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ᴛʜᴇ ғᴏʀᴇsᴛ ɢᴏᴅ's ʙʀɪᴅᴇ || ᴢᴇᴘʜʏʀᴀ & ʟᴜᴠɪᴀ . ♡ ⁿˢᶠʷ

Luvia

𓆩♡𓆪
   

 ˚₊‧  . ☘︎  ݁˖  ‧₊˚ 

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───. ᴡʀɪᴛᴛᴇɴ ʙʏ 𝓛𝓾𝓿𝓲𝓪 & 𝓩𝓮𝓹𝓱𝔂𝓻𝓪


𝓒𝓸𝓶𝓮, 𝕔𝕠𝕞𝕖 𝕓𝕒𝕔𝕜. 𝓒𝓸𝓶𝓮 𝓫𝓪𝓬𝓴 𝓽𝓸 𝓶𝓮.


・┈ ✦ ﹕ᴛʜᴇᴍᴇs ᴄᴏʀʀᴜᴘᴛɪᴏɴ ᴏʙsᴇssɪᴏɴ ᴘʀɪᴍᴀʟ ʀᴏᴍᴀɴᴄᴇ ᴛʀᴀɢᴇᴅʏ ᴅᴇᴍɪɢᴏᴅ x ʜᴜᴍᴀɴ
・┈ ✦ ﹕ᴘʟᴀʏʟɪsᴛ ʜᴏᴡ ᴅᴏ ʏᴏᴜ ᴅᴇsᴛʀᴏʏ𝓂ℴ𝓃𝓈𝓉ℯ𝓇 ᴡɪᴛʜᴏᴜᴛ 𝒷ℯ𝒸ℴ𝓂𝒾𝓃𝑔 ᴏɴᴇ?
﹕﹒★﹒ ᴛʜᴇ ʜᴜᴍᴀɴ: luvia
﹕﹒★﹒ ᴛʜᴇ ᴅᴇᴍɪɢᴏᴅ: zephyra
 
 

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╭─────── · · ୨୧ · · ───────╮

YUELINA
the offering | | ocean
𝒴𝑜𝓊 𝓌𝑒𝓇𝑒 𝒹𝑒𝓈𝓉𝒾𝓃𝑒𝒹 𝒻𝑜𝓇 𝓂𝑒.
𝒫𝑒𝓇𝒽𝒶𝓅𝓈 𝒶𝓈 𝒶 𝓅𝓊𝓃𝒾𝓈𝒽𝓂𝑒𝓃𝓉.

---------.--╰─────── · · ୨୧ · · ───────╯


𝅘𝅥𝅮 now playing : ℒ𝒾𝓁𝒾𝓊𝓂


Every 100 years, he came.

Every 100 years, he came to take.

Every 100 years, the monster beyond the forest demanded an offering.

Refusing him wasn't an option. It was the only way to appease his hunger.

This year was no different. His conditions were always the same:

Bring me a woman with jewel eyes.

The village was usually quiet, but not tonight. Tonight was the night of the offering—the night another life would be sacrificed.

"PLEASE! Please, don't do it. She's my daughter, Vernon... please. Please! Don't take her away from me!"

Yuelina watched as her mother marched with them, though at a distance. The villagers had made sure of that. They were desperate, all of them.

"Stay away, Lenore. I understand that she's your daughter, but you know we have no choice!" The mayor kept her mother at arm's length, his face reddened, his forehead wet with anxious sweat.

"What you did was treason. Treason! Don't think you'll get off lightly for this betrayal." He raised his chin toward two other villagers, then gestured towards the heart of the village. "Lock her up."

"No! Noooo!" Kicking and screaming ensued, though there was nothing Yuelina could do to help. They'd tied her wrists and ankles—loose enough for her to walk, tight enough to prevent her from running.

Her body shook with fear.

Fear for her mother. Fear of what was to come.

I should have never gotten curious. I should have never left the house.

For as long as she could remember, her mother had been fiercely protective of her. It was the reason she insisted Yuelina remain at home, never venturing beyond their secluded dwelling. All her life, she had been told they couldn't live in the village because she was ill, though she had never felt sick. A weak body, a fragile constitution—her mother had claimed that any contact with the villagers could put her life at risk.

But tonight, she'd learned the truth.

To the outside world, Lenore's daughter had died upon her birth. Only, she hadn't.

Yuelina was that daughter. She was the one with the jewel eyes.

Every 100 years, a girl among the villagers was born with them. Bright, jewel-like and with an unnatural color. Nobody knew why or how. But they were a dead giveaway as to who was to be the next offering. They were like a curse, a mark of death itself.

Of him. It. The monster that was master to the dark forest that enclosed the village.

"I truly believed Lenore had lost her mind with grief after her baby was declared dead. And she played the part flawlessly, had us all convinced. We were fools, every one of us. Who would have imagined that all this time, the food, the clothes—they weren't for some ghostly figment, but for a living child? Ha!"

She was pushed unkindly, nearly tripping over her own feet.

The mayor scoffed. "Move, you cursed thing. You have a duty to uphold."


──────────────── ୨୧ ────────────────


The clearing that separated the village from the forest was eerily quiet as they waited. The light of the moon and the flicker of the villagers' torches were the only sources that illuminated the path ahead.

The village men peered into the darkness with bated breath, Yuelina at their center. Not to protect her, but to make sure that she remained right where she was.

Every single one of them was praying, hoping, for the same thing:

Die. Please, die in our stead.

It was obvious in the way they had looked at her earlier, in the tension that hung in the air now.

She looked down at the dress they'd forced on her. Black, solemn, suffocating. The kind you wear to a burial—though no one seemed to notice the corpse was still breathing. With a veil drawn over her head, she was blind to everything, her face and hair swallowed by the fabric like the rest of her will.

Perhaps it was better that way.

Yuelina wasn't ready to face it just yet—that every step she took brought her closer to the maw of something beyond mercy or reason. That she was nothing but bait for a creature with no name.

She shuddered, imagining what it might look like.

Was it tall? Had twigs for limbs? Was it a shadowy creature with dark eyes and giant jaws?

Would it rip into her slowly, or swallow her whole?

"There!" one of them whispered.

Every gaze turned sharply in that direction. None could glimpse the monster yet, but they all felt its looming presence.

He was here.

She sucked in a breath.

The mayor stepped forward. "W-we have her! Your offering is ready for you. We're upholding and honoring the deal!" He swallowed audibly. "You, bring her here."

Her arm was taken, and she was guided to stand next to the mayor. He bowed down to her level, whispering into her ear. "You will walk twenty steps ahead now. Let him have a look at you. He must approve of you." His voice dropped lower. "Think about your mother, how she's protected you all this time. If you don't, she might be next."

Vile bastard.

His breath was rancid; his terror palpable. The nerve of him to threaten her, even now.

But it worked—Yuelina gritted her teeth.

Her mind screamed to run, to fight, to refuse. But the whisper of her mother's safety anchored her feet in place. What shocked her most wasn't the danger or the fear. It was how easily they had made the decision.

No one argued. No one hesitated.

They all just quietly agreed that her life was the one to give. They told themselves it was for the greater good, that one person could be sacrificed to protect many. It was reasonable. Necessary. But it didn't make it fair, no. It just made it easier for them to live with the guilt. That reasoning only held when it wasn't their life on the line—when it wasn't them being led toward sacrifice. To them, she was a solution. A way out. And that was the most damning thing of all: that they were willing to let someone else pay the price for their safety.

"Now go."

Yuelina hesitated before she forced herself to step away.

Each movement felt heavy, weighted by the crushing silence around her. Her legs trembled, but she took the first step. Then another.

The fear deepened like a stone settling in her chest.

Her breath came shallow and uneven, the shadows pressing closer—as if the darkness itself were watching, waiting. She kept her eyes fixed on the ground, unwilling to meet whatever eyes were meant to fall upon her.

Twenty steps. Just twenty. And then everything would change. Or end.

She swallowed the lump in her throat, counting silently with each step.

One... two... three...

The crowd's murmurs faded to a distant hum, replaced by the sound of her own heartbeat pounding loud enough to drown out everything else. She clutched her arms tightly, the cold air giving her goosebumps.

Seven... eight...

Her vision tunneled. The world narrowed to this slow, agonizing march toward an unknown horror, each step dragging her closer to whatever awaited.

Thirteen... fourteen...

A sickening chill slithered up her spine. The air grew heavier, colder, but she forced herself to keep moving, each step slower than the last, as if wading through unseen resistance.

The seconds stretched and stretched.

Her body stayed tense, caught between panic and reluctant acceptance. Every instinct begged her to flee, yet her feet refused to betray the silent promise she had made.

Then, she stopped.

Twenty.
 

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╭─────── · · ୨༒︎୧ · · ───────╮

SOLON
the forest god | | vermilion
𝒮𝒽𝑒 𝒾𝓈 𝑒𝓋𝑒𝓇𝓎𝓉𝒽𝒾𝓃𝑔 𝒶𝓃𝒹 𝓂𝑜𝓇𝑒,
𝒯𝒽𝑒 𝓈𝑜𝓁𝑒𝓂𝓃 𝒽𝓎𝓅𝓃𝑜𝓉𝒾𝒸.

----------╰─────── · · ୨༒︎୧ · · ───────╯



They say that time flies by the older you get, that each year begins to pass in the blink of an eye until you finally realize the past is long behind you and the end of your days draws near.

Some people are driven mad by the revelation, scrambling to spend the time they have left in a way they deem worthwhile. Others learn to accept their fate, eyes closed as they embrace the unknown in hopes that, maybe, there is some kind of life after death. And then there are those who never cared to begin with.

For Solon, immortality was as much a curse as it was a gift to those who coveted it. Time was no friend of his—he who had walked this earth for over a thousand years, ruling over this gloomy forest that rung hollow with the memories of all he'd lost.

This crown of thorns he wore cut deep into his skin, reminding him that he would forever be a twisted monarch who bore the malison of a vindictive goddess, a gnawing hunger that would only bring ruin to those who got too close.

Despite all the times he'd lived through it, watching his love die never got any easier. Tragedy had left a permanent mark on his psyche, effectively killing the man he used to be.

In grief, he remained, waiting for her to return as the years dragged by impossibly, painfully slow, always hoping that this time things would be different. If he just tried a little bit harder, surely she would remember him. If he was patient, kind, and nurturing, she would grow to love him just as she used to and break this endless cycle of despair.

But even if there was love, loss was always quick to follow.

That was why Solon had snuffed out the humanity, the weakness inside of himself. The girl would be his, no matter the cost. Even if she screamed, or cried, or begged him, he would never let her out of his sight. By putting her under his protection, he would strip her of her freedom and agency entirely.

After all, his fated bride had no need of such things.

──────────────── ୨༒︎୧ ────────────────


He need not be told that his offering had arrived. He was the eyes and the ears of this forest, the god that presided over each and every root, branch, and trembling leaf within his domain. A shift in the air alerted him to the villagers gathering at the very edge of his territory, afraid to cross the threshold into that dark, haunted wilderness. Everyone knew that the beast who lived there had power beyond mortal means, and that of those who dared to venture inside, few ever made it back out alive.

Their fear smelled acrid, like sulfur and smoke, each one of them practically cowering behind the young woman who was thrust into the clearing with no chance to flee. But she stood braver than them all, shaking but determined, robbed of sight yet still so very perceptive. She smelled of honey and lavender, radiating pleasant pheromones that caused his nostrils to flare and his gut to roil.

Women always made the sweetest meals, so tender and fragrant. If she was not the one, then she would at least serve a purpose by filling his stomach and sating his bestial appetite.

He moved like moonlight through the canopy, emerging in monstrous form. Hooves dug into the dirt path leading into the woods, massive, jagged antlers scraping the trees where crows flew off into the night, cawing loudly as they fled. Despite the creature's staggering size of at least 365cm, it moved silent as a ghost, having traversed this terrain countless times before.

The villagers startled when they saw him, some immediately bolting back in the direction of their paltry settlement. Frozen in terror, the others remained, their human mayor among them.

In a trembling voice, the man addressed the monster directly, condemning one of his very own so readily for the sake of such fragile peace. Give the beast what he wanted, and the villagers would remain unharmed—all but one, that is. However, the minute any of them stepped foot into his woods, their fate was in his clawed hands.

Solon didn't say a word. He only stood there, waiting like a looming shadow as the girl in black walked forward, each step heavy with trepidation.

What could she be thinking in this moment? Did she think she would be killed? Eaten alive? Stripped bare and taken right in front of her people in the most painful, sickening of ways? The fear must have been nigh unbearable, but she still did it to protect the ones she loved.

How touching.

Twenty long, laborious steps brought her right before him, and she would soon be able to hear his slow, deep breathing from well above her. She was lucky not to bear witness to those glowing red eyes in their empty sockets, nor the reddish-brown stains that peppered his blackened fur, for such a nightmarish visage may very well have stopped her heart dead before he could even lay a finger on her.

One long, dark claw reached out and gently traced down from jawline to collarbone, testing her nerve. Observing her reaction, he paused, before slowly retracting the gnarled digit. Perhaps the fact that she was still alive was a good sign, or perhaps he was just getting the first taste of his new prey.

Bones creaked and groaned as the skeletal abomination changed before their eyes, shifting into the form of a human man. He was still a few heads taller than the village men, standing at a whopping 200 cm tall, not counting the added height of his horns. Even those seemed to have changed, taking on a much simpler shape than the long, twisting antlers the creature possessed.

Strands of long hair fell to his lower back, colored the same brownish-black as his fur had been, yet with bangs as blond as if they'd been bleached by starlight. Without a shirt, one could make out the smooth, ashy expanse of skin that covered his lean chest and biceps—everywhere except for his lower arms and legs which appeared to have been dipped in ink due to their deep black hue, almost like the flesh had turned necrotic.

Carmine eyes and pointed ears further hinted at his strangeness, qualities that separated him from normal people like them. But in spite of his quirks, he had an undeniable allure, blessed with the face of an angel and the body of a demon. If he'd been human, perhaps he could have charmed the village girls instead of causing them to run away screaming as soon as they laid eyes on him.

But that mattered not. There was, after all, one woman who had looked past his outer appearance to see the soul within. For her, he would move mountains and topple entire kingdoms just to prove his everlasting devotion.

Anything for his beloved.

Anything but freedom.

His gaze severe and scrutinizing, Solon stared down at the maiden, her own cast to the floor.

"Look up." He demanded in a sonorous tone, but he was not patient enough to wait long. If she did not obey, then he would capture her chin and tilt her head back at an angle, his eyes sweeping over those pretty pink lips, the only visible part of her face. He watched them for a moment, waiting to see if they would twist into a scowl or split open in a desperate cry for help. Neither would deter the beast.

With his other hand, he lifted the dusky veil from her eyes, draping it over the back of her head. Wisps of ivory hair tumbled out, lifted by the cold breeze that passed between them. He remembered that color so vividly, how it stood out against the greens and browns of his forest home.

One look into her eyes was all it took to jumpstart the heart he'd long thought to be dead and unbeating. Their striking lavender stirred memories of secret getaways, of joyful, chirping laughter more beautiful than any songbird's call. When he was without her, he felt cold and empty, like a husk that simply operated on instinct and routine to get through the day. For the first time in what felt like an age, his veins coursed with life, warmth flowing through him when she looked up at him with those eyes like flawless gemstones.

Here was his jewel, looking just like the day he'd first laid eyes on her all those centuries ago.

There was a flicker of softness in his gaze as he felt himself melting into her, his hand on her chin extending to cup her cheek between coarse fingers, feeling the velvety warmth of her skin. She was cold, but her body still radiated heat, and he could feel her racing pulse thundering beneath his touch.

Before he could get lost in the moment, Solon stilled, remembering that they had an audience still in attendance.

"Leave us." He spoke above her, addressing the group without looking at them. When some of the men hesitated, his gaze snapped to them, red like the burning sun. "Now."

They didn't have to be told a third time. Tails tucked between their legs, the mayor and his associates ran for the hills, not daring to anger the god of the forest. Certainly not after they'd seen his first form, that of a walking horror with jaws large enough to snap a man's neck in one bite.

When they were finally alone, he looked to her once more and did something unexpected. His body lowered as he took to one knee, kneeling before the sacrificial lamb like a knight swearing an oath to the princess. Even on the ground he was only a little bit shorter than her, a credit to his impressive stature.

"My morning star," Solon murmured, low and steady. When he glanced up at her, it was with an intensity like he bore the weight of the world on his shoulders. "My treasure. Tell me..."

Taking hold of her leg, he rested a large hand on the back of her thigh, his face hovering close as he inhaled her scent. She was pure, untainted by the evils of this world.


"Do you not remember me for who I am? Speak the truth for I will not suffer your lies."

It was always the same. The same question, the same answer every time. But maybe, for now, he just wanted to hear her voice, let the song of his little bird soothe him. There was no sweeter music in all the realm than her laughter, her cries, and the words that dribbled from her rose-tinted lips. Her presence was the only thing that could quell the storm inside of him, clear out the dark clouds on a rainy day.

In some ways, it only made it hurt all the more to be forgotten.
 

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╭─────── · · ୨୧ · · ───────╮

YUELINA
the sacrifice | | ocean
𝒴𝑜𝓊 𝓌𝑒𝓇𝑒 𝒹𝑒𝓈𝓉𝒾𝓃𝑒𝒹 𝒻𝑜𝓇 𝓂𝑒.
𝒫𝑒𝓇𝒽𝒶𝓅𝓈 𝒶𝓈 𝒶 𝓅𝓊𝓃𝒾𝓈𝒽𝓂𝑒𝓃𝓉.

---------.--╰─────── · · ୨୧ · · ───────╯

It's here.

Yuelina's eyes widened beneath the veil as the truth settled in.

It's right in front of me, isn't it?

She noticed a faint, deliberate movement directly ahead. Silently and slowly, something—was reaching out toward her.

No. No, no, no.

Don't move. Don't even breathe.


Every instinct screamed at her to pull away, but she held still. She didn't know what would happen if she flinched, only that she didn't want to find out.

A shape emerged from the shadows and she caught the glint of a single claw; black as pitch and impossibly long.

It didn't strike, however. Instead, it glided along her jaw with unsettling care. The contact was faint, barely there, but it left behind a trail of cold, leaving a chill in its wake that seeped into her bones.

Please. Please have mercy.

She was being assessed and she knew it.

It felt as though it was testing her, appraising her, probing her mental fortitude.

Then, the claw retracted.

What the hell was that? Is it… over?

For a fleeting moment, she thought perhaps she was safe. That perhaps whatever creature had touched her, had decided she wasn't worth the trouble.

But then she heard it.

Bones shifting. Cracking. Reforming.

The sound turned her stomach and sent a chill skittering down her spine. She'd never heard anything like it before.

Yuelina imagined limbs twisting, spines contorting, the grotesque transformation of something monstrous into… what exactly? Something even more grotesque? Her imagination ran rampant.

She could feel the creature still watching her. Measuring her. She didn't know what it wanted, or what it was waiting for, only that her life hung suspended on the edge of its next breath.


"Look up."
Its voice rumbled through her like thunder, resonant and commanding. And yet, it also sounded shockingly… human?

Her hands curled into fists, the soft fabric of her dress bunching under her fingers.

Was it safer to obey or defy?

Before she could decide, a rough hand caught her chin, lifting her face. The touch wasn't violent, but it was firm—possessive. Her lips parted in a quiet gasp, not out of pain, not out of discomfort, but surprise. She wasn't imagening things. She could feel it—a hand, not a claw.

And more importantly, it was warm. Not just in temperature, but in presence. Overwhelming, even comforting, if only for how solid and real it felt.

The veil was then drawn back over her head and she blinked, vision adjusting slowly to the dim light and the figure before her.

What in the—

Her lungs stuttered. The air was gone.

Yuelina stared, heart lurching against her ribs.

What stood before her wasn't the grotesque nightmare she'd braced for—no snarling beast, no twisted thing of teeth and hunger—but a man.

A beautiful man.

Too strange to be human, but beautiful in the way that a wild beast might be, dangerous and mesmerizing all at once.

Oh.

And then, there were his eyes.

She'd never seen anything like them. They weren't just looking at her. They reached inside her.

Yuelina didn't avert her gaze and looked back at him, seeing so many swirling shades in his irises. They should have frightened her more. Instead, they pulled her under, holding a familiarity she couldn't explain. Her gaze flicked down, taking in the rest of him.

He looked like something carved by divine hands and then corrupted by something darker. And he was staring at her like she was the only thing in the world worth seeing.

Why?

It confused her.

There was something in the way he looked at her, something hollow and hopeful. Her heart thundered, fear and intrigue wrestling beneath her chest.

Then he spoke again. The villagers scattered. She heard their hurried steps fade into silence, but she couldn't take her eyes off of him. He turned back to her, and knelt.

She blinked, stunned.

This monster—no, this man—had dropped to one knee. Before her. Not to eat her, not to tear into her. But to confess.

My morning star. My treasure.

The words tangled like vines in her mind. They weren't just poetic, they were desperate. She could hear it in the weight behind them.

I don't understand.

Then his hand moved again, resting on the back of her thigh, and her breath faltered. Not out of fear now, but uncertainty. Her mouth parted, but no words came at first. He sounded so certain that she should know him. That she did know him.

But how could she?

Yuelina racked her mind, trying to dig through the fog. There were dreams, maybe. Whispers in the night that faded by morning. Visions of a forest far away, of laughter and starlight and—

"I..." she began, her voice quiet and shaky. Then, after another pause, "I don't know who you are."

A lie, maybe. Or perhaps the truth. Even she couldn't be sure.


"But I feel like I've seen you before... somewhere."

What am I saying? This doesn't make any sense.

It was the only answer she could give—honest and fragile.

She watched the way his eyes searched hers, like her voice alone had the power to mend whatever had broken inside him long ago. And still, she was afraid. But beneath that fear was the seed of something else.

Curiosity. Recognition. Longing.

She couldn't look away.

Not from him.

Not from the storm behind those carmine eyes.

"You look sad." Her voice had an easy charm to it, gentle and dulcet. It dropped an octave as she regarded him. Her self-preservation took a nosedive when she pressed on, "I don't understand why."

Had she been of a more devious and calculated nature, she wouldn't have said that. She would have immediately latched on to the fact that this creature saw something in her that wasn't a meal or a tasty little morsel. For what it was worth, she felt the irrational urge to comfort him, and to not lead him astray. Clearly, she wasn't who he thought she was, for she couldn't remember.

She shook her head, the motion causing the veil to slip off of her head entirely. Tentatively, Yuelina brushed her fingers against his cheek and her lips curved into a soft frown.


"You'll be disappointed with me. I think you're mistaking me for somebody else."

It was better to disappoint him now than later.
 
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