The ballroom was chaos—a sea of colors, faces, and indistinct voices blending into an indistinguishable roar. For Paola, it was a scene on repeat in her mind, an unsettling vision that replayed, emerging from the blackness that shrouded her between teleports. The screaming, the tearing of flesh, the crackling bursts of magic, and the metallic taste of blood on her tongue. She saw her own blood, warm and vivid against her hand, where it seeped through the fabric of her gown, trailing down from her abdomen. Her cloak was in tatters, each tear a scar on her own body, marking places where her flesh had met metal and shadow.
But she felt no pain, only a disorienting numbness as her eyes fixed on the skills that appeared before her in reflection, glowing faintly as though cast on invisible glass suspended in the black void.
Claw and Dagger Mastery: 10% critical boost.
Shadow Pounce: 5 teleports within a 10-meter radius.
T’shal’ara’s Legacy: Bone Claws Mastery—10% armor penetration bonus.
Chaos Unleashed: Random elemental effect to attacks—fire, ice, lightning, or poison.
They shimmered and dissolved as her vision returned to the ballroom, a cascade of flickering glimpses that made her tremble with an uncanny sense of the inevitable. She wasn't sure why she had those visions in the moments of nothing while she teleported. So brief... So, tangible. Her fingers twitched, clutching at nothing, but it was enough to snap her focus back to the present. As her gaze sharpened, she saw it—the shadowy figure standing, waiting, as it loomed behind the Duke and Duchess, arms morphed into two spiked spears poised to strike.
Time slowed. Her mind screamed as her instincts surged, urging her forward with every ounce of speed she possessed.
Move, Paola. Faster!
She was already moving before her body had fully registered the thought. She felt her muscles coil and release as she darted through the crowd, her form a blur as she teleported, weaving past startled guests who barely registered her presence, leaving only a gust of wind in her wake. She was close—only a few more steps and she could intercept the shadow. The air crackled around her, and she felt the familiar pulse of her claws extending, bone and blade merging, her senses keening with the focus of her T’shal’ara instincts.
She pushed herself to teleport again, desperate to make up the last few inches that separated her from the Duke and Duchess. But it was too late.
The shadow’s arms plunged forward, piercing their backs with a sickening sound that felt like the earth tearing open. Paola’s scream choked in her throat as she watched the spikes of shadow retract from their bodies, leaving gaping holes that leaked an inky black mist. Her own momentum carried her forward as she landed on the stage, claws extended, her dagger drawn and poised in a desperate, futile act of protection. Her growl tore through the silence as she swung at the air, slashing and stabbing, but there was nothing left. Only silence.
The ballroom was eerily still. Paola’s breaths came in ragged gasps, her heart hammering as she looked down to find herself alone, the blood pounding in her ears drowning out all else. Slowly, her gaze fell on the Duke and Duchess lying at her feet, their faces twisted in a final expression of pain and betrayal, their eyes wide with shock. Shadows leaked from the wounds in their backs, pooling on the stage in a viscous, inky stain. Paola’s mind reeled as she tried to process what she was seeing.
A murmur rose from the crowd, faint whispers that grew louder as those closest to the stage gasped in horror. Masks hid most of the faces, but the expressions of disbelief, terror, and confusion were clear in their wide, staring eyes. All around her, the crowd began to back away, the silence breaking with hushed voices that spiraled into panic.
Then a voice rang out, slicing through the shock like a blade.
“What have you done?” Lady Marcelline’s voice was thick with horror and fury as she stepped forward, her icy blue eyes filled with accusation. She pointed at Paola, her arm trembling, the shock evident even through her controlled facade. “You… You killed them!”
Paola’s heart dropped, her blood turning to ice as she met Marcelline’s gaze. “No… I—” Her hands raised instinctively, palms open, as if to ward off the accusation, but as she looked down, her fingers trembled, black sparks flickering at their tips, tiny bolts of chaos energy dancing from her claws.
Marcelline’s eyes widened in terror, her face a portrait of fear and disbelief. She recoiled, clutching her chest as though afraid Paola would strike next. The crowd mirrored her reaction, their shock shifting to horror as they watched the black energy crackle and spark from Paola’s fingers.
“She’s gone mad!” someone shouted from the crowd.
“Stay back!” Marcelline cried, her voice ringing with fear as she backed away. “Paola… She’s… she’s going to kill us all!”
Paola’s mind raced, desperate to find the words to explain, to deny it, but they died in her throat. Her chest tightened as she felt the stares on her, felt the judgment of every noble, every guest, every masked figure who saw only a monster standing over the Duke and Duchess’ lifeless bodies.
“No, please!” Paola stammered, her hands trembling as she lowered them, trying to dispel the dark energy that danced around her fingers. “It wasn’t… I didn’t…”
But her voice was lost beneath the rising wave of horror, swallowed by the fear that spread like wildfire. Before she could say another word, the unmistakable clang of armor drew her attention.
Ayla was upon her.
Paola’s heart stopped as she turned to face her lover, her confidante, the person she had trusted above all others. Ayla’s face was set in a look of grim determination, her broadsword gripped tightly in her hands, the blade shimmering with an unnatural gleam. She advanced toward Paola, her eyes burning with a mixture of hurt and anger.
“Ayla… please…” Paola’s voice broke, her words barely audible, but Ayla didn’t falter.
Without a word, Ayla raised her sword high, her face a mask of cold resolve as she swung down in an arc that glinted ominously under the ballroom’s lights. Paola barely had time to react, her instincts taking over as she teleported backward, just beyond the reach of Ayla’s blade as it slammed into the stage, splintering the wood with a deafening crack.
The shock of the attack rippled through Paola, disbelief numbing her senses. She could barely process what was happening, the reality of her situation crashing over her like a tidal wave.
“Ayla, I didn’t do it!” she shouted, her voice thick with desperation, but Ayla’s gaze remained unwavering, her grip tightening on her sword.
“I saw what you did, Paola.” Ayla’s voice was low, filled with an emotion that cut deeper than any blade. “You killed them. I don’t know why, but I won’t let you hurt anyone else.”
The weight of her words crushed Paola’s heart. It was a mistake—a setup—but nothing she said could undo the horror that had been etched into Ayla’s eyes. Before Paola could argue further, the sound of splintering wood filled the room as the doors of the ballroom burst open.
Masked bandits poured into the ballroom, their weapons drawn, their faces hidden behind grotesque masks painted in garish colors and exaggerated features. They moved with ruthless precision, slashing through anyone who dared to get in their way. Screams erupted from the crowd as guests scattered, scrambling to escape the carnage that had erupted within the once-opulent hall.
The masquerade had turned to a massacre.
The masquerade had descended into chaos, a deadly nightmare from which there seemed no escape. The guards and knights stationed throughout the ballroom tried to fend off the masked invaders, their polished armor gleaming as they clashed with the bandits who surged through the doors. But it was sudden—so sudden that even the guards struggled to keep up, their defenses falling apart in the confusion. Each swing of a sword, each flash of magic, only fueled the panic as guests trampled one another in their desperate attempts to flee.
Even the Duke and Duchess’ esteemed knights fell, their bodies piling near the grand entryways, crushed under the relentless onslaught of the masked intruders. Screams filled the room, mingling with the shouts of guards and the clash of steel on steel, the air thick with the acrid scent of blood and smoke. But amidst the terror, two figures stood apart, locked in a battle of their own.
Ayla’s blade moved with deadly precision, her broadsword carving through the air as she cut down one bandit after another, her every motion guided by fierce determination. Paola mirrored her movements in an almost haunting symmetry, teleporting from one corner of the ballroom to another, her claws glinting as she tore through the assailants who dared to cross her path. Though they exchanged no words, each glance Ayla spared toward Paola was heavy with unspoken fury, confusion, and… something else. Something that hurt to look at.
Paola’s mind raced with questions, but she had no time to answer them. Not when the ballroom was overrun with enemies, each masked figure lunging at her with blades and dark magic. She felt her T’shal’ara instincts rise, pushing her to fight harder, faster, her every fiber focused on survival. She sidestepped a masked man’s dagger, slashing through his arm with her claws, then teleported to Ayla’s side just in time to knock back a bandit who had managed to flank her. For a brief, heart-pounding moment, their eyes met, and she could see the conflict in Ayla’s gaze—the anger, the confusion, and the doubt that tore at her with every swing of her blade.
Another bandit charged at Paola, breaking the moment. She dodged to the side, her claws sinking into the intruder’s chest before she moved on, leaving the lifeless body behind. Slowly, agonizingly, the waves of attackers thinned as the guards and knights regained their footing, and Paola felt the weight of each life she took settle over her like a shroud. It wasn’t until the last few bandits had fallen and the echoes of battle faded that she dared to look up.
The guards and knights had managed to bring the fight outside, meeting the riotous throng of nobles and servants who had fled into the gardens. The ballroom was strewn with bodies, blood staining the marble floors where the slain lay, their lives spilled out in the aftermath of the slaughter. The battle could be heard still raging in the gardens, and Paola couldn’t shake the feeling that this was only the beginning.
The ballroom itself was a battlefield, strewn with the bodies of nobles, guards, and bandits alike. Only a handful of survivors remained, scattered and shaken. Selene stood to the side, breathing heavily, her mithralite arm glinting as she wiped the blood from her face. Poca moved quietly among the wounded, her healing strings shimmering as they mended torn flesh and soothed burns, her expression a mix of grim focus and exhaustion. At her touch, those who could still walk rose and limped out of the ballroom, guided by her quiet, reassuring presence.
The final survivors gathered in the center of the room—Paola, Ayla, Yucca, Yasmin, Selene, and Poca. Lady Marcelline stood upon the stage, flanked by a handful of nobles who had yet to flee. Her icy blue eyes scanned the carnage before her, taking in the fallen bodies, the shattered remnants of a celebration turned massacre. But as her gaze shifted to Paola, her face twisted into a look of pure, calculated revulsion.
In a clear, ringing voice that silenced even the whispers of the wounded, Marcelline spoke, her tone dripping with contempt. “So, this is what you wanted, Paola? And your… accomplices?” She sneered, her words heavy with accusation. “You came here as guests, only to unleash a massacre upon us. The Duke and Duchess murdered in cold blood, their noble blood staining the very floor they built to celebrate peace. And who stands here, untouched, but you?”
Paola’s stomach dropped, dread coiling within her as she realized the trap had closed around her. “Lady Marcelline, I didn’t—” she began, her voice trembling, but Marcelline cut her off with a harsh, slicing gesture.
“Enough lies!” Marcelline’s voice rang out, cold and unyielding. “The evidence is clear, for all to see. The Duke and Duchess lie dead, and you are the ones who stand beside their bodies. You, and your followers.” She pointed, her finger like a dagger as it landed on each of Paola’s companions in turn—Selene, her face shadowed in defiance; Poca, her hands still glowing with the soft light of healing magic; Yasmin, who stood protectively in front of Yucca, her face set in defiance.
Marcelline turned to Ayla, her eyes narrowing. “And you,” she said, her voice laced with betrayal. “You who pledged yourself to me, bound by your contract, now hesitate to deliver justice?”
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
Ayla’s grip on her sword faltered, her eyes flicking between Paola and Marcelline, torn between loyalty and doubt. Her voice was low, almost pleading. “Lady Marcelline, perhaps… they deserve a chance to explain. I saw Paola fighting the bandits too. She—”
“Explain?” Marcelline’s voice was a snarl, her composure cracking. “What explanation could they possibly offer? The bodies lie at their feet, the blood of our leaders on their hands. Will you deny what you saw with your own eyes, Ayla?”
A murmur rose from the nobles behind her, a ripple of agreement and distrust as they exchanged fearful glances. Marcelline turned to them, her face set in a mask of righteous fury. “Tell me, noble allies of Valarian, what do you see before you? Are these women to be trusted, or are they the murderers who brought ruin upon us?”
The nobles nodded, their voices hushed but unanimous as they echoed her words, a chorus of accusation that left no room for doubt. “They must be dealt with,” one of them muttered, his voice shaking. “They cannot be allowed to leave after what they’ve done.”
Marcelline’s gaze swept over the room, settling on each of her targets—Paola, Selene, Poca—and she raised her voice, her tone sharp as steel. “Then let it be known that these murderers are to be executed, here and now. Their lives are forfeit. Bring me their heads!”
A cold wave of horror swept through the room, the gravity of Marcelline’s command sinking into each of them like a dagger. Paola looked to Ayla, desperation etched into her face, silently pleading for her to understand, to remember everything they had shared, to see the truth beneath the lies. But Ayla’s face was shadowed in conflict, her eyes filled with a pain so raw it cut deeper than any wound.
“Paola…” Ayla whispered, her voice broken as if the word itself had shattered something inside her.
Yucca’s expression was icy and resolute as she took a deep breath, her hand lifting to summon the shimmering, razor-edged glass shards that hovered in the air around her like the deadly fragments of a shattered mirror. Her gaze never left Paola’s, the regret flickering there buried beneath layers of duty and conflicting loyalty.
But just as the shards began to coalesce, Yasmin moved in front of her, stepping firmly into the line of danger. She held her chin high, amber eyes defiant as she faced her older sister.
“No,” Yasmin said, her voice steady and strong despite the fear that lingered in her gaze. “You know Paola didn’t do this, Yucca. She was fighting the bandits just like us. She’s innocent, and you know it.”
Yucca’s jaw tightened, her expression flickering between anger and agony as she met Yasmin’s fierce gaze. “Yasmin… please. Don’t make this harder than it has to be. Move aside. You don’t understand what’s at stake.”
Yasmin stood her ground, unmoved. Her voice lowered to a fierce whisper as she held her sister’s gaze. “I understand exactly what’s at stake. But I won’t let you become the monster Marcelline wants. I won’t move, Yucca. Not until you see the truth.”
For a tense, breathless moment, the ballroom fell silent, save for the distant echo of the chaos beyond its walls. The two sisters stared each other down, a war of loyalty and love unfolding in silence. Paola could only watch, heart pounding as she clung to the desperate hope that Yasmin’s words might break through Yucca’s walls and turn the tide.
Across the ballroom, Ayla’s grip on her sword remained tight, her gaze flickering between Marcelline and Paola. Ayla’s face betrayed an inner battle, her shoulders tense, her brows drawn together in a pained expression. The weight of Marcelline’s command pressed down on her like an iron shackle, yet she stood rooted in place, unwilling to take a single step toward Paola.
Lady Marcelline’s gaze hardened, her cold blue eyes sharp with anger and something deeper—an unyielding disappointment that seemed to twist her face into something almost unrecognizable. Her lips pressed together into a thin line, and she lifted her chin, her voice cutting through the tension with icy authority.
“Are you truly choosing defiance over duty?” Marcelline’s words were pointed, her tone laced with both fury and disdain. “Have you both forgotten your place, your oaths to me? I don’t expect much from the common rabble, but you two, my most loyal, are faltering over… sentiment?” Her eyes flicked dismissively over Yasmin, who stood protectively between Paola and Yucca, and then to Paola herself, her expression darkening.
Ayla’s jaw clenched, and she forced herself to meet Marcelline’s gaze, though her grip on her sword wavered. “Lady Marcelline… please. There is so much here that doesn’t make sense. Shouldn’t we give them a chance to explain? Paola isn’t capable of this.” Her voice trembled slightly as if each word was a struggle against the weight pressing down on her.
Marcelline’s eyes narrowed as she stepped closer, the chill in her tone enough to silence the remaining whispers around them. “Ayla, loyalty is not loyalty when it requires constant questioning. You swore yourself to me, just as Yucca did. Or have you forgotten?”
The nobles still huddled behind Marcelline exchanged uncertain glances, their expressions a mixture of fear and confusion. But Lady Marcelline’s words were lowered as she addressed Ayla and Yucca directly, her voice a quiet, dangerous edge that only they could hear.
“If you will not act of your own will,” Marcelline continued, her voice like a blade slipping between ribs, “then allow me to remind you of what you pledged.” She took a step closer, the quiet menace in her tone unmistakable. “I will strip your will if necessary, leaving you hollow, empty, to serve as I see fit. And once it is taken, it will never be yours again. Not in life, nor in death. Defy me now, and you shall exist only as the shell I command.”
Ayla’s face paled, her body freezing as Marcelline’s threat sank in, a sharp pain flashing across her expression. Her hand trembled on her sword, her eyes filling with a raw, helpless agony as she looked toward Paola, pleading silently for understanding. She felt trapped, like an animal in a cage, unable to escape the choice forced upon her.
Yucca’s face, too, grew strained, the shimmering glass shards around her trembling as she lowered her hand slightly. Her gaze flickered to Yasmin, who stood firmly in front of her, unwavering, determined. There was regret, love, and fear in Yucca’s eyes, but as Marcelline’s words twisted deeper into her mind, her face hardened once more, her expression closing off.
Marcelline’s expression remained cold, but a flicker of disappointment crossed her eyes as she took another step forward. “So you defy me. You both disappoint me,” she said softly, her voice void of warmth. Her gaze darkened, and her next words were low, like a quiet storm gathering in the distance. “I am left no choice, then.”
The room held its collective breath, everyone frozen, knowing that whatever came next would be irrevocable.
Paola's gaze fell to the obsidian dagger in her hand, the very one Ayla had given her on their first mission together. Its blade gleamed dully in the dim ballroom light, a bitter reminder of everything they’d once shared. Every mark, every nick, held memories of Ayla’s steady hand guiding her through the dangers of Udanara. Now, the blade felt foreign, as though it belonged to someone else entirely.
In front of her, Lady Marcelline’s voice rose, cold and unyielding as she addressed the nobles gathered on the stage. “You should leave,” she declared, each word sharp and laced with false resolve. “I will stay here with my Sword Maiden. I will see to it that these women are punished for the vile crimes committed against our beloved Duke and Duchess.” Her gaze lingered on the trembling crowd, brows raised as she watched them file out, the shuffle of fine shoes fading until silence filled the massive, empty space.
With the room cleared, Marcelline turned back, and her expression hardened. She looked to Ayla and Yucca, her eyes cold, yet beneath the ice lurked something darker, a twisted sense of purpose. And then, with a subtle raise of her hand, she did the unthinkable.
Marcelline’s voice dropped to a chilling whisper, soft and intimate, as she uttered words that would bind Ayla and Yucca to her will completely, stripping them of all autonomy.
Ayla flinched, her body stiffening as if struck by an invisible blow. Her eyes widened, and for a moment, there was pure horror etched across her face as the weight of what was happening settled over her. She staggered, gripping the hilt of her sword so tightly her knuckles turned white, every muscle straining against the invisible chains tightening around her mind. Her gaze met Paola’s, the blue and red of her eyes flickering with the last embers of herself.
“Paola…” Her voice cracked, barely a whisper, but filled with pain that ran so deep it felt bottomless. “I… I didn’t want this. I’m so sorry…”
Paola took a step forward, desperation clawing at her insides, but her legs felt as though they were rooted in place. “Ayla, no… please—don’t let her do this. Fight it, please.”
Ayla’s eyes, once so vibrant, began to dull, as though something essential, something irreplaceable, was slipping away. The edges of her face seemed to blur, her expression melting into blank obedience as the fight drained from her. Paola watched, helpless, as Ayla’s proud spirit—the very essence of the woman she loved—was torn away, leaving behind a hollow shell.
Yasmin let out a strangled cry as she watched Yucca go through the same transformation. Her sister’s hands trembled, her fingers flexing in some last effort to resist, but Marcelline’s grip tightened, and Yucca fell to her knees. Her face twisted in agony as she struggled to cling to her mind, her gaze fixed on Yasmin, her lips forming a silent apology. Yasmin rushed forward, but the look in Yucca’s eyes stopped her, a wordless plea that spoke louder than any scream.
“I’m so sorry, Yasmin,” Yucca managed, her voice barely a breath, fragile and shattering under the weight of her forced obedience. “I… I tried… I wanted…”
And then, as though a light had been snuffed out, Yucca’s eyes turned blank, her expression softening into nothingness. Her body remained upright, but the sister Yasmin knew was gone, vanished behind the vacant stare of someone who no longer possessed her own will.
Paola and Yasmin stood frozen, each woman bound by grief, unable to look away from the hollow shells of the people they loved. There was no color missing from Ayla’s face, no true change in Yucca’s posture, yet both of them felt emptied, stripped of whatever intangible life had made them whole. They were statues, shadows of the women they had once been.
Lady Marcelline, her face impassive, approached Ayla slowly. She cupped Ayla’s chin, lifting her head until their eyes met. Ayla’s mismatched gaze, once so filled with light and fierce independence, stared blankly back at Marcelline, unblinking, obedient.
A tremor of something close to regret flickered across Marcelline’s face, but her voice was as steady as ever. She brushed her fingers over Ayla’s cheek with a gentleness that twisted something deep within Paola’s chest. “I am sorry, Ayla,” Marcelline murmured, her voice low, a tragic softness weaving through her words. “Sacrifices must be made for the good of all. You of all people should understand this.”
Paola’s heart hammered as she struggled to keep her breaths even, but the grief in her eyes was mirrored in Marcelline’s as she looked at Ayla with an expression Paola had never seen before—something almost like love.
Ayla’s head remained tilted in Marcelline’s hand, her gaze steady but utterly devoid of life, as though nothing of her spirit remained within her. Paola took a shaky step forward, her hand reaching out instinctively. “No… Ayla, please… this isn’t you.” Her voice was hoarse, choked with despair, as she tried to reach her, tried to connect with anything that was still her Ayla.
But Ayla didn’t respond, her face a mask of obedience. Marcelline released her chin, stepping back as she looked at Ayla and Yucca, assessing the two women as though they were objects, tools to be wielded, rather than people. The flicker of regret had vanished, leaving only a cruel satisfaction.
With a calm, deadly precision, Marcelline straightened and addressed Ayla and Yucca, her voice cutting through the silence with an edge of finality. “You will follow my command,” she said, each word a nail driving deeper into the hearts of those who cared for them. “You will finish what you started.”
A shudder ran through Paola as she felt the finality of Marcelline’s words, the hopelessness of her power pressing down on her, suffocating. Her hand clenched around the dagger Ayla had once given her, and her throat tightened, her breath coming in shallow gasps. She had lost Ayla. The realization hit her like a blow to the chest, and her vision blurred as tears filled her eyes.
Yasmin took a step back, her entire body trembling as she turned to face her sister, still kneeling, blank-eyed and motionless. “Yucca… please, it’s me. It’s Yasmin. You can fight this,” she whispered, her voice breaking, her hand reaching out to touch Yucca’s shoulder.
But Yucca did not respond. She merely stared ahead, her glassy eyes devoid of recognition, as though Yasmin’s voice no longer reached her.
Marcelline’s gaze swept over them all, her face an unyielding mask as she took in the pain she had inflicted, her expression colder than stone. But for a brief moment, as she looked at Ayla and Yucca, her eyes softened, as if even she could not escape the weight of what she’d done.
Then, her voice, calm and deadly, shattered the silence. “This is the price for betrayal, for resistance.” She held Paola’s gaze, her voice softening, almost sympathetic. “You must understand, Paola. Everything I do is for the good of Udanara. For the order and peace we all desire.”
Paola’s chest heaved with silent sobs, her voice a ragged whisper. “How could you… how could you do this to them?”
Marcelline’s eyes narrowed, the faintest hint of irritation flickering across her face as she dismissed Paola’s question with a flick of her hand. “You wouldn’t understand. But you will, eventually. Perhaps one day you’ll see the wisdom in sacrifice.” She turned to Ayla, who remained impassive, and for a brief, heartbreaking moment, the love that Marcelline hid from everyone else flickered once more in her gaze.
Paola’s throat tightened as she watched the woman she loved, now nothing more than a hollow vessel, awaiting orders, devoid of everything that had made her whole. Her heart fractured as she realized there was no bringing Ayla back, not as long as Marcelline held her will captive.
Marcelline’s voice was barely above a whisper as she addressed Ayla, her words filled with chilling finality. “You will serve me faithfully, as you always have. And if there is anything left of you that resists, it will be silenced.”
As Marcelline turned away, Ayla’s head lowered, her shoulders sagging, her once-vibrant spirit entirely extinguished. Paola’s knees buckled, and she sank to the floor, her hand clutching the dagger like a lifeline, her mind reeling from the unbearable weight of her loss.
Yasmin’s voice, raw with grief, filled the silence as she looked into Yucca’s empty eyes, her own gaze filled with agony. “Yucca… please… please come back.” Her words hung in the air, unanswered, as Yucca’s lifeless stare held no trace of recognition, no hint of the sister who had once stood beside her.
Lady Marcelline’s voice cut through the air, cold and detached. “Now, it’s time to rid Udanara of this chaos you’ve brought. Ayla, Yucca…” Her words sliced through the shattered hearts of everyone present, her tone as commanding as ever. “Finish what you’ve begun.”
As Ayla’s empty gaze turned toward her, Paola felt a surge of terror grip her, freezing her in place. She tried to move, tried to summon the strength to fight, but the grief and horror weighing her down made her feel as though she were drowning.
Ayla took a step forward, her sword lifting with mechanical precision. Paola’s breath caught in her throat as she saw the woman she loved, the woman who had once fought beside her, now standing against her, her expression void of anything resembling compassion or recognition.
Yasmin’s sobs filled the air as Yucca, her own sister, turned toward her, her glass shards floating ominously around her in a deadly dance. The sisters were no longer sisters, the lovers were no longer lovers. Marcelline had taken everything from them, leaving behind only shattered fragments of what once was.
And as Ayla’s sword rose, her eyes blank, her loyalty forever stolen, Paola knew with a devastating certainty that there was no turning back from this. The finality of Marcelline’s control had twisted everything they held dear into something dark, something hollow, leaving only despair in its wake.
With a final, cold smile, Marcelline watched her handiwork unfold, satisfied as the people she had once pretended to love fell to their knees, broken beyond repair.
“Sacrifices must be made,” she whispered, her gaze lingering on Ayla and Yucca. And as the two broken warriors moved forward, ready to strike, the world seemed to shatter along with Paola’s heart, leaving nothing but darkness in its place.