Syntra
Baba Yaga
The edges of the world, usually so sharp, had been blurred beyond recognition, though Whisper didn’t care. How could she? How?! Her entire being, paltry as it was, was focused on a single phrase: ‘I almost fucking lost you.’ Almost. Funny, wasn’t it? Because, for those long, torturous weeks, the narrative had been that she had lost her-- that Iskra was gone, and in her place, only a parasite could be found. (Something dirty and disgusting, like a grave worm feasting on her corpse. A monster in anything but name. Had she been wrong about the princess’s perceptions, then? …the hope was small, a quiet rumble of an engine that had long since run out of fuel, but it was there, and that scared her. More than she could say.) I’m not her, though, the pirate wanted to protest. We’re too different. But, really, wouldn’t that also mean that Verity was no longer Verity? Because the recent events had twisted her as well-- transformed her into something that she hadn’t been, according to both Iskra’s diaries and herself. Were they both dead, then? An acceptable conclusion, except that the princess… well, she felt very much alive. The pulse of her heart couldn’t be silenced, especially when she was pinned beneath her. (Beneath the sheets, during those nightly escapades of theirs, she’d been even more alive. Sparks had been dancing in her eyes as she’d demanded more, more, and more, and despite everything? Whisper had been happy to give it to her. In those moments, the pirate supposed, she had seemed alive as well.) “I don’t…” the captain trailed off, practically choking on her tears. (How had she been suppressing them for so long, again? The answers eluded her, as they often did.) “No. It wasn’t fair. But it happened, and what you’re doing to me isn’t fair, either. No amount of grief will ever justify it.”
In case you were interested, then no, Whisper knew not what she expected from this. More insults, maybe? More excuses? More ridiculous arguments revolving around how she was the victim here, actually? Except that none of it ended up happening. Instead, there was a waterfall of apologies, and her combativeness melted in it. “I didn’t want you to be a princess,” the pirate sobbed, with the kind of sincerity that she’d thought lost to her. (How long had she been feeling that way? Days, or weeks, or entire centuries? The secrets of her own heart were a mystery to her, but in this very moment, Whisper knew it to be true-- knew it just as much as she knew that she needed oxygen to live.) “I just wanted you to be mine.” Of course, Whisper’s wishes interested nobody. The lady of the realm of the dead was still there, you see? And she demanded her sacrifice, just like the Holy Vessel and Seraphina and… and everybody else, really. Everyone aside from Verity, who wanted the very opposite from her. The irony was bitter, wasn’t it? Almost bitter enough to make her vomit, had her stomach been full enough for something like that.
‘The princess is stubborn,’ Iskra had written into one of her early entries, shortly before the thoughts of Verity had consumed everything else. ‘Do not override her will, otherwise that which you never want to happen will become her heart’s greatest desire. She is to be coaxed gently, and treated with care.’ And, honestly? Whisper should have taken her past self’s advice there, because what followed had been very predictable in hindsight. “By the Shade,” she murmured, watching helplessly as Verity signed her death sentence. “You are unbelievable.” Always had been, right from the moment she had looked at Iskra like that and seen, oh so easily, everything that she’d tried to conceal from the others. From herself, even. Does she really think this is going to stop me? No, you couldn’t talk a hurricane out of razing a city with a gentle song, and similarly to that, you couldn’t restrain Whisper when she set her mind on something. “Foolish princess,” the pirate said, half a chuckle and half a sob. “You have only taken one of my many, many choices away from me. I won’t let you have the rest.” Easily, she dislodged the dagger, and before Verity could so much as comment upon her actions, she was standing next to her, her sword in her hand. (Somehow, this felt… right? Like a piece of puzzle sliding into place.) “If we both die, I can at least do so by your side. And, in case we happen to survive? You better make it worth it to me. This time, I want to be treated right. I want to be courted, and have poems composed about my beauty, and, yes, be serenaded to. Do all that, and I might forgive you.”
‘Oh, how very moving,’ the monster laughed. ‘Too bad this scenario of yours will never, ever come to pass! You should pick your enemies more wisely, princess and pirate. At least one of you could have lived-- could have stayed behind to bring flowers on the other’s grave, or whatever it is that you mortals do to wrestle with your sorrow. A shame. Then again… I will love to tear you apart, limb from limb.’ Did it matter to the entity that Verity had struck her claws with her sword? It was hard to tell, for it didn’t cry out, nor did it whimper in pain. That wasn’t to say that there wasn’t any reaction at all, though. Blood began pouring from the open wounds-- so much blood, indeed, that it could have filled entire rivers, seas, oceans. Soon enough, the entire ship was drowning in it! …but, oh, that wasn’t everything. If only. The blood around them swirled, forming whirlwinds deep and wide, and when the currents splashed against the walls? The liquid assumed the shapes of Verity’s dead sisters, their faces contorted in eternal agony. “Verity!” Mercy howled, digging her nails into the princess’s shoulders. “How could you?! It is because of her that I am like this now. Why don’t you want her to pay?”
“Pay!” the chorus of their voices sang, so chilling it could freeze the hell over. “Pay, pay, pay!”
In case you were interested, then no, Whisper knew not what she expected from this. More insults, maybe? More excuses? More ridiculous arguments revolving around how she was the victim here, actually? Except that none of it ended up happening. Instead, there was a waterfall of apologies, and her combativeness melted in it. “I didn’t want you to be a princess,” the pirate sobbed, with the kind of sincerity that she’d thought lost to her. (How long had she been feeling that way? Days, or weeks, or entire centuries? The secrets of her own heart were a mystery to her, but in this very moment, Whisper knew it to be true-- knew it just as much as she knew that she needed oxygen to live.) “I just wanted you to be mine.” Of course, Whisper’s wishes interested nobody. The lady of the realm of the dead was still there, you see? And she demanded her sacrifice, just like the Holy Vessel and Seraphina and… and everybody else, really. Everyone aside from Verity, who wanted the very opposite from her. The irony was bitter, wasn’t it? Almost bitter enough to make her vomit, had her stomach been full enough for something like that.
‘The princess is stubborn,’ Iskra had written into one of her early entries, shortly before the thoughts of Verity had consumed everything else. ‘Do not override her will, otherwise that which you never want to happen will become her heart’s greatest desire. She is to be coaxed gently, and treated with care.’ And, honestly? Whisper should have taken her past self’s advice there, because what followed had been very predictable in hindsight. “By the Shade,” she murmured, watching helplessly as Verity signed her death sentence. “You are unbelievable.” Always had been, right from the moment she had looked at Iskra like that and seen, oh so easily, everything that she’d tried to conceal from the others. From herself, even. Does she really think this is going to stop me? No, you couldn’t talk a hurricane out of razing a city with a gentle song, and similarly to that, you couldn’t restrain Whisper when she set her mind on something. “Foolish princess,” the pirate said, half a chuckle and half a sob. “You have only taken one of my many, many choices away from me. I won’t let you have the rest.” Easily, she dislodged the dagger, and before Verity could so much as comment upon her actions, she was standing next to her, her sword in her hand. (Somehow, this felt… right? Like a piece of puzzle sliding into place.) “If we both die, I can at least do so by your side. And, in case we happen to survive? You better make it worth it to me. This time, I want to be treated right. I want to be courted, and have poems composed about my beauty, and, yes, be serenaded to. Do all that, and I might forgive you.”
‘Oh, how very moving,’ the monster laughed. ‘Too bad this scenario of yours will never, ever come to pass! You should pick your enemies more wisely, princess and pirate. At least one of you could have lived-- could have stayed behind to bring flowers on the other’s grave, or whatever it is that you mortals do to wrestle with your sorrow. A shame. Then again… I will love to tear you apart, limb from limb.’ Did it matter to the entity that Verity had struck her claws with her sword? It was hard to tell, for it didn’t cry out, nor did it whimper in pain. That wasn’t to say that there wasn’t any reaction at all, though. Blood began pouring from the open wounds-- so much blood, indeed, that it could have filled entire rivers, seas, oceans. Soon enough, the entire ship was drowning in it! …but, oh, that wasn’t everything. If only. The blood around them swirled, forming whirlwinds deep and wide, and when the currents splashed against the walls? The liquid assumed the shapes of Verity’s dead sisters, their faces contorted in eternal agony. “Verity!” Mercy howled, digging her nails into the princess’s shoulders. “How could you?! It is because of her that I am like this now. Why don’t you want her to pay?”
“Pay!” the chorus of their voices sang, so chilling it could freeze the hell over. “Pay, pay, pay!”