scantilycladsnail
One Thousand Club
Ephraim didnât move.
The door slammed shut behind the last of themâEryonâs hoofsteps echoing into silence, Silvanoâs theatrics mercifully absent for once. Mern had vanished like parchment in fire. And still, Ephraim stood.
Alone with him. Alone with Wrath.
And her.
The shadows lashed, the lanterns flickered. But Ephraimâs violet gaze remained lockedâstill and deliberateâas her hand lifted, calm, and brushed a loose strand of hair from her face.
Then came the sound.
Not laughterâyet.
It was a breath. A low exhale from deep in her chest. Something between a scoff and a hum.
And then: she did laugh.
Not loud. Not mocking. Not cruel. But amused. Deeply. Darkly.
âOh, Wrath,â came the voiceânot hers. Not fully. Something layered beneath it, velvet-slick and hollow. Vengeance. Older. Colder. Herself. âYou old fool.â
Ephraim turned, slowly, and stepped toward the center of the storm. Shadows hissed, recoiledâthen coiled tighter around her like loyal dogs scenting home.
âYou really let that fish kiss you, didnât you?â
Her smile was sharpânot cruel, but vicious in its knowing.
âLet him sing to you. Murmur nonsense in my voice. And youâoh, youâthe all-burning fury of the heavens, tangled up like a lovesick spark.â
She circled him now, slow, like a stalking tide.
âAll that talk of purity and justice and divine rage⊠and there you were. Lantern-drunk. Lantern-dumb.â
The shadows trembled as she neared, her fingers tracing the edge of Mordecaiâs scorched shoulderânot soothing. A brand. A tether.
âYou loved him, didnât you?â she whispered, fangs bared just behind her teeth.
Her eyes narrowed.
âAnd thatâs the part that burns, isnât it?â
A pause. Her smile fadedâjust slightly.
âBecause I wouldâve never done that. I wouldâve never lied to you, Wrath. Never tricked you with false kindness and ocean-born lullabies. I was always what I said I was."
The voice dropped lowerâsofter. Deadlier.
âHe wore me like perfume.â
And thenâ
Fire.
It rolled off her in a pulseânot heat, not brightness, but clarity. Red-veined, judgment-born Vengeance, roaring through Ephraimâs frame as she stopped in front of him.
Her gaze met his third eye.
âI want him dead too.â
She raised her hand, fingers dripping with controlled fury.
âBut if youâre going to burn him⊠do it for what he is.â
Not what he pretended to be.
Not what you wanted him to be.
The shadows flickered. The silence deepened.
And Vengeance smiled once more.
ââŠYou lantern-kissing dummy.â
The door slammed shut behind the last of themâEryonâs hoofsteps echoing into silence, Silvanoâs theatrics mercifully absent for once. Mern had vanished like parchment in fire. And still, Ephraim stood.
Alone with him. Alone with Wrath.
And her.
The shadows lashed, the lanterns flickered. But Ephraimâs violet gaze remained lockedâstill and deliberateâas her hand lifted, calm, and brushed a loose strand of hair from her face.
Then came the sound.
Not laughterâyet.
It was a breath. A low exhale from deep in her chest. Something between a scoff and a hum.
And then: she did laugh.
Not loud. Not mocking. Not cruel. But amused. Deeply. Darkly.
âOh, Wrath,â came the voiceânot hers. Not fully. Something layered beneath it, velvet-slick and hollow. Vengeance. Older. Colder. Herself. âYou old fool.â
Ephraim turned, slowly, and stepped toward the center of the storm. Shadows hissed, recoiledâthen coiled tighter around her like loyal dogs scenting home.
âYou really let that fish kiss you, didnât you?â
Her smile was sharpânot cruel, but vicious in its knowing.
âLet him sing to you. Murmur nonsense in my voice. And youâoh, youâthe all-burning fury of the heavens, tangled up like a lovesick spark.â
She circled him now, slow, like a stalking tide.
âAll that talk of purity and justice and divine rage⊠and there you were. Lantern-drunk. Lantern-dumb.â
The shadows trembled as she neared, her fingers tracing the edge of Mordecaiâs scorched shoulderânot soothing. A brand. A tether.
âYou loved him, didnât you?â she whispered, fangs bared just behind her teeth.
Her eyes narrowed.
âAnd thatâs the part that burns, isnât it?â
A pause. Her smile fadedâjust slightly.
âBecause I wouldâve never done that. I wouldâve never lied to you, Wrath. Never tricked you with false kindness and ocean-born lullabies. I was always what I said I was."
The voice dropped lowerâsofter. Deadlier.
âHe wore me like perfume.â
And thenâ
Fire.
It rolled off her in a pulseânot heat, not brightness, but clarity. Red-veined, judgment-born Vengeance, roaring through Ephraimâs frame as she stopped in front of him.
Her gaze met his third eye.
âI want him dead too.â
She raised her hand, fingers dripping with controlled fury.
âBut if youâre going to burn him⊠do it for what he is.â
Not what he pretended to be.
Not what you wanted him to be.
The shadows flickered. The silence deepened.
And Vengeance smiled once more.
ââŠYou lantern-kissing dummy.â