From the ruins of a once-holy temple, two figures had made their camp.
Skuld worked quietly near the altar, her fingers brushing along carvings of spiraling waves and motherly faces — half-worn from salt and age. Every ti she restored a line of script, the temple's faint green glow would pulse, as though the building recognized her kind heart.
Outside, Kurai stood in the rain with an obsidian quill of shadow sketching sigils into the air. Each one dissolved into mist, then reappeared farther off — forming a web across the valley.
It was just reconnaissance.
"You really think you can chart where darkness is gathering?" Skuld called from the doorway.
"Of course I can," Kurai said, not turning. "I'm not a fool like so other little girl. The rain changes before the heartless co — turns violet, the water glows faintly, and the wind carries whispers. If I can chart and figure out how that happens, I can find where the world is dying. And if we find that…" She smirked faintly. "Then we can stop it."
Skuld tilted her head, her voice gentle but sure. "I didn't need the fool insult, by the way. However, you almost sound like you care."
Kurai scoffed, tucking the quill away. "Don't start imagining things. I'm simply efficient."
"Efficiently caring, then."
Kurai turned, silver eyes cold as the horizon. "You're going to drown in your own optimism soday. Who knows I might drown you myself."
Skuld just smiled and let the rain speak between them.
Their thods clashed, yet the goal was the sa — one mapping darkness, the other attempting to connect with those around them. The balance between them was fragile but functional.
Just like the world.
By afternoon, the storm changed. The rain grew thicker, its rhythm syncopated — like a song trying to rember its lody.
A commotion rippled through the nearby stilt village. Drums of alarm echoed over the water. Skuld and Kurai descended from the temple to find the villagers gathered at the docks, staring at a drifting canoe. No crew. No nets. Only a lantern swaying on the prow, its fla purple instead of orange.
The chief pointed with trembling hands. "It ca back on its own."
Skuld approached cautiously. Inside the boat were scorch marks and wet footprints leading back into the sea.
Sothing had walked ho.
Kurai crouched beside the hull, her eyes narrowing. "The darkness here is layered. It was recent, aning it should still be close."
"Close?" Skuld echoed.
Kurai's shadow flared outward, testing the water. Ripples glowed faintly purple. "This world sohow runs on emotion. When people grieve, the rain falls harder. When they forget, the sea gets colder. The Heartless here—" she paused, glancing up, "—aren't just hunting light. They're attempting to plant negative emotions within the people for so reason. Maybe to summon more of them."
The villagers began backing away as the water darkened. Skuld turned, calm but firm. "We'll find your missing fishern. Stay inside until we return."
Kurai's tone sharpened. "We don't even know what's under there."
"Then we'll find out." Skuld raised her hand, and a faint teal charm ford on her wrist, swirling like a miniature tide. "This will let breathe below. You monitor from the shore."
"Of course," Kurai muttered. "This is all you. I happen to hate the ocean."
"Bad experience underwater? You have to tell about it soday," Skuld said softly, then dove into the depths.
The world below was dreamlike — a cathedral of light and color muted by distance. The water wasn't cold. It humd.
Threads of bioluminescent coral pulsed with teal and green, forming shapes that resembled veins. Each pulse matched the rhythm of the rain above, a slow, patient heartbeat.
As Skuld swam deeper, the currents began to whisper. Not in words, but in voices that sounded familiar — laughter she couldn't quite place, a promise she never rembered making. For a mont, she thought she heard that boy Epher calling her na, faint and echoing through the tide.
Her fingers brushed the silt — warm. Sothing massive shifted in the gloom ahead, and scales glinted like moonlit glass.
Then ca the others.
Shapes slithered from the shadows: Echolures. Siren-like Heartless with elongated, drifting forms and faces that mimicked her own. They sang in her voice, distorted through water.
"Co ho," they whispered.
Skuld summoned her keyblade, its light rippling across the ocean floor. The Echolures circled, their songs splitting into layers of grief and comfort. She closed her eyes briefly, letting her light expand rather than strike — a pulse of purity that disintegrated the Heartless without shattering the calm.
The sea stilled. But the warmth she had felt earlier was gone — as though sothing had recoiled, retreating into deeper mory.
She swam back up, breaking the surface in a shower of light.
Kurai stood on the dock, drenched but composed, her eyes closed as she tracked the flow of darkness. When Skuld's ergence disturbed the water, the shadows shattered like glass, breaking her focus.
"Well?" Kurai asked.
"Sothing's down there," Skuld said, breathing hard. "Sothing alive. I don't think it's a Heartless. Maybe the ocean itself."
"Good." Kurai straightened, rain streaming from her cloak. "Then we go down together."
"I thought you hated teamwork and the ocean."
"I do," Kurai said, lips curving faintly. "But I hate wasting ti more."
The rain quickened, as if approving their unity — or warning them it wouldn't last.
Evening fell, but the world didn't darken. The clouds glowed faintly turquoise from within, like a heart still beating beneath the surface. Skuld and Kurai returned to the village, where the white-haired elder awaited them beside a fire that refused to go out despite the downpour.
"You've heard the song, haven't you?" the elder asked. "Those creatures that call upon your mories, making you rember as they pull you down."
"Yes I've heard them," Skuld murmured.
The elder nodded. "The previous Elder told that even the ocean and the goddess Te Fiti can be lost in their mories. Those creatures first started appearing a little at a ti before but so long as we stay away, they did not bother us. Lately, they have grown in numbers and attack us. The storms are drifting east, toward the mountain where the ocean once climbed into the sky. I believe you'll find that is where they take people."
"Thank madam, for telling us," Skuld said respectfully.
"An anomaly zone," Kurai stated, folding her arms. "I wonder what's there?"
The elder's gaze went distant. "The place where the goddess's heart once beat."
That caught them both.
Skuld stepped forward. "When did the storms start?"
"After the stars fell into the sea," the elder said simply.
The villagers murmured prayers, fearful.
Kurai's eyes narrowed. "Stars don't fall here. Every star is a world, so it can vanish but never fall. Maybe travelers did."
Skuld's tone softened, realization dawning. "Soone else ca through the lanes."
Kurai looked toward the horizon, where lightning flickered in the shape of a spiral. "Then we might have a foe out there," she said coldly with a hint of disdain. "This place just got more interesting."
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