= list of major characters from R S T D because character intros are hard
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A H A V AÂ
= she/her / character intro / character tag
=Â grumpy doctor trope, runs clinic across from local bar;Â âThe Blind Owlâ, salty & gay, magician of Aeran heritage, suffering from a lost culture & sense of disconnect with her past, done with Deviâs self-destructive behaviourÂ
A L P H O N S E
=Â he/him / character intro / character tag
=Â father of Satyr & Gemini, married to Kimon, close friend of Deviâs, exceptionally powerful magician who has been forced into hiding after Querevage banned magic, skilled magician capable of matter manipulation
A M A T O R
=Â he/him / character intro / character tag
=Â deceased, murdered by Barachiel & Desdemona, powerful necromancer who helped found Querevage, old friend of Deviâs, known for his ambition & legacy of human rights improvements, retired Coliseum battle mage
B A R A C H I E L
= he/him / character intro / character tag
=Â king of Querevage, high general of Querevage until the end of RstD, regal appearance & tastes, in charge of legislature, human disaster prone to substance abuse, will casually just break into Deviâs house to see her
D E S D E M O N A
=Â she/her / character intro / character tag
=Â queen of Querevage, serves as the public face of the monarchy, main decision maker between her and Barachiel, knows what she wants and takes it, highly intelligent, built the anti-magic movement into what it is today
D E V I
= she/her / character intro / character tag
= bruiser in the Arena, mom friend, old friend of Barachiel & Amator - has come to hate the former, forced into poverty after Amatorâs death, desperately trying to cultivate a new normal, prone to suffering in silence, loves tea & blankets
G E M I N I
= she/her / character intro / character tag
=Â acting general of Querevage, training under Barachiel, forged her documents to obtain her desired position of power, claims to be working with Barachiel to form a ânew Querevageâ where magicians and Insensitives have equal rights
K I M O N
=Â he/him / character intro / character tag
= Coliseum battle mage, married to Alphonse, father of Gemini & Satyr, specializes in electricity-based elemental magic, snarky asshole, frequently out of the house, favours Gemini, constantly fighting with Satyr
S A T Y R
= he/him / character intro / character tag
=Â smol bean, used to be able to predict the future, now specializes in illusion magic, cheerful but not necessarily carefree, cares deeply for his family, presently travelling Mezilon with other magicians hiding from the law
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Querevage has never seen a darker period in its history. The divide between magicians and the increasingly common Magic Insensitives peaked with the death of AMATOR, the nationâs founder and renowned necromancer. Left leaderless, the laws of succession ruled that his murderers DESDEMONA and BARACHIEL should take the throne. The pair immediately forced an anti-magic dictatorship onto the Quereven citizens and began a campaign of conquest that sought to wipe magic from existence through means of genocide, starting a war that would eventually consume the entire continent of Mezilon
Caught in the middle of the storm is DEVI, a close friend of both Amator and Barachiel. She is struggling to cope with the strange new nation that has formed around her and desperately trying to reconcile the diplomat she once knew with the ruthless monster Barachiel has become. Through years of hard work, Devi has managed to settle down, creating a delicately balanced life for herself, complete with good friends - AHAVA and ALPHONSE - and a job that manages keeps her out of the mines. The shack she lives in isnât home, but itâs good enough.
However, this is all thrown upside down when she discovers that KIMON, Alphonseâs husband, is having an affair. Fearing for her friendâs heart, she tells him without hesitation, only, he doesnât believe her. Instead, he calls her a liar, a fiend, and a manipulator. Alphonse, a magician clinging to the remains of a family destroyed by politics and war, refuses to believe that the man he loves would betray him.
So Devi is left with one option: expose Kimon.
She uncovers a revolution instead.
= R U N says the D E V I LÂ
G E N R EÂ lgbtqia+ fantasy
S U B G E N R E S fluff & angst ; queer themes ; ambition ; hurt & comfort ; found family ; morality ; identityÂ
P R E V I E W chapter one (tw for sewing needles in a medical context)
W I PÂ T A GÂ #rstd
T A G L I S T to be added, interact with the post here or ask/reply.
đ: give a brief character bio of your 3-5 MCs | writer wip asksâ¨
Letâs give yâall THE most abridged summaries to ever walk the face of the earth letâs go
DEVI: the protag, main bitch, trans, fights for money in a thing called the Arena, sword lesbian, soft bean, loves tea and blankets, pls let this girl rest, femme babe who just wants to talk about fashion all day tbh
AHAVA: Badass doctor, 10/10 done with deviâs self-destructive behaviour shit, butch bitch, AngerTM, looks like she could kill you but is a cinnamon roll, will actually kill you tho
ALPHONSEÂ âALâ: magician, sweetheart, total babe, has never done anything wrong in his life ever, doesnât deserve this crap, Dad FriendTM, loves his kiddos, AnxietyTM
DESDEMONA: Ominous dark cloud of hate, anti-magic bitch, straightest woman alive, had a staring contest with a wall and won, ManipulativeTM, had good intentions Once Upon A Time
BARACHIEL: resident prick, hasnât gotten the memo that Devi hates his guts, walking meme, probably consumes more coffee than food, makes questionableTM life choices
It was twelve past midnight when the Devil walked in.
These trips to the hospital were unavoidable. Deviâs profession would simply not allow it; the bruisers of Querevageâs underground Arena were not prone to leaving matches uninjured, and Devi had stopped trying to resist the call of the ring a long time ago.
Ahavaâs clinic was untidy the way a vulture was; untamed and unnatural, yet not unkempt. Sitting on the edge of the city centre, it was the only thing someone like Devi could truly call a hospital for four square miles. Inside, clay pots covered every space not occupied by a box, or a bottle, or a book. Inscriptions ran along their sides, dates and ingredients and names. Forgotten bundles of herbs and flowers dangled from the ceiling in bunches. The medic would claim they were drying. At present, the normally buzzing waiting room gaped with the emptiness brought on by the late hour as moonlight filtered through decrepit shutters and dirty glass. The rest of the city scum would crawl in an hour or two later; Deviâs match had started earlier tonight. A small blessing.
The night sat strange in Devi - something was different. Perhaps it was in the people. A full moon always brought out the worst of Querevage. Brutes to begin with, an excuse for mischief was never passed up, and the beck and call of a supernatural mistress was beyond tempting, but tonightâs twilight was soft as it settled into the city; a god all its own in the way it claimed the streets. It curled and whispered against the edge of the fiendish towers, her winds a gentle touch, carrying with them songs of a thousand desperate men. Maybe that was it. In Querevage - in the Capital - tenderness was a rare commodity that unsettled the bones. And not all had havens to retreat to, not like Devi had Ahavaâs.
It wasnât like she deserved the doctorâs help to begin with. Especially not when she insisted on showing up at this hour. Nerves crawled up Deviâs spine as floorboards creaked under her pacing boots, steel toes clicking along the wood in time to the pulsing rabble of an unsleeping city. Waiting for Ahava to appear was never an easy task. She had wounds that needed tending to and, with each rattling inhale, Devi got more and more tempted to crawl out a window. What it would be charge into the night on her own - bloodied face and all. Bliss? Maybe. Anxiety wriggled in her stomach. Maybe Ahava was sleeping? She needed her rest too. No, Devi reassured herself, Ahava was never far from death, and Devi - bleeding, gasping, and limping - stunk of it.
It only took a few more moments for the good doctor to descend from the staircase, much to Deviâs relief. Her curly hair was pulled back in a bun so sloppy it could have been mistaken for a nest. She must not have taken it out before bed; the rumpled medicâs garb she wore supported that idea. It made Devi feel worse about waking Ahava up so late.
The doctor looked her up and down, clearly counting injuries, measuring the damage; assessing which wounds needed to be tended to first and which were life threatening. She wouldnât accurately know until Devi stripped out of her armour, but first impressions were important, and Devi wasnât in a position to complain. She could do that later. As if sensing her plan to be a nuisance, Ahava fixed her with an exasperated gaze, and sighed. Devi just laughed, some broken sounding rattle, before choking out, âYou should have seen the other guy.â
Ahavaâs face flashed with concern, but she said nothing; it was the same bitter comment Devi made every time she was handed a look like that - the routine theyâd built insisted upon it and Devi, a creature of habit, was in no mood to change it any time soon. And the doctor, bless her, had accepted that part of the gladiator long ago, just as she had accepted their silent agreement: she was not to criticise the bruiser for reappearing each night. In these moonlit hours, her only job was to treat Deviâs wounds, not prevent them. Friend or not, Ahava had to respect that.
It didnât stop Ahavaâs gold eyes - dark and faded and full of rotting magic - from turning cold when they found nastier wounds. Devi took no offense, it was so very like Ahava to become stern when faced with an uncooperative patient - whether they were ignoring prescription or common sense, and Devi was a sure convict for the latter. But what was Devi to do? She needed the money from the Arena as much as she needed the adrenaline. A known enemy of the state didnât have choices, especially one so addicted to the high of the fight. Especially one whose most common moniker was âDevilâ. At least Ahava had managed to keep some dignity about her despite being an ex-magician.
âDevi,â Ahava greeted, tone careful. âPlease wait for me in the other room while I get ready.â The speech was so mechanical it almost made Devi wince.
âWhat, am I bleeding all over your floor?â The words were joking, if weak. Ahava, it seemed, needed some brightness right now.
âYes, actually,â The doctor shot back, sarcastic to a fault, an overdramatic sneer scrunching her nose, âItâs rather unsightly. If you could do it in the other room Iâd really appreciate it. Less mess to clean up before I dispose of the body, yâknow how it is.â
Devi gave an amused huff, before grunting in acknowledgment. Relief made heavy limbs light, but it took a brief struggle to get moving again. She gave Ahava a quick peck on the cheek as she walked by, an affectionate but outdated form of greeting, one that made the doctor grumble unhappily. But Devi knew deep down Ahava appreciated the sentiment.
As she stepped towards the doorway to the side room, her companion remained outside, materials shifting as Ahava pawed her way through the mess, seeking out the package made specially for Deviâs visits. If the bruiser walked straight into the doorframe they wouldn't mention it till next morning, when teasing was welcome and more than expected. Right now, the clock was ticking too fast for anything more than light banter. Deviâs injuries needed stitches, and fast.
A blood-coated cough shook Devi something terrible, drawing Ahava from her search, fear flickering over her features for a fraction of a second. Anyone could tell that the wet noise was not a good sign. Swaying on her feet now, Devi was barely able to look up when Ahava spoke, âIâll be with you in a minute, lie down and stay there.â Despite the harsh tone, they were comforting words. Devi couldnât blame her for the mistake; Ahava was perpetually new to the whole friend thing.
She settled into her cot without complaint, and allowed herself to nestle into the fresh sheets, and sighed for a moment, taking in the nook that seemed to get smaller with every visit. The side room was not Ahavaâs traditional examination area, much more akin to a storage closet with a bed in it. But it was Deviâs room. For Deviâs examinations. And the gods knew she didnât have enough things to call hers anymore.
A soft patter of footsteps hailed the medicâs approach. Their work began.
The cot was small, the going was slow, and the time was late, so tan hands pressed stitches into Deviâs dark skin and a rhythm was created in time to the soft tune Devi hummed. It was quiet, but at least it kept her mind off the push and pull of the needle and the rattle in her ribs. Ahava, she knew, appreciated the melody too; kept the tremor out of her hands. The song was a soothing thing; an old lullaby that managed to hold its nostalgic charm despite the ragged, off key notes that clawed their way out of Deviâs throat. Sheâd forgotten its name ages ago, but she knew it was old; it had been taught to her before Amator had been assassinated, and it was a reminder of better times - of wealth and glory and friends. The song had become just another private memory.
The sky faded like an old dye outside the window, light beginning to settle into the room, glinting off the needle. It made her spine itch. In the morning there would be crowds, and the sultry masses would give her no privacy - each desperate for an easy target. She had founded this nation alongside Barachiel and Amator before the latter had shamelessly been murdered, and she had been kicked to the gutter like trash. The fighterâs fall from grace had been a public spectacle that none were keen to let her forget. Despite the many years that aged its memory, the incident had even given life to her nickname in the Arena; The Devil. Half of its permanence in the public mind was Desdemonaâs doing. After all, what better way to remind the people of Querevage that she had slaughtered its founder than parading around his partner like a caged tiger. To think she was all that remained of Amatorâs legacy⌠Appalling.
Devi left with the moon, skulking off to the withering shack she still refused to call home. A painful endeavour with the state she was in - Ahava could only do so much for her aching bones without the use of illicit magic - but both knew there was nothing more to be done. Devi would tear the stars from the skies before she gave up this fix. An addict she was, but the call of the Arena was too great to be denied, no matter what the doctor suggested.
Devi knew that if she chose to, Ahava could detach herself from the situation entirely, reign in her emotions and just mend the wounds she was presented with - if she chose to mend them at all. Ahava was a doctor. Professionalism was the first rule of the trade; too many died to get attached, so their agreement was a precarious one - based initially on pity, and only later a genuine fondness that had grown between the two dark-skinned women. But fondness didnât disguise the grief stooping in the doctorâs gaze as the door shuttered behind Devi as she escaped into the veins of the city, a small packet of hormone pills clutched in one hand. Streets and avenue and cobblestones spreading out before her in the night, branching out from the beast that was the ancient Montgomery Street.
Devi huffed, watching the fogging breath drift off in the breeze. Montgomery Street, sunless, was cold but not necessarily lifeless. Bar chatter seeped out of the cracks in the walls of the Blind Sparrow, just across the street. Its lit windows shone like catâs eyes, and she felt vaguely like she was being watched. For a moment, she met its gaze, heard her pulse in her ears.
She had survived the Arena, her heartbeat a testimony to that. She had survived. She was alive. What a beautiful, insignificant miracle. It took her breath away. Alive, what a concept.
The bruiser moved on, shaking off the sudden reverence with a shudder. Devi padded down the cragged street, looking for her exit. The clinic wasnât her last stop tonight, and she couldnât keep Alphonse waiting much longer. With luck, she could take the alleys and get there before the magician broke another pair of glasses.
Alleys were the only real way to travel in Querevage, even before Desdemonaâs takeover.
Taking her usual route, Devi found herself cramming her way through a particularly narrow street. Most would be unnerved in the claustrophobic setting, but for better or for worse, the fighter had become particularly acquainted with the nooks and crannies of the Capital. Cool walls draped themselves along the passageway, bricks wet with the night. Cobble stones with runes scratched into them ran against her vision as she moved, only half of which had been painted over by the Night Guard - a new staple in all Quereven cities. Moonlight spilled over her back as she scurried down the alleyways. She could taste the magic in the air, illegal and beautiful in how it was still alive despite Desdemonaâs hard working hands. It made her laugh and her cheeks flush, better times dancing in her head. Some part of her could tell she was more than a little delirious with either shock or blood loss. Who knew. Who cared.Â
The bruiserâs dark skin all but melted into walls of the backstreet, a disguise built into her form. Sheâd appreciated it more and more over the years, this inlaid ability to sink into the dark backdrop of the city, her only spotlight the moon. Haloed and aglow in the dawn, she forged onward. There was a destination in mind, a definite course set for her senseless wandering, but not the place sheâd led Ahava to believe. Ahava was a friend, yes, but the doctor was too lawful to be trusted with the secrets of the Hive and the magicians that lived within it. Alphonse had only told Devi because he trusted her. She wouldnât betray him to a woman he didnât know, no matter how much Ahava meant to her.
If her wounds were left untreated, she'd be unable to move the next morning, and she'd have to be dragged back to her shack before she unnecessarily spent time there, but with the help of Alphonse and his magic sheâd be fully functioning in an hour. And with his help, the hut could stay as distant from her life as possible; exclusively for sleeping and storage and sometimes not even that.
Devi could always trust that Alphonse would help, he was a blessing too good for this earth and she was lucky to have met him before the Guard forced him and all other practicing magicians into hiding. The Hive had saved Quereven magic from extinction and Alphonse from the jaws of death. It was tucked between the fabric of here and now, a nontruth that wasnât actually real according to any natural laws, and had entrances that didnât exist unless you already knew they were real.
In short, the Hive was a magical, semi-sentient collection of spaces called Fantasies, things aptly named for their unique nature of being entirely conjured realities. Taking a variety of shape and form, a Fantasy could be as small as a single bedroom or as large as a city, all the while using no physical space, merely taking advantage of the illusion of it to explain its own existence. A fourth dimension, if you will. Realities within reality. They took a complicated network of spells to make and a great understanding of magic, not to mention an obscene amount of luck and skill. Alphonse had all of the above, and had built many of the Fantasies that stemmed off the main tunnel of the Hive. Many were now empty.
Magic had disappeared, but the persecution of it had not. Â
Ahava had chosen to give up magic in exchange for a life above ground, where you could interact with real, actual objects, eat real, actual food, and listen to the sound of real, actual rain. The doctor hated falsities, and thus she refused to live one. Devi would have to side with Ahava at the end of the day. She loved Alphonse, but even his familiar Fantasy was unsettling in a primal way. The food tasted foreign, never quite right. Telltale signs for the mimicry it was. And the sounds felt flat. It sat heavy in the bones and watched like a cat. Living in a Fantasy was isolating. It was just you, and the world, and the knowledge that the only pulse on this plane was yours. Most couldnât live with that.
Devi, peering into the Portmans Avenue entrance, knew she certainly couldnât. She stepped into the tunnel, and felt it swallow around her. The Hive was a winding thing, a living being that breathed and pulseed, though she couldn't say if it physically pulsed or magically pulsed, even though she had one hand on its wall, trailing down the easy dips and peaks that rippled down the tunnel. She wasnât sensitive enough to magic to tell the difference. Alâs Fantasy - Trinkets - was the third opening to the right.
The gateway opened to a countryside manor settled comfortably atop a glassy lake. The water sprawled out in front of her, painting a mirror image of the canopy that towered above her. Only floating knots of islands disturbed an otherwise flawless reflection. Trinketsâ red brick emerged from the charcoal trees like a dragon, seeming to breathe with chimney smoke and stare with shuttered eyes. It was the only warm colour in this place, homey like a motherâs wrath amongst the cool tones of the sunken forest. Trinkets itself rested on the very cusp of the water, serene in its untouchability.
Fake, all of it, but God, how beautiful.
Parts of the house flickered in and out of vision like a dying flame, shrouded in the mist rising from the water. Though, admittedly, the opaque liquid wasnât water at all. It held no weight where it clung to her boots, and it wasnât cold. It was warm. Eerily and surreally so. She always hated walking over to the door, the pooling sky cut her feet off by the ankles, and she'd lose them wherever she stepped. Below the water, nothing existed. Nothing had been programmed to exist below the water, just as nothing had been programmed to exist beyond the thick layer of fog encircling the manor.
Alphonse, here, was God. And God had not wanted to lie to himself with fake creatures. Nothing here breathed but her, and Al, and his husband. And thus this place belonged to the three of them. The husband in question, Kimon, could be seen in the greenhouse bulging off the side of Trinkets like a blister. She waved to him, and in turn Devi saw him nod in greeting at her, before his silhouette dipped back inside the house. It was good to remind herself that isolation did not mean alone.
She wondered, briefly, if Kimon and Alphonse ever got used to the feeling. The Devil supposed they must have, over the years. With nothing but each other for company, conversation must be hard to come by. Or, she mused, perhaps not. Each quirky and sporadic in their own right, Kimon and Alphonse got on like a house on fire. Their bond was something Devi could only hope for. Kimon could leave at any time, abandoning Alphonse to the loneliness of solitary existence, something that would undoubtedly kill the social man. And yet he stayed, warm and tucked away here with the love of his life. Universes would bend under their determination, and this sanctuary proved just that. Trinkets was private, and Trinkets was Alphonseâs, and Trinkets was Kimonâs.
Devi was just a guest.
While Alphonse was like Devi, a criminal by law, Kimon was a beast of a different kind. As a coliseum mage, Kimon was charged with exploration of the Quereven badlands, and combating the monsters that inhabited them. It was a position of power, one that allowed Kimon the ability to practice magic despite the laws against it. Amator had been a coliseum mage before they had founded Querevage properly, back when it had just been a bunch of mercenaries squatting in tents. Those had been some of the most blissful days of Deviâs life, when she had him and Barachiel by her side sheâd felt like she could take on the world. She had never seen the same appeal in the crazy world of politics that had followed just a few years after. Give her a pulse, a sword, and a monster any day. However, she was glad that part of Quereven culture had carried on.
Some things were so signature to the nation that not even Desdemona could erase them. The status that came with being a coliseum member was one of them. That, and the need for a coliseum mage to ensure the survival of the troop meant that Kimon had the most idealized life one could have in Querevage, both before and after Amamtor died. He was a lucky man. And she believed Amator would have liked Kimon, which was what was most important to her, what with Kimon being the current holder of Amatorâs first title. The two men were kindred souls, both having a fearsome appreciation for magic and for their partners. At least she could trust Alphonse not to try and murder anyone, much less his husband. Who she was now face to face with.
Kimon, holding the door open for her, looked deathly tired. Bags were stamped under electric blue eyes, unusually dull against his tan skin and dark lashes. Several scratches littered his face, with two nasty ones clipping along his cheekbone. He was typically an attractive man but his slouch and the grime coating him took away from that. Kimon was careful about his appearance, to see him in such disarray was especially concerning. Hopefully nothing had happened to Alphonse.
âRough day?â She asked, stepping into the house. The Coliseum was a one-way ticket to fame and success, but it rarely left one feeling anything but battered and exhausted. She wouldnât be surprised if that was the cause of his disorder. Â Devi, still aching from her match, could sympathize.
âYeah,â He said, bluntly, closing the door behind her, âAnd we got a letter. Didnât help.â
Devi wiggled her toes as she shook water from her pants, it was good form to make sure all of them were still there after a trudge through the water. âPardon my asking, but who from?â
A dismissive grunt. âGemini. Itâs about her promotional ceremony.â
Officially the young woman had been serving as general for over a month, the celebration was merely a formality, but it was still the most highly anticipated event of the season. Public events celebrating military grandeur were an excellent way to reassure the masses, after all, so the monarchs put extra time into ensuring their success.
âWhatâs the matter with that?â Devi asked.
âIâve been formally invited. Alphonse on the other hand⌠has been⌠asked not to attend. Formally.â
âOh.â Devi knew things had been tense between Al and his eldest child but she hadnât thought it was that bad.
âYeah,â Kimon nudged at the floor with his shoe. âHeâs rather torn up about it. She said it was because she didnât want him getting caught. Which is admittedly a risk, and a reasonable one at that, so I can-â
The bruiser almost laughed. âAl? Get caught? Magic smothering is a temporary enchantment, yes, but heavens heâs better than that. You and I both know that sheâs just embarrassed to admit her father is a witch.â
âWatch it,â Kimon snapped. âYou all but raised her. I was hoping youâd be able to translate for her, not make her look worse. She doesnât mean to hurt him. Alphonse needs to remember that.â
Devi huffed. Gemini had changed when sheâd gotten her first taste of life outside of the Hive. Sheâd been a sweet young girl but now she reminded Devi scarily of Barachiel. Too much so to be a coincidence. It wouldnât surprise the Devil if heâd actually started mentoring her.
âDevi,â Kimon pleaded, putting a gentle hand on her shoulder, âPromise me youâll talk to him. Itâs⌠awkward when I do it.â
She met his eye, and hissed. âI will not lie to him.â
âThen donât. The only person who knows her better than you is Alphonse. You know she doesnât mean it like that.â
She tensed, agitated.
âPlease. He canât lose any more family.â
A beat of hesitation. âIâm getting my damn stitches fixed first.â
Kimon beamed. âKnew I could count on you.â
âWhere is he, anyway?â They could both tell she was making small talk as she wandered over to the living room door, âI usually canât get him off me long enough to have a proper conversation with you.â
âHiding,â Kimon answered, bounding after the womanâs longer strides, âThink he wants to surprise you.â
âOh? Alphonse nearly scared me half to death the last time he âsurprisedâ me.â She stopped just outside the door frame, turning to look at Kimon, a smile playing at her lips.
âYou were only paralyzed for a week, Devi.â
She scoffed, playful. âDoes he still tell the story?â
âTo anyone whoâll listen.â The corners of Kimonâs blue eyes crinkled happily as his mouth tilted, fondness glowing in them.
âSo every night over dinner, then, when you two sit down to eat?â
Kimon laughed pleasantly, âYou know him too well.â
âJust promise me this surprise doesnât involve alpacas. Iâm still picking fur out of my teeth from my last encounter with them.â
The mage shuddered, the memory fresh in both of them. âNo alpacas.â
âGreat.â Devi stepped through the doorway. And screamed.
Al, always one for dramatic entrances, had dropped down from the air like a bat, and upside down shrieked; "If it isn't the great and powerful Devi!" His smile spread bright, "You're home!" And she was.
Devi laughed bitterly at that, a sound which turned into a yelp as Al pressed on a tender part of her shoulder. âHey! Thatâs my favourite arm, Iâll have you know!â
77:
âYouâre pale as a sheet, and cold. Devi, answer me what happened, whatâs going on?â
Devi didnât want to answer. Fidgeted. Ahava would kick her out if she told the truth. Ahava didnât meddle with murderers.
Send me a number and Iâll send you my favourite line from that page of my wip!
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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21. Do they have a significant other? If so, what is their partner like?
The only character in the book to have a significant other is Alphonse, one of Deviâs closest friends and a massive softie. However, his husband Kimon isnât exactly ideal. Heâs a cheating bastard and Devi spends the vast majority of the book trying to convince Al of that, who is too desperate to hold onto what little family he has left to believe Devi. I love Alphonse with all my heart, but Kimon can go die in a well.Â