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Cher x StrayMarch 9, 2025 12:23 PM


MISERY

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Koen stood stiffly as Bellius spoke, arms crossed over his chest, fingers digging into his biceps as he listened. The way Bellius spoke—"That’s a strong name. I like it."—sent an odd shiver down his spine. It wasn’t threatening, exactly, but it was still unsettling. Like the weight of those words meant something more here than they would’ve back home.

And then came the introductions.

Bellius. Sayla. Rhiot.

Koen kept his face neutral, but his mind worked quickly, turning over the information, storing it. Institute. Head of Arcane. Head of Viper. He had no damn clue what any of that meant, not yet, but it sounded like some kind of hierarchy. Bellius ran this place. Sayla dealt with magic. Rhiot… Viper. Whatever that entailed.

He didn’t react outwardly to any of it, just nodded once in acknowledgment. But the moment Sayla spoke, his jaw clenched.

"Pardon my informality here, but what the literal hells, Bellius."

Her voice was sharp, edged with irritation, and Koen felt himself instinctively straighten, shoulders squaring as tension crackled between them. He didn’t know the full scope of their argument, but he could read people well enough. Sayla was pissed. Bellius, for all his composure, was holding firm.

Koen should’ve been more concerned with whart they were actually saying—what problem Sayla thought he might pose, what Bellius thought about all of this—but instead, all he could focus on was the sheer, suffocating sensation of being talked about. Right in front of him.

Like he wasn’t even there.

Like he was some specimen they had to analyze and decide what to do with.

It hit a nerve, one that had been worn raw long before he woke up in this place.

And Rhiot was staring.

Koen caught it out of the corner of his eye—the way the pale-haired fey’s red gaze lingered on him, th flicker of something unreadable in his expression. It wasn’t just curiosity. It was study. Those eyes were pretty, but not when they lingered on Koen like he was some kind of new animal no one had ever seen before.

Koen turned his head slightly, meeting Rhiot’s gaze dead-on for a moment. If he was supposed to flinch away under the scrutiny, he didn’t. He just held it, let his exhaustion temper the sharpness in his own green eyes.

Then, finally, Bellius gave an order. And Koen wasn’t sure whether to be relieved or irritated when he was handed off to Rhiot like some kind of package.

Rhiot, for his part, seemed amused by the whole thing.

Koen didn’t like that.

He liked it even less when Rhiot started walking, and he was expected to just follow along like some lost kid. But what choice did he have? Wandering off in an unfamiliar place like this would be stupid, and Koen wasn’t stupid.

So, he walked.

Koen’s jaw tightened as he walked, the fey’s presence irritatingly palpable. There was something about him—something smug, or maybe just too self-assured—that made Koen’s skin itch. He wasn’t sure if it was the way Rhiot kept looking at him, all sharp-eyed and studying, or the way he spoke, like he was playing at being polite but didn’t actually care about the answer. Maybe it was both. Maybe it was just the fact that Koen didn’t like being paraded around like some kind of curiosity.

Still, he forced himself to keep his expression unreadable, or as close to it as he could manage. He’d already given too much away with the way he’d tensed when Bellius and Sayla had been arguing. He wasn’t interested in giving Rhiot more ammunition to pick him apart.

The fey’s comment was met with nothing but a slow exhale from Koen’s nose. He didn’t even glance at him.

It wasn’t that Koen didn’t want to respond. He did. He wanted to say something dry, maybe bite back at the casual way Rhiot was treating this whole thing. Like Koen hadn’t just woken up in another world, like he wasn’t standing in the middle of some ornate, unfamiliar hall, surrounded by creatures that could probably kill him if they felt like it.

But he didn’t have the energy for that right now.

His body still felt wrong. Not weak, exactly—more like his muscles weren’t reacting the way they should, like something was slowing them down, making everything just a little too sluggish. If he had to fight, he wasn’t confident he’d be at full capacity. And that pissed him off.

No, I don’t want a drink, he wanted to snap when Rhiot offered. Instead, he barely inclined his head, his voice flat. “I’m fine.”

The truth was, he didn’t trust anything they had here. He didn’t trust them. Not yet.

His gaze flickered briefly over the spread of food, eyes catching on the glistening fruits, the fresh bread, the thick, cured meats. It smelled good—too good. Like something out of a fairytale, which was exactly why Koen wasn’t touching any of it. He might not know much about fey, hadn't even known they existed, but he knew enough. Eating or drinking the wrong thing in a place like this could go bad fast.

Rhiot’s smirk didn’t help. That smug little curve of his lips, the way he watched Koen, like he was waiting to see what he’d do. Koen hated it.

“You’re really enjoying this, huh?” The words left his mouth before he could stop them, his exhaustion making him reckless. He met Rhiot’s red-eyed gaze, his own unreadable, but something simmered beneath it. “Playing tour guide. Watching me stumble around trying to make sense of any of this.”

He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t need to. The weight behind it was enough.

Then, as if deciding the conversation wasn’t even worth lingering on, Koen turned away from the food, from Rhiot’s too-interested expression, and rolled his shoulders. He could still feel Rhiot’s eyes on him. Watching. Assessing.

Koen had dealt with people like this before. People who looked at him like they were trying to figure him out like he was some puzzle they just had to solve.

He never let them.


Edited at March 9, 2025 12:24 PM by Setinel
Cher x StrayMarch 10, 2025 10:00 PM


Cherokee Pride

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Posts: 73
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Rhiot gave a rather unbothered shoulder shrug, "Since you asked, I am, yes. I mean, it has been 23 years since a human has been able to step foot in our realm. I am dreadfully curious how you managed it. Are you sure you're not secretly a witch?" he humored, mostly himself. But did have a rather surprising moment of compassion. His posture softened just slightly, the sharp features of his face seemed to relax. Not very noticeable body language cues, but enough that someone could pick up on it.
"If you would like for me to be completely honest, this castle is the safest place for you. Specifically with with either me, or Bellius, or one of the other Heads of Orders. A lot of creatures that live here are... not kind... to humans from your realm." Rhiot tilted his head just slightly as he looked across the hall to Koen. He gave him his space, but still kept his muscles tensed in case of any quick movements.
"If it helps any as well, you will probably be left in a room by yourself this evening because we have been expecting the Angels. Hence the reinforced security, excess workers, and this feast." he gestured to the hallway behind him. "But, since you don't seem to be interested in an exclusive snack, we can continue on." Rhiot started moving forward again. He detected the tones of unease and irritation from Koen, but it didn't seem he was dwelling on it. Just taking a mental note. His sharp gaze stared down the hallway. Just down this walkway, and up a small flight of stairs, opened up to the floor his room was on. There were other rooms in the area, but were mostly used for storage, or guest rooms, should they be needed. Rhiot liked his privacy of having almost an entire floor to himself, but anytime any of the other Viper members stayed at the castle, they stayed on the floor with him.
But Rhiot couldn't make it much further before someone came bustling towards him. His gaze flicked down to the shortened frame of one the Arcane members. A small, bright and bubbly creature with small horns, and hooves for feet came shuffling up. Their hooves making soft clicks on the stone.
They stopped when they saw Rhiot, their gaze flicked to his companion in a moment of uncertainty, but they continued anyways, "Rhiot, Sayla is attempting to distract... you know who... and has requested you speak to her immediately." The creature's shimmery eyes kept flicking to their companion. Worry and curiosity all in one painted on their face.
Rhiot picked up on that though. For some reason, he felt mildly irritated about it. Maybe Koen's obvious displeasure with what has been going on has leeched off on him. His posture stiffened and he stepped forward ever so slightly. Almost in a threatening tone. The horned creature immediately stopped, full attention on the pale Fey in front of them. Rhiot's entire stance mimicked that of a snake, poised to strike. "Thank you, Cinna." Rhiot's normal, flamboyant tone now had a slight hiss to it. His head tilted to the side, as if challenging the creature.
Cinna quickly shook their head, before lowering their gaze to the floor and scurrying back in the direction they came. Rhiot rolled his shoulders, the tension loosening from his muscles. "Well. Today is just full of surprises. Guess we're going to see Sayla. If there's anyone who could have a slight clue about your appearance her, its her." Rhiot spoke to Koen with a surprising calmness. No dramatic sarcasm, harsh twists, or exaggerations. Just spoke plainly. Almost reassuringly.
But as soon as the Fey turned to begin walking towards Arcane's Tower, his stance returned to the normal sharpness he held himself with. His boots making soft, echoed thumps down the hallway. Soft fabric wrinkling slightly with his movements. His ears stayed pricked towards Koen, waiting to listen, but he kept his gaze in front of them. On his boots mostly. He was confused, uneasy, and not sure why he felt so off today. Perhaps this was all connected. Maybe there was something with the magic and that's why he felt strange, and Koen appeared. It had to make sense somehow, but his brain couldn't figure it out. And hells did it frustrate him.
The hallway gave way to a stair case, leading to a large observatory room with an intricate glass ceiling. Panes aligned different ways to allow different lights to filter through in certain areas, or for gazing at different star arrangements.
Sayla was standing beside a table with many different relics and fragments scattered about. Inspecting tools, like magnifying glasses, microscopes, and probes laid close by.
Her eyes shot up at the sound of their foot steps. A rather pissed off look on her face as they approached, mostly aimed at Rhiot.
"How'd you get rid of him this time?" Rhiot immediately opened with a sly joke. Sensing the Vampire's anger.
"Told him the truth. That we have no idea. He seemed rattled by that and took off without a second look. He's acting odd if you ask me." She hissed. Crossing her arms.
Rhiot rolled his eyes, "You think everyone's acting odd." he halfway joked, but the smile tugging on his lips faltered as he watched Sayla's eyes widen.
Arcane researched the magic, and what could have damaged it. Arcane employs some of the most brilliant minds in the realm. But the head of this spectacular Order, could not make sense of the sight before her.
The table beside Sayla had continued old runes and relics and fragments of artifacts from items made back when the magic was strong. Trying to detect any residual traces of magic on them in hopes to study it, but so far, to no avail. But the closest artifact, a small, intact carving of a bird. That seemed to "come to life". As Koen approached. The intricate carvings glistening just barely, the entire piece seeemed to pop back to life, like it was freshly carved and not 25+ years old.
Rhiot casted a look to Koen. A mix of almost empathy and uncertainty twisted his features. Sayla picked the piece up, her breathing hitched slightly at the hum it radiated into her hand. Her pale amber eyes looked up, more in disbelief and awe. She held the bird out to the human. "This... is the first sign the magic hasn't died." her voice faltered slightly as she spoke, like she couldn't even believe she was saying it. She didn't know how, why, or what this entailed. But this was the first glimmer of hope she'd had in years.
Cher x StrayMarch 13, 2025 11:43 AM


MISERY

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Posts: 808
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Koen exhaled slowly through his nose, jaw tight as he forced himself to stay focused. His entire body was coiled with tension, like a wire wound too tight, ready to snap. Every word out of Rhiot’s mouth only grated on his nerves more, from the mocking curiosity to the casual way he tossed around the fact that humans weren’t exactly welcome here. Like it was just another amusing little fact, nothing to be concerned about.

Koen wasn’t stupid. He’d picked up on the way people looked at him, the way Rhiot kept watching him, even when he acted like he he wasn’t. The Fey moved with a certain grace, but there was something snake-like about him, something that made Koen’s skin itch. He wasn’t sure what it was—maybe it was the easy arrogance, or maybe it was the way he carried himself, like he was above it all, like Koen was a curiosity, a mystery to be picked apart.

Whatever it was, he didn’t like it.

Still, he wasn’t about to show that. He didn’t trust this place. Didn’t trust these people, no matter how much they were pretending to be helpful. He’d played this game before, navigating unknown territory, sizing up people who could be threats. He needed to stay calm, needed to keep his head clear.

So he exhaled again and gave Rhiot a sharp look. “Yeah, well, I don’t particularly care what a bunch of monsters think about me being here.” His voice was flat, edged with something dry and biting. “I didn’t exactly ask to be here, did I?”

Koen rolled his shoulders, trying to push off the heavy exhaustion creeping into his bones. His whole body felt like it had been wrung out and left to dry, his nerves raw and frayed. But he wasn’t about to slow down. Not here. Not when he didn’t know what the hell was going on.

Then the other one arrived.

Koen’s sharp gaze flicked to the small creature scurrying up to them—hooves clicking against the stone floor, horns catching the dim light. They weren’t threatening, but they weren’t exactly comfortable either. There was something jittery about them, something nervous.

The moment they looked at him, Koen felt his anxiety rise. It wasn’t much—just a flicker of uncertainty in their expression, like they were trying to decide if he was safe. If he belonged.

That was enough to piss him off—but it also made his temper defuse, as well. The look in their eyes.. like they were almost scared of him.

Maybe that was just Rhiot.

He hoped?

"Sayla is attempting to distract... you know who... and has requested you speak to her immediately."

There were way too many layers to this bullshit.

Koen barely had time to register that before the air shifted again. Rhiot’s entire demeanor changed in an instant. The irritation, the tension, the way he suddenly coiled like a predator scenting something foul in the air. Koen wasn’t sure what the hell was going on between these people, but he could tell when someone was getting ready for a fight, even if it was just with words.

And for some reason, that made his skin crawl. He felt the sudden urge to jump out and protect the poor thing from his glare. It only made him resent the pale Fey more.

The creature—Cinna, apparently—shrank udner Rhiot’s stare and hurried away, and Koen had to force himself not to scoff. Fucking weird place, weird people.

And now they were dragging him off to someone else.

Again, Koen didn’t have a choice.

So he followed.

The walk was quiet. The kind of quiet that had weight to it, something just barely restrained beneath the surface. Koen’s boots scuffed slightly against the floor as he walked, and he kept his arms loose at his sides, trying to shake the tension from his shoulders. He didn’t trust how calm Rhiot was acting now. Didn’t trust anything about this.

Then they arrived at the observatory.

Koen’s breath hitched, just for a second.

He wasn’t the kind of guy to be impressed easily, but there was something about the way the glass panes caught the light, the way the whole space felt open, almost untouchable, that made something tighten in his chest. It was the first thing in this godforsaken place that didn’t immediately feel hostile.

But then his gaze snapped to the woman standing at the table, arms crossed, looking pissed. Sayla.

Koen felt that same damn tension settle back into his bones.

The conversation that followed barely registered at first—he was too busy trying to get a read on her, on the room, on whatever the hell they’d dragged him here for. He caught the way Rhiot prodded at her, the sharpness in her response, the weight of whatever unspoken things were hanging between them.

But none of it mattered.

Because then he stepped closer.

And the artifact reacted.

Koen didn’t even realize what had happened t first. Didn’t want to realize. The shift in the air, the faint hum, the way something unseen but powerful stirred the second he got too close.

He stopped cold.

His stomach dropped.

No. No, no, no. This is not supposed to be happening. I wanted a calm, normal life with Drew.. this was not.. I didn't..

His breath came sharp through his nose as he stared at the carving. The bird, simple and small, glowing just barely, like it had taken a breath for the first time in decades. It looked new. Fresh. Alive.

And it had done that the second he got near it.

He didn’t move at first. Didn’t reach for the damn thing. Just stared at it, wariness coiling deep in his gut.

“This… is the first sign the magic hasn’t died.”

Sayla’s voice held something fragile. Something dangerous. Hope was dangerous. Koen had learned that young, learned that hope had a way of twisting itself into a knife when you let it in too deep.

His gaze flicked from the carving to Sayla, then to Rhiot. He didn’t like the way they were looking at him. Like he was something now. Something else.

His stomach churned, a sick feeling crawling up his spine. He swallowed it down, forced his voice steady, even as unease tightened his throat.

“What,” he said slowly, carefully, “the fuck does that mean?”

He didn’t reach for the artifact. He didn’t want to. Whatever just happened, it had nothing to do with him. Couldn’t.

He wasn’t special.

He was just a guy who got dealt a shit hand and woke up in a world that wasn’t supposed to be real.

And now they were staring at him like he was the answer to something.

His fingers curled into fists at his sides, nails pressing into his palms as his pulse hammered in his ears. He didn’t like this. Didn’t like any of this.

And he sure as hell wasn’t about to pick up that fucking bird.

Cher x StrayMarch 19, 2025 06:18 PM


Cherokee Pride

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Rhiot watched with an eerie quietness. The pale Fey's skin seemed taught, all of his muscles seemed to be pulling against each other. Taught as a bowstring. He didn't know what to think about the sight before him. Didn't know how to make sense of it. He hated it. The shocked look on Sayla's face. The quiet, unreadable stubborness of Koen. That damn bird in her hand. His jaw clenched slightly, not knowing what to say.
Koen didn't either. Asking what was going on. Who even knows at this point? Everything had been off. Bellius had been acting weird, Sayla seemed oddly suspicious of him, and the Angels that were arriving that day couldn't have been worse timing.
Sayla arched a brow slightly at the notice of Koen not reaching for the bird. "Stubborn. I like it. It might keep you alive." She pocketed the bird herself. Her stance relaxing for the first time since she heard about all the drama going on today. "I'm going to stay here and see what I can find out about this bird. Rhiot, SHE can't know he's here." her pale amber gaze stared at the Fey with a strong intensity. Rhiot's eartip twitching was the only response. She crossed her arms, jaw muscles ticking slightly.
After a moment, Rhiot relented under her glare. Turning he gazed at the human for a moment. There was no way he was as innocent as he was letting on. Something wasn't adding up and Rhiot was going to figure it out.
"I suppose we can find you a room." his nostrils flared slightly. The barest hint of a joke leaving his lips. But his sarcasm was quickly replaced as he winced slightly at a hiss from Sayla.
"Rhiot, Gods, your insufferable." she scoffed. The Fey only shrugged, grumpy he was scolded. "If you can stop behaving like a child, I'm sure Koen would appreciate a room TO HIMSELF to breathe. And it keeps him out of her clutches." her eyes narrowed at Rhiot.
The Fey, still pouting, only rolled his eyes. Stepping backwards from a shove Sayla aimed at him. "Fine. 'I'll be nice'". He mocked her tone as he spoke. Before turning to walk back down the hallway. "The floors are going to have permanent boot marks if we have to take this same path one more freaking time." he grumbled over his shoulder.
Rhiot rolled his neck as he walked. Stretching it to pop out any kinks or binds. The muscles straining against the movement. A long slender ear pricked backwards to listen for Koen. "Well. Haven't even been here an hour and you've already made friends with a very powerful vampire." he spoke with a alluring twist to his words. Rolling his accent as much as he could. "You have to tell me your secrets. She's known me for years and can barely stand me." he let out a chuckle as he amused himself.
His boots padding softly on the floor. Leading them back down the hallway Cinna originally interrupted them in. Eventually reaching the staircase that twisted back up into the floor above them. Creating a cosy, secluded area that held a few different doors to different chambers. The walls were a hard stone, decorated with beautiful tapestries. The outer wall had windows, with intricate carvings in the panes, and heavy, decorated curtains framed them.
Rhiot stopped at one door. His gaze flicking slightly to the door next to it. Where his room was. "This is an unocuppied room. If you need anything, I'm always close by." he smiled, not so innocently, before stepping a few paces away. Allowing Koen his space, while still watching. Sayla's warning lingering in his mind.
'Hopefully you didn't jinx us by bringing her up Sayla.' he thought to himself. For a brief moment, his confident facade was swapped for an uneasiness. His smug face softening into one of worry. He needed to find Bellius. Maybe he could explain some things.
Cher x StrayMarch 26, 2025 02:32 PM


MISERY

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Koen didn’t move at first. Didn’t respond. Just stood there, weight settled into the floor like he was bracing for something. His stomach still felt twisted from the whole bird situation, and Sayla’s cryptic 'she can’t know he’s here' wasn’t exactly settling his nerves. The hell kind of mess had he walked into?

His gaze flicked to Rhiot, watching the Fey’s easy, lingering smugness like it was some kind of game. Always close by. Yeah, he bet. Probably just waiting for him to slip up.

Koen exhaled sharply through his nose and stepped past Rhiot into the room.

It was quiet. The heavy kind of quiet, the kind that pressed in around his ears and made his skin itch. He took a few slow steps further inside, eyes moving through the dim light as he sized up the space. The air had that cold, old-stone smell, mixed with something faintly herbal—dried lavender, maybe. A single lantern hung from the wall, its golden glow flickering against dark wooden furniture.

The bed was bigger than it needed to be, draped in heavy fabric that looked like it hadn’t been touched in years. There was a sturdy desk against the far wall, a few empty shelves, and an armchair near the window. The curtains were thick, meant to block out light, but when he brushed his fingers against them, dust stirred in the air.

No signs of recent use. Whoever had last stayed here—if anyone had at all—was long gone.

His gaze flicked toward the window. The glass had intricate carvings in it, nothing too elaborate, but enough that it distorted the view outside. Probably enchanted. Wouldn’t be surprised if breaking it wasn’t an option.

Koen turned slightly, catching Rhiot still hovering outside the door, watching him like he was waiting for something. Maybe testing him. Maybe just waiting to see if he’d react.

He let the silence stretch a little longer before finally speaking. “You ever get tired of hearing yourself talk?” His voice was flat, but sharp at the edges, brittle with something restless.

He didn’t wait for an answer before turning his back on him completely and stepping further inside.

The door shut harder than necessary.

Finally. Alone.

Koen stood still in the center of the room for a long moment, listening. The quiet here was thick, swallowing sound. He ran his tongue over his teeth, then exhaled, slow and steady, rolling his shoulders.

Something was wrong.

More wrong than it had already been.

That damn bird had reacted to him. Not to Rhiot, not to Sayla, but him. And whatever the hell that meant, they weren’t telling him. Not all of it, anyway. That much was obvious.

And then there was her.

Whoever she was, Sayla had made it real clear that he wasn’t supposed to be anywhere near her. And that was what stuck with him the most.

Koen ran both hands over his face, then dragged them through his hair, pacing once, twice, then forcing himself to stop.

He wasn’t locked in. Yet. But that was probably coming.

His eyes moved over the room again, this time not just looking, but searching.

The door—heavy, reinforced. He could brace a chair under the handle if he had to, but that’d only buy time.

The window—definitely enchanted. No way they’d risk an obvious escape route.

He exhaled through his nose. He’d play along. For now. Get more information. Figure out what the hell was going on, why they were so desperate to keep him in the dark.

Koen stared at the floor for several long moments, his mind trying to wrap around all the whys and hows.

And they overwhelmed him. Realization set in much too late.

It wasn't long before Koen’s breath came a little too fast. Shallow. The kind of breathing that crept up on you before you realized you were on the edge of something worse.

No. No, no, no. Not here, Koko. Not now.

Who's voice was that? Who the hell was that?!

His hands flexed at his sides, fingers curling into fists before he forced them open again. He could still feel the phantom weight of that bird in his palm, the way it had reacted, the way it had known something about him that he didn’t. His own skin felt foreign, like it didn’t belong to him.

This wasn’t right. None of this was right.

His chest tightened. His stomach twisted. He backed up a step, only to bump against the heavy wooden desk. The solidity of it barely registered, his thoughts spiraling too fast, looping over themselves like a snake eating its own tail.

This wasn’t real. It couldn’t be real.

But it was.

His eyes darted around the room again, seeing everything but understanding none of it. The heavy curtains. The carved glass. The thick, old walls that weren’t just walls but part of something older, something built to last, something meant to keep people inside.

Like a cage. Like a goddamn cage.

Koen sucked in a breath, but it didn’t feel like it reached his lungs. His heart was slamming against his ribs, beating too fast, too hard, like it was trying to get out. The more he tried to catch up with it, the more it pulled away, hammering at his insides, faster, faster, until it was all he could hear.

His hands trembled. He braced them on the desk, fingers gripping the edge like it was the only thing keeping him grounded. His knuckles went white. His vision blurred at the edges.

He had to calm down. But how the fuck was he supposed to do that?

How was any of this even possible?

Magic? Fey? Vampires? It was all some fairytale bullshit, the kind of thing people whispered about in dark corners but never actually saw. And yet—here he was. Standing in the middle of it. Trapped in the middle of it.

He wasn’t supposed to be here.

He wasn’t supposed to exist in this kind of world.

So why did it feel like something had dragged him into it, like it had been waiting for him to step wrong, to slip through the cracks?

A sharp, gasping inhale broke from his throat before he could stop it. His hands lifted to his hair, gripping hard enough that it hurt, but the pain barely made a dent in the rising panic crawling under his skin.

He squeezed his eyes shut. His body felt too tight, too small, like his skin was about to split open.

His pulse pounded in his ears.

And then, just to make everything worse: Rhiot.

Koen’s eyes snapped open.

His stomach turned violently at the thought of him. His sharp-edged face. His stupid, stupid smugness. The way his voice had coiled around words like he was playing some private joke only he was in on.

And worse than all of that—the way it looked on him.

The way he looked.

Koen choked on something between a gasp and a curse, his hands dropping from his hair to press against his face instead.

No. Nope. Not doing this. Not touching that thought with a ten-foot pole.

It was just the panic talking. Just stress.

His breath hitched again, and suddenly the room felt too small all over again. His hands pressed harder against his face like he could force himself to get a grip, but it wasn’t working. The walls were too thick. The air was too still.

He needed to move. Needed to do something.

Koen sank to the floor at the foot of the bed and rested his back against it, trembling.

Cher x StrayMarch 27, 2025 11:36 AM


Cherokee Pride

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Rhiot stared at the slammed doorway like it offended him somehow. Mouth slightly parted like he was about to pop off his final sarcastic comment when the door quickly interrupted their interaction.
"Hmm... rude." he mumbled to himself, more or less to make himself feel like he won the conversation. Straightening his posture, he played with a few delicate white locks to tuck them back into place, but before he could walk off, his eartip twitched slightly at the sound of something in Koen's room. After a moment to listen, the Fey realized it was gasping. His muscles tensed slightly, his hand barely made an effort to reach for the door. Like he wanted to check on Koen, but instead, his desperation to figure out what was going on triumphed. The pale Fey turned and stalked off down the hallway. Leaving the human in his room.
'He NeEdS tImE tO hImSeLf,' he mocked Sayla's words in his head as he prowled down the corridor. A rather irritated expression etched on his sharp features. All of this was so unbelievably infuriating. From Bellius acting like everything was okay, Sayla buddy-buddy with this human now, that freaking bird glowing. Rhiot was already dealing with a lot as is, with the feast for Angels coming this evening and having to sit through a night with their unbearable, mildly creepy, leader. He always felt like she was watching him like a cat would a mouse waiting to eat it.
At the end of the staircase that led back into the main floors, the only exit/entrance to the loft those in Viper stayed in. A worker for the feast was in the middle of rearranging and tidying up the walkway. Straightening out the tapestries, sweeping up the dust, rearranging flower decorations. Rhiot didn't know their name. They were probaby just a random worker. Clearing his throat, the worker turned and looked at him with a puzzled expression. They were a young male, handsome but a generic kind of handsome. Nothing that stood out to him. His mind flicked back to Koen for a heartbeat. Only for a moment, but he couldn't help but compare this creature to the human. He furrowed his brow slightly. Unsettled by that idea, he quickly wiped it away.
"Yes?" The worker finally asked, arching a brow like he was irritated that Rhiot hadn't said anything yet.
The pale Fey's ears pinned. He wanted to chide this worker. Remind him who he was talking to. Not only was he the Head of an Order, he was their leader's right-hand. How did this worker not know who he was?
"I want someone watching this stairway at all points in time. I don't care if its you, your friend, whoever. Anything happens, report to me, or Sayla only." His words were sharp and harsh. He decided not to berate the worker for the moment.
The worker frowned, "I'm sorry but I can't do that, I'm prepa-" before he could finish his sentence, Rhiot had already moved. Fast as a snake, and a glimmer of silver, a blade appeared in his hand. The worker's eyes grew wide, watching it with a careful delicacy as the Fey threatened to spill his throat onto the floor.
"The next time you decline a direct order from a HEAD of Orders, you won't have a tongue to decline with anymore." he hissed. The worker seemed to finally piece together what was happpening and nodded his head frantically, but another sound interrupted them. The worker taking the brief slip of focus from the Fey to scurry backwards.
"There are nicer ways to speak to the staff."
Bellius stood there, staring at them, halfway amused by the interaction he walked up on. Rhiot nonchalantly sheathed his blade with a shrug, like he hadn't just terrified a poor worker doing their job. "Perks of the job." he offered a cheeky smile as he sidled over to Bellius. The dragon-shifter only grunting in response. The slight displeasure on his facial expression caused Rhiot to quickly wipe away his smile. Normally Bellius didn't mind, if anything that was the one way Rhiot could get his attention was by berating someone. Maybe he was feeling off with everything going on.
Bellius turned to walk away and Rhiot hurried after him. Steps falling in sync as they walked. "What did you figure out about the human?" Rhiot asked.
Bellius didn't seem very talkative as they walked. "Not much, being honest." he finally responded.
Rhiot narrowed his eyes at the horned man. He was detecting an almost rigidness to the dragon-shifter. Like he was carrying himself with a tensed unease rather than the usual calm and collected manner he did. But before he could open his mouth to press further, a voice rang through the halls.
"Bellius! How good to see you! Oooh, and is that Rhiot? I'm so glad I caught you both at the same time."
Rhiot clenched his jaw. He knew that voice. He hated that voice. He hated most things to be fair, but she was at the top of the list. Her dark onyx eyes, always staring like she was waiting for any moment to eat you alive. Her perfectly maintained deep, raven black hair that never strayed out of place. She was beautiful, as most angels were, but her beauty was almost eerie. Like she sold her soul for her beauty. She was clad in typical Angel armor. With shining silver plates, interwoven chain mail, and sigils on display. Her armor was more extravagent since she was their leader, but nonetheless, all the angels uniforms irritated him. 'Shiny, soulless, conceited monsters.' is how Rhiot often spoke of the Angels. They were some of the only remaining army from the time of the Prince. They'd stayed on good relations with Bellius, even though they didn't support his reformations. But a truce was made. As long as the Angels didn't interfere with their preceedings, they could carry on with their customs of training everyone as warriors.
"Orin... your early." was all Bellius responded. Turning to face the woman walking up to them. Rhiot had to stifle an eye roll as she eyed him up and down.
"Oh don't be so surprised, you know I hate missing out on all the fun." she flashed them a wink, like she knew more than she was revealing.
Rhiot instantly pinned her with an irritated look. She was up to something. He never trusted her. Bellius hosted the Angels occasionally, in a sign of good tidings, but everytime Orin was here, something bad always happened, that she chalks up as 'her doing a favor for them.'
Bellius' lips pressed into a thin line. "We're just preparing for the feast tonight... nothing exciting..." he tried to smoothen things in his usual way, but a sharp glance from Orin stopped him.
Her black eyes narrowed, you could barely differentiate her pupil from her iris. "Will the human be joining us? I have been dying to meet him." her lips tweaked into an eerie smile.
Bellius tensed, and Rhiot was aready watching her with a fixed intensity like a snake.
"Orin... you know no humans have been in this realm for 23 years," Bellius tried to play into a joke. But his deep brown gaze flicked to Rhiot. Searching for a way to deter the conversation.
"Until.... this morning." she pressed. Her eyes twinkled as she spoke. Like she'd just pulled the cover off some huge relevation. "He's got be special if he has everyone jumpy like this." her gaze kept flicking back and forth between the dragon-shifter and the Fey.
"Well? I guess I'll just come back later then. But I want that human at the feast tonight. We have some interesting things to talk about." she smiled, in her creepy way she always does. Orin always knew things somehow. Rhiot wasn't sure how she managed to find out about Koen so quickly, but it couldn't be good.
"Erm, of course not Orin. You're always welcome here. Come, lets go see what Sayla and her Arcanes have been up to. Your going to love some of their new inventions." Bellius shot Rhiot a look. Orin followed the look, her creepy gaze lingering on Rhiot for a moment longer than he wanted before she painted a fake smile on her lips and stalked off with Bellius, who was trying desperately to keep her distracted and on the opposite end of the Insititute from where Rhiot put Koen.
Rhiot craned his head back, groaning aloud as he expressed his irritation at the situation. "Rhiot, go do this. Rhiot, go do that. Rhiot, babysit the human. Rhiot, don't let her find him." He mumbled to himself as he begrudgingly began dragging his feet back in the direction he came.

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