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Silver & Blood [Chiasm x Lockdown]

Lockdown

There are no pacts between Lions & Men
Joined
Apr 29, 2020
Location
Danger


⌌⊱🏴‍☠️⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊰⌍
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⌎⊱⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷
⚔️⊰⌏
Sebastian Kataragi

"The Scourge of the Seven Seas"

✧ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✦✧✦ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✧

The candles flickered with each sway of the ship as the tides rocked the Reaver's Wraith in a sweet lullaby while the celestial tapestry of the starry night watched the slumbering cursed ship from up above. An interesting bunch the crew was. Cursed almost all of them were. A band of sailors bound by destiny to forever be marked with misfortune and deformities. But they were promised to be freed from their curses if they serve under the Captain of this very vessel. Others were supernatural outcasts driven out of their home and promised a new one for their servitude. But these promises were becoming questionable and some of the crew were beginning to grow restless and wonder if they were searching for false treasure.

"First to Atlantean Lagoon, then Shipwreck Cove, and now Thalara's Veil port? What's next?! A fishing trip to the Mendova Islands?" the pirate huffed in bitterness as if him and the crew were simply wasting their time collecting random magical artifacts that their Captain wouldn't even sell for silver or gold. "If I were Captain I'd sail right into the direction of setting us free or that "utopia" he keeps blabberin' about for years now," he whined before he was shushed by a siren. She discreetly gestured toward the ever growing footsteps. Then came into view a beastly man sprouting highlights of white fur with hints of a more dangerous side to him with a scar across his chest. He stopped within the door frame of the brig to make sure the two were mopping the floors instead of the boat load of noble prisoners escaping the belly of the boat.

The siren waved nervously before the werewolf nodded and continued his routine nightly inspection as the quartermaster. Once the footsteps grew faint she turned to chastise the man, "If you were Captain you'd be taking us in circles. Neptune knows you would never get your hands off of her," she mumbled the last sentence with disgust. She knew very well how lecherous men could be when stranded at sea for months and then suddenly coming upon a bombshell of a beauty. She thanked the Captain every day for granting her a necklace to hide her natural beauty.

"Well…maybe," he hesitated to agree with the siren. "She's gorgeous, but…she's also a vampire," he said in a hushed tone as if afraid she'll hear him. He gripped onto the handle of the mop and stared at the floor. "You didn't see how she was able to kill a man. She's like a cannon ball ripping through a ship's deck with malice. I'd be afraid to even put my hands on her. Also, the way she recently fought that basilisk was…inhuman," he said before continuing to mop. "She's almost as stunning as she is dangerous. That's why I don't question the Captain," he admitted his fear of disobedience and awestruck of her beauty; knowing full well almost everyone on this ship would agree with him. "But if could handle her…mhmph~" he trailed off before his thoughts could turn into a wet dream. His stupid smile gave away his filthy intentions.

The siren felt her skin crawl and took a few half steps away from him. She huffed before continuing to mop. "I don't know. I think I fear the "immovable object" that won against the "unstoppable force"," she proposed a different perspective. "Just, something about the Captain's eyes. It's like he's staring into my soul when I look at his black irises," she felt goosebumps run up her arm just thinking about it. "He looks like easy prey, but you quickly realize he's turned the tables when it's already too late, If he has time to plan then…he's unstoppable," she shuttered with her thoughts before remembering the screams of her sisters who dared to try and make a meal out of him. "And the way he keeps the vampire in check is…" she shivered, "insanely suicidal."

"You don't actually believe that," a voice from behind the bars said before two green glowing eyes came into view.

The cursed pirate and siren looked at the man who came towards the bars and leaned against the cool iron. Showing he was one of the few nobles awake at this time and listening in on their conversation. "H-how do you know that?" she chirped. The tall noble tapped his eyes with a cocksure smile, "I've got really good eyes, sweetheart. You think he's courageous. Not crazy," he said much to his amusement of seeing the siren cover her mouth in shock. "As for you," the noble turned his attention to the pirate. "You…" he trailed off as if staring into the soul.

"Are here for a loved one?" he asked before the pirate set the mop down against the wall and edged closer to the holding cell. "My family," the pirate corrected. "Ah, family," the emerald eye noble echoed. "There's a curse that strikes at thirty. Everyone in my family gets sick then dies one-maybe two-decades after. I just want to save me nan," he shared. The noble sized up the pirate before saying, "You're just shy of being thirty yourself, hm?" the noble deduced of which the pirate nodded. "Well then there's no more time to waste," the noble gripped the bars and got closer. "Do you want to fail your nan and be stuck here cursed or do you want to be the hero that saved your family?" the noble asked tempting the pirate with a solution.

"Well how do I do that?" the pirate scoffed.

The noble's eyes flashed, "Mutiny." The pirate and siren looked at each other as if the noble was mad. "Think about it. I'm sure more of the crew are fed up too. You have an army sleeping her in the brig outnumbering the crew, and the arsenal of magical items waiting for us in the armory," he explained almost every advantage they had if they were to just jump at the opportunity. The pirate at first shook his head as if mutiny was a delirious daydream, but as the noble kept going he began to listen seriously. The siren then pulled the man out of the noble's alluring offer with a tug to bring him away from the cell. "We can't, Captain will unleash her upon us," she whispered.

"I'll pay you a million quillings," the noble added. "Imagine how handsomely rewarded you and the crew will be for getting all of us nobles back to shore and off this ship. My god. Rich, a hero, AND a beautiful woman clinging to your arms?" the noble said. The pirate pulled in closer to the bars, "A beautiful woman?" he inquired. "Everyone has a weakness. Including vampires. And my eyes can see her weaknesses perfectly. I'll have her eating out of the palm of your hand," he insisted with that annoying cocky and slimy grin.

The pirate gulped and his lips slowly pursed into a smile. He looked at the siren and then back at the noble. The silence was suffocating for the siren as she watched the noble try and actually start a mutiny. Just as she was about to shut down this conversation the pirate said, "Two million quillings." The siren gasped while the noble stuck his hand out, "Deal," he said before the two men shook hands.

"N-no. You can't. She'll kill-she'll kill ALL of us!" the siren stammered in words and in her feet before falling backwards. Her heart was racing. Her loud voice almost alerted the sleeping crew above. The pirate looked back at her along with the noble. "Shame, but we can't have you screaming about it," the noble said before gesturing behind her. Then a large burly arm wrapped around her neck and a large hand closed her mouth shut revealing another noble awake in the cage opposite to them. The siren scratched and screeched but to no avail before the lack of oxygen knocked her unconscious.

"Now that she's taken care of. Let's make you a rich man."


࿇ ✥◈✥࿇

The Captain's quarters felt more like a museum than living space given all of the supernatural and cursed items decorating the walls and bookshelves the Captain held closest to him. Especially the lady bound by chains lying in his bed. The most powerful weapon within his arsenal. A vampire.

A taste of reverie trailed behind his fingers tracing her ethereal face. From her luscious lips, to her soft cheeks, and to her adorable chin as if committing her features to memory. The Captain hovered over the vampire before slowly leaning down and finding refuge between her neck and ear. "You might be a vampire. But I see something burning like fire. They were the stars in your eyes. Like the ones in the dark skies," Sebastian, Captain of the Reaver's Wraith, whispered into the ear of his first-mate, Circe. His warm breath tickled her ear with each syllable.

"I saw bags under your eyes. You were abused and fed lies. Be mine. You'll savor my blood just fine," his finger tips raked along her milky ivory thighs and hiked up her silk dress. "But, no, you're not a vampire. You're my sapphire. Let me light your fire. Give in…" he sent sparks of electricity to her neck by planting his lips and leaving bloody kiss marks behind. A conditioning method used for a couple years now to let her know it was feeding time.

Then his golden halo eyes faced her directly, "…to your desire," he finished reciting the dark poem. Urging her to give in. To succumb to him and only him after describing how they met and what lead them to their symbiotic relationship. The scarlet nectar she'd grown so fond of pooled at his lips and stained his pearly whites. Just inches away. Teasing her. She could almost taste it. The scent of iron was in the air. One drop, and then two, fell to her lips. But she knew better than to steal his lips before the timer started. His hand swiftly reached and overturned the hourglass sitting at the headboard of the bed. But the moment he placed the timer down is when he heard a gunshot.

His eyes darted away from Circe's pale silver orbs and to the double mahogany doors. The hull of the ship groaned, as if scraping against a reef, before the spectral whispers hastily reached the Captain's ears. He furrowed his brow when the bellows of rebellion hooted and hollared from the deck past the comfort of his quarters. The Reaver's Wraith swiftly informed her Captain of the situation. His eyes rolled and he sighed in annoyance. "Of course when we're about to arrive they decide to revolt," he growled in a vexing tone. The atmosphere was now sullied with insubordination. Sebastian sat up while watching the doors. Then the door handle jiggled haphazardly like a virgin fumbling for their first time. Then crude attempts at smashing their way in followed suit.

"Bloody pigs and snakes," he cursed before wiping his lips free from blood with his thumb. He then reached down to Circe and painted her lips in his scarlet as if it were lipstick before gingerly pushing his thumb past her lips for her to savor what was left of his blood. "I'll feed you at a later time. Execute transgressors with extreme prejudice, crew or prisoners," he ordered coldly before slowly unsheathing his thumb from her mouth. "If you so much as drink a drop of blood that isn't mine, I'll make sure the crew is present when I feed you," he warned with a stern glare.

He reached for his dimly glimmering enchanted sword and waved over her body. The chains bounding her wrists and ankles suddenly came undone. Then a gunshot to the lock of his doors finally granted passage to those sieging the King's castle. Sebastian twirled his sword and swiftly snuffed out the light within the room. Blanketing his quarters into darkness. Then a gust of smoke gathered from the candles ensnared the intruders into an abyss of pandemony.

After a few moments, a beaming ray of hope cut through the darkness. The pirate wielding the Solstice Sabor casted forth sunlight into the room, "Come out, Sebastian! You're weak without your vampire!" the pirate called out. "Yes! I'm going to be rich, save nan, and-" *cough* he felt his own blood drip down his chin. Then he looked down to see a blade piercing his heart. "You think you can come in here and take MY title?" the Captain growled in a venomous tone Circe had grown accustomed to hearing when he was passed furious. "H-how???" the pirate mumbled. Sebastian cocked an eyebrow, "You're predictable," he simply said before twisting the blade to add salt to the wound, "Now perish," he said before placing his pistol on the pirates chin and then the Captain's gun roared across the room.

The smoke slowly dissipated and revealed the Captain pinning down the only (major) weapon that even had a chance against his Circe. "When you aim at the king you better not miss," he jeered to the trembling pirates. He could smell their delicious fear. "That includes the queen otherwise you're damned to Davy Jones’s locker. Now. Fetch me their souls, Circe!" he commanded with a confident smile and aiming his sword towards the intruders as if anything in front of him was about to turn into a corridor of carnage.


⋆༺𓆩⚔𓆪༻⋆
@Chiasm
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⌌⊱ 🦇 ⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊰⌍
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⌎⊱⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷🗡️⊰⌏
Circe Melantha
"Lady Death Afloat"

✧ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✦✧✦ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✧

The Captain’s quarters always reeked of things long dead and never buried. Spirit-slick air, spell-choked books, relics whispering madness from shadowed alcoves. She lay among it all like one more cursed treasure– naked under silk and chain, pinned not just by enchanted silver, but by the weight of years. His years. His voice.

She should have felt cold.

But his fingertips– those always came with fire. Her lovely, walking furnace of a Captain. A part of her would have stopped at nothing to crawl under his skin and settle into his ribs had she been given the chance.

Circe didn’t flinch when his hand traced her face. She never did anymore. Not when his touch was like a rite, an invocation of who she had been before he found her. Before she was polished and sharpened into this weapon he cherished, this sapphire with eyes that held only him. He always touches my lips first, she mused distantly, almost dreamlike. As if they might lie to him. But she never had. Not once. Not even when he chained her to this devotion. Not even when he spoke her name like it was his to own.

His warm breath against her ear made her eyes close, lashes trembling. Fire, he said. Stars. Words like lullabies, desire dressed in velvet. He knew how to break her open with the poetry she so loved, to tangle her hunger with meaning.

“I saw bags under your eyes. You were abused and fed lies.”

Yes, she thought. Yes, I was. But not by you. Never by you.

And still, when his hand trailed up her thigh– alabaster raking into ivory– and pushed silk higher, her breath hitched. Not out of fear. Not anymore. It was the weight of it– this little ritual she’d unwittingly found herself looking forward to. This long-cultivated tenderness that looked like ownership, that felt like gravity.

The vampire didn’t move. Not yet. Even if her body screamed with the urge to touch him.

Her heart, that decades-old, defiled relic, thrummed in time with the blood he offered. She could smell it now. Warm. Alive. Singing through the air between them, and all her instincts reared up like a starved animal. Her body ached for it. For him. For the worship she was only allowed to taste when her Captain deemed her ready.

Then his lips marked her. Painted the slim column of her neck in that red religion. Circe tilted her head like the obedient thing he’d made of her, shuddered in wanton lust for him and him only, but something deeper trembled within her. She was his weapon, his compass, yes, but underneath all of it…she was a woman still. A woman with needs of her own, something she had not started coming to terms with until very recently.

Even Circe, so sure of herself and her place in this world, wasn’t sure what exactly those needs were.

His golden eyes met hers, surrounded by a midnight sea. She hated how her own flickered. Not in fear– never that. But something raw, older. Like the child in her, curled beneath silken sheets over a century ago, waiting for a mother who never came.

“...to your desire.”

And Gods, did she want to. Circe wanted to bite him. Feed from him, sink her claws and fangs into fair skin and never let him go. To feel his blood burn down her throat and remind her that she was still here. Still real. One drop of his life elixir, then two dripped and stained her plush lips– as much as she yearned to, she didn’t lick them clean just yet. Not when the real prize was hovering inches away from her.

“Please…” she whispered.

The hourglass turned.

Always the hourglass.

She waited, her lips parting in anticipation. Obedient. Perfect. Hungry.

But then–

The gunshot shattered the spell.

Her dilated pupils sharpened to slits, body going rigid beneath her silk slip. Her chains rattled like a warning as she shifted, instinctively readied herself despite Sebastian’s weight remaining above her. The ship groaned around them, and she felt it in her bones. The Reaver’s Wraith was restless. So was Circe. She watched him rise. Watched him curse and clean the blood from his mouth, the very same lips she wanted nothing more than to take with her own. And then– he painted hers.

Scarlet bloomed across her mouth like a kiss she wasn’t allowed to take. The gesture should have been humiliating. It wasn’t. It was his language. His mark. His command. When his thumb slid into her mouth, pressed down against her tastebuds, her eyes fluttered closed again and she closed her lips around the digit without thinking. Not even because she was obedient– because she needed it. Him. That warmth, that promise of life disguised as control. She moaned, almost subconsciously, around the taste of him. Her tongue curled against his skin, savoring the last of what he offered. It was a communion. Sacred. Addictive.

His voice turned to iron again, but the damage was already done. Her lips still burned. Her fangs still itched. Her heart…ached. She allowed him to remove his thumb from her eager mouth, her fangs grazing him delicately, reverently, her tongue chasing the last taste like a starving thing trying not to beg.

“If you so much as drink a drop of blood that isn’t mine–”

His warning lingered, bitter as gall beneath his possessiveness.

No. She would not betray the vow carved beneath her skin. Her hunger curled quiet in her belly. She would not steal. She would only ruin.

Circe remained motionless on Sebastian’s bed for a moment. Chains now discarded, her wrists and ankles still bore the delicate impressions of where they had once bound her– not harsh restraints, but ceremonial, familiar.

She did not flinch when the second gunshot rang out.

Even before the lock shattered, before smoke curled like serpents across the floorboards, she had known. Known in the marrow of her bones that someone would dare. That someone always does. That men born to earth and salt forgot what it meant to challenge flame and fang.Men who thought the sea bowed only to their maps, who thought the Captain could be bested with bullets or blades. She pitied them, almost. The vampire licked the last of Sebastian’s blood from her lips slowly, languidly. Her eyes glowed faintly, pale silver simmering to a molten shimmer in the dark.

She rose.

She did not walk– she glided, like mist given form, like a hunger with hands and lovely legs. Her feet touched the floor with no sound, the silk of her slip rustling faintly as she passed through the gloom he’d conjured and slipped behind the broken door before that oppressive sunlight all but burst into the Captain’s quarters.

Circe wished she could have watched him– her Captain– as he moved with that terrible grace that made mortals forget how close to godhood fury could come. Her ears perked at the sound of his blade cleaving the first would-be usurper like wet bark, and in the arc of his motion, the shadows danced. She could practically hear the smile in his voice.

Oh, that smile. That cruel, brilliant smile– like the breaking of daylight through thunderclouds. She could have drowned in it if he let her. How dare it make her heart ache.

“Fetch me their souls, Circe!”

Her voice cut through the shadows, her words echoing with something wholly inhuman. “Of course, my Captain.”

Only then did she make her move.

Circe practically materialized in the darkness, a silhouette of velvet wrath. Bare feet silent against the wooden planks, her gown whispering like the ocean between verses of an ancient song. Her presence preceded her like incense– narcotic, unholy, fatal. One man turned, weapon trembling in his grip. A boy, really. Still warm with fear. He lifted the blade shakily, but not fast enough. Not low enough. Her talon-like nails pierced his throat, relishing in his cut-off scream and grinning wickedly before she tore his esophagus free with a sickening squelch.

“Let us teach them what treason tastes like.”

Circe’s smile deepened as she stepped over her first corpse like a discarded cloak, but it never touched her glowing eyes. The scent of fear was thick now– copper, sweat, desperation. Delicious. But she wasn’t hungry for blood or flesh if it wasn’t his.

Another man, another pirate, tried to scramble back in an attempt to escape. She caught him before his heart could even stutter. “Tell me,” she breathed against the shell of his ear, the cool draft of her voice colder than grave-soil, “Do you bleed for gold…or for glory?”

“P-please, I didn’t mean to–”

Circe silenced him with a single, bloodstained finger pressed to his lips, her touch light, reverent almost, like she was consoling a child who had spoken out of turn. Her dagger– a slender thing forged in the old ways, silver-veined and whispering old names– slipped into her other palm. “Hush,” she whispered, so saccharine it was almost sickly, “You’ll ruin the moment.”

Then, without theatrics, she slid the blade just beneath his ribs, angled upwards. The gasp that followed wasn’t loud; it was more like the exhale of a secret, let go too late. The vampire held him there, close, as if embracing a dance partner, her other hand cupping the back of his neck. He convulsed once. Twice before his body sagged, his final shiver running down her wrist like spilled wine. She let him fall and didn’t move again until the cadaver thudded against the ground.

Quicker than thought. Faster than mercy. Her eyes blazed red, and the mutineers’ blood fountained around her as she danced. She was not a woman now; she was vengeance draped in silk. The Reaver’s Wraith groaned beneath her like a beast well-fed.

Once the chaos stilled, Circe stood beside her Captain once more, her face calm. The white silk of her slip now stained in red and clinging wetly to the curves of her body. She turned to him slowly– a creature wrought of ruin and longing– and let her gaze climb his frame like worship.

A beat of silence passed.

Then, a slow smile curved her lips, her eyes now glowing a faint pink; gleaming with the residue of death and something more– devotion, perhaps. Hunger of a different sort. It was clear that Sebastian's earlier tone had not left her unaffected.

“Souls delivered, Captain. It’s a shame that mutt wasn’t tempted to join them.”

⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆

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⌌⊱🏴‍☠️⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊰⌍
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⌎⊱⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷
⚔️⊰⌏
Sebastian Kataragi

"The Scourge of the Seven Seas"

✧ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✦✧✦ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✧

Yes…” he cooed as soon as the symphony of bloodshed reached his ears. The moonlight slowly crept in illuminating the scarlet stained floorboards. “Let me hear their screams,” he hummed while Circe went forth like bloodlust incarnate. A wildfire spread across his chest and burnt him up with delight. One by one the silhouettes fell at the hands of the vampire. Sebastian reached down to grab the Solstice Saber and sheathed it in his secondary scabbard hugging his waist along with his enchanted sword in his primary.

Foolish insolence. Mavericks have no place within my crew. They will be culled from the ship leaving only useful crewmates to aid in my ambition,” he thought before reaching to touch the side of his neck. Roman numerals branded him. He was a slave to a curse of his own. His fingers traced over the pitch black ink, “MDCX” he whispered. “Just a little longer,” he thought before glancing past his double doors to the outside. “What to do with the lot?” he wondered. “Top priority is to limit casualties on both sides. Otherwise what point was it bringing them to Thalara’s Veil port? The only way to do that is by using it,” he thought before his palm rested on the pommel of his sword and his finger tapped in rhythm with his thoughts.

It can’t be helped. That’s my best option. Voodoo,” he decided before an unsettling feeling nestled within his stomach. He turned his head and the feeling wilted away when he found the source. Circe was now right next to him. She barely made so much as a sound, but the pink flicker in her eyes gave her away. She completed the task with flying colors. He bit his lip “You never fail to satisfy me,” he purred as if inviting her to interpret his words in more ways than one. He then grabbed her by the waist and brought her body, drenched in the mutinous blood of those scoundrels, to his before he closed the distance and tasted her lips.

An acknowledgment and reward for her efforts to gift her what little of his hemoglobin remained before the wound coagulated. When the taste of iron no longer remained he pulled away and looked down at her. “Fenris," he corrected, "is as loyal as you are and was my direct second before our paths crossed. It's best you at least tolerate him," he advised. His grasp hadn’t relinquished her yet and still pinned Circe against her Captain when his finger hooked under her choker, “Keep this up and I’ll feed you with my thigh,” he promised the reward with a soft grin and while as his gold, halo, coins focused on her, blushing, silver pieces.

By the gods the flash of pink bewitched him. He wanted to pin her down right now.

But the raging chaos outside brought his attention back from his carnal intentions. His grasp upon her fainted, but he playfully tugged on the choker until his finger could no longer reach sending it, gingerly, jolting back to her from the tension. “Come now. We will purge these snakes from my garden,” he said while his boots squelched when stepping on the blood. His white sleeveless shirt was stained just as her silk dress, but the sanguine complexion simply acted as warpaint and readied him for battle. He swiftly swooped his long coat over his shoulders and slipped his arms through the sleeves right before moonlight graced his features.

Sebastian stepped outside to see his (former) prisoners sprinkled about his ship fighting with magical trinkets they’ve probably never needed to use in their pompous lives. It was honestly comical to see them try and lift even a silver sword when all they’ve been accustomed to was a silver spoon. Whoever came up with this plan obviously didn’t take this into account. Or did they? His golden halos scanned the scene searching for a leader before he suddenly pulled out his pistol and sword. He shot a charging lunatic who thought yelling her attack was a bright idea. Sending them rolling down the curved staircase of which lead up to the captain's quarters and the wheel of the ship to stir the Reaver's Wraith.

Then he clashed with a man who knew his way around a sword. The song of iron rang with each parry the other made. But all is fair in love and war. Sebastian shot the man’s foot then waved his sword to bring down rope. With a simple twirl and sharp raise of his arm he man was gasping for air with his legs shaking mad. He didn’t pay further attention to watch the soul seep away from the man’s eyes. He simply sheathed his sword and holstered his firearm before leaning against the railing and observing the chaos.

What about his officers?

The flapping of wings caught his attention. Just as he tilted his head a bird with feathers of twilight flapped towards the Captain. Sebastian raised his arm where the crow then landed on his outer forearm, “Status report,” he said before the crow chirped, “Oni has secured the armory from the nobles save for some cannons. Fenris is handling the levels quite well below the deck, but wanted me to check for you Captain.” Sebastian smirked before giving Circe a knowing look.

Captain, the nobles are attempting to flee via the rowboats,” Crow said as if asking for a command. The Captain took a moment to think with his finger tapping his sword pommel again. Then he ordered, “Relay a message to the quartermaster and gunner to round up the mutineers and prisoners to the top deck on my signal. As for the rowboat seekers. I’ll handle it,” The bird nodded, “Aye Captain,” the bird chirped before launching into the air and spreading it’s wings. It flew gracefully above the fighting getting lower until dropping below the deck through the middle of the giant deck.

Sebastian unsheathed the Solstice Saber once more while also retrieving a doll from inside of his jacket with it dangling from a string on the top of its head. It swayed back and forth as he said, “I was really hoping to save this for when we reach port to get them to comply. But this trick would be fruitless if I have no bait,” he sighed. The Captain wrapped the doll around the blade before raising it high.

Circe would feel a tug on her wrist as he pulled her close and inside of his jacket. Shielding her from even the moonlight, “Don’t come out until I say so,” he said while his hand caressed the back of her head from over his coat. Then the sword began to shimmer, “Let there be light!” he yelled from atop of the railing. The sword shined brightly casting the shadows into oblivion and conjuring a mock sun into existence for only a brief few seconds. Its radiance couldn’t be ignored especially as the doll faced directly into the blade itself.

Immediately only the nobles were blinded as if they stared directly into the sun. They cried out in pain and shuttered their eyes or covered them in a desperate attempt to block the sun. But the voodoo doll kept staring until the sword dimmed. The doll then was slowly turning to dust, “Damnit,” he cursed before he brought the doll closer to his lips so then he could whisper, “So help me if you don’t cease your incessant tantrum I’m going to…” he chastised his prisoners as if disciplining a child. Then what followed were wicked, twisted, and morbid promises that felt like an unsettling tickle in the back of their brain as he whispered directly into every one of their ears.

Then the doll vanished. He sighed knowing he wouldn’t have the time or power to conjure another one, but at least it disoriented the nobles enough for his remaining loyal crew to sweep up the stragglers. He looked across the railing to see the merfolk, accursed humans, and fiendish ghouls. “Bound the snakes, strip them of their magical arms, and rejoice in picking the right side!” he hooted from atop of his railing while the saber was raised high. This garnered a few cheers at least.

Sebastian’s thumb absentmindedly rubbed along the back of Circe’s head from over his coat before he realized what he was doing. He unveiled her and retreated his warmth and touch, “You’re not hurt are you?” he asked in a concerned tone. His halo eyes looked her up and down to make certain.

We’ll hit port tonight and I need you ready to kill,” he revealed the reason behind his concern. That’s all she was to him. A harbinger of death at his beck and call. Her impeccable skills as an assassin could at least comfort her in knowing she always had a place at his side. That was the only comfort on this haunted ship he offered. Either that or the plank.

Go help round up the prisoners from the ones trying to take off by the rowboats, and let me know if you find anything interesting,” he said before turning away from her to look out at the deck. “The mutiny…was it a diversion? Why try to seize the ship only to abandon it?” he thought with his eyes narrowing, “What did you want to plunder from my armory besides weapons?” he growled at even the thought of losing something.


⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆

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Captain’s Log

"Silver & Blood"
+++
Basic information ──────────────────────

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彡⁺₊ ⋆☽ NAME

➠ Sebastian Kataragi
sib-AS-chən | ka-ta-Ra-g-ee
Sebastian : Greek origin meaning "Venerable", "Revered", "Martyr"
Kataragi : Derived from the Greek words "Katara" (Cursed) and "Magi" (Magician, Sorcerer)
彡⁺₊ ⋆☽ EPITHET
The Scourge of the Seven Seas
彡⁺₊ ⋆☽ BIRTH
➠ ??? || ¿?¿
Place of Birth : The Fallen City, Diuskrates (Better known as the Devil's Triangle)



──────────────────────────────────────────── Appearance
Height: 6 feet and 2 inches
Build: V-shaped broad shoulders, narrow waist, fit/lean, tall, with chiseled features
Complexion: Tanned from a life of seafaring with lighter shades the more he undresses. Circe is the only one to have seen his fairest complexion in his unmentionable region
Hair: Long hair that goes down to his shoulders and is tainted in dark ash (originally white before the curse). Usually slicked back but can also be tied up to prevent from falling onto his face when he's fighting
Eyes: Hunter-esque, swallowed into the twilight of oblivion with a shining halo of gold acting as his iris (Originally blue before the curse)
Distinguishing Features: Roman numerals branded on his neck rumored to sometimes change, his black pupils


Wardrobe ────────────────────────────────────────────────

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Daily Attire

  • Black Leather Round Hat
    • The large round hat shields him from the sun and adds an air of mystery
    • Three Peacock feathers sit atop as a show of vanity
  • Obsidian Long Coat with Gold Trimmings
    • Shoulder's highlighted with sharp edges
    • Two tail coats follow behind mischievously
  • Golden Sleeveless Waistcoat with Black Trimmings
  • Plain Linen T-Shirt (White)
  • Black Leather Belt
  • Black Baggy Trousers
  • Leather Boots
Sleepwear/Private Chambers


  • Plain Linen T-shit (White)
  • Shirtless (Preferred)
  • Firm Fitting Sherpa Trousers
  • (Maybe) Plain Robe After Bathing


Accessories


  • Strange golden necklace ALWAYS hanging by his neck even while bathing
  • Holsters wrapped across his chest for pistols
  • Scabbard for his Sword hugging his waist with room for another


──────────────────────────────────────────────── Personality

Traits: Confident, persuasive, ruthless, vengeful, a supernatural/historical scholar, and cunning. Sebastian combines vast experience with strategic meticulousness. His fearlessness is sometimes mistaken as suicidal insanity-you have to be if you set out to tame a vampire. Extremely goal oriented. Morally dark grey

Likes:

  • Collector: Wether it's magical artifacts or cursed trinkets. He loves to learn every part of it including it's history and function
  • Feeding Circe: Sebastian loves to see Circe at the edge of her seat before she drinks his scarlet
  • Sailing: Sebastian loves hearing the waves crashing against his ship, the smell of the sea, and the blue horizon in all directions
  • Haunted Ship: Sebastian likes to talk with the Reaver's Wraith by himself as if speaking with an old friend. He only does this when alone
  • Circe's Glowing Eyes: She's easy to read when the pink flickers in her eyes and it excites/turns him on
  • Sunrise/Sunset: The Captain usually tries to capture the rise and set everyday
  • Cloudy Days: There's a serenity he finds in the calm before the rain. Also shields from the sun
  • Regal Attire: Perhaps his vanity or a desperate attempt to cling to his old life
  • Gold: Need I explain?
  • Trophy Collector: No prisoners, only trophies
  • Rum: When stressed


Dislikes:
  • Encroaching Upon his Dominion: Wether his treasure, artifacts, or crew; he is akin to a dragon who will shed blood and wage war for the smallest coin plundered from what he deems is his or under his command
    • Circe: God protect the sailor who tries to take her from him
    • Crew: The Captain would defend his crew with his own blood so long as he doesn't spill too much or interferes with his plans
  • Hunters: They've been after his Circe (and some of the crew) for a while now
  • Challenging Authority: Sebastian doesn't tolerate unruly crew mates well and disposes them swiftly and sometimes painfully
  • Belittling Curse Wielders: Sebastian hates people who look down on folks who are cursed
  • Devil Triangle Rumors: The Captain dismisses all bloody rumors as if vexed they're still being blabbered about
  • Useless People: If you don't serve a purpose then he'll cut dead weight
  • Asphyxiation: Absolutely hates it
  • Chains: Has an irrational fear of chains bound to his ankles especially
  • Mirrors: Nobody knows why
  • Messy Armory/Quarters: Makes finding his magical belongings hard


Habits: Raises his sword to direct his crew's warpath or victory; palm tends to rest atop of the pommel of his blade when sheathed along with his fingers toying with the top of the pommel when in thought; kisses Circe's neck before feeding her; tugs on Circe's choker when being intimately playful, wicked smile when sending one of his 'weapons' to fetch souls

Curse ─────────────────────────────────────────────

IMG_3761.jpeg Origin: "Atonement for the Fallen":
A curse which pins the sins and burden of atonement onto Sebastian and marking him with roman numerals which symbolize each soul who perished when the city of Diuskrates was destroyed by the gods. The only way to get rid of a sin is to do good deeds and “atone” for the hardship the curse has afflicted to those affected by it. But each sin has an arbitrary price of good deeds needed before the damned soul tied to the sin can go into the afterlife instead of remaining in limbo. If Sebastian dies before atoning all of the sins of his people; the lost souls will remain in limbo FOREVER. Only when the curse has been satisfied will he regain his magic and soul back. This also means he cannot go to heaven or hell if he dies before completing the curse. He isn't affected by time anymore and has attained a "semi-immortal" status but can be killed in any conventional manner so long as it's not time based.

Manifestation:

  • (Initially) Curse: The sin transforms into a curse and can manifest into a myriad of ways. Either cursing a bloodline who's parents die after their firstborn, a house which haunts the new residents, or a sword which possesses their wielder with insatiable blood lust
  • (Afterward) Good Deed/Atonement: Sebastian is branded with a new roman numeral signaling the release of a soul from limbo and banishing a curse from this world


───────────────────────────────────────────── Personal Background



  • Birth of the Grand Magus, Sebastian. Sebastian is born and raised in the ancient city, Diuskrates
    • He’s a prodigy in sorcery and becomes the youngest Grand Magus in history
    • His grand rise to power leads to the hubris of him spearheading the construction of a tower which can reach the gods themselves. Making Mount Olympus a part of man's world
  • Construction of the Tower took several years and eventually reached a speed bump
    • The Tower was by far the largest man-made creation for it's time but human limitations were finally constraining the complete construction
    • Diuskrates discovered an ancient artifact which allowed the construction of the tower to commence once again
  • The Tower was almost completed until the gods, Zeus, Poseidon, and Hades decided to destroy the tower as they saw it as an offense for man to try and tame their realm while also using an accursed tool from an even more ancient mythology
    • A great flood swept over the island nation right after the tower crumbled
    • The gods began to transform the island and the surrounding area into a cursed place of which no manned voyage would survive unscathed if they sailed into the triangle
    • The destruction of the tower also sent the artifact to go haywire and bleed out into the world cursing humanity like pandora’s box
  • Sebastian was cursed by the gods to pay for the sins of his people and tasked with banishing every single sin he inadvertently spawned or else he and his people will be in limbo forever
    • He was also stripped of all of his magic
    • Sebastian's hair and eyes were stained with the ashes of his people and he was branded with the amount of total curses/sins in the world spawned by his actions
    • The cursed sorcerer rode the waves of the sea for what felt like an eternity until he finally made it to land
  • Sebastian has since tried to exorcise the sins. This is his second time he plans to sail into the Devil's Triangle since he has a new plan and vendetta against a haunted crew that backstabbed him which also now guards the artifact used all that time ago
 


⌌⊱ 🦇 ⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊰⌍
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⌎⊱⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷⊶⊷🗡️⊰⌏
Circe Melantha
"Lady Death Afloat"

✧ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✦✧✦ ▬▭▬ ▬▭▬ ✧

The blood adorning her body had begun drying warm in some places, tacky in others, but his eyes didn’t seem to care. Nor did she.

Not when he looked at her like that.

The gold in his eyes seemed to darken after he’d realized Circe had appeared by his side– silent, swift, always his. Her blade was already cleaned. Her breath calm. Her beauty ruinous. And when those strong hands curled around her waist and drew her against his sculpted body like something he had earned?

She let him.

Because the truth was simpler than any vow she’d spoken, simpler than any thread of myth she’d carried from her House. In that moment, the carnage, the fire, the mutiny meant nothing. Not when he kissed her.

Circe couldn’t remember when she had started feeling this way, nor did she know what exactly these feelings were.

Her lips opened beneath his without hesitation, the taste of blood and smoke and salt and Sebastian rushing in all at once. It wasn’t soft. It wasn’t sweet. It rarely was. But gods, it was real. His mouth on hers, rough and claiming, his fingers bruising at her slender waist, the silk of her slip sticking to her thighs, the iron scent of gore still clinging to her hair– and yet, in all that chaos, he was what grounded her.

His kiss was a command and a reward. And she obeyed.

Circe’s breath hitched, barely, as she dipped her tongue into his mouth to taste the insides of his cheeks. Her hands didn’t rise to his face– she didn’t cling like a girl. She merely leaned into the heat with a low moan, into the promise, into the tether between them like a woman remembering what she was forged for. And when he pulled back, she followed for half a heartbeat, chasing his lips before she caught herself.


You are his blade. Not his bride.

“Fenris…is as loyal as you are–”

The words itched across her pride, though she didn’t flinch. Not outwardly. But her eyes narrowed slightly in disapproval, and something in her presence grew colder– not hostile, but distant. As if he’d mentioned another woman’s name while cupping her cheek (and gods help him if he ever dared. When had she gotten so possessive over him? Why had she gotten so possessive?). As loyal as her? Fenris hadn’t worn chains on his limbs day by day. Hadn’t been dragged from ash and shadow and named mine like a blade plucked from the pyre. He hadn’t fed on the Captain’s blood with his hands trembling, tasting command and salvation in the same mouthful. Still, she offered no spite minus the slight pout of her lips before they widened into a slow smile– indulgent, dangerous– as though Sebastian had just told a particularly amusing lie and she was too gracious to correct him aloud.

“Tolerate,” she echoed, almost mocking in a way. The very fact that Fenris was still alive after her years aboard this ship was toleration enough. If she could have her way–


Keep this up and I’ll feed you with my thigh.”

Oh.

A spark flared beneath her ribs. Not blush, not quite– though something warm curled behind her cheeks. Her lips parted as though to breathe, but no breath came. Not when he said it like that; teasing, claiming, promising. Not when his hands were still there, holding her, one finger hooked under her choker. Not when his eyes were looking at her like she was worth keeping.

Circe leaned closer. Only a breath. Enough that her words ghosted against his mouth. “Fine. I suppose I’ll play nice with your dog.”

His weapon had followed him into the storm like a shadow made flesh– fluid, silent, loyal. The Captain’s parting tug on her choker still ghosted across her throat like a brand, her silver eyes catching the moonlight just as he slipped into his long coat. Her nightdress still clung to her like ink spilled across parchment, wet with blood, split at the thigh, slashed at the ribs. She didn’t bother trying to change. There was no time, no need. She wore it like warpaint.


Come now. We will purge these snakes from my garden.

Gods, how she adored when he said we.

As her Captain descended into the carnage, Circe followed, not a step behind. Her bare feet left no sound against the slick deck, though they did leave bloody smears in her wake. He fought beside her like war incarnate. And she moved like something both holy and unholy, cutting through the mutiny like it was her own sacrament. While he shot down the foolish and dueled the bold, his first mate wove between the chaos with her dagger in one hand and fire in her veins. Her blade sang in gleaming arcs, slipping beneath ribs and across throats like a silver whisper. Where Sebastian clashed, Circe danced. Where he shattered, she slipped the knife between the cracks. Truly a match made in the fiery pits of Tartarus. When their movements brushed– a shoulder to a chest, the arc of her dagger crossing beneath the sweep of his sword– it felt less like battle and more like communion. She wanted to taste him again. Right there in the blood and gunfire.

She swore could feel him even then– feel the heat of his gaze when she moved like sin personified, slicing through the trembling elite who had dared rise against him. She didn’t need to see his grin to know it was there. She could feel it in her spine.

But then came the flare of something else. A tug on her wrist. A sudden pull– firm, protective– and the world narrowed. Before she could even protest, she was against Sebastian’s chest, inside his coat, his hand caressing the back of her head. He could have barked an order, commanded her away like a beast meant to be kenneled– but instead, he wrapped her in his own warmth and shielded her. Her body stilled in an instant, nestled against him, rigid with instinct, but she did not fight it. She never did when he held her like this. Circe closed her eyes. The warmth of his coat and body wrapped around her– velvet and salt and the distant echo of gunfire. Her fists tightened into the fabric at his chest, not for fear, but for restraint. Her fangs ached. Her hunger twisted. But she waited.

And then the world erupted into light.

A blinding sun screamed into existence just beyond the folds of his coat. She felt it– a holy burn she was never meant to endure– yet she didn’t suffer it. Because he had protected her. Because even in the maelstrom of rebellion and fire, Sebastian shielded his monster like a lover shielding a flower from hail.

She said nothing. Only waited. The moment passed, the false sun fell.

Sebastian was speaking again– dark promises against vanishing magic, twisted promises coiling like breath on the back of their enemies’ necks– and Circe smiled faintly in amusement against his chest. She might have pressed a kiss against his sternum. His darkness was her lullaby. His madness her melody.

His thumb was still stroking the back of her head, and she leaned into it before he realized what he was doing.

And then his warmth retreated like the low tide, exposing her once again to the moonlight. She blinked slowly, her silver eyes adjusting again, lips parted not in fear but in awe.


You’re not hurt, are you?"

A heartbeat passed before she answered. “No. You wouldn’t allow that.”

“We’ll hit port tonight and I need you ready to kill.”

That– that– was the truth of her. The purpose carved into her bones. Not lover, not bride, only concubine when they were alone together. Assassin. Blade. Monster on a leash of gold and shadow.

Circe bowed her head slightly. “Of course, my Captain.”


Go help round up the prisoners–
–and let me know if you find anything interesting.

She broke from his side like a riptide veering off course with a final glance at his back. The taste of him still lingered in her mouth. She did not linger. She moved– toward port side, where the fleeing nobles scrambled like rats. But she would remember the way he’d shielded her. She would remember the sound of his heartbeat under her ear, steady even as the sun had burned behind them.

The Captain had commanded the deck, and he would paint it in flame and fear. But she– she would tend to the remaining escapees. The ones who thought themselves clever. The ones who thought distance could save them from what was bound to them by blood and blade.

Circe moved through the smoke, ignoring the chaos as if the battlefield were a ballroom. The cries of the wounded faded behind her, muted by the crashing of waves against the hull. Moonlight speared through the fog, illuminating the narrow stairs down toward the lower deck. She glided down, a wraith in red silk. By the time her bare feet touched the loading ramp near the port side, the nobles were already in the rowboat. Six of them. Two oars in motion, a lantern dangling from the prow. One man cursed as he tried to untie the rope mooring them to the Reaver’s Wraith.

By the time the nobles realized she was among them, it was already too late.

The nearest noble– a silver-haired lordling with rings crusted over every finger– froze mid-motion. His back stiffened as if he’d felt something crawl down his spine. A second man turned, eyes going wide as he caught the shimmer of her in the gloom.

The vampire sat at the prow of the rowboat like some ancient sea relic, half-siren and half-statue, one bloodstreaked leg folded beneath her while the other trailed lazy patterns in the seawater. She said nothing at first as she watched them almost curiously, head tilted. She didn’t have to.

“I wouldn’t,” she said gently, her voice velvet and winter smoke.

The men hesitated. She stepped closer.

Row, now one of them barked.

“Shhh.” Circe pressed one finger to her lips, and the man who had shouted forgot how to breathe. She turned her gaze to the silver-haired noble and let the ancient weight of her bloodline uncoil behind her eyes like a storm rising from still water.

“Look at me,” she breathed, the barest coax of a command.

He did.


“Good.”

Her voice wove around him like silk spun through a harp. Her accent, touched faintly by the old continent, curled each word into something richer– slower– deeper.

“You’re not afraid of me,” she said, stepping closer to the edge. “You’re not running. You’re…returning.”

The oarsman dropped the paddles as her voice poured down like honey mixed with venom. “Go back aboard,” she whispered, “It’s cold on the water. So…cold. You’ll catch your death.”

The noble’s lip trembled. His hands, which had been sawing frantically at the rope, went limp. Another man beside him blinked, glassy-eyed, and muttered, “We should go back. We should– yes, back. It’s safe there.”

One by one, her compulsion coiled through them. Her voice softened further, a lullaby that had once rung through marble halls beneath chandeliers.

“You came aboard his ship. You bled on his deck. You breathed his air. There is no escape from that.” She didn’t smile as they began to pull the rowboat back towards the loading ramp by the frayed rope. Not truly. It was too easy.

Circe rose with unhurried grace and stepped back aboard the Reaver’s Wraith, stepping aside as they fumbled up the boarding ladder. Half in a trance. Half in fear. Eyes on her, every last one of them. She let them pass– touched the cheek of one boy barely past twenty as he murmured a prayer– and whispered:


“Now, hush. Wait by the top of the stairs for me. I’ll see you soon.”

The last noble, still bleary-eyed, and obedient, dared to speak as he passed her. “W-what will he do to us?”

Circe tilted her head, eyes aglow.

“I don’t know,” she said, her voice sweet and cruel all at once, “But I know what I will do if you try to run again.” That smile bloomed, slow and terrible. “And you won’t like it.”


⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆

They followed her like lambs to the slaughter.
Twelve in total. Silent. Wide-eyed. Spell-struck.

Not one bore a scratch, not one limped from injury– yet every step they took behind her felt like surrender. Like a dream they couldn’t wake up from. Another rowboat bobbed gently next to the first, tethered by her will alone, forgotten by the fools who had climbed inside it just moments before with freedom in their hearts and daggers at their backs.

Now, they climbed the stairs to the upper deck in a single file procession, heads bowed like children led to confession. Their jewelry clinked faintly with each shuffling step. Fine gloves torn. Ribbons and frills limp with seawater. Whatever pride they once held had been replaced with something else– something closer to awe. Or fear.

Circe led them without looking back.

The Reaver’s Wraith welcomed her return with a low groan through the hull, the kind it made when its hunger had been sated. She crossed the deck without ceremony, shadow and moonlight trailing in her wake. Her dark hair billowed in the wind and her gown, still clinging to her, shimmered faintly where the spray of the sea had kissed it. When she reached the Captain’s perch, she stopped.

And turned.

Down,” she said. One word.

The prisoners dropped to their knees like marionettes with their strings severed. No chains needed. No swords. Just her voice. Her silver eyes found Sebastian’s immediately. “I told them they were already yours,” she said, soft as satin, “They believed me.” The vampire then tilted her head. “They’re intact, if you’d like to make examples of them. I left that…pleasure to you.”

Then, as if recalling something minor but inconvenient, Circe drew a folded piece of parchment from the bodice of her ruined slip. Damp around the edges but otherwise sealed. The wax emblem still bore its noble crest. “I found this beneath the bench of the boat. Hidden beneath silk cushions, but they weren’t clever enough to hide it from me. She handed it to him without preamble, her fingers brushing against his. Then, her voice dipped.

“There’s something moving behind this mutiny,” she murmured, quieter now, for his ears alone. “I don’t believe it was only greed.”

And when she finally looked up at him– truly looked, as if seeing past the blood and moonlight and triumph– her voice gentled to something nearly human.


“I thought you might want to know.”


⋆༺𓆩☠︎︎𓆪༻⋆

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