyes wide, face bathed in amethyst glow. “It’s like Vegas and heaven had a baby.”
Reed’s voice carried calculation even as it wavered. “Inter-dimensional fissure stabilized by self-regenerating energy. This—Selara, this is rewriting every known law of—”
Ben squinted. “Looks like the inside of a kaleidoscope ate a lightning storm.”
Sue only stared, hand light on Selara’s shoulder, the glow reflecting in her eyes. “It’s beautiful.”
Selara’s own gaze was unreadable—hunger and grief stitched together. “It remembers me,” she whispered, as though speaking to the portal itself. “Even when I did not wish it to.”
The hum deepened. The air bent.
Johnny stepped forward without hesitation, the portal’s wind tugging at his jacket, fire flickering faintly across his shoulders in reflex. He turned back once, catching Selara’s eyes—hers glowing silver-gray with that faint green undertone, his burning blue like defiance. He grinned, soft and sure.
“See you on the other side, starlight.”
And then, with reckless grace, he leapt first into the violet storm.
—-
Johnny plunged first. The portal swallowed him whole — a blur of fire, color, sensation without anchor — then spat him out onto ground that wasn’t ground at all. Smooth crystal, faceted and alive, glowed faintly under his boots. He staggered a half-step, breath catching.
The air hit him like a second skin: heavy, fragrant, electric. It tingled in his lungs, fizzing against his teeth as though the atmosphere itself carried a charge. It smelled of iron rain and crushed flowers, strange and sweet, making him dizzy.
Then the sky.
Twin moons dominated it — one vast and silver, solemn as a guardian, the other smaller, amethyst-bright, their lights braided together into a shifting violet-white canopy. Auroras curled like silk ribbons between them, pulsing faintly, almost breathing. Johnny’s chest stuttered. “Holy hell…”
Crystal towers loomed beyond — not built but grown, jagged and elegant, catching the moons’ light and scattering it in fractured rainbows across the ground. Farther still, a forest of glass-stalks swayed, each one bioluminescent, glowing in hues of green, indigo, and rose. The wind moved through them like an invisible musician, coaxing out a chorus of delicate, chiming notes.
Reed stepped through next, adjusting his fogged glasses only to remove them altogether, blinking at a city that refused to obey Earth’s geometry. “The entire environment is crystalline-biotic,” he breathed. “An integrated resonance ecosystem…”
Sue followed, Franklin absent but her hand reaching for him by instinct. Her heels sank into the translucent terrace, eyes going wide at the glow. “It’s beautiful,” she whispered, reverence cracking her voice.
Ben emerged last, boots planting with a thunderous scrape. He turned in a slow circle, squinting up at towers like frozen lightning. “Looks like Tiffany’s had a nervous breakdown.” But his voice carried a hush, like even he was unwilling to break the spell.
Then Selara stepped through.
—-
The portal’s hum clung to her like recognition. When her boots touched Amarune’s soil, the ground itself seemed to wake. The translucent terrace beneath her shimmered in a rush of light that rippled outward, chasing across the crystalline street like veins igniting.
The air thickened instantly. The humming forest faltered mid-note, then re-tuned itself into a single, rising chord — sharp, hungry. The twin moons’ light seemed to bend toward her, sharpening her silhouette, throwing her shadow long and violet against the terrace.
The flux spread. Veins of Vyra, buried deep underfoot, glowed brighter, racing like rivers toward the terrace. The luminous river nearby surged higher, liquid light frothing against its banks. The crystal towers themselves chimed, faint and eerie, as though their foundations remembered her name.
Johnny staggered, heat prickling along his skin. “What the—”
Reed’s pen was already out, frantic notes scrawling. “Extraordinary. The entire biosphere is resonating—synchronizing—no, pulling…” His head snapped up, glasses slipping. “It’s her. It’s feeding on her presence.”
Selara froze. Her silvery-gray eyes widened, catching every fractured gleam. Her breath came shallow. She wrapped her arms tight across her chest as though bracing against invisible chains. “It knows me.” Her voice was hoarse, broken. “It… hungers.”
And the planet answered. The terrace thrummed under their feet, not with tremor but with rhythm, like a heartbeat eager for a pulse it had been denied. The glow spread in concentric waves, brighter each time, as if Amarune itself leaned closer, straining to drink from her life-force.
Johnny stepped forward instinctively, fire crackling up his shoulders, his heat pushing back the violet light. “Hey—hey, starlight—don’t let it. Don’t give it a damn thing.”
Sue reached for Selara’s arm, field flickering to steady her against the pull. “Selara—look at me. Breathe. Stay with us.”
Ben’s rocky jaw ground, fists flexing. “Planet’s actin’ like it’s starvin’. Wants a meal, and it’s pointin’ at her.”
Selara’s lips trembled. “I told you.” She closed her eyes, the glow washing over her face, making her look carved from the same crystal as her world. “To stand here… is to kneel. Amarune remembers its Source.”
—-
The river’s hum rose higher, keening now, almost a wail. The towers flickered like prisms struck by invisible thunder. Even the air thickened, dragging at their lungs, demanding her.
Johnny planted himself in front of her, reckless fire burning hotter against the violet surge, daring it closer. “Then it’s got a problem,” he spat, voice raw. “Because she doesn’t belong to it anymore.”
The glow pulsed once more — furious, yearning — then dimmed, subsiding into a lower, resentful hum. The forest’s chiming stuttered back into uneasy music. The river fell to its normal, luminous rush.
But the ground beneath Selara’s boots still whispered.
She whispered back, not in English but Amaralian, words heavy with grief: “Sha’reth vyra’sor.” Source bound in chains.
Johnny heard none of the meaning, but he heard the break in her voice, and that was enough. He stepped closer, not touching — never touching — but his fire leaned toward her like a vow.
Selara’s eyes stayed fixed on the towers. “He knows I have returned,” she said. “The planet told him before I could.”
—-
The glow along the crystalline terrace dulled to a simmer, but Selara still felt it pressing against her ribs. Each step forward tugged at her chest like invisible threads stitching her back into a garment she had torn off long ago. Amarune’s breath was everywhere: in the charged air, in the soil that pulsed faintly under their boots, in the violet gleam that refused to let her shadow rest.
She forced herself upright, smoothing the folds of her gloves as if that could disguise the tremor in her hands. “This way,” she said. Her voice was steady, but too careful — like a blade balanced on its own point.
The path to the court sloped downward first, then curled into a broad avenue lined with crystalline pylons. They were taller than the Baxter Building and shaped like jagged reeds, translucent cores glowing with slow currents of light. Each time Selara’s boots touched the terrace, the pylons flared brighter, answering her presence.
The reaction spread outward.
Amarune’s citizens — pale-skinned and tall, with hair like spun metals and eyes luminescent in shades of violet, emerald, and cobalt — turned at once. They had been walking, speaking, carrying bundles wrapped in crystal-cloth. Now they stilled. Dozens of gazes fixed on Selara, and the hum of the pylons seemed to deepen into a chorus.
Johnny shifted closer, shoulders tight, his flame twitching like a reflex. “They’re staring,” he muttered, low, to her.
“They feel it,” Selara whispered back without looking at him. Her silvery-gray eyes stayed fixed ahead, jaw locked. “The planet speaks through me. They hear it.”
Reed walked with his hands folded behind his back, but his eyes darted everywhere — up at the pylons, down at the glowing seams of the street, across the faces of the citizens. “Fascinating,” he murmured, though his voice was strained. “This isn’t passive resonance. It’s systemic recognition. The environment is—”
“Hungry,” Ben finished grimly. His rocky jaw flexed as he scanned the crowd. “Place feels like it’s starin’ through my skin.”
The citizens whispered in tones like bells struck underwater. Some bowed their heads as Selara passed, others clutched their children closer, eyes wide, as though witnessing both miracle and curse. A young girl reached out a hand — tiny, glowing faintly violet at the fingertips — before her mother yanked it back with a sharp hiss.
Selara’s breath caught at the sight. She remembered being that child, reaching for her mother’s hand in the crystal hall, only to find cold silence instead of warmth. She walked faster.
—-
The avenue opened into a wide plaza, its surface a mosaic of luminous crystal tiles that pulsed faintly in geometric patterns. At its center, a fountain of liquid light rose and fell, spraying arcs of glowing droplets that evaporated into mist before touching the ground. The mist tasted faintly of iron and honey.
Sue slowed, eyes darting across the plaza. “They’re all watching her,” she whispered to Reed. “Not us. Just her.”
Reed adjusted his glasses, voice taut. “Because she is the Source. The resonance confirms it.”
Johnny bristled. “She’s not a damn battery.”
Selara flinched at the word. Her gloved hands curled tightly at her sides.
Beyond the plaza, the court loomed. It was not a single building but a vast citadel grown directly from the crystal earth, towers spiraling like frozen lightning, bridges woven from translucent threads spanning impossible gaps. At its highest spire, a great orb of crystal floated, rotating slowly, its surface fractured into a thousand mirrored planes. Each mirror seemed to catch Selara’s reflection no matter where she stood.
She faltered. The court was not home. It was a cage carved in beauty.
Sue touched her elbow gently. “Selara—?”
Selara shook her head quickly, eyes fixed forward. “Do not speak here. The walls listen.”
Johnny leaned close, whispering so only she could hear. “Then screw the walls.” His heat was steady at her side, a defiance the planet couldn’t swallow.
The citizens parted as they climbed the great steps, their whispers rising like a tide. Some voices were reverent, others sharp with suspicion. Selara caught fragments in Amaralian: Source returned. The Binding. The king will claim her.
Each phrase struck her like a lash. She kept moving, but her hands shook harder.
At the top of the steps, twin guards awaited — armored in crystalline plates that shimmered with internal light. Their helms hid most of their faces, but their eyes gleamed cold violet. They crossed long spears of luminous crystal in front of the entrance.
Selara stopped, shoulders tight. For a moment she looked like she might collapse under the weight of memory. Then she lifted her chin, voice sharp in Amaralian. “I am Selara Veyara , daughter of Amarune. You will not bar me.”
The guards stiffened. The resonance of her name rippled through the pylons and towers, brighter than before. Slowly, reluctantly, the spears lowered.
The gates yawned open.
A rush of cold air spilled out, scented with stone dust and something faintly sweet — like crystal ground into powder and mixed with honey. It smelled like memory, sharp and wrong.
Johnny glanced at her, brow furrowed. “You don’t have to do this—”
“Yes,” she said, cutting him off. Her silvery-gray eyes gleamed wet, but her jaw was set. “I do.”
And she stepped through, into the court that had always wanted to claim her.
The others followed, the weight of Amarune’s gaze pressing behind them like a second gravity.
—-
The air inside the citadel was colder, sharper, as though it had been filtered through centuries of stone and expectation. Their footsteps echoed on crystal floors polished to mirrors, the sound a hollow percussion that made every word feel like it would linger forever.
Light didn’t simply fall here — it refracted. Thin beams entered through carved apertures high above, splitting into violet, indigo, and silver strands that painted the floor with shifting constellations. The walls were alive with slow pulses of luminescence, veins of Vyra woven through the very architecture, glowing faintly like the heartbeat of something slumbering but restless.
Selara walked first. Not proudly, not willingly — but with the inevitability of someone returning to a place that had already written her name on its stones. Her pendant was gone, but she still felt its ghost tugging her chest toward this hall.
Johnny stayed close, his heat flickering in and out of the refracted beams, his eyes darting everywhere, shoulders coiled tight. Reed walked with rigid posture, mind racing behind his gaze, glasses catching the violet light. Sue’s hands brushed invisible force around them in subtle arcs — a shield always ready to snap into being. Ben brought up the rear, heavy steps shaking loose faint shivers from the crystal seams, his rocky brow furrowed deep.
At the end of the hall, the throne loomed.
It was not carved wood or molded stone, but a monolith of crystal, facets sharp as blades, the whole seat humming with faint resonance. It rose out of the floor as if grown from Amarune itself, and seated upon it was the king.
Theryn.
—-
Crown of twin moons set in silver. Robes cut from deep violet crystal-thread that glimmered like starfields. His hair was white, not with age but with Amaralian pallor, sleek and unyielding. His eyes burned a hard violet, sharp as ice caught in fire.
He did not rise. He did not need to. The room bent around his presence like iron filings to a magnet.
Selara slowed, every instinct in her body urging retreat, but the team’s footsteps behind her held her forward. She stopped at the foot of the dais, her silvery-gray eyes fixed on the floor.
Theryn’s mouth curved, not in warmth, but in satisfaction sharpened to cruelty.
“Selara,” he said, voice low, carrying like a tide through stone. “Daughter. You return.”
Her jaw tightened. “I did not return. I was followed.”
His eyes slid over her — down her gloves, her Earth-styled coat, the curve of her human form. Contempt twisted his mouth. “You wear it still,” he sneered, the Amaralian word cutting out like a lash. “Kareth. This false skin. This costume of meat. You dare to stand in my court parading as one of them?”
Selara flinched as though struck.
—-
Johnny’s heat flared, sudden and bright. “You shut your mouth.” His voice cracked like flame catching paper. “She’s not some costume. She’s—” His fists clenched, fire crawling up his forearms. “She’s Selara. That’s all that matters.”
Theryn turned his gaze on Johnny for the first time. The king’s contempt was measured, dissecting, the way a predator sizes the insect crawling near its paw. “Ah. The flame-child.” He spoke in Amaralian first, then in English, voice dripping disdain. “The human who hovers near my daughter as if warmth could make him worthy.”
Johnny took a step forward, heat spiking. “You got a real problem with me, fine. But don’t talk about her like that.”
Sue’s hand lifted, invisible field brushing Johnny’s arm, grounding him without extinguishing him.
Theryn’s gaze returned to Selara. “This is what you chose. A kareth shell, Earth’s primitives, a boy who plays with fire. You shame your mother’s blood with this childish rebellion.”
Selara’s breath cracked. The mention of her mother — spoken without reverence, without ache — lit something deep in her chest. She raised her chin, finally meeting his gaze. Her silvery eyes burned faint green at the edges.
“Do not speak of her,” she said, voice trembling but hard. “You killed her with your silence.”
The hall stilled. Even the light seemed to hesitate.
—-
Theryn’s expression cooled further, which somehow meant heat. “She refused her duty. She refused the Binding. Her silence was her death. You walk the same path.”
“You call it duty,” Selara spat, voice breaking. “I call it chains. You dress sacrifice as love, but it is nothing but hunger. Amarune feeds on its daughters and calls them irreplaceable. You took her life. You would take mine.”
Her voice cracked on the last word. Johnny’s hand twitched, like he might reach for hers then and there.
Ben’s low rumble rolled through the hall. “Some father you turned out to be. Stone-hearted king thinkin’ he can sell off his own kid like a bad loan.”
Theryn’s gaze flicked briefly to Ben, eyes narrowing. “And what are you, human? A slab that talks? You think your kind has weight here?”
“Yeah,” Ben growled, stepping forward, rocky fists clenching. “More weight than you think.”
Reed’s voice sliced in before Ben could take another step. Calm. Controlled. “King Theryn, you claim love for your people, yet you would hollow out your own daughter to feed them. That is not love. That is consumption.”
Theryn’s eyes cut to Reed, lips curling. “You think yourself clever, human mind. But you mistake insolence for wisdom. My daughter was born for this. She is Source. She is power. She belongs not to herself, but to Amarune.”
Selara’s voice broke raw, shaking. “No. I belong to no one.”
The hum of the court deepened, the very walls seeming to quiver with her words.
Theryn leaned forward at last, violet eyes boring into her. “We will see. In mere hours, you will either kneel to the Binding or you will be given to one of my chosen suitors. A bond-wife. Linked. Obedient.” His smile was thin, cruel. “One way or another, daughter, you will serve.”
—-
Selara’s gloves creaked as her fists clenched. Her silvery-gray eyes filled with tears she refused to shed. “I will never serve you.”
Theryn’s laughter was sharp, crystalline — a sound like glass shattering in cold air.
And in the violet light of his court, Amarune itself seemed to echo him, hungry and waiting.
—-
The hall was so still that Selara could hear her own pulse, quick and jagged, thudding against her ribs. Theryn’s laughter still clung to the crystal walls, sharp and echoing, as if the planet itself approved. Amarune thrummed beneath her boots — not welcome, not joy, but hunger, as though the ground already counted the hours until it could drink her down.
Her throat ached, but she stood straight. She would not bow.
Then Sue stepped forward.
She didn’t raise her voice — she didn’t have to. Her presence carried, quiet steel wrapped in calm. “You speak of her as though she’s a vessel,” Sue said evenly, her eyes never leaving Theryn’s. “But I have watched her laugh. I have watched her learn. I have seen her protect without being asked. That is not a Source. That is a person. A daughter. A sister. A friend. And she is family.”
Selara’s lips parted, breath catching. The word landed heavy in her chest: family. Not bond, not chain, not duty. Choice.
Ben’s heavy tread shook the crystal floor as he stepped up beside Sue. He crossed his arms, rock grinding faintly, and his voice came low, gravel with fire behind it. “You think she’s just somethin’ to plug into your little light socket? Lemme tell you somethin’, pal. She’s tougher than you. Braver than you. And she’s one of us. World tried to tell me once I was just a monster, just a freak. Guess what? They were wrong. Same goes for her. She don’t belong to you. She belongs with us.”
Selara blinked rapidly, vision swimming. Her father’s eyes burned harder, but she clung to Ben’s words like stone.
—-
Reed adjusted his glasses, his movements precise, but his voice carried something deeper than logic. “King Theryn, I am a man of science. I deal in measurements, probabilities, functions. And by every rational metric, what you propose — binding your own child to serve as perpetual energy — is abhorrent. A world cannot be sustained by cruelty. It will collapse under its own weight.” His voice steadied, firmer now. “But beyond reason, there is this: Selara matters not because of her power, but because she chooses. She chose to save lives on Earth. She chose to stand against Galactus. She chose us. That choice is worth more than any throne you sit upon.”
Selara’s knees threatened to buckle. Her silvery-gray eyes shimmered, green undertones glowing faintly as if her tears caught the Vyra light.
And then Johnny moved.
He didn’t stand with careful words, or calculated calm. He flared — flame crawling across his shoulders, fire licking at the seams of his jacket. His voice cracked raw, every word a live wire.
“You don’t see her,” he shouted, stepping closer to the dais. “You don’t even know her. You think she’s just some… Source? A damn battery? She’s Selara. She’s stubborn as hell, she makes me laugh when I don’t want to, she floats when she’s nervous, she’s braver than anyone I’ve ever met, and she’s the only person in the universe who’s ever made me feel like fire isn’t just something that burns things down.”
His voice broke, heat flaring hotter, eyes glassed with fury and grief. “You don’t get to chain her. You don’t get to own her. She’s not your Source. She’s not your property. She’s… she’s the best thing that’s ever happened to me.”
The last words rang through the hall, too raw to be anything but true.
Selara’s breath shuddered out of her, her whole body trembling. She stared at Johnny — the boy of fire standing against a king — and for the first time since stepping back onto Amarune, she felt the hunger of the planet falter. Just a little.
Theryn leaned back in his crystal throne, expression unchanged, though his violet eyes glinted with something sharper. Not respect — calculation.
—-
“You dare,” he murmured. “All of you. To speak against me in my own court.”
But Selara barely heard him. The voices beside her — Sue’s quiet steel, Ben’s grounded loyalty, Reed’s measured conviction, Johnny’s unguarded love — rose louder in her bones than the hum of the planet.
For the first time, she felt Amarune’s hunger and did not flinch. She looked at her father, her hands steady, her voice low but firm.
“I am not your Source,” she said. “I am Selara. And I will not kneel.”
—-
Theryn did not rage. He did not shout. His composure was a blade — the quieter it rested, the sharper it cut.
“You speak so boldly,” he said, voice smooth as polished stone, “but you do not know the game you play.” His gaze slanted toward Johnny, lingering like frost burning across fire. “This one especially. The boy of flame.”
Johnny squared his shoulders, but his fire dimmed a fraction under the weight of that stare. Selara stiffened, heart cracking against her ribs.
Theryn’s lips curled. “I see what you think you feel. I have seen it since the first moment you paraded in that—” he spat the Amaralian word like it tasted foul, “Kareth. That meat suit.” His eyes turned to Selara, cutting. “You wear it to pretend at humanity, to drape yourself in the skin of primitives. And still you dared to let this boy of fire close enough to breathe the word Aruna’shai.”
Selara flinched. Her throat closed around the syllables, the way a wound closes around a blade. He had heard her. Through the pendant, through every stolen second of what she thought was hers alone.
Theryn’s voice deepened, echoing faintly against the crystal columns. “Do you want him, daughter? Then tell him what it means. Tell him the truth of your Bond.”
The silence was heavy, broken only by the faint crackle of Johnny’s fire. Selara’s lips parted, but no sound came. Not here. Not with her father watching like a vulture waiting for meat to fall.
—-
Theryn leaned forward, elbows on the throne’s arms, expression coldly triumphant. “Explain to your… humans. Explain that the Amaranth Bond is no courtship. No childish vow. It is forever. It burns. It devours. If the flame is false, it kills.”
Johnny’s chest heaved, but his jaw set like stone. He didn’t look away.
Theryn’s grin widened, cruel as the crack of crystal splitting under stress. “So either you bind yourself to him and bleed him out with your love… or you deny it, deny him, and return to the Core as Source. Tell me, Selara—” his voice turned sharp, almost amused— “which funeral shall I attend first? His, or yours?”
The words hit the chamber like a fracture.
Sue inhaled sharply, color draining from her face. Ben’s fists ground together until sparks of stone dust flaked off. Reed’s eyes darted, furious calculations spinning, but even he had no quick theorem to close this wound.
And Selara—her knees weakened, her breath fractured. Amarune’s hunger thrummed under her boots, louder now, as though the planet itself had heard her father’s dare and leaned closer, eager.
Her gaze snapped to Johnny. His fire glowed fierce, stubborn, the heat shimmering around him like a shield. But his eyes—his eyes were steady on hers, raw and unafraid.
“Don’t,” she whispered, barely air. “You don’t know what he asks. You don’t understand.”
Johnny’s answer came fast, harsh, like a vow spat into the wind: “Then explain it to me. Don’t protect me with silence. Let me choose.”
Her heart lurched. Her father leaned back in his throne, satisfied, watching the fracture spread.
And Selara knew — this was the knife he had sharpened for years, the trap within the trap.
—-
Selara’s breath caught in her chest, jagged as glass. She felt every eye on her: her father’s cold and triumphant, the court’s curious, the team’s stricken with concern. She had hidden this truth her whole life, carrying it like a shard under the skin, but Theryn had left her nowhere to hide.
She raised her chin, though her gloves trembled against the folds of her Kareth. “He twists it,” she said, her voice raw but steady. “But what he says… is not false.”
Johnny’s fire guttered at those words, a flash of fear breaking through his stubborn heat. Sue’s lips parted, a protest caught in her throat.
Selara turned to them all — her family, her anchors — and for the first time, she opened the door she had sworn to keep shut.
“Among the Amaranthi,” she began, her accent heavier now, her Amaralian cadence sharpening her English into something ceremonial, “the most sacred bond between two souls is called the Amaranth Bond. It is rare. It is forever.”
Her silvery-gray eyes flickered from one face to the next, but they lingered on Johnny last. “There are two forms.”
The chamber hushed. Even the Vyra conduits in the walls dimmed, as if listening.
“The Petal Bond,” she said, softer now. “When two touch — truly touch, skin to skin — and a rose-colored glow blooms. It means loyalty. Mates for life. It is strong, but it does not burn. Those who share it live together, whole. It is sacred.”
Sue’s hand crept to her mouth, eyes shining with awe and worry both. Ben shifted his weight, the stone of him creaking, as if even his body felt the solemnity.
Selara swallowed. Her voice shook now. “And then… the second form.” Her gaze dropped, as though afraid the words themselves might ignite. “The Eternal Flame. It does not glow. It erupts. Violet fire under the skin. A link beyond distance, beyond death. Two souls bound as one.”
She hesitated, then forced the words out. “It is not only love. It is power. To harm one is to harm both. Pain is shared. Wounds are shared. If one dies…” Her voice fractured. “…the other follows.”
The silence that followed was suffocating. The crystal columns hummed low, vibrating with her confession.
Reed’s mind was already racing, his lips pressed thin. “A psychic link… psychosomatic feedback, perhaps even—” He cut himself short, the clinical words failing against the look on Selara’s face.
Sue whispered, “Oh my God…” She reached instinctively for Johnny’s arm, as if shielding him from what had just been named.
Ben muttered something like a prayer disguised as a curse. “So what he’s sayin’… either you light up together, or you burn down together.”
Johnny didn’t flinch. His fire dimmed to embers, steady, controlled. He stepped closer to Selara, his voice rough but unshaken. “And you’ve been carrying that alone this whole time.”
Her eyes shone wet, silver-gray flickering faintly green. “Do you see now? Why I keep the gloves. Why I never—” Her throat closed. “I cannot risk it. Not with you.”
—-
Theryn’s laughter cracked through the chamber, manic and triumphant, bouncing against the crystal walls like breaking glass. “And still she clings to you, little flame. You hear her, boy? She tells you she loves you by refusing you. She saves you by denying you. Either way—” His smile cut like a knife. “She is mine again.”
Johnny’s jaw set, fists curling. “Not a chance.”
Selara turned to him, desperate. “Johnny, you don’t understand. If we try and it is wrong—”
“Then we’ll make it right.” His voice was raw, fierce, almost pleading. “You think I haven’t figured it out? Aruna’shai.” His eyes burned into hers. “I know what it means now.”
Selara gasped, breath stolen from her chest.
Johnny’s voice cracked, but he didn’t back down. “It means love. You’ve been saying it to me this whole time, and I didn’t even know. But now I do. And I’m not letting him use it against us.”
Her heart thundered, caught between terror and hope. Amarune itself seemed to lean closer, its hunger vibrating under her boots.
Theryn only sat back in his throne, smiling as if he had orchestrated this moment from the beginning.
“Then burn, little flame,” the king murmured. “Burn, and show me which funeral I shall attend.”
—-
The throne room pulsed with a terrible stillness after Theryn’s laugh faded. The crystal walls thrummed faintly, as though the very planet fed on the tension.
Selara’s chest rose and fell too quickly, her gloves clenched hard against her ribs. The confession sat heavy in the air, vibrating like a struck bell. Every heartbeat was a countdown she couldn’t stop.
“No,” she said, sharp and shaking. Her voice cracked through the silence. “I will not risk it. Not here. Not with you.”
Johnny flared, fire licking the air around his shoulders, his eyes desperate. “Selara—”
She whirled on him, her silvery-gray eyes blazing. “Do you not hear me? If it fails, you die. If it succeeds… you still die if I fall! That is what you ask me to gamble!”
“I don’t care!” Johnny’s voice cracked raw, echoing off the crystal. “I’d rather die with you than live watching him chain you like a battery!”
Sue’s gasp cut like glass. “Johnny!” Her voice was half-command, half-plea. She stepped between them without thinking, invisible force humming at her skin, her hand outstretched toward her brother. “Do you even hear yourself?”
Johnny’s chest heaved, fire seething along his jawline. “I hear myself just fine. You don’t get it, Sue. She’s it. She’s the one. And I’m not gonna stand here while some stone-hearted tyrant laughs about it!”
Reed’s voice sliced in, steady but sharp. “Emotion won’t protect you. If the bond is as Selara says, the risk isn’t theoretical — it’s inevitable. Shared pain, shared mortality.” His eyes flicked to Selara, then back to Johnny. “It could end you both.”
“Better than letting him win!” Johnny shot back.
Ben slammed his fist into his palm, stone cracking stone, the sound rolling like thunder. “This is crazy. Kid, you don’t just go signin’ up for a death wish because your heart’s got the hots. Selara’s right — you can’t play dice with your life like that.”
“It’s not dice!” Johnny’s voice shredded. He turned back to Selara, fire dimming to a bare glow but his eyes burning hotter. “It’s choice. Mine. You’ve been carrying this alone, afraid of forever, and I’m telling you — I want forever. Even if it’s dangerous. Especially if it’s dangerous.”
Selara’s throat worked, tears threatening. “You do not know what forever means.”
“I know enough.” His voice softened but didn’t break. “I know what it felt like when you said Aruna’shai. I know what it means that I can’t stand the thought of you facing him alone. And I know I’d rather burn with you than watch you fade without me.”
Sue’s voice trembled with fury and fear both. “Jonathan Lowell Spencer Storm, listen to me. You are my baby brother. You don’t gamble your life because you think you’re in love!”
He snapped back, but his voice cracked under the weight of it: “I don’t think, Sue. I know.”
The chamber went deathly quiet. Even the crystal conduits stilled, as though Amarune itself was listening.
Selara’s knees weakened. She gripped the folds of her kareth hard, trying to hold herself upright against the tidal wave of his words. “You cannot know,” she whispered, broken.
“I do,” Johnny said simply.
Theryn’s laugh rumbled again, low and cruel, filling the silence like smoke. “Delicious,” he sneered. “The little flame would tether himself to my daughter’s doom and call it love. Amarune has no need to destroy them. They will destroy themselves.”
Selara flinched at the word doom, but Johnny’s gaze never wavered. He took one step forward, closing the distance between them by inches, his fire banked but steady. “You don’t get to decide what destroys me,” he said, voice low, meant only for her. “That’s my call. And I’m calling you.”
Her breath stuttered. “Johnny…”
Her father’s shadow loomed behind her, her family’s voices pressed close, and the entire planet seemed to hunger for her choice.
—-
The throne room’s air grew heavy, like the walls themselves had bent forward to eavesdrop. Crystal conduits hummed, resonating faintly with Selara’s breath, as if Amarune waited for her pulse to falter so it could devour her.
Johnny’s fire crawled up his arms again, not an explosion this time but a steady, aching burn. He wasn’t posturing; he was pleading with his entire body, his flames translating the desperation he could barely choke into words.
Selara shook her head, tears streaking down her cheeks, glowing faint in the crystal light. “You do not know what you ask. A Bond is not courtship. It is not your Earth’s… costumes of love. It is chains made of soul. If I fall, you fall. If you bleed, I bleed. If you die…” Her voice cracked. “I will end.”
Johnny’s voice broke raw. “Then let me end with you. Better that than letting him—” He flung a hand toward Theryn without breaking her gaze. “—decide what you’re worth.”
Sue’s voice sliced sharp. “Enough!” She thrust herself between them, invisible field shimmering faintly in her anger. Her chest heaved, pearls flashing at her throat. “Johnny, you are not thinking. Selara, you are breaking. Stop before you both shatter.”
“I am thinking!” Johnny shouted back, eyes wet but unflinching. “I’ve been thinking about it since the night she floated at the press conference, since the first time she whispered words in her language I couldn’t understand but knew were everything. Aruna’shai—” His voice cracked. “—I don’t need a translation. I know what it means.”
—-
Selara staggered backward as if struck. The word on his tongue — her word — was both salvation and threat. She pressed her gloved hand to her mouth, trembling, as though trying to hold back the sound of her heart.
Ben stepped forward, rocky fists balled, trying to steady the crack in his own voice. “Kid, you’re talkin’ like a soldier goin’ over the top, not knowin’ if there’s ground on the other side. Selara’s right — this ain’t about guts. It’s about survivin’.”
“Surviving without her isn’t living,” Johnny snapped, fire flaring hotter with each syllable.
“Johnny,” Reed’s voice cut in, cold logic cracking with the tremor beneath. “What you’re proposing isn’t sacrifice. It’s annihilation. Two lives for the price of one bond. Amarune gains nothing but your father’s delight. You gain nothing but—”
“Her.” Johnny’s chest heaved, voice shredded, eyes wet and blazing. “I gain her. That’s all I’ve ever wanted.”
The silence after was brutal. Selara’s shoulders caved inward, her gloves pressed tight to her chest as if she could crush her own ribs into stillness.
—-
And Theryn — Theryn laughed.
It was low, deliberate, a sound like stone grinding bone. His voice rolled across the chamber, cruelly indulgent. “Extraordinary. My daughter plays the tragic princess, whispering chains and sacrifice, and yet she has managed to ensnare a champion of your filthy little world.” His gaze lingered on Johnny, hungry and mocking. “You burn so brightly, little flame. But fire is fuel. Fire is meant to be consumed.”
Johnny’s fire snarled higher in reflex. “Say that again.”
Theryn leaned forward in his throne, eyes like twin shards of the moons. “I need not kill you. If she bonds, Amarune eats you both. If she refuses, I will take her anyway, bind her to another, and the planet will still drink her dry. Either way, the Vyra flows.”
Selara let out a choked sound, half-sob, half-snarl. “You are pleased to gamble with your own daughter’s soul?”
“You mistake me, Selara.” His smile was glacial. “I do not gamble. I calculate. Every ending serves Amarune. You are only the vessel.”
Sue’s arm tightened protectively around Selara, her voice shaking but sharp. “You don’t get to reduce her like that. Not here. Not ever.”
Theryn’s smirk deepened, pleased. “Oh, but I do. You humans cling to your fragile illusions of choice. Bonds, families, found loves — laughable. In the end, only duty survives. You will see.”
The chamber seemed to tilt. Selara’s legs wavered; the pendant’s absence on her chest felt like a phantom brand. The planet’s hunger was louder now, thrumming against her bones, a chorus of need that whispered: feed us, feed us. She nearly doubled over, clutching her sides.
“Starlight—” Johnny’s flames dimmed instantly as he reached for her, his voice raw with fear. “Don’t listen to him. Don’t listen to this.”
Her breath came in broken waves. “I cannot… hold it much longer.”
Theryn’s voice cut clean. “Then do not. Yield. Choose. The hunger of Amarune will have its due.”
He sat back, smug, cruelly entertained. “But I am not without generosity. A parting gift. Retreat to your chambers, daughter. Play at family with your pets. Whisper your desperate words. You have until the moons reach their zenith.” His smile widened like a knife. “Then you will choose. Either way, someone dies. Either way, Amarune feasts. That is what pleases me.”
He raised a hand, and the crystal conduits dimmed around the throne as though bowing to his decree. “Leave me.”
The massive doors groaned open, spilling a pale, otherworldly light across the floor. Guards in obsidian armor stepped aside, sneers carved into their faces.
—-
Selara stood trembling, her gloves shaking, her silvery-gray eyes brimming with unshed tears. Sue gripped her shoulder, Reed took her arm, Ben moved to shield her body with his stone bulk.
Johnny stood rooted, eyes locked on Theryn, his entire frame vibrating with fire he could barely contain. “You’re wrong,” he said, voice low, dangerous. “She’s not yours. And she never will be.”
Theryn’s smile was pure amusement. “Burn bright, little flame. The brighter you burn, the faster you end.”
Selara turned away before she broke completely, her tears falling silent onto the crystal floor.
Together, the Fantastic Four guided her from the throne room. The doors boomed shut behind them with the finality of a coffin lid.
And in the hollow echo of that sound, Amarune itself seemed to shiver, hungry, waiting.
—-
The corridors swallowed them whole.
Their boots struck crystal floors that thrummed faintly with Vyra, as though Amarune itself was listening to their retreat. Guards lined the passage, their helms spiked with mirrored obsidian, but none spoke. Their silence was worse than jeers: it meant they knew their king had already won.
The Fantastic Four stayed close, their shapes huddled around Selara in a broken circle — Sue at her shoulder, Reed at her side, Ben a wall behind her, Johnny just ahead, his flames guttering low as if even fire had to crouch under Amarune’s weight.
At last, the guards peeled away and a set of double doors carved with twin moons yawned open. The chamber beyond pulsed faintly with pink light, alive as if the stone remembered Selara’s childhood steps.
She hesitated at the threshold, her silvery eyes rimmed red, her gloves trembling against each other. “This was my mother’s,” she whispered. “Before it was made mine.”
The doors closed with a low, resonant sigh once they entered, leaving them sealed in with Amarune’s quiet hunger.
The chamber was vast, cathedral-like, yet intimate in its design: crystal walls breathing with faint luminescence, curtains spun from glass-thread shifting as though touched by wind, a dais carved into the likeness of a flower’s open throat. It smelled faintly of ozone and something sweeter — almost like starlight soaked in rain.
Selara moved slowly into the center, then stopped. She didn’t look at them when she spoke. “He called it a Kareth.” Her voice was steady, though it wavered at the edges. “The form I wear on Earth. This… ‘meat suit.’” Her jaw clenched around the insult. “He will not hear me in it. Not here.”
Sue’s hand hovered near her arm. “Selara, you don’t have to—”
“I do.”
—-
Her hands lifted to the seams of her gloves. She pulled them free finger by finger, laying them with ceremony on a low table beside the shards of her pendant. Then she touched her temple, drew her fingers down to her throat, and exhaled a word in Amaralian that glowed violet against her skin: Sha’vireth. Release.
Light cracked from her like a hushed explosion.
Her human shape dissolved in a wash of radiance. Bones lengthened, eyes brightened into twin star-flares of silver-green, hair unspooled in streaming filaments that shimmered with their own glow. Her skin was not skin but translucent luminescence, crystalline veins tracing her like constellations. Where her feet touched the floor, the crystal thrummed with greedy recognition.
The planet knew her. Hungered for her.
The others staggered back instinctively, hands half-lifted. Reed’s scientific awe nearly erased his fear. “Extraordinary,” he breathed, glasses fogging faintly. “A complete energy reconstitution—Selara, your baseline form—”
“Reed,” Sue cut him off, her voice sharp with both awe and protectiveness. She hadn’t looked away, though her mouth had parted in something like grief and wonder. “She’s still Selara.”
Ben exhaled slow, a rocky rumble. “Kid… you glow like a whole damn sunrise.”
Johnny stepped forward, eyes wide, his fire dimming to a fragile ember. He had always thought of her as luminous — now he realized he’d never seen the half of it. “Starlight,” he whispered, softer than he’d ever said it.
Selara folded her arms across her radiant chest as if trying to hold the light in. “This is why he called. Why Amarune stirs. The Source it craves… is me.”
No one answered. Even the walls seemed to lean closer.
At last she lifted her gaze. Her voice was steady, regal now, though grief undercut every syllable. “There is one thing he fears. The Amaranth Bond.”
Sue frowned.
Selara then raised her hands. Light flared between her palms, weaving into shapes: one soft pink, the other blazing violet. They hovered like fragile ghosts.
Reed’s brows furrowed, voice low. “So when your father taunts—”
“He means to see if I would risk it. With him.” Her gaze flicked unwillingly toward Johnny.
Johnny’s fire flared low at his fingertips, his chest heaving. He took a step closer, then another. “So that’s what you’ve been afraid of.” His voice cracked. “That’s why you always pull back.”
Selara’s throat tightened. “You do not understand. If it is the Eternal Flame, and if I fail to protect—”
“Then I burn with you.” His voice was raw, cutting through everything. “I don’t care if it’s forever. I want forever.”
—-
Sue gasped, stepping in front of him, palms out. “Johnny, stop. Think. This isn’t a ring on a finger — this is your life.”
Johnny’s eyes never left Selara. “And what’s more forever than Aruna’shai?”
Selara’s entire body jolted. The word in his mouth — her word — was rough, imperfect, but devastatingly real. Tears sprang to her eyes, her glow trembling at its edges. “You should not speak it… anymore.”
“I’ve been practicing,” he said, voice shaking. “For weeks. Because I knew. Because I love you, Selara.”
The chamber stilled as if the planet itself leaned in.
—-
Ben rubbed a hand over his rocky face. “Aw, kid…” His voice was hoarse, caught between admiration and fear. “You really went and did it.”
Reed opened his mouth, closed it, adjusted his glasses. He looked at Selara like a man staring at a cliff face about to give way — fascinated, terrified.
Sue’s voice broke, trembling. “Johnny… you’re my baby brother. You can’t just—”
“I can,” Johnny said, fierce now. His flames burned bright but controlled. “And I will. If she’ll let me.”
Selara staggered back, her glow flickering. The hunger of Amarune pressed against her bones, whispering to yield. She looked at each of them — Reed’s dread, Sue’s grief, Ben’s stubborn loyalty, Johnny’s burning devotion — and felt the weight of choice like a blade against her throat.
She whispered, voice frayed. “You do not know what you ask of me.”
Johnny took one last step forward, violet fire reflected in his eyes. “Then teach me. Show me. But don’t you dare keep me out when I’ve already chosen you.”
The crystal walls hummed louder, hungry. Above them, Amarune’s twin moons slid toward their zenith.
The king’s clock was already ticking.
—-
The chamber seemed to breathe with them, the crystal walls vibrating faintly as if Amarune itself enjoyed the taste of their conflict. Selara stood radiant and trembling in her true form, light skimming her translucent skin like rivers of silver fire. Johnny faced her, all heat and reckless devotion. The others—her found family—tightened the circle around them.
“No,” Sue said first, sharp as broken glass. Her voice cracked with the weight of it, but her spine stayed straight. “Absolutely not.”
Johnny spun on her, eyes blazing. “Sue—”
“Johnny, listen to me.” She stepped forward, shoulders squared, her pearls glinting in the alien light as though defying it. “You’re my little brother. You’ve thrown yourself at plenty of flames, but this one—” Her hand slashed through the air toward Selara’s glow. “This one burns forever. You can’t just decide for all of us that your life is something to gamble with.”
“It’s not a gamble,” Johnny shot back, raw. “It’s a choice. My choice.”
Sue’s throat worked. Her voice softened but cut deeper. “And what happens to me if I lose you? What happens to Franklin when I have to tell him Uncle Johnny’s gone because he wanted to play hero with a girl who didn’t even know what dating meant two months ago?”
The words landed like a slap. Selara flinched as if she’d been accused herself. Her glow guttered.
—-
Ben rumbled low, leaning his massive bulk forward on one rocky elbow. “She ain’t wrong, matchstick. You’re all heart and no brakes. I’ve seen you jump into fights just ‘cause you didn’t like a guy’s haircut.” His gravel voice cracked. “This? This ain’t just about you, Johnny. It’s her whole damn planet. Her whole damn life. And ours too.”
Johnny turned, fists burning faintly. “So what, Big Guy? We just let her get chained up like a car battery ‘cause it’s safer for us?”
“Safer for you,” Ben growled. “That’s what I care about. I ain’t buryin’ another teammate.” His rocky jaw clenched, eyes narrowing like crevices. “Not if I can stop it.”
Reed, who had been silent too long, finally adjusted his glasses and spoke in that too-calm cadence he used when he was desperate. “Emotionally, I understand your… intensity. But rationally, this is unacceptable. We know nothing about the mechanics of this Bond, its limits, its biological toll. Attempting it without data is—” He stopped, realizing the futility. “Johnny, it could kill you. Instantly. Do you understand that?”
Johnny’s laugh was bitter, hollow. “Do you think I don’t know that? Do you think I haven’t been listening this whole time?” His voice cracked. “I know it could kill me. And I don’t care.”
“Johnny—” Sue tried, broken.
“No!” His fire flared, lighting the walls with a violet echo, as if the planet itself was listening. He turned back to Selara, his face raw, boyish and ancient at once.
—-
The room shattered into silence. The walls hummed louder, Amarune’s hunger vibrating in their teeth. Sue turned away, pressing her palm hard against her eyes. Reed muttered something low and desperate about probability. Ben cursed under his breath, the sound like rocks grinding together.
Selara’s glow trembled so violently it blurred her outline. Her voice cracked when it came: “You think it is simple. You think it is romance. But it is pain. It is chains. It is…” She faltered. Then, trembling, she reached for the pendant shards still lying on the low table.
Her hands closed around them, trembling, then tightened. The crystal screamed faintly in protest before shattering to dust in her palms. She let the fragments fall in a glittering rain, her glow flaring bright.
“No more chains,” she whispered, her voice like a vow.
She lifted her gaze, eyes blazing with grief and determination. “Do you want to know what it feels like, this Bond you beg for?”
Johnny swallowed hard, nodding once.
Her voice became a raw song, trembling but steady. “The Petal Bond is soft. A rose-pink glow. It warms you for a moment, then fades into loyalty, trust, life together. It is safe. It is enough. But the Eternal Flame…” Her eyes filled with tears. “The Eternal Flame burns violet fire. It sears through you like the first scream of being born. It ties you so tight that you can never breathe without the other. If one suffers, the other bleeds. If one dies…” Her voice broke. “…the other follows.”
Johnny’s jaw clenched. His flames dimmed, leaving only his eyes bright. “Then let me burn with you.”
Selara staggered back a step, her light flaring. “You do not know what you ask.”
“Then show me,” he whispered. His voice cracked but did not break. “Give me permission. Like you told me once — don’t read my mind without it. Well, I’m saying it now: I give you permission. I give you all of me.”
The chamber pulsed with Amarune’s hunger, every crystal vein glowing faintly violet, as if the world itself held its breath.
Selara looked around — at Sue’s broken fear, Reed’s frantic logic, Ben’s gruff loyalty — then back at Johnny’s raw devotion. For the first time, she truly understood the one-for-all rhythm of Earth’s families, their mad willingness to bleed together.
Her hands shook as she lifted them. “If we do this…” Her voice trembled, reverent and terrified. “…the world will never let us go.”
Johnny’s flames licked higher, his chest heaving. “Then let’s never let go.”
—-
Selara’s breath shook as she lifted both hands, palms trembling with glow.
“Stay back,” she whispered.
Before anyone could argue, her light spilled outward — a silken ripple that wrapped itself around Reed, Sue, and Ben, forming a translucent shield that bent the alien light into soft prisms. The crystal walls hummed in resonance, recognizing the boundary. The field shimmered like glass woven from starlight, protective, absolute.
Ben pressed a rocky palm against it. “Kid—”
Selara shook her head once. “No. If this kills us, you must live.”
The word us landed like a stone in their chests.
Johnny stepped forward without hesitation, fire already licking at his shoulders, his breath coming fast. He looked at her with every layer of himself peeled raw. “No more waiting.”
Selara’s glow flared, bright enough to hurt the eye, and she extended her hand. Her voice was barely air. “Then come.”
Johnny ignited fully — a man-shaped flame, heat shimmering so intensely the stone under his boots began to sweat. And yet, as he raised his hand toward hers, his fire bent, softened, as if drawn toward her light instead of devouring it.
Their fingers met.
At first, it was gentle: a pink bloom, soft as dawn, unfurling where skin met skin. Selara gasped at the warmth, a tether that reached deep, threading between her ribs, tugging something she had guarded for too long. Johnny’s fire dimmed at the edges, gentled by the glow, his breath catching.
“The Petal Bond,” she whispered, awed, terrified. “It is… enough.”
But the glow didn’t fade. It spread, climbing their arms, wrapping around their joined hands like flowering veins. The pink deepened, heat building, until Johnny staggered. His knees bent, fire flickering.
But Johnny only tightened his grip, dragging her closer. His grin was raw, teeth clenched against the pain. “You’re not draining me. You’re filling me.”
His body trembled, fire flaring erratically. Selara’s light pulsed violently, her breath breaking in sobs. “Let go! Please—you will die!”
Johnny’s flames roared higher, as if answering her grief. His voice came ragged, torn between agony and something greater. “If this is love—if this is what Aruna’shai means—then I don’t want safe. I want forever.”
And then it happened.
—-
The pink fire spiked violet. Not soft, not gentle — blinding, searing. It poured out from their hands, their arms, their entire bodies, a cataract of light and heat that cracked the crystal floor and painted the chamber in impossible colors.
The Eternal Flame.
Selara screamed — not in pain, but in recognition, her soul stretched open until there was no boundary left. Johnny’s voice broke into a ragged laugh, weak but radiant. “We did it. Selara—we did it.”
His knees buckled. She caught him, both of them blazing violet, and his lips found hers in the storm. The kiss was fire and light, a vow carved into the marrow of the world.
And then the chamber exploded.
The blast tore outward, a supernova of violet flame, shattering crystal walls and sending shockwaves through the court. The shield around Reed, Sue, and Ben held, but barely — the three of them crumpled inside it, unconscious but alive, their vitals a steady thrum Selara could feel in the threads of Vyra.
When the light dimmed, Selara staggered, her glow guttering. The shield still hummed around her family. But Johnny—
Johnny was gone.
Her breath came frantic, desperate. “Johnny?” Her eyes darted across smoke and ruin. Nothing.
She dropped to her knees, clutching at the psychic thread she barely understood yet. “Johnny—answer me—” Silence.
Her heart cracked. She pressed both palms to the shattered floor, screaming into the link: Johnny!
Nothing.
Tears blurred her vision. She whispered the word that had carried them this far, the word that was now her only prayer. “Aruna’shai…”
And then—faint, ragged, inside her skull like a candle refusing to die—
Aruna’shai.
His voice. Weak, but alive.
Selara collapsed forward, sobbing into the ruin, her glow trembling violet around her. The Bond had been forged. The Bond had survived. But what it had cost… she did not yet know.
----
Writer's Note(s):
Man does it feel great to get a story idea out of your head (although... this is actually just the halfway point of this story lol).
This is my favorite chapter so far!
Can we say Johnny is stubborn or just crazy in love? Hmmm... maybe both?
Thank you for all the support from everyone liking, rebooting, and reading! See ya'll in Arc Two!
The Amaranth Bond (Johnny Storm x Black!OC Fanfic)
Chapter Ten – The Fallout of Fire
Previous Chapter(s)
- Chapter One- The Binding
- Chapter Two- The Arrival
- Chapter Three- The Crossing
- Chapter Four- The Intermissions (A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Five- The World Watches
- Chapter Six – The World in 1964 ( A Filler Chapter)
- Chapter Seven– The Pendant Ultimatum
- Chapter Eight – Daughter of Amarune
- Chapter Nine – The Choice of Flames
----
Disclaimer: This is a Fantastic Four AU fanfiction. I do not own Marvel, its characters, or related media; only Selara Veyara (OC) and original worldbuilding belong to me. Franklin Richards is aged up for narrative purposes.
Summary: Princess Selara Veyara of Amarune was born to be a power source, not a person. On the eve of her Binding, she tears her destiny apart and flees across galaxies to Earth—arriving in 1964 Manhattan, where neon hums, civil rights protests rise, and the Fantastic Four are just beginning to define what it means to be heroes. Drawn into their orbit, Selara must balance secrecy, survival, and the first fragile sparks of connection with Johnny Storm.
AU: The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025) reimagined as a retro-futurist period AU, blending cosmic fantasy with grounded 1960s New York. Franklin is aged up to better serve his role as both a peer and celestial mirror to Selara.
Themes: Found family, destiny vs. choice, alienation and belonging, cross-cultural translation, the cost of power, Black beauty as inspiration, and the vulnerability of first love.
Word Count: 10429
----
The throne chamber did not fall silent after the explosion.
It rang. Every crystalline surface quivered with the aftershock of what Selara and Johnny had unleashed, as though the planet itself hadn’t decided whether to bow or revolt. The floor was spiderwebbed with glowing fissures, violet veins that pulsed like the heartbeat of some vast, wounded beast. Smoke curled upward, tinged with a bitter mineral tang. Dust drifted down in slow, sparkling sheets, tasting faintly of metal and ash on the tongue.
Reed, Sue, and Ben were just beginning to stir inside the protective dome Selara had thrown over them at the last instant. The shield, woven from her Vyra, trembled as it unraveled, its violet shimmer thinning to threads before vanishing. Inside, their coughs and groans sounded muffled, like voices under water.
But Selara wasn’t watching them.
She was on her knees in the rubble, no disguise left. The kareth was gone — her human skin discarded in the firestorm. Her true form glowed with silver-violet radiance, lines of light threading her veins, her hair alive with faint flame that shifted color with her breath. There were no gloves to hold her back now, no pendant to steady her. Only her, raw and unveiled, and the boy who had dared to burn with her.
Johnny lay before her, fire guttered to embers. His chest rose shallow, uneven. His skin, kissed too long by her Vyra, was pale except where faint scorch marks flared at his collarbone. His mouth curved weakly, the corner glowing faint orange — a star collapsing in slow motion.
“Johnny,” she whispered, her voice breaking in two languages at once. Amaralian first: Veyra shath’en, do not leave me. Then English, desperate and shaking: “Burn. Please, burn for me.”
----
Her hands hovered uselessly above him, trembling. To touch him might drain what little he had left. To not touch him felt like abandonment. Her body ached with the paradox.
Her lips shaped the word that had become her only anchor. “Aruna’shai.”
The syllables trembled in the hollow between them — and the psychic thread flickered to life.
—Selara.
Her breath caught. “Johnny?”
Aruna’shai.
The answer came weak, frayed, like a note played on broken strings, but it was there. Him. Always him. The word glowed through the link, faint embers clawing back toward flame.
A sob tore loose from her chest. She dropped, pressing her bare palm to his cheek. The contact burned — not with heat, but with resonance. His pain, his exhaustion, his stubborn will surged through her, braided with her own until she couldn’t tell where he ended and she began.
A laugh curved through the smoke. Cold, deliberate.
----
King Theryn’s projection still loomed over the shattered chamber, crystalline robes unmarked, crown gleaming as though nothing could touch him. The violet light of the bond hadn’t singed him; it had only sharpened the disdain in his features.
“Well,” he said, his voice polished glass, “the children have played with fire.”
Selara rose shakily, body trembling with both fury and grief. Her hair crackled faintly with violet sparks, her aura unshielded, undeniable. She stood between her father’s projection and Johnny’s prone body, silver-gray eyes glowing like stormlight.
“You saw,” she whispered.
“I saw,” Theryn confirmed, savoring the words. His gaze raked over Johnny, dismissive. “And what a pathetic display it was. This… kareth—this meat-suit parasite—dared to reach for you. And you let him.”
Selara’s shoulders shook. “Do not call him that.”
“Not a toy? Not a pawn? Not a lower animal wearing fire like a mask?” Theryn sneered. “My daughter, bartering her life with dust-born flesh. Do you think rebellion makes you noble? It only makes you weak.”
Johnny stirred faintly, eyelids dragging open. His voice was a rasp, cracked but insistent. “Guess… it worked.”
Selara dropped again, pressing her forehead to his temple, tears slipping free. His fire was faint, his presence thin — but he was here. He had not broken.
Theryn’s chuckle was sharp enough to cut skin. “And already, he weakens. Already, he collapses under the bond’s weight. You will drain him until he is ash, and still Amarune will take you. That is all you are good for — to feed. To be fed upon.”
Reed pushed himself upright, dust streaking his face. His glasses hung crooked, but his voice found steadiness. “She made a choice. He made a choice. That’s more than you’ll ever understand.”
Sue came forward, positioning herself instinctively between Selara and the projection though she knew it couldn’t harm them. Her voice was maternal steel. “Because love isn’t weakness. You wouldn’t recognize it if it stood in front of you.”
Ben cracked his stone knuckles, gravel grinding. “You’re a sick piece of work. Callin’ your own kid a damn battery. If I ever get the chance, I’ll—”
Theryn cut him off with another laugh. “Oh, yes. Family. The primitives cling to it like driftwood. You mistake defiance for destiny.” He leaned forward, crystalline eyes narrowing on Selara. “That bond will break you, daughter. It will break him. And when it does, Amarune will take what’s left.”
Selara’s skin glowed hotter, her voice trembling but resolute. “I am not yours. Not anymore.”
“Not mine?” Theryn tilted his head, smiling like a blade. “Then prove it. Touch him again. Show me this bond doesn’t devour him. Show me you can love without destroying.”
Her heart slammed in her chest. The temptation and terror knotted so tight she could barely breathe. Behind her, Johnny’s hand shifted weakly on the ground, fingertips twitching toward her.
----
“Not… letting… go,” he whispered through grit teeth. “Not… ever.”
Tears blurred her vision. Her palm burned where it touched his cheek — not draining now, but humming with dangerous possibility.
She lifted her chin toward Theryn, voice breaking but unbowed. “I will never be your Source. And I will never be your pawn.”
The king’s crystalline smile widened. “We shall see, Selara. Amarune itself already hungers for you. Listen—feel it. The ground trembles when you breathe. The sky flickers when you speak. It will consume you, whether through the bond, through the Core, or through my chains.”
Then his image dissolved, leaving only dust and silence.
Selara’s legs buckled, and she collapsed again at Johnny’s side. His lips twitched into a weak, lopsided grin.
“Told you,” he rasped, eyes half-lidded. “Not leaving you.”
Her sob cracked open, unrestrained. She pressed her glowing palm to his chest, forehead against his shoulder, whispering the only word that mattered anymore:
“Aruna’shai.”
The chamber groaned around them, the cracks in the floor glowing brighter — as though Amarune itself had heard.
—-
It wasn’t a siren like Earth’s; it was a chord—three notes struck on a scale that belonged to stone—with overtones that set the teeth on edge. The walls answered, light running along their veins like quicksilver. Dust shivered from the vaulted ribs overhead in glittering sheets.
“Company,” Ben growled, hauling himself fully upright and planting between Selara and the tall doors.
They opened like eyelids. Amaralian Sentinels poured through—sleek and terrible, their armor faceted like dark quartz, helms drawn into moon-sickle crests. Lances hummed in their hands, tips crackling with violet-white charge that smelled like rain just before it strikes live wire. A second wave flowed behind, thinner figures in mantle-sashes—Weavers—fingertips already sparking as they began to braid the air into nets.
“Stand down,” intoned the lead Sentinel, voice amplified through his helm into a glassy resonance. His gaze took in the fractured floor, the scorched dais, the glowing girl shielding the boy. “By decree of the Crown, the Princess returns to the Core.”
Johnny coughed, the sound making his whole body flinch. “Over… my fried body,” he rasped, trying for a grin and getting half of one.
Selara rose to her feet in one smooth, shaking motion, placing herself in front of him. Her true form shed light across the wreckage, hair lifting in a tide of silver-violet flame. No gloves; no pendant; no human mask. Just Selara—radiant, trembling, unafraid.
“You will not touch him,” she said.
The lead Sentinel tilted his head, as if cataloging her glow like a specimen. “You have bonded,” he said, clinical. “Inevitable. Inefficient.” His lance brightened. “Yield.”
----
“Over my dead—” Johnny started again.
Sue’s hand touched his shoulder, field already gathering around all of them like a second skin. “Save it for when they deserve it,” she murmured. Then, calm as anything, to the Sentinels: “No.”
Reed didn’t waste words. He stretched—arms arrowing out, torso thinning, a human whip that snapped around a toppled obelisk and dragged it into place as cover. “Ben, left flank,” he barked. “Sue, layered domes—vector their charge into the ceiling. Selara—”
“I know,” Selara said, voice low, furious music. She flung her hands and Vyra answered—walls of light blooming like petals, turning the first volley of lance-fire into a storm of harmless sparks that died hissing on the fractured floor.
The chamber erupted.
Bolts slammed Sue’s domes and skittered upward in glittering sheets, turning the ceiling into a storm of captured lightning. Reed slingshotted himself into a pair of Weavers, his elastic body snapping them together with a neat, disarming knot that yanked their lances wide. Ben charged like a boulder that had learned to choose its targets, shoulder-checking a rank of Sentinels and driving them back… back… until his fist slammed into a load-bearing column.
The column didn’t break.
Shock ran up Ben’s arm, into his shoulder. He hissed through his teeth. “Okay,” he grimaced, flexing stone fingers that vibrated with pain, “note to self—don’t punch the jewelry.”
“They won’t yield,” the lead Sentinel observed, not unadmiring. He cut his lance in a tight arc—fast—and sent a low, wide wave of force crawling along the floor at ankle height. Selara felt it a heartbeat before it hit and dropped a slab of light—Sue’s dome doubled its thickness in the same instant. The wave shattered against it, spraying prismatic shards that evaporated into bitter steam.
Johnny pushed to his knees behind Selara, breath ragged. A thin ribbon of flame climbed his forearms—no bravado, only need. “I’ve got…—” He coughed, spat copper. “I’ve got a cut for that.” He dragged his hand through the air and left behind a thin, incandescent line—a tripwire of heat. Two Sentinels hit it at speed; their armor flared, shuddered, powered down for a precious second.
Selara’s palm flashed. A spear of Vyra answered her hand and she flicked it low, clean, taking their legs out from under them without carving flesh.
“Nonlethal!” Reed called, as if she needed the reminder. “We’re not making corpses.”
“Then stop shooting at the visitors,” Ben bellowed, hurling a shattered bench like a discus. It clipped three lances out of alignment and thunked uselessly against a wall that chimed in irritation.
More Weavers fanned in, fingers flickering, and the air thickened—Vyra-strands weaving a net that looked like heat mirage and felt like syrup. Sue swore under her breath, pushed both hands forward, and her field became wind—pressure—flattening the weave against the far wall where it sank and sputtered like a jellyfish beached by a wave.
“Selara!” Reed again, sharper now, eyes tracking, calculating in real time. “The lattice—see it? This room has a resonant key. We can’t break it, but maybe we can ask it to open.”
Ask. The word bit and soothed in the same breath. Her mother’s voice in memory: Stone listens to those who name it for what it is, not what they want. Selara flung a look toward the hall that led out—not the grand doors choked with guards, but a lateral seam along the chamber’s western curve, almost invisible unless you knew where to look. The old service corridor. She’d chased shadows there as a child when court bored her and her mother’s laughter still lived.
“It won’t obey me,” she said, grief hot in her throat. “He changed the keys.”
“Keys can be forged,” Reed said. He yanked a device from his belt—a stubby cylinder that was three parts sonic, two parts guesswork. He snapped it open, slid the housing to expose a ring of micro-tuners, and thrust it at Johnny. “Heat. Thin and steady.”
Johnny’s mouth twitched. “Like a blowtorch? You’re askin’ me for minimalism?” But he reached, pulled at the thin flame ribbon he’d laid, and fed its heart to the tuners. The cylinder glowed, a line of lights crawling from red to violet.
“Sue, I need a waveguide,” Reed said, already tuning the device, listening past the fight to the room’s bell-voice.
Sue knelt, palms flat to the fractured floor. Her field shaped to a narrow funnel, an invisible horn pointed at the seam in the western wall. “Done.”
“Selara,” Reed said, voice low, intent. “Sing.”
Her breath hitched. The last time she had sung to Amarune, it had been a child’s game—a duet with a mother who smelled of cool metal and moonlight. Her father had made songs into chains.
She closed her eyes. Under the alarm-chord, under the ring of lances and the thunder of Ben’s charges, under Johnny’s paper-thin scrape of breath—there was the planet. A pulse. A hunger. A wanting that wasn’t malevolent so much as mindless. It recognized her. It called.
Selara set her teeth, chose the note her mother had taught for gentle opening, and let it loose.
The sound wasn’t loud, but it filled everything. A silver tone threaded with violet, braided with grief. The tuners whirred, hunting, and Reed’s fingers worked the dials like a man coaxing a lock he couldn’t see. Sue’s funnel tightened. Johnny fed a steadier lick of heat, jaw clamped, skin shining with sweat. The seam brightened—faint at first, then a little more.
The lead Sentinel heard it. “Block the passage,” he snapped, and three soldiers pivoted, lances leveled.
----
Ben moved. He didn’t break the wall—couldn’t—but he could be a wall. He planted wide in front of the seam, catching the first lance-charge full in the chest. It sparked and skittered off, leaving blackened scoring across orange stone. He grunted, set his shoulders, and dared them to try again.
“Weavers!” the commander barked.
The Weavers threw their hands and a net flared—wide and shimmering—dropping toward Ben like a descending curtain.
“Not today,” Sue muttered, and flung her field upward, not as a dome this time but as a slice—the world’s cleanest paper-cutter. The net split down the middle, both halves slapping harmlessly to either side and melting like sugar in the rain.
The seam along the wall glowed brighter. Selara’s song warbled—only a little—when a stray lance-bolt glanced off her shoulder. The contact hurt—hot and bright—but pain was a language the bond made complicated now; Johnny hissed as if he’d been struck too. She steadied, poured more of herself into the note.
“Almost,” Reed breathed. He twisted the final tuner. The device thrummed, the chamber answered, and the seam unsealed with a sigh like petals losing their will to stay closed.
“Go!” Reed shouted.
“Move it!” Ben barked, catching a lance with both hands and twisting—not breaking it, but torquing it out of its wielder’s grip and sending the soldier sprawling into his companion.
Johnny pushed himself up, knees threatening mutiny. Selara turned, grabbed him—skin on skin—and the world narrowed to a bright thread. Energy moved between them: not a drain this time, not the ravenous pull of the planet, but a lend. She didn’t couch it in words. She poured. His pupils blew wide; a breath hitched in his chest; his flame steadied by a slender inch.
“Starlight,” he breathed, dazed. “Careful.”
“Always,” she lied.
----
They ran.
The service corridor was narrow compared to the throne hall, its walls a softer crystal that glowed with its own unassuming light. It smelled faintly of cool metal and something floral she almost remembered. Her childhood stuttered through her vision in bright, painful cuts: hiding here with a stolen pastry; her mother’s hand brushing the same seam, smiling; a Weaver bringing news in a rush that wiped all smiles from the air.
Behind, the Sentinels surged, armor scraping, lances sizzling. Ahead, the corridor forked—a left-hand slope rising toward the outer arcades and the city’s open light; a right-hand descent into the Galleries of Veins, where the world’s bloodstream glowed and sang.
“Up,” Reed said, without breath to explain.
“Down,” Selara countered, equally breathless. “He’ll choke the arcades with soldiers. The Veins… the Veins can be persuaded.”
“Persuaded not to eat you?” Johnny asked, only half kidding and not at all reassured.
Ben didn’t slow. “Kid says down, we go down.”
They covered the fork with a wall of Sue’s force—thin but stubborn—and plunged right.
The Galleries opened like a throat. Columns rose in clean crescents, each one a living artery. Vyra ran through them, visible as light, audible as a hum you felt in bone. The temperature dropped a degree; the smell changed—cold, mineral, with an edge like the air before snow.
The planet’s hunger sharpened.
Selara staggered. The hum locked onto her like a tuning fork finding its pair. She felt it in her teeth, under her breastbone, low in her belly—a pull that was part recognition, part appetite. Mine, the Galleries sang. Ours. Come home. Lay down. Feed.
Johnny flinched, even though the call wasn’t for him. “Selara—”
“I feel it,” she gasped. “Keep moving.”
“Give me a lane,” Reed said, eyes scanning the lattice like a man reading music. Sue shaped one—two invisible rails that shoved the hum back enough to make an aisle.
----
Sentinels spilled into the Gallery behind, their armor throwing prismatic ghosts along the columns. One fired. The bolt ricocheted, turned into a skein of harmless light when it passed too near a Vein; even weaponry bent in here.
“This is our place,” Selara said, as if reminding herself, not the others. “It listens.”
“Then talk fast,” Ben said, catching a thrown spear on his forearm with a clang that would’ve shattered steel anywhere else. Here, the crystal rang, and Ben’s rocky hide vibrated with the blow. He snarled, shoved the spear back—the soldier who’d thrown it pinwheeled into his neighbor. “Sorry ‘bout your choir practice.”
Reed spun the tuner again, this time hunting not a door’s key but a path’s. “There—there,” he said, pointing toward a tight knot of columns where the glow ran brightest. “If that’s a junction, you can soften it.”
Selara planted both bare hands on the nearest Vein. The contact wrung a gasp from her; every nerve in her palms felt plugged into suns. “I will not feed you,” she whispered, cheeks wet, voice shaking with command. She shifted to her first tongue—the one the planet had known since her bones were built. “I will not be your Core. But you will open. Not for him. For me.”
The Gallery answered with a subsonic groan. Light along the Veins flickered—hungry, wanting. Then, slowly, a seam ahead drew itself—reluctant, resentful, but obeying. The columns leaned a fraction of breath apart and revealed a slit of dark.
“Move!” Sue snapped, holding the lane while bolts sang overhead and melted against her field like rain on oiled cloth.
Johnny staggered toward the opening, and Selara braced his weight without thinking, the bond a rope around both their waists. For a terrifying second she felt him falter—and then she sent him a swallow of herself. His flame lifted, a tremor steadied. His eyes flicked to hers, shocked, grateful, undone.
“Stop—sharing—your—everything,” he gritted, trying for humor and getting prayer.
“Then do not fall,” she shot back, throat working.
They slid into the slit just as the Sentinels reached the edge of the lane. Two tried to follow. The columns—obedient this once to Selara, jealous of what they held—angled tighter. Armor scraped, caught, trapped. The lead Sentinel made a frustrated, inhuman sound as the Gallery swallowed their lances’ light and turned it into a harmless aurora that ran like water down crystal.
The slit closed. Darkness took them—complete for a beat, then filled by the dim luminescence of inner stone.
They were in the bones of Amarune.
----
Sound changed here. No more ring of battle, only the slow, deep thrum of a world. The walls weren’t smooth; they were layered—geologic growth lines that caught Selara’s glow and broke it into thin, wandering threads. The air was cool and dry, smelling faintly of iron and what the inside of a seashell might remember.
Ben exhaled hard. “Gotta hand it to you,” he muttered, cradling his forearm where the lance had scored him. “I don’t like your dad’s house, but the basement’s got style.”
“Are we safe?” Sue asked, already rolling her shoulders, recalibrating her field from shield to sustain.
“For now,” Reed said, listening as much as looking. “We need to keep moving. Find an exit into the lower wilds before he routes around us.”
“He’ll try to force the Galleries to turn on us,” Selara warned. Her hands still sang from the touch. She curled her fingers, willing the ache away. “But he cannot make them take me. Not if I keep choosing.”
Johnny leaned against the wall, every breath a climb. He looked up at her and smiled with that sideways, breaking heart of a smile that always made her feel both seen and doomed. “Then let’s choose faster,” he said, and reached for her hand without thinking—
Skin to skin. A small, blinding flare at their palms. Not the shock of the first bond, not the supernova that had split the throne room—but a pulse, a heartbeat shared. Petal and flame, braided.
He hissed, and so did she—pain traveling the link and then evening out, like water finding level.
“Johnny,” she warned, voice hoarse with fear and want.
“Yeah.” His grin was thin but real. “I felt it too. C’mon, starlight.”
They moved deeper. The passage sloped, rose, curled back on itself in gentle spirals, a labyrinth designed by geology and prayer. Twice Reed had to stop and tune that little cylinder again, leaning on Johnny’s thread of flame to give it voice while Sue shaped the air into a horn. Twice Selara had to lay her hands on the Veins and insist, tears standing on her lashes, that she would not feed them but she would lead them, and the stone—sulky, wanting, remembering her mother—let them pass.
----
Once, the path opened to a balcony carved over a chasm so deep the light didn’t reach the bottom. A sound rose from it like breathing. Selara pressed her free hand to the railing and closed her eyes. “This is the gorge where they cut the first channels,” she said softly. “Before there was a Core. When we still asked, and the planet still had the right to say no.”
She pulled back fast, as if the memory could burn. “We keep moving.”
Behind them, far away and yet too near, the alarm-chord changed key.
“He found our line,” Reed said.
“Translation,” Ben grunted.
“He knows where we’re going.” Reed looked to Selara. “Can you throw him off?”
She thought of Theryn’s face when the bond flared, the small curl of satisfaction that had twisted his mouth even as he sneered. Either you risk killing him with your love, or you kill yourself by denying it. He believed he couldn’t lose. She let the cold of that sit in her, then set it down, then stepped forward.
“Yes,” she said, more certain than she felt. She turned not left, where the Veins led—the old road, efficient and obvious—but into a narrower cut that smelled of old air and disuse.
“Shortcut?” Johnny asked, eyebrows up, voice barely above a whisper as if the walls might tier an eavesdrop.
“Not a road,” she said. “A memory.”
They squeezed through, single-file—Ben taking up too much space and apologizing under his breath, Sue’s shoulder a steadying hand on Johnny’s back when he stumbled, Reed mapping angles in his head like he could unfold the world and walk it flat. Selara led, palms grazing stone, singing under her breath in the first tongue so quietly that only the walls heard.
The planet’s hunger scratched at her spine all the while—persistent as tide, patient as long illness. But for the first time since she had set foot on Amarune, she felt something else coil beneath it.
Not hunger.
Attention.
----
You changed a thing, the bones whispered. You made fire that was not ours answer you. You are not only for feeding.
A sob tried to climb her throat. She swallowed it with a small, stubborn smile that was all Aivara. “No,” she breathed, to the world and to herself and to the boy behind her whose hand burned in hers like a promise. “I am not.”
The passage blew colder air into their faces—cleaner, tinged with the sour-green of surface life. The light ahead grew brighter, more natural, less refracted. The hum thinned.
“Exit,” Reed said, relief flattening the word.
They broke out into it—the outer wilds beyond the palace plateau, where Amarune made forests not from wood but from stiffened light and living glass. Spires rose here in thickets, each one etched with the slow calligraphy of growth. Wind ran through them and made a sound like a thousand thin voices singing one note. The twin moons hung low and large, one pearly, one the color of bruised violets.
Selara breathed as if she had been underwater since stepping through the portal and had only now found air.
Behind, far across the plain, the palace gleamed—cold, perfect, a crown driven into rock. Alarm-gleam ran around its circumference like a snake eating its own tail.
“We need cover,” Sue said, already scanning the glass-forest for places a shield could hold.
“North—” Selara started, then corrected herself, because north didn’t mean anything here. She pointed toward a denser stand where the spires grew close and low. “There. The Singing Thicket. It will hide us… if we ask, and if it forgives me.”
“Still makin’ friends with walls,” Ben muttered, rolling his sore shoulder. “Let’s go make friends with trees made outta chandeliers.”
Johnny squeezed Selara’s hand, weak but certain. “Lead the way, princess.”
She didn’t flinch at the word—not anymore. She lifted her chin, set her shoulders, and led them into the singing glass. The planet watched. The king gathered his soldiers. The bond burned like a brand and a benediction between two people who had decided, against a world, to belong.
And for the first time since she had been born on a planet that made girls into fuel, Selara’s steps—terrified, defiant, luminous—sounded like someone walking toward her own future, not away from anyone else’s.
—-
The Thicket would not stop singing.
Wind threaded the crystal trunks and the forest answered in long, patient chords that shivered the air. Notes stacked and leaned, overtones ringing like glasses on the lip of breaking. Moonlight—two pale coins off-center in the sky—caught in every facet so that even the shadows looked crystalline, as if absence itself had edges.
Selara’s shoulders drew tight against the music. It vibrated in her teeth and the fine bones behind her ears, a resonance she had learned to ignore as a child and had forgotten how. Beneath it, a subtler rhythm pulsed—planetary, tidal—tugging at her sternum where the pendant had once rested. The pull sharpened whenever Johnny exhaled; it sharpened again when he smiled. Amarune was listening. Amarune wanted.
“Strategy,” Reed said, forcing the word into the humming air like a wedge. He had his notebook out—of course he did—with a sliver of a crystal thorn tucked into its spiral. “We need three things: distance from the city, dampening for Selara’s signature, and misdirection for Theryn’s scouts.”
“Misdirection I can do,” Ben grunted, settling on a knee with a long-out breath. “I’ll go find somethin’ big and punch it in the wrong direction.”
“Let’s not announce our position by leveling a mountain,” Sue said, gentler than her words. She was kneeling beside Johnny with one palm hovering over his ribs as if her field could feel for fractures. “We’re not at full strength.”
Johnny tried a grin. It caught on the corner of his mouth and stayed. “Speak for yourself. I’m fine.”
“Liar,” Sue said fondly. Her eyes stayed on Selara. “How much does the Bond pull when you’re apart?”
Selara blinked, dragged herself back from the sound pressing at the inside of her skull. She looked at their hands—hers bare now, unmarred by gloves, his knuckles trembling faintly. She didn’t dare touch him again without asking. The memory of violet fire under skin still made her breath falter.
“It is… louder now,” she said, voice rough. “Before, when we were near, it was a… hum. Warm. A thread with slack. Now the thread is—tense.” She touched the space over her heart. “When he steps away, it tightens. When he is hurt—” Her eyes flickered, the green undertone flaring. “I feel it. Not the cause. Only the shape.”
“Confirmation,” Reed murmured, more to himself. “Eternal link— bidirectional affective resonance, partial somatic sharing.”
Johnny shot him a look. “In English, Stretch.”
Reed blinked. “You’ll feel each other.”
“Yeah,” Johnny said softly. “We already do.”
----
The Thicket’s harmony rose a degree, glass voices swelling in a chord that sounded too much like breath caught in a throat. Selara flinched. She angled away from the wind to blunt the sound as if it had hands.
“Tell us again,” Sue said quietly, “both forms. Everything we need to know.”
Selara nodded once, gathering the words as carefully as if they were shards. “There are two. Most Amaranthi find the first—the Petal Bond. Touch, and a pink bloom flares under the skin. It fades with the seconds. The bond remains for life. It is loyalty, not… destiny. No pain-sharing. Only deeper understanding. Old people call it the gentle tether.”
“And the second?” Reed prompted, though he knew.
Selara’s gaze slid to Johnny and then away. “The Eternal Flame. When the flame takes, it erupts bright violet. It burns.” Her voice went smaller, honest. “It hurts, at first. The link opens—emotions pass, pain passes. Distance thins. It is… forever.” She swallowed. “If the female carries a child, the pain is spared the male.” A small breath that was not quite a laugh. “Our mothers insisted.”
Sue’s mouth trembled, a smile through worry. “Smart mothers.”
“Rare,” Selara continued. “So rare that entire clans keep stories of one they witnessed—like a comet recorded once in a thousand winters.” Her gaze lowered to her hands, bare, humming faintly with leftover light. “It can kill if it is forced. It can save if it is chosen.” She lifted her head. “We chose.”
Johnny drew a breath he didn’t fully have. “We did.”
Reed pressed his lips together. “Which means we need to treat proximity like a throttle. The closer you are physically, the more data the link will carry. It could overrun you both, and—if Amarune can sense the output—feed the very hunger we’re trying to starve.”
“Translation,” Ben said dry. “No makin’ out in the glass woods.”
Johnny flushed; the grin came back, crooked and defiant. “Noted. For now.”
----
Selara’s own mouth tugged at one side without permission. It faded when the Thicket’s chord peaked and the planet tugged again, unmistakable now—like an infant’s rooting in the dark. She swayed, steadying herself on a trunk that thrummed under her palm.
Sue saw it. “What is it doing to you?”
Selara closed her eyes. “It remembers me. It thinks I have returned to—feed. The Core calls. Here, the winds carry the call.” She exhaled through her teeth, hands shaking. “It is polite hunger. It will get ruder.”
Reed’s mind raced visibly. “We need dampening. You called it a weft once—a weave between you and the Core. Can you lay one that keeps Amarune from tasting you?”
Selara hesitated. “If I pull Vyra inward, knit it into a—veil—it will quiet. But the veil catches more than hunger.” She glanced at Johnny; the link hummed between them like a tuned wire. “It will also mute… him.”
Johnny’s jaw set. “Do it.”
She stared. “You hate being shut out.”
“I hate being the reason you’re pulled apart,” he said simply. Then, softer, “I’d rather hear you faintly than feel you burn.”
Sue breathed something like relief. “Then that’s the call.” She squeezed Selara’s shoulder. “We’ll build you a veil.”
Reed had already broken the crystal thorn out of his notebook and was testing its tone with a knuckle. “These spires resonate at discrete frequencies. If Selara braids a thin field—call it a counter-hum—and I anchor it with a tuned ring of fragments, we might cancel the call in a radius.” He looked up. “A null around us.”
“Like a quiet room,” Sue said, the words landing with a kind of longing.
“Exactly.”
Ben hauled himself up, eyeing the trunks. “I’ll take a couple o’ these tapas off the buffet.” He lifted a fist.
“Not the big ones,” Reed and Selara said at the same time.
Ben paused mid-swing, squinting. “Tiny ones, check.”
“Please,” Selara added, soft. “Ask the Thicket.”
----
Ben made a face—then planted his palm on a smaller spur, closed his eyes, and said, grave as a child, “’Scuse me, tree. We just need a little.” He tugged. The slender shard gave with a clean, singing pop. The whole grove’s chord wavered in brief disapproval, then settled.
“See?” Ben said, holding up the shard like a candied apple. “Manners.”
Reed arranged a circlet of shards in the frost-gloss grass, each piece pointing inward like the petals of an austere flower. Sue stepped back and widened her stance. “I can layer a field dome over whatever they create—think of it like… silk that holds the stitch.”
Johnny hovered at Selara’s shoulder. He didn’t reach for her hand this time, though his fingers twitched. He stayed close enough that their breath made a small, private weather. “Ready?” he asked.
Selara gathered Vyra in the cradle of her chest. In Amarune’s twin light her true shape was impossible to disguise—edges of luminous geometry under skin, a trace of starlight shimmering in the iris, the faint impression that gravity respected her but did not own her. She lifted both palms. “I will weave a hush.”
She flicked two fingers. Vyra answered, thinning into filament and then into thread. She bent it—not around herself, not around Johnny, but around the circle Reed had made in the frost grass. As the bright strands crossed and re-crossed, a faint counter-melody rose against the Thicket’s persistent music—an almost-sound, like breath drawn in before speech.
“Slower,” Reed murmured, calibrating by ear. “Attenuate the third overtone.”
Selara narrowed the thread to a hair’s breadth as she laid it. The planetary pull eased a fraction. The bond’s hum—Johnny’s steady heat—faded to a warmer background, like a lamp in a neighboring room.
“It is working,” she said, awe and grief braided in the words.
Sue touched the air. Her invisible field smoothed over the weave, tucking it into place, sealing edges that threatened to fray. The dome settled; the Thicket’s song softened, as if the forest had stepped one pace back.
Johnny blew out a breath. “It’s… quieter.” He glanced at her. “You okay?”
She nodded, throat tight. “I still feel you.” She moved one hand a few inches and watched the light between them answer in a shy pink flicker. “Just… less sharp.”
Ben planted in the grass, satisfied. “Good. Now for the misdirection.”
----
Reed looked at the shards remaining. “We can create false sources. If I arrange clusters at varying intervals and excite them with a low-energy impulse—”
“I can push a whisper into them,” Selara said. “A—taste—of me.”
“Baits,” Sue said, catching on. “For the scouts to chase.”
Johnny tilted his head, gaze sliding to the dark between spires where the Thicket thickened. “You do that and we move. Fast. Not toward the city. Toward—?”
“Outcroppings to the east,” Selara said immediately, turning her face that way as if a compass pulled it. “Flux-shadow there is heavier. The stone is old. It drinks song. The hunger dulls.”
“Sounds like a bed ’n breakfast,” Ben muttered. “Let’s go.”
“Wait,” Sue said softly. Her eyes were on Selara. “What else do we need to know? About the Bond.”
Selara’s hands twined, then forced themselves still. She looked to each of them, letting truth be what she gave them in place of certainty. “It will demand honesty,” she said. “Lying makes the link… ache. Small lies pinch. Big lies—burn.”
Johnny winced, a ghost-smile passing through the pain. “So… no more ‘I’m fine.’”
“Not if you are not,” she said. The corner of her mouth bent. “And—touch will speak louder now. A hand is a paragraph.” She colored, the glow at her cheeks entirely human despite everything else about her. “A kiss is… a book.”
Sue’s lips parted and then sealed in an exhale that was half laugh, half sob. “Good to know.”
Reed coughed into his wrist. “Right. And… death?”
It was tactless and necessary. Selara did not look away. “If one dies, the other feels the last pain.” She swallowed. “And then half of everything is… missing.”
Johnny’s hand found her wrist and stopped there, hovering a centimeter above skin—permission held, not assumed. “Not happening,” he said. It wasn’t bravado. It was a vow.
The Thicket pressed again—like a congregation leaning forward when it knows the sermon has reached the asking. The hush-dome thrummed and held. Beyond it, a different tone entered the forest’s song—metal on crystal, distant, deliberate. Reed’s head snapped toward it. Sue straightened, field sensitive to the pressure change. Ben dragged in a breath like a furnace priming.
“Scouts,” Selara said. No fear in it—only fatigue shot through with iron.
“Then let’s finish the baits and go,” Johnny said. He looked at her, eyes bright under the moons. “You weave. I’ll carry.”
She blinked. “You are weak.”
“So are you,” he said, almost cheerfully. “We’ll limp together.”
Ben got to his feet with a sound like stone settling. “Kid’s got a point. Two limps make a walk.”
Reed moved fast, precise, placing triads of shards at the circle’s edge and in the shadow of three neighboring trunks. Selara extended a hand. Tiny glows touched the crystal tips, and each flared pink, then violet, then dimmed to a sullen, enticing throb. A Selara that was not Selara, a mouthful of sugar for Amarune’s endless teeth.
Sue cast her dome wider, a last smoothing of silk. The forest’s music receded another step, the hunger blunted—still present, still insistent—but less like a command and more like a haunting.
Johnny offered his arm without touching. “Princess?”
Selara took it, not skin to skin, but the pressure made their bond hum anyway, like two instruments learning the same key. She met his eyes. “No more calling me princess in front of kings.”
“Got it,” he said. “Your majesty.”
The ghost of a smile lit her face. “Worse.”
He laughed, breathless, and for a heartbeat the Thicket sounded almost like applause.
They turned east.
----
“Ben,” Reed said as they moved, voice pitched low, “when we reach the flux-shadow, you and I will set up a perimeter—pair my sensors with your—”
“My fists, yeah,” Ben said. “Say fists, Stretch. It’s okay.”
“Fists,” Reed agreed, dry, relieved. “Sue, the dome—”
“I’ll keep a skin over them as long as I can,” she said. Her eyes stayed on Selara’s back, watching the minute tremors that ran through her shoulders when the wind rose. “We trade off. No one burns out alone.”
Wind shifted. The Thicket’s song darkened—a minor chord through glass. The new tone threaded it: the sibilant hiss of cloaks through crystal grass, the soft clink of Vyra-threaded weapons knocking together at a jog.
“Here we go,” Johnny said under his breath.
Selara glanced back, not slowing. “Remember,” she said, a command whispered, the nearest thing to a prayer she had, “no heroics for vanity. Only for necessity.”
Johnny gave her a sideways look that was half love, half mischief. “Define vanity.”
“Johnny,” Sue warned.
“Right,” he said, sobering. “Necessity only.”
The hush-dome held a little longer, their baits pulsing like false lighthouses in the dark. The forest sang. The planet wanted. Between longing and pursuit, the five of them threaded east—toward old stone that drank songs, toward a shadow deep enough to hide a flame, toward a night that would ask for everything and give back only what they took with care.
And as they moved, the bond between two of them—new, raw, impossible—hummed like a live wire. Not quiet. Not safe. But chosen.
----
The Thicket breathed with them—no, not with them, at them—like a sleeping animal angling for their warmth. Wind combed the glass-leafed crowns so the branches chimed in thin, bright tones, a thousand little bells rubbing crystal on crystal. Far off, something called in three notes, low and mournful, and the ground answered with a pulse that rippled through their boots. The two moons had lifted higher—twin coins thrown and frozen mid-arc—and their pallor painted everyone strange.
“Sit,” Ben said finally, and it came out less like a suggestion than a mercy. He guided Johnny down onto a fractured slab that made a kind of bench. Johnny tried to act like his knees weren’t shaking; the act fooled no one, least of all Selara, whose ribs thrummed with the truth of him.
Reed tore a strip from the singed hem of his shirt and wrapped it tight around Johnny’s wrist—not because a bandage was needed but because doing anything felt better than doing nothing. Sue crouched beside her brother, fingers ghosting over his temple, then pulling back as if touch itself might crack him further. Her pearls were scuffed by dust now. She didn’t seem to notice.
Selara stood a few steps away, arms wrapped around her middle. She could feel the planet tugging her by her name—Selara, Selara—in the language of root-sap and ore, urging her to lie down and let it drink. The bond with Johnny pushed back against that pull, warm and stubborn as a hearth, and the two forces met in the thin bone of her sternum and argued there.
“Tell us,” Sue said at last, voice steady but tender; she used the tone she used with Franklin when a nightmare refused to shake loose. “You said the Eternal Flame is forever. Where does it come from? What does forever mean for your people?”
Selara’s throat moved. She swallowed against the rawness there and angled her face toward the trees, as if asking permission from old things. When she spoke, she didn’t start in English. The Amaralian words came first, round and luminous: “Leth’varan Aster.”
Selara’s silvery-gray eyes took on a reflective sheen, catching both moons and throwing them back gentler. “On Amarune,” she said, “they say the first bond was not made by our priests or our kings, but by the sky. Two warriors—Sairak and Mevia—stood on opposite ridges while a war tried to cleave the world. Neither would yield. They met in the valley to end it. Blade to blade.” Her hands drew the shape of the meeting in the air, a geometry of inevitability. “When their swords crossed, Vyra woke. The ground sang. Light leapt from him to her, from her to him, and for an instant the air burned purple as a new star. They fell to their knees not because of injury, but because the world had changed its math to fit them.”
----
Johnny was still listening like a parched man listens to a river. The link between them pulsed, a mosquito hum against her pulse—his attention lighting her nerves in little gold pricks. He swallowed. “And the war?”
“Over,” Selara said simply. “They rose together and every soldier who saw the light laid down their weapons. The bond said: these two live or die as one; if you strike at one, you strike at both; the cost will be too high. Amarune is practical. Even our myths understand arithmetic.”
Ben huffed something that wasn’t quite a laugh. “Can respect that.”
“In our ceremony,” Selara continued, voice gentling, “we call the Petal Bond the First Flower. Soft pink—sweet, loyal—root and shelter. But the Eternal Flame—” She exhaled, and the breath came out a little shiver of light. “We call it the Night Star. The old stories say the twin moons dim the first time it forms, jealous of a new light they did not author.” She lifted her hands—bare, aglow, unashamed. “Tonight, they dimmed.”
No one argued. The moons themselves, momentarily veiled by a breath of high ice-cloud, seemed to do the nodding for them.
Johnny’s thought brushed her mind—not a word yet, just the shape of him, the way you know a person by the weight they make on a sofa cushion before you look. She startled. He felt it and tried again, pushing the way a novice pushes a stubborn door—too hard, too loud.
Easy, she sent, not with her mouth. She didn’t know she could do it until she did it. The bond took her intention and walked it gently to him. You do not shout at glass.
His eyes widened. A crooked grin punched through the fatigue. Right, he answered—no voice, only a warmth that found the thought and clothed it. You’re the expert. Starlight. Then, tentatively, he formed a word with care, shaping it the way he had practiced alone in hallways, under his breath, in every slip of solitude he could steal: Aruna’shai.
The bond delivered it as heat at the center of her chest. She made a sound she would later be embarrassed by—a small, undone sound like a harp-string plucked too close to breaking. Her knees softened. The Thicket leaned deeper, crowding, alert to her spike of feeling. Sue stepped closer on instinct.
“What is it?” she asked.
Selara blinked hard, forcing mortal air back into mortal lungs. “He… spoke into the link,” she managed. “His word was—” Her mouth failed her exactly when she needed it. She looked away.
Johnny cleared his throat, eyes on the ground. “Just… practicing,” he muttered, and if bravado were warmer than a jacket, he would never need one. “Wanted to see if the, uh, Wi-Fi worked.”
“Wi—?” Reed began.
“Don’t,” Sue warned. “Let the boy have his metaphor.”
Ben shook his head fondly. “Hothead learns telepathy in ten minutes. Took him six months to learn how not to burn toast.”
“Progress,” Johnny coughed, then grimaced. Even his winces came through the link, a soft echo of pain that made Selara brace her palm against the nearest tree. The trunk warmed under her hand—not because it wanted to comfort her, but because it wanted the contact.
----
“Reed,” Sue said, and all the trembling maternal had drained into steel, “talk to me about forever.”
Reed rubbed a clean patch on his glasses that didn’t need rubbing. “If we take forever literally—metaphysically—it’s only meaningful in the context of their arcana, which I’m calling Vyra-fields for lack of a better term. The bond looks like a bidirectional coupling across two nervous systems with dimensional harmonics. Chronic feedback loop. The body adapts. The psyche adapts. In theory, it stabilizes.”
“And in practice?”
He didn’t look at her. “In practice, two lives have become one equilibrium. Disrupt one side violently, you don’t just terrify the other—you break the system. The cascade could be—” He stopped himself before catastrophic left his mouth.
Ben blew a slow breath through his teeth. The sound was like a bellows coaxing a flame back to life. “On Earth, ‘forever’ is a ring and a mortgage and hope.” He scratched at a seam in his rocky forearm with careful, embarrassed gentleness. “And divorce papers sometimes. ‘Forever’ means you try. That’s the whole of it. You try.”
Sue’s gaze didn’t leave Johnny. “For us, ‘forever’ is a promise you remake every day. Choice, not—” She gestured at the pulsing woods, at the planet itself hungrily swaying toward Selara. “—not this.”
Selara listened with a kind of aching hunger. “For us,” she said, “forever is a law. Once you speak it with your skin, there is no unspeaking.” She looked at her hands as if scolded by them. “I was afraid of it my whole life. Because my father made forever into a cage.”
Johnny’s head lifted, slow. “And now?”
“And now,” she said, voice small and bright, “it feels like a door I chose.”
He closed his eyes. The link carried an exhale that hit her own lungs. We chose, he sent, corrections gentle as a thumb smoothing a sharp edge.
She did not argue. She did not have the strength.
Reed had already found a flat stretch of stone and was drawing on it with a shard of dark crystal, chalking lines that meant thermal currents, estimated guard perimeters, predicted paths of Least Death. He spoke without looking up. “We need to move before dawn. The planet’s response curve to Selara’s presence is spiking. If we stay, we nourish it. If we move, we force it to redistribute its attention.”
Ben squinted at the scribbles. “You’re talkin’ like the ground’s got a mouth.”
“It does,” Selara said absently, hand still pressed to the tree. “Just not in the places you can stab without starting another war.”
----
Sue turned back to her, not letting the strategy drown the spirit. “Selara, I need to ask you something unscientific.” She held the girl’s gaze—direct, kind, merciless. “If ‘forever’ means he dies if you die… if he hurts when you hurt… how do you live with that?”
Selara didn’t look at Johnny, and yet she did. The bond made the angle obsolete. “On Amarune, the answer would be: together, or not at all.” She breathed carefully. Every inhalation fed the Thicket if she let it. “On Earth, your way says: together, and at great effort, until the effort becomes joy.” She blinked hard. “I would like… your way. It is harder. But it is making me brave.”
Johnny laughed—soft, startled, folded in on himself. The sound cracked like a shell around something too tender to touch. “You’re already the bravest person I know.”
A silvery ripple rolled through the brush, as if a flock of small chrome fish had swum under the ferns at once. Reed froze. “Movement.”
The team’s ragged circle tightened. Ben set Johnny a smidge deeper in the lee of the boulder and planted himself in front, a cathedral door on legs. Sue reached for Selara without quite touching, field already prickling in the thin hairs on her arms. Reed’s eyes went flat and clever.
Nothing emerged. The Thicket merely rustled again, senselessly lush, and carried on watching them breathe.
“It’s listening,” Selara said quietly. “It wants to learn how our forever sounds.”
“That a threat?” Ben asked.
“A superstition,” she answered. “The Thicket remembers the bonds that are made beneath it. The old folks come out here, sometimes, to sit under the leaves and tell the first love story we keep.”
“About the two warriors?” Johnny asked, hungry for any detail that wasn’t a countdown clock or a blade.
She nodded. “They say Sairak and Mevia lived long. Longer than rumor thinks flesh deserves. When his blood spilled, she bled pink through her skin the way light bleeds through thin cloth at dawn. When she laughed, fire walked up his arms because joy cannot find a quieter way. They became a map for others. Not because they never broke—” her mouth twisted “—but because when they broke, they mended, and the seam glowed brighter than the untouched cloth.”
Ben’s weathered stone face went thoughtful and shy at once. “That’s… somethin’.”
Johnny sent her a thought so soft it tickled: You quoting that at our hypothetical kids later? He didn’t mean to say kids, but it slipped the same way knees slip on ice—unguarded truth traveling faster than balance.
----
Selara’s breath caught. The bond carried the shape of the word deeper than sound could, and instead of flinching, she let it settle. She thought of Franklin’s small hand tugging her scarf, of the way his laugh always sounded like bells against her ribs. She thought, too, of the babies she’d met on Earth—chubby fists reaching for her hands, toddlers barreling toward her legs with fearless affection, infants giggling when her glow broke through her gloves no matter how carefully she tried to hide it. They had always come to her unafraid, as if her light hummed at the same pitch as their beginnings.
Her lips curved, not in mockery but in something new—something softer than duty, braver than fear. Not impossible, she sent back across the link, the thought trembling but true. Not impossible at all.
Images rose unbidden, carried on the bond’s current: not Amarune’s crystal halls, but an Earth apartment with windows fogged by winter. A couch, a blanket, Johnny’s ridiculous socks kicked up on the coffee table. The two of them curled together, debating names or futures in hushed voices while a Twilight Zone rerun flickered on the TV—Rod Serling’s voice narrating mysteries in black and white while their own mystery breathed warm between them. At home. At ease. No thrones, no chains. Just choosing.
The vision pressed so vivid she almost startled at herself. She whispered across the bond, shy and unafraid at once: Maybe… at home. On Earth. With my Twilight Zone.
Johnny’s grin cracked open, boyish and bright, even as his eyes burned damp. That’s the dream, starlight.
—-
Reed went on drawing lines. “We angle south. Cut along the obsidian gutter—see that seam of black?—to avoid the main patrol spine. We double back at the split. Sue, you conceal our heat signature. Ben, you take point. Johnny, you conserve—”
“Got it,” Johnny said, softer, not even a little contrite. He turned his face toward Selara again without meaning to, like a sunflower does that for the sun and can’t be taught shame about it. “And you?”
“I try not to feed the planet by existing,” she said, so dry it nearly was funny.
Ben grunt-laughed. “Kid’s got a mouth on her when she wants it.”
Selara touched the boulder to feel a sensation that wasn’t fear. It vibrated like a low drum under her fingers. She found herself speaking before she knew the sentence had formed. “If we survive,” she said—then steadied—“when we survive, I would like to stand in your kitchen when morning is gray and learn to make your pancakes wrong, and have you pretend they’re right.”
Sue’s mouth fell open—not at the grammar, but at the ordinary ache of it. “We will,” she said, voice going raw at the edges. “We absolutely will.”
Reed looked up at the sky to put the algebra of his heart somewhere it couldn’t argue with him. “Move in five,” he said roughly.
Selara didn’t move yet. The bond tugged. She turned and, before she could reconsider, set her palm against Johnny’s cheek. Skin to skin, no gloves, no field, no fiction.
The link opened wider like an iris. The world narrowed to a tunnel with two people at its ends and a warm, fast thread between. Aruna’shai, he sent again, and this time it didn’t land like a bright stone—it dissolved like sugar in tea, sweet through everything. She saw herself in him, simplified: a girl in a plum coat laughing at mustard; a warrior whose spear found the seam in a killing machine; a face under moons that made a man decide to learn a word the way other men learn a trade. He felt himself in her: a terrible hospital room with a white bed and a hand colder than truth; the first time he flew and didn’t come back just because he could; the moment the bus slid like a seal down her shield and he came apart a little at the sight of mercy done boldly.
They broke the contact at the same time, because some things you do not force. The Thicket chimed, jealous and thrilled.
----
Sue breathed out. “Okay,” she said to the air, to the planet, to the part of herself that would rather lock both kids in a closet than let them walk into one more danger, “that’s… very beautiful. And I hate it.” She swiped at a tear in a motion sharp enough to be tactical. “We move.”
They gathered themselves: Reed with his chalked plan; Ben with his fists and the kind of gentleness that lifts not-very-heavy things as if they are breakable; Sue with her field wound tight and ready; Johnny with his flame turned low, his mouth set in the kind of line that suggests no force on heaven or earth could make it smile unless prompted by one girl’s laugh.
Selara took the first step south. The vines stirred as she passed, then stilled when her field brushed them back. She swallowed against the pull. The planet tugged at her like an old teacher who wants a favorite student to come to the front of the class and show the answer. The bond tugged back like a hand saying no, and for the first time since crossing the portal, no felt like an act of worship.
“Hey,” Johnny said behind her, voice careful around its own brightness. “Your myth—those two warriors. Did they… did they get a happy ending?”
Selara didn’t turn. Her smile tilted in a way only the bond could see. “Our myths do not end,” she said. “They continue until you cannot tell which parts are the story and which are the people telling it.”
“So… yes?” he pressed, boy forever.
“So,” she said, “they lived long enough to make their elders angry with how much they laughed.” Then, quietly, across the link alone, where only he could hear it burn: And long enough to have children who inherited their troublemaking.
Johnny’s step hitched. Ben covered it with a cough.
The ground shivered underfoot as if in warning. The moons slid another inch toward a zenith that felt too much like a blade’s highest point before the arc down. Reed touched Selara’s shoulder—light, businesslike. “We need to go.”
She nodded once and started forward for real, cutting through the blue-black ferns, her light held tight to her bones so the Thicket couldn’t drink it.
----
Behind them, the ridge they’d used as a bench pulsed once, twice, as if tasting the last of their warmth. The wind shifted. Far off, something answered in those same three sad notes.
They moved in a diagonal through the brush, avoiding the thinner patches where the ground gleamed with bare, greedy Vyra. Sue threw a soft dome each time they crossed a clearing, making the air denser so the planet’s sensors—if plants could be called that—would mistake their heat for a passing animal. Reed counted paces under his breath. Ben swatted a vine that tried to wrap his ankle and muttered an apology to a plant, because somewhere along the way he had learned that sometimes the world listens.
Johnny’s breath came ragged, but not worse. Selara checked him every thirty paces by virtue of the bond alone. He checked her back, more gently, like touching a bruise with his mind to make sure it knew it was being looked after.
“Forever,” Sue said at one point, low to Reed as they walked. “I can accept the poetry. It’s the physics I can’t forgive.”
Reed’s mouth twitched—pain for humor. “I’m working on a way to forgive both.”
“Find me a way to keep him safe from a promise he would die for,” she said. “Then you can have your equations.”
He didn’t answer right away. When he did, it was as a vow disguised as a hypothesis. “I will.”
Ben fell in beside Selara for a stretch, his heavy footfalls careful to match her lighter ones. “For what it’s worth,” he said, voice pitched so Johnny wouldn’t hear, “I seen a lotta forevers that broke inside a year. Yours ain’t that. Yours is… loud.” He gestured to her chest awkwardly. “If the world tries to take it from you, you tell me where to punch.”
She glanced up at him, a quick, grateful flare. “You cannot punch a planet, Ben Grimm.”
“You’d be surprised,” he said, and the corner of her mouth lifted despite the ache.
They reached the obsidian gutter Reed had pointed out—a riverbed of black glass sunk between two ridges, the surface broken into plates like the cooling skin of a great spilled thing. Frost-sheen dust made it glitter. Their reflections warped in each shard—four humans and a not-human, and yet the bond insisted on a plural that made the categories useless: we.
----
They dropped into it one by one. Reed slid down, hands skidding and catching, too long limbs folding like elaborate anchors. Ben jumped and the gutter objected in a noise that sounded like a cathedral organ having an opinion. Sue went last of the three, then offered a hand to Johnny that he pretended not to need. Selara took his other without ceremony. Their skin did what it does now—light at the seam, soft and not soft, the color of a violent flower. The Thicket, above, bent like an audience that knows the story and loves it anyway.
“Two hours,” Reed said, looking up at the moons’ angle. “Maybe three if the king likes theater.”
“He likes knives,” Selara said. “Theater is how he reads you the recipe before he cuts.”
Johnny squeezed her fingers. “He doesn’t get to cut.”
She squeezed back. “He does not get to choose the shape.”
“Deal,” he said, breathless, and grinned a little because bargains were how he kept his courage from spilling out. Then, through the link alone: Aruna’shai.
She didn’t answer aloud. The bond carried what needed carrying: the weight of yes.
They moved on.
Behind them, the Thicket whispered, leaves clinking like glass charms on a wedding belt, but the whisper had a different quality now. Less hunger. More… curiosity. As if the planet itself were trying to decide whether the kind of forever these two had brought could be eaten at all—or whether it would burn the mouth that tried.
Far ahead, the towers of the court bled light into the sky, a pale, cold bruise at the horizon. Theryn’s hours ticked inside the bones of the city. The world felt wound like a spring.
“Let’s go explain to a king what forever actually means,” Johnny said softly, and if his voice shook, the bond steadied it.
Selara nodded. The Night Star in her didn’t dim. It narrowed, a blade, a beam, a path.
They walked.
And the moons kept counting.
----
Meet King Theryn Veyara of Amarune
Inspirations behind him:
Real-Life (More based on vocal performance then appearance):
Keith David
Kevin Michael Richardson
Fictional:
Thanos (MCU)
Ronan (MCU)
Cosmic entities (Like Adam Warlock- MCU)
Tool used:
Photoshop
Canva
Pintrest
BeFunky
Fotor
Google Images
Fontiko
Staring at reference photos of purple villains and characters
Reddit
Tumblr
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The Singing Thicket
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Taglist (Thank you for your support! Also, thanking anyone who liked, reblogged, and commented too!)