My first YouTube video! And I'm starting with Bloom. I hope to turn this into a full series, and honestly, posting on YouTube makes me feel like I have an obligation to actually follow through this time. I can't wait to share more!
trying on a metaphor
Mike Driver
hello vonnie
YOU ARE THE REASON
Sweet Seals For You, Always


romaâ
$LAYYYTER
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

if i look back, i am lost

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JBB: An Artblog!

@theartofmadeline

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ

Kiana Khansmith
styofa doing anything
Show & Tell
Not today Justin

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@loverspearl
My first YouTube video! And I'm starting with Bloom. I hope to turn this into a full series, and honestly, posting on YouTube makes me feel like I have an obligation to actually follow through this time. I can't wait to share more!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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COSMIX REDESIGN PART 4. LAYLA/AISHAđŞ
She definitely HAS to be the dancer queen
In my rewrite, instead of Musa's hair getting longer, it only gets shorter
Take my revolution đđ
I like ur winx rewrite! I like how each of the Winx has their magic in addition to a unique skill (Stella and portals, etc) and I think that's a neat and new take on the Winx.
Hi, thank you so much!!! I think Winx Club is not a show that could ever truly have a hard magic system, because part of what makes it so fantastical is the vagueness of its magic, especially when paired with the technology in the setting. However, I did want to establish a few clear boundaries between the girls and how much magic they can use, so that with every transformation you can actually feel the difference between them. My rewrite is all about growth and evolving as a person, so I wanted their transformations to mirror that. I also wanted their personalities to reflect the powers they are initially best at.
Stella: Portals
When Stella faces a problem, she's quick to run away from it. She often needs a moment alone to think things through. This is both a strength and a weakness: it allows her to truly understand what's happening, but it can also make her come across as uncaring at times.
Bloom: Clairvoyance
Bloom is someone who trusts her instincts more than anyone else. This makes her a strong leader, but it can also make her impulsive. She has a vivid imagination and a strong sense of intuition, so her powers are a reflection of that.
Flora: Trace Magic
Flora is someone who always looks for meaning in the world around her. Because of this, finding clues and analyzing scenes is her first instinct when she's in trouble. She's highly observant, alert to her surroundings, and attentive to details others might miss.
Musa: Soothing Magic
When dealing with conflict, Musa always wants to jump in and fix the problem herself. This is both one of her greatest strengths and one of her biggest flaws. She hates giving up and will stay with a problem until it's resolved, even when it takes far more out of her than she'd like to admit.
Of course, after every transformation I want them to become stronger. I want them to learn from one another, but I also want their powers to remain distinct, so that when they work together as a group, they are undeniably stronger because of it.

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Winx: Echoes of Magic
(Winx club reboot/rewrite)
Character sheet: Musa
Musa was such a girlfailure in the original show, and I both love her and side-eye her for it. I hope I can capture that same charm in my version of Musa while expanding on her character a bit more. I also hope you guys like her redesign!!!
Also, my first Winx Club rewrite video is coming out soon, and I'm starting with Bloom!
Winx: Echoes of Magic
(Winx club reboot/rewrite)
Character introduction: Musa
Musa's mother had been her whole world.
From the moment she could speak, her mother had filled her life with music. She had taught her how to sing before she had learned how to read, how to recognize melodies hidden inside ordinary sounds, and how to listen not only with her ears but with her heart. Music had never been something Musa simply practiced. It had been woven into every part of her life because of her mother. Now, standing beside her lifeless body, Musa couldn't hear any of it.
The silence felt unbearable.
It pressed against her from every corner of the room, swallowing every memory of laughter, every song they had shared, every gentle correction when Musa sang a note slightly off-key. The absence felt so complete that for a moment she wondered if music itself had disappeared alongside her mother.
Her gaze remained fixed on the woman lying before her.
Even in death, her mother looked beautiful.
Her dark hair had been carefully arranged around her shoulders, and her expression carried a peacefulness that almost seemed unfair. Looking at her, it was difficult to believe that she would never open her eyes again. Beside her, Musa felt her father's hand trembling against her own.
When she looked up at him, her chest tightened.
Dark circles rested beneath his eyes, mirroring the exhaustion she knew was reflected in her own face.
Neither of them spoke. Words felt meaningless in a room like this. As the funeral ritual began, soft magical light slowly filled the air around her mother's body. The glow wrapped around her gently, illuminating her features one final time before her form began to dissolve. Musa watched without blinking, terrified that looking away would somehow make the moment more real.
Little by little, her mother disappeared.
The light consumed her completely until nothing remained except countless shimmering particles floating through the air like golden dust caught in sunlight. The particles drifted together in a slow spiral before settling inside an ornate golden urn waiting nearby.
One of the attendants stepped forward and carefully placed the urn into her father's hands.
The moment he accepted it, something inside him seemed to break. He wrapped both arms around it as though he were afraid someone might take it away and lowered his head. The sob that escaped him was quiet, almost painfully so, but hearing it hurt more than any scream could have.
Musa had never seen her father cry before. The realization made her throat burn. Around them, mourners began quietly leaving the room, offering sympathetic looks and whispered condolences as they passed. Musa barely noticed any of them. The walls suddenly felt too close, the air too heavy to breathe.
Before anyone could stop her, she turned and hurried outside. The tears gathering behind her eyes still refused to fall. Perhaps they were trapped. Or perhaps some stubborn part of her refused to let them escape because crying would mean accepting that this was real.
All she knew was that she needed to keep moving.
She walked without paying attention to where she was going. Familiar streets passed in a blur as she moved through the city, her thoughts too tangled to focus on anything around her. Voices blended into meaningless noise. Buildings came and went without leaving an impression.
Eventually, her legs began to ache and her feet felt heavy enough that continuing forward became impossible. A small playground sat nearby, nearly empty beneath the fading afternoon sky. The sight stirred something deep inside her, and before she fully realized what she was doing, she found herself crossing the grass toward the swings. The chains rattled softly as she lowered herself onto one. Slowly, she pushed herself forward.
Back and forth.
Back and forth.
The familiar motion brought memories rushing toward her before she could stop them. This had always been their place. Her mother would swing beside her, laughing whenever Musa tried to go higher than she did. Her father would stand behind them, pretending to push one while secretly giving the other a stronger push just to start an argument. Their laughter would echo across the playground until all three of them could barely breathe.
For a moment, the memory felt so vivid that Musa almost expected to hear them again. Instead, she found herself staring at the empty swing beside her.
The sight hurt more than she expected. The tears still wouldn't come. She lowered her gaze toward the ground and gripped the chains tighter.
"Hey, you." The voice pulled her from her thoughts.
A boy stood a short distance away, studying her with an expression she couldn't quite understand. He wasn't much older than she was, but there was something oddly serious about the way he observed her, as though he were trying to solve a puzzle without having all the pieces.
After a few seconds, he walked over and sat on the swing beside her. Neither of them spoke immediately.
"Why are you upset?" Musa stared at him in disbelief.
Of all the questions he could have asked, that was the one he chose. Annoyance immediately replaced whatever sadness had occupied her thoughts moments before.
She had wanted to be alone.
"Leave me alone," she said sharply. The boy paused for a moment, and she thought he might actually listen. Instead, he leaned back slightly and looked toward the sky.
"You know," he said casually, "I'm going to become the strongest knight Eraklyon has ever seen.â The statement was so absurd that it caught her completely off guard.
"That's stupid," she replied. The boy immediately looked offended.
"It isn't stupid."
"It is," Musa argued. "My dad says only rich people and nobles become knights."
"Then I'll be the first exception." His confidence was ridiculous. What made it even more ridiculous was the fact that he genuinely seemed to believe it. The determination in his voice lacked any trace of doubt. For the first time all day, Musa felt the corner of her mouth twitch upward. The boy noticed.
A grin spread across his face before he turned toward her. "Fine. If my dream is stupid, what's yours?" The question struck her harder than she expected.
The small smile disappeared instantly. Musa looked away. The swings gradually slowed.
"I don't have one."
This time her voice sounded quieter, because it was the truth. She had never needed a dream beyond the one she already had. Whenever she imagined the future, her mother had always been there beside her. They would sing together on stage while her father played music behind them. It was such a simple vision that she had never questioned it. She had never considered another possibility because she had always believed there would be time.
Now there wasn't. The future she had imagined her entire life had vanished alongside her mother.
And sitting there beneath the fading evening sky, listening to the creak of the swings and the distant sounds of a city continuing without her, Musa realized she had absolutely no idea what came next.
The boy suddenly stepped off his swing and moved behind hers. Before Musa could ask what he was doing, she felt his hands connect with her back and, with a single powerful push, he sent her soaring forward. She hadn't expected someone his age to be that strong. The swing carried her higher than she had gone in years. Wind rushed through her hair as she swung forward, then backward, only to be pushed again.
Each push sent her higher, carrying her farther above the playground. For the first time all day, she wasn't thinking about funeral rituals or urns or empty rooms.
She was simply flying. A feeling she hadn't experienced since childhood began bubbling inside her chest. It started as surprise, transformed into excitement, and before she realized what was happening, laughter escaped her.
The kind she hadn't thought herself capable of anymore.As she laughed, the tears finally came.
They slid freely down her cheeks, carried away by the wind as the swing continued its arc through the air.
Musa cried and laughed at the same time. And somehow, for the first time since her mother's death, neither felt wrong.
Eventually, the boy stopped pushing. The swing gradually slowed until she was drifting back and forth in gentle motions. When she looked down, she found him standing directly in front of her. After a moment, he lowered himself onto one knee so that he could look up at her properly.
For once, there was no smug grin on his face. No ridiculous speech about becoming the greatest knight in history. His expression was surprisingly sincere.
"I don't know what you're going through," he said quietly. "But I know you're hurting."
Musa looked at him without speaking. "And I know you're going to be okay." The confidence in his voice sounded almost ridiculous, yet somehow she found herself listening.
"Maybe things won't feel okay tomorrow," he continued. "Or next week. But eventually they'll get better. You'll find something that makes you happy again.â He shrugged.
"And you'll find your dream." Musa stared at him.
Only minutes earlier she had been irritated by his presence. She had wanted him to leave her alone and stop talking to her altogether. Yet now, as she sat there looking down at him, she felt a strange warmth settle inside her chest. Not because his words magically fixed everything.
They didn't.
Her mother was still gone, nothing could change that.
But for the first time, someone had spoken to her as though there was still a future waiting for her. As though her story wasn't over. A small smile appeared on her face.
"Thank you," she said softly, the boy immediately brightened.
"The name's Riven, by the way."
"Musa."
"Pleasure to meet you, Musa." She rolled her eyes.
"You're still annoying." His grin only widened.
"Good."
That had been seven years ago. She had never seen Riven again after that afternoon. Life had continued moving forward whether she had wanted it to or not.
The grief never disappeared completely, but it changed with time. It became something quieter. Something she learned to carry instead of something that crushed her.
Her relationship with her father had never fully recovered. He still loved her more than anything in the world, but the years following her mother's death had left scars on both of them. The cheerful musician Musa remembered from her childhood had completely disappeared, he had done everything he could to raise her alone.
And because of that, Musa had gradually learned how to stand on her own as well. She had learned how to make decisions without her mother's guidance. How to trust herself. How to keep moving forward.
Standing in front of her bedroom mirror, Musa adjusted the strap of her travel bag and studied her reflection. A smile slowly spread across her face.
Tomorrow she would leave for Alfea. The thought should have terrified her. Instead, it filled her with anticipation. For the first time in years, she felt as though an entire world was opening in front of her. Turning away from the mirror, she stepped out of her room and made her way toward the living area. The first thing she saw was her mother's photograph.
The framed picture sat in its usual place, carefully maintained despite the years that had passed. Her mother's smile looked exactly as Musa remembered it.
Today marked seven years since her death. The realization still hurt. Some wounds never completely healed. Her father sat in front of the photograph, quietly staring at it. Musa crossed the room and lowered herself beside him.
For several moments neither of them spoke. Then her father reached over and gently took her hand. When she looked at him, she was surprised to find him smiling. A smile she hadn't seen often recently.
"You know," he said softly, I'm so proud of you." Emotion tightened in Musa's throat.
"Dad..."
"You've worked harder than anyone I know."His voice wavered slightly.
Musa squeezed his hand. "I'm proud of you too."
He looked surprised.
"You are?"
"Of course." A small laugh escaped her, his eyes immediately became suspiciously shiny. For a moment, he simply stared at the photograph.
As though saying anything else might break him.
The conversation gradually shifted toward tomorrow.
Her father believed the greatest thing a fairy could become was becoming a Guardian Fairy. It was a respected position. Stable. Honorable. The kind of future parents dreamed about for their children.
As he spoke enthusiastically about all the possibilities waiting for her, Musa listened with a fond smile. She knew exactly what future he hoped she would choose.
A future devoted to helping their world. A future that offered security and respect. But when the conversation turned toward music, his enthusiasm faded. It always did.
Ever since her mother's death, music had become painful for him. Musa understood why. Yet a small part of her still longed for it. As her father continued talking, ignoring the topic of becoming a musician all together, another memory unexpectedly surfaced.
A stubborn boy with impossible dreams.
âYou'll find your dream.â
The words echoed through her mind even after all these years. Musa smiled to herself. Maybe she didn't know exactly what her future looked like yet. Maybe she wasn't certain where her path would lead. But she knew one thing. She wanted that path to be hers.
Not her father's. Not her motherâs. Hers.
Life had not ended seven years ago. For a long time she had believed part of it had. But sitting beside her father, preparing to leave for Alfea and step into a future filled with endless possibilities, she finally understood how wrong she had been. Life had continued. And tomorrow, for the first time in a very long time, she was ready to truly start living it.
Winx Club YouTube creators complain about the show being unoriginal, yet they're all copying each other's analyses. Idk if they're all in a group chat together and that's why this happens, but it's genuinely unsettling when two different people with different personalities end up saying almost the exact same thing.
Omg I love the way you wrote the winx girls
They feel like actual people you could met in real life and become friends with (I want to become friends with)
If I might ask do you have any other hcs to share?
Replying really old asks
Iâm not sure what to answer since my AU is so fanon that idk if this counts as headcanons, but here are some bits of the girls
Headcanons
Bloom â doodled the girls and they use them as pics on the group chat â is kinda of a history nerd â would stay all night reading something she intersted in â Curious by nature
Stella â answers phone or message in 30 seconds â Cannot use moon powers and doesnât want to talk about it â Is used to have everything she wants, now is a bit overwhelmed that she has to work for â Wants to be fashion designer, but doesnât know how to sew â Cannot dance, or sing too well, but she tries.
Tecna â likes cute things â The girls go to her with their emotional problems because she would give them her pragmatic point of view. She does not enjoy it too much. â Has online friends that she games with.
Flora â Starts having âtea timeâ, the girls join her sometimes to relax â Braids her hair when she is anxious, if it is too much; she would start braiding others people hair. â Tecna introduced her to dating sims, she got a bit addicted.
Musa â never answers the phone â Is afraid on hover bikes
Aisha â Has never done normal teen, like going shopping or for a coffee. â Didnât get along with other kids at court, she mostly hanged out with Ann â Collects shells, for comfort â Her mom doesnât know she can ride hover bikes â She know a bit of a martial artâ
Tecna and Musa seem not be able to sit straight
They have a group chat, but they need a separate one for all the things Flora and Stella send. Animal videos, what clothes to buy, cafes they should go.
Aisha teaches Flora relaxing exercises (they need it)
Bloom organizes group night hangouts, watching movies, playing games, ranting about topics they really want to talk about, but no one to hear it.
Happy Pride!!! đ
Here's a quick drawing of my favorite ship!

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The enemy
Percy and Luke the last Olympian spoilers
For the past four years, I had ceased to see Luke as a human being.
WHEREâS YOUR HEAD AT?
(EYE STRAIN WARNINGâźď¸)
Voice clip from: Sapphirestudios (Myth of the Machine DUB)
(GO SUPPORT THEM ON YOUTUBE, THEYâRE GREAT!!!)
Myth of the Machine by: Flygutzz + Nortsauce
Animation made by: Luvx (Sorrowfulsaddie .aka. ME!!)
Song: WHEREâS YOUR HEAD AT? (Cover by: eurotripp)
This took me 2 days⌠đ¤Ş
My sister is so talentedđđđ
Winx: Echoes of Magic
(Winx club reboot/rewrite)
Character sheet: Flora
This is my Flora character sheet. Iâm thinking Iâll introduce the girls one by one in a video and talk more about the design process, and then Iâll make videos explaining how my seasons would play out.
I think Flora came out so pretty, and I hope you guys think so too. I tried to make her a more complex character because, in the original show, we donât have a lot to work with, even though the comics do dive more into her personality.
Also, I'm a writer first, so | don't really want to hear art criticism because I probably already know the issues already, or at least, please be kind. And if you're really connected to the original story, you probably won't like my rewrite, especially if you're attached to certain relationships or dynamics. I'm shaking a lot of things up.
I don't want to write something exactly like the original show; I think that kind of defeats the point of a reboot/ rewrite.
If you want to see more of this rewrite this is Floraâs character introduction
Wait can someone explain to me why Robin is Faragondaâs assistant while sheâs a specialist???? Is she doing this for extra credits or something đ or is she not a student⌠Iâm really confused on her age
While I was watching the Winx Club reboot, I made a list of stuff I liked about it and stuff I didnât, and I thought, why not post it?
Stuff I like:
* I liked the camping episode. It was a cute moment with the girls, and it showed off the characterization theyâre going for in this show.
* Riven having an actual interest in music is a nice detail and gives him and Musa something to actually bond over.
* I love the Stella online date episode, where we can see Brandon and Bloom just being goofy together as friends instead of always being focused on their romantic pairings.
* Tecna, while being obnoxiously robotic, has a clearer character arc to go through than she had in the original. And while, as an autistic person, I am concerned about the intent, I do think she has some cute scenes and Iâm willing to see where her character goes from here.
* Griffin seemingly/allegedly having a close relationship with the Trix, even though this is only shown in dialogue and not in actual scenes in the show, is still something I liked seeing mentioned.
* Witches and fairies learning together is cute in most cases. I wish the writers felt comfortable enough to actually let them interact more, but I think it being in the background is fine for now.
* Flora being less shy and more upfront was nice to see. While she still doesnât really bite back, she does have a more developed personality than she had in the later seasons, and I think her accent, while inconsistent, is cute.
* In theory, I think Damien is a compelling character, but it really does feel like they added a man so that more boys would be intrigued by the show. I just think itâs a shame they didnât trust their mainly women-led cast to be able to do that.
* I think Bloom being sweeter than anything else works for this story. While I do think itâs a shame she doesnât have the same spark she had in the original, I think her never-ending positivity and love for the world and her friends, however âcringyâ it may be, fits the atmosphere, and she has her cute moments.
* I think the rock concert outfits on most of them were cute.
Stuff I donât like:
* The girls are weirdly judgmental in the oddest circumstances. Theyâll dislike Diaspro or be put off by Riven before they even get to know him, but still defend Damien even though he shows no sign of interest in them???
* They made âDark Bloomâ tanner than regular Bloom.
* The idea that fairies are âsupposed to know their placeâ and should contact teachers, while Specialists, who are mainly men, even with the inclusion of Robin, are allowed to go wherever they want and save whoever they want just feels misogynistic.
* The sorting ceremony genuinely was awful. I think the reboot wouldâve benefited from having a special class where students could understand where their powers come from instead of this School for Good and Evil approach, where it just felt like they were discriminating based on whether someone was alternative or not.
* What the hell is a warlock, and what is Damien even doing at this school?
* Diaspro in this show defends a girl after Bloom pushes her, has cute little moments set up where she appreciates her relationship with Sky, and is standoffish with Bloom because her boyfriend is clearly interested in someone else. Yet she still gets such a massive middle finger from the writers. Iâm assuming that in the second half of the season weâll get an explanation that, just like Stella started texting a guy online to hopefully please her parents, Sky was doing something similar with Diaspro. But if not, I just think itâs another case of the writers wanting the audience to carry over their previous dislike for a character into a new series without justifying why we should dislike them now. Same with Mitzi.
* I donât like how it feels like theyâre swimming while flying. I just donât like the movement.
* Aishaâs character felt like a personal insult to me and to every Black person with strict parents. Aisha in the original show was shy, reserved, adventurous, and even awkward at times, thatâs what made her compelling. It was nice to see a Black woman represented in such a soft and gentle way. While I donât dislike a more athletic interpretation of Aisha, I think itâs a shame considering what her character could mean for so many girls. Her parents apparently having ânever hugged her,â only to do a complete 180 after two white girls confront them, is actually insane to me. And the fact that Aisha herself has no agency in any of it makes it even worse. What are they even going to do with her relationship with her parents after that episode? Are they suddenly just okay now?â¨What also feels like a slap in the face is how little effort they made for the plotline to even make sense. If Aisha really had strict parents, why is she wearing her normal gym clothes around them? Wouldnât they disapprove of that? Why would they even allow the princess of Andros to attend this school in the first place? None of it fits together, and I honestly donât think the writers had a clue either. It just feels like they diminished the character so much that Aisha barely even feels like herself in this version of the story.
* I donât know how I feel about them almost switching Musa and Aishaâs personalities in ways that align more with common stereotypes about Asian and Black women...
* Faragonda just pisses me off. At least in the original, it felt like she wasnât entirely sure what was going on. And while she still hid information for stupid plot reasons, it didnât feel malicious or like she didnât care about the girls at all. Reboot Faragonda, on the other hand, basically has everything figured out by episode 4 and still doesnât feel the need to inform her students that they might be in actual danger. It just feels really strange.
* They wanted to target the show toward both boys and girls, and yet the Specialists somehow feel even more lackluster than they did in the original Winx Club.
* Where and when is Damien actually being kind? I get that he has a thing with animals, and you could point to that or to when he hesitates in the last episode, but why are we extending this huge amount of grace to him? I genuinely donât get it. Is it because he has daddy issues? Because we genuinely do not know this guy.
There is more but because I was writing notes down while watching everything is just word vomit so I have to actually make it comprehensible.

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Historians will say that they're 'just good friend'
Winx: Echoes of Magic
(Winx club reboot/rewrite)
Character introduction: Flora
Flora knew she was about to do something stupid.
She walked slowly through the lush wetlands bordering her village, boots sinking slightly into the damp earth as warm air curled around her skin. All around her, the swamp breathed with magic. She could feel it humming through every twisting vine, every branch heavy with moss, every flower blooming across the waterâs surface.
Nature had always spoken to her. And today, it felt like the entire swamp was waiting for her decision.
Flora inhaled deeply. She had turned nineteen a few weeks ago. According to her family, and most of the village, that meant it was time to choose her future.
As the daughter of one of Lynpheaâs most respected families, everyone expected the same thing from her: medical magic. Healing arts were considered one of the highest calling a person could pursue, the purest way to serve the community and honor generations of tradition.
But every time Flora imagined that future, all she felt was hesitation. It wasnât that she disliked healing magic. She admired it deeply. But her heart belonged elsewhere. She loved studying nature itself, understanding how plants lived, adapted, connected. She wanted to learn ancient magic, travel beyond Lynphea, and become a true fairy in every sense of the word. She wanted to earn her Winx.
Very few fairies from her village ever pursued transformations. Most considered it unnecessary, even selfish. Winx meant adventure, risk, individuality. Those things didnât contribute to the community. They didnât help crops grow or illnesses heal. But Flora couldnât ignore the feeling inside her anymore.
Her whole life, she had done everything right. Perfect grades. Charity work. Obedience. Kindness. For once, she wanted to choose herself.
The deeper she walked toward the village, the more the landscape changed. Dense swamp greenery slowly gave way to enormous flowering plants towering high above the homes of Lynphea. Their petals glowed in brilliant shades of pink, gold, and violet beneath the summer sunlight. Normally the sight comforted her. Today it made her anxious.
The late spring heat had been unusually harsh, and several flower stems were beginning to weaken beneath their own weight. Flora had noticed the signs days ago. She had even warned her father, asking him to bring the issue to the village leaders before one of the massive flowers collapsed. But he had brushed her concerns aside.
âNature corrects itself,â he had told her firmly.
Flora wasnât so sure.
Pushing the thought away, she made her way through the village streets, smiling politely and waving to neighbors as they greeted her. Eventually she stopped in front of her familyâs home. Her stomach twisted. After one steadying breath, she pushed the door open. Immediately, a small blur launched itself at her.
âFlora!â Miele crashed into her legs with enough force to nearly knock her over. Laughing softly, Flora scooped her little sister into her arms and lifted her onto her shoulders while Miele squealed happily.
The familiar warmth of home wrapped around her as she walked further inside. Wooden walls covered in climbing vines. The scent of herbs drying near the windows. Soft lantern light glowing against polished floors.
At the dining table sat her parents. Dinner was already prepared. They had clearly been waiting for her. Flora sat carefully, thanking them quietly before beginning to eat. Conversation barely moved beyond small comments about the weather and village errands. The silence pressing beneath it all felt heavier than words.
Her fingers nervously traced the curves of her vine-woven chair. Finally, she forced herself to speak.
âI want to go to Alfea.â
Silence.
Her mother froze. Her fatherâs expression hardened almost instantly.
âAlfea?â he repeated sharply. âWhy?â
Flora swallowed. âI want to study magic properly. I want to grow stronger.â
âYou already have a future here,â he replied. âThe Lynphean School of Medicine personally requested you for their campus. Most students would dream of an opportunity like that.â
âItâs not my dream,â Flora said softly.
His jaw tightened.
âOur family serves this village. That is what we do.â
Floraâs instinct was to apologize immediately. To back down before disappointment settled any deeper into his face. She hated confrontation. Hated feeling like she was hurting people.
But then her eyes drifted toward the photographs lining the walls. Most of her motherâs side of the family had been fairies once. Real fairies with powerful magic and enormous potential. Yet none of them had pursued transformation. None had left Lynphea. Even her mother still carried dormant magic within her. But now she barely used it at all. Flora loved her mother deeply. And yet⌠she couldnât bear the thought of having a fate like hers.
âI donât want to lose this part of myself,â Flora admitted quietly. Before anyone could answer, a loud cracking sound echoed from outside. The entire house shook slightly. All four of them jumped to their feet.
Outside, panic had already spread through the village. One of the giant flower structures had bent dangerously sideways, its massive bloom threatening to collapse directly onto several nearby homes. People shouted as families evacuated. But nobody knew how to stop it.
Floraâs heart pounded. Without hesitating, she ran toward the flower.
âFlora!â her father shouted after her, but she kept moving.
The enormous stem groaned overhead as petals trembled violently in the wind. If it fell now, it would crush everything beneath it. Flora reached the base of the plant and pressed both hands against the weakening stem. Then she closed her eyes. Magic surged through her instantly.
She could feel the plant like a living heartbeat beneath her palms. Every root. Every fracture. Every place where the summer drought had weakened its structure. If this failed, the flower would collapse on top of her. But somehow, she wasnât afraid.
Slowly, Flora lowered herself to her knees, then pressed her hands against the flower again. Her magic spread into the earth, weaving carefully through the broken root system. The connection was overwhelming. She felt the plant reaching back toward her. Piece by piece, she guided the damaged roots together, feeding energy into the dried soil and stabilizing the fractured stem.
For a long moment, nothing happened. Then the flower lifted. The enormous bloom straightened upright once more, steady and strong against the sky. A stunned silence swept through the village before cheers erupted around her.Breathing hard, Flora pushed herself back to her feet.
Her parents stood at the front of the crowd. Her motherâs eyes shone with pride. Without hesitation, she crossed the distance between them and pulled Flora tightly into her arms.
âIf youâre going to do this,â she whispered emotionally, âthen you better give it everything you have.â
Flora laughed shakily through the tears gathering in her eyes.
She glanced toward her father. He still looked conflicted, arms crossed tightly over his chest, but some of the anger had faded from his expression. Her mother gently cradled Floraâs face.
âHeâll come around,â she promised softly. âEspecially after he sees who you become.â
Emotion caught painfully in Floraâs throat. She hugged her mother tightly.
âIâll make you proud,â she whispered.