[ standing over a body ] " oops. "
the silence in the room was thick, clinging like smoke after a spell gone wrong. emilia stood a few feet away from the body, arms crossed, gaze fixed on the slowly spreading pool of blood with an expression that wasn’t quite surprise. she’d seen worse. she’d caused worse. but that didn’t mean she approved of this. not by a long shot.
yelena stood nearby, a smear of something dark on her cheek, chin lifted like she was daring the world to flinch first. ❝ oops, ❞ she said. emilia blinked once. ❝ oops, ❞ she echoed, voice flat. ❝ that’s what you’re going with? ❞ she took a few slow steps forward, her boots silent against the tile. the scent of blood mixed with gunpowder and bad decisions. she didn’t crouch, didn’t touch the body — just looked down at it with the weariness of someone who had cleaned up too many messes that didn’t need to happen in the first place. ❝ you could’ve walked away, ❞ she said. ❝ you could’ve handled it with a threat, or a promise, or even just silence. instead … ❞ she gestured loosely to the body with one hand. ❝ now there’s a corpse in the hallway and we both get to deal with the fallout. ❞ yelena didn’t say anything. she didn’t have to. emilia could read her like a spellbook left out in the rain — a little warped, but still legible. she sighed and pinched the bridge of her nose, more tired than angry. ❝ i know what it’s like to be angry. i know what it feels like when the world treats you like a mistake. but if you let that anger decide for you, you’re just doing their work for them. ❞ her voice softened, but the edge remained. ❝ you want a place at the table? fine. but you don’t get there by being reckless. you get there by surviving. ❞ emilia looked at her, really looked at her — at the hard line of her jaw, the heat behind her eyes, the tension in her hands. ❝ you’re not stupid, yelena. sᴏ ᴅᴏɴ'ᴛ ᴀᴄᴛ ʟɪᴋᴇ ɪᴛ. ❞ then, after a beat, she turned toward the door. ❝ come on, ❞ she said over her shoulder. ❝ we need to move the body before someone sees. and next time? try not to make me regret standing beside you. ❞
The Times, Shreveport, Louisiana, November 30, 1913
♱ ⠀⠀… ⠀⠀𝐏𝐈𝐂𝐑𝐄𝐖 ⠀⠀your ⠀⠀𝖒𝖚𝖘𝖊 ⠀⠀.
tagged by ⠀⠀… ⠀⠀@ashbalfour & @stvrmlicht tagging⠀⠀⠀⠀… ⠀⠀@geisterwelt, @heiliqe, @renchoku & @sternleer
Marian Seldes, referring to Anne Sexton in "Anne Sexton: A Biography"
lucrezia guides emilia's bloody hands under a faucet / water source and begins washing them clean.
the water was too warm. it made the blood feel thicker somehow — less like something to be washed away and more like something that had sunk too deep to ever really leave.
emilia didn’t speak. her eyes remained fixed on their hands beneath the faucet, the red swirling down the drain in ghostly ribbons. lucrezia’s touch was steady, reverent even, like a priestess performing a ritual rather than a someone scrubbing sin from skin. ❝ you don’t have to do this, ❞ emilia murmured finally, her voice low, almost hoarse. not from pain. from restraint. ❝ I'm not some frightened girl in ⁿᵉᵉᵈ ᵒᶠ ᵃᵇˢᵒˡᵘᵗᶦᵒⁿ. ❞ but she didn’t pull away. because for all the blood she’d spilled, there was something strangely disarming about lucrezia’s hands — so calm, so sure, as if she’d done this before. maybe she had. maybe that’s why emilia stayed still. why she let her. because only someone with her own share of ʀᴜɪɴ could understand what it meant to do terrible things … and still want to be touched gently after. her gaze finally lifted, meeting lucrezia’s with a quiet defiance — and something else flickering behind it. not regret. never regret. just … weight. ❝ are you always this gentle with ᴍᴏɴsᴛᴇʀs? ❞
“Hecate was perfumed with dark spices and unending remorselessness.”
— Lola Ridge, from To the Many; Collected Poems of Lola Ridge; “Hellish,” (via violentwavesofemotion)
𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐒𝐓 𝐌𝐄𝐄𝐓𝐈𝐍𝐆 . . . ( ice breaker )
✧ › Send "Looks like we're stuck together." for a sudden situation forces our muses into close quarters. A great way to break the ice with mutuals you'd like to write with but are nervous to approach!
she didn’t smile. not at his question, not at the way his words lilted so easily between implication and charm. the air between them had cooled by degrees, not with malice, but with something quieter — older. like caution pressed into silence. ˢᵒ ʷʰᶦᶜʰ ᶦˢ ᶦᵗˀ ᴬ ᶠᵒʳᵗᵘⁿᵃᵗᵉ ᵃᶜᶜᶦᵈᵉⁿᵗˀ ᴼʳ ᵖʳᵉᶜᶦˢᵉˡʸ ᵗʰᵉ ᵐᵉᵉᵗᶦⁿᵍ ʸᵒᵘ ʷᵉʳᵉ ᵐᵉᵃⁿᵗ ᵗᵒ ʰᵃᵛᵉˀ she heard it for what it was — not curiosity, not truly. it was a shift of the board. an invitation to let him steer the narrative, to hand him the reins under the illusion of shared conversation. her gaze stayed fixed on him, ˢᵗᵉᵃᵈʸ ᵃⁿᵈ ᵘⁿʳᵉᵃᵈᵃᵇˡᵉ. that, too, was a kind of answer. ❝ you’re very good at answering questions with more questions, ❞ she said at last, her voice calm, precise. ❝ though i suppose that’s the game, isn’t it? ❞ she didn’t wait for his reply — she didn’t need to. it was already written in the curl of his mouth, the ease of his posture, the too-smooth cadence of someone used to slipping through locked doors with words alone. ❝ i’ve seen people lie with less grace, ❞ she continued, her tone still unbothered, still measured. ❝ but rarely with so much ᴄᴏɴғɪᴅᴇɴᴄᴇ in being believed. ❞ she stepped forward then, slowly, allowing her presence to fill the space between them, not to intimidate — that would have been too obvious — but to remind him that she was not just listening. she was reading. every line, every pause, every carefully chosen word. a small silence passed between them, deliberate, weighted. then, her voice — quieter now, but edged with something steel-spined and certain ❝ i don’t trust men who smile while they’re being watched. ❞ she let that linger in the air like the last note of a spell, her expression unchanged, unblinking, as though she were waiting — not for an answer, but for something more revealing. a misstep. a crack in the veneer. a shadow, even slight, that might betray what he really wanted. because people like him never asked questions like that without a purpose. they didn’t speak in riddles unless they had something to hide — or something to gain. so she watched. and waited. because if this was a game, she intended to know all the rules before she moved her first piece.
" would you believe me if i said wrong place, wrong time ? "
the sorceress studied him carefully, her gaze sweeping over the pristine cut of his coat, the polished cufflinks, the effortless poise of someone who had never wanted for anything. his words were smooth, his demeanor composed — but there was something just a little too measured about it.
she let out a slow breath, eyebrows lifted as she regarded him with quiet scrutiny ❝ would you believe me if I said I didn't believe in coincidences? ❞
her voice was steady, laced with the unmistakable lilt of her sicilian accent and edged with quiet sᴜsᴘɪᴄɪᴏɴ — and yet ᴄᴜʀɪᴏsɪᴛʏ flickered beneath it. men like him didn’t end up in the wrong place at the wrong time — unless they meant to be there.
Safia Elhillo, from Girls That Never Die: Poems