Hildrabrenna
The Blood Sorceress
Hildrabrenna did not speak at first.
Instead, she studied Nepheli in full—no longer through the lens of calculation, but with something closer to reverence. It wasn’t the kind reserved for kings or gods. No, it was rarer than that.
It was the kind reserved for those few beings in eternity who refused to bend, even when the world demanded it.
The dungeon murmured around them. Bones shifted. Dust sighed from the walls. But Hildrabrenna stood still, her head tilting with a predator’s poise and a scholar’s restraint, as though etching every word Nepheli had spoken into the runes beneath her skin.
“Good,” she said at last, and though the word was simple, it rang with the finality of a seal placed upon a pact.
“Then we understand each other.”
She stepped into the same circle of flickering light, her shadow touching Nepheli’s, the two bleeding together in jagged edges.
“You are no relic, no summoned shade.” Her voice was smooth now, stripped of theater. Blunt. True. “You are what remains after ruin. What refuses to break when the gods have already moved on.”
The flicker of something else ghosted across her features—not softness, not vulnerability, but respect so old and rare it almost ached to hold it.
“You are what the Night Court needs.”
She looked past Nepheli for a moment, down the corridor swallowed in gloom. “Marcus saw it in you—of that I have no doubt. But he was never made to love anything smaller than the world itself. Even his children are planets caught in orbit.”
Her eyes returned to Nepheli’s, steady. Eternal.
“But I am not him.” A truth offered like an edge across a throat. “And I will not squander loyalty that has already bled for our dream.”
A long breath passed between them. Hildrabrenna’s next words were quiet—too quiet to echo, meant for Nepheli alone.
“If you stand with me, you will stand beside me. Not behind. I will give you respect, purpose, and power in equal measure. And I will demand the same.”
A faint smile touched the corner of her mouth, sharp and sad and knowing.
“Because I, too, do not kneel.”
Their shadows broke apart as she turned slightly toward the next passage, where the dungeon’s breath waited like a curtain about to rise.
“Let it judge us then. Let it find that we are more than the sum of what came before.”
She looked back only once.
“Come, War Master. Let’s carve a path fit for gods to envy.”
Instead, she studied Nepheli in full—no longer through the lens of calculation, but with something closer to reverence. It wasn’t the kind reserved for kings or gods. No, it was rarer than that.
It was the kind reserved for those few beings in eternity who refused to bend, even when the world demanded it.
The dungeon murmured around them. Bones shifted. Dust sighed from the walls. But Hildrabrenna stood still, her head tilting with a predator’s poise and a scholar’s restraint, as though etching every word Nepheli had spoken into the runes beneath her skin.
“Good,” she said at last, and though the word was simple, it rang with the finality of a seal placed upon a pact.
“Then we understand each other.”
She stepped into the same circle of flickering light, her shadow touching Nepheli’s, the two bleeding together in jagged edges.
“You are no relic, no summoned shade.” Her voice was smooth now, stripped of theater. Blunt. True. “You are what remains after ruin. What refuses to break when the gods have already moved on.”
The flicker of something else ghosted across her features—not softness, not vulnerability, but respect so old and rare it almost ached to hold it.
“You are what the Night Court needs.”
She looked past Nepheli for a moment, down the corridor swallowed in gloom. “Marcus saw it in you—of that I have no doubt. But he was never made to love anything smaller than the world itself. Even his children are planets caught in orbit.”
Her eyes returned to Nepheli’s, steady. Eternal.
“But I am not him.” A truth offered like an edge across a throat. “And I will not squander loyalty that has already bled for our dream.”
A long breath passed between them. Hildrabrenna’s next words were quiet—too quiet to echo, meant for Nepheli alone.
“If you stand with me, you will stand beside me. Not behind. I will give you respect, purpose, and power in equal measure. And I will demand the same.”
A faint smile touched the corner of her mouth, sharp and sad and knowing.
“Because I, too, do not kneel.”
Their shadows broke apart as she turned slightly toward the next passage, where the dungeon’s breath waited like a curtain about to rise.
“Let it judge us then. Let it find that we are more than the sum of what came before.”
She looked back only once.
“Come, War Master. Let’s carve a path fit for gods to envy.”