This will be my summary for chapter 1 to keep a track of the plot and lore seeds. The first full chapter of Silver and Blood deepens the stage set by the prologue. What begins with a trial quickly unfolds into tangled politics, betrayal, and prophecy. The focus rests on Empousa Bathory’s fate, Noah’s uneasy role as the Moonblessed, and the shadow of Baphomet—whose experiments and obsession with memory push the story toward its first major climax. Beneath the action lies the heart of the game: questions of identity, the fragility of memory, and the cost of survival. Summary under the cut.
The story opens with the trial of Empousa Bathory. Baphomet, the oldest Elder, also called The Soulless, condemns her for breaking the Bathory family’s laws by bringing Noah back from death. Cain warns that her punishment will be decided by the four highest-ranking elders—a sentence of cruelty without mercy. But Cain, Aiona, and Setti plot to rescue her, asking Noah to help.
What follows is a clash of politics, faith, and identity. In the Hall of Elders, Noah faces what he later calls a “gathering of weirdos.” Aiona argues for Empousa’s cause, Bella and Gilrain trade sharp barbs, and Gilrain plays the role of executioner—even faking Cain’s death to mislead the others. Baphomet mocks the prophecy of the Moonblessed, calling Noah a perfect vessel for his experiments.
Imprisoned, Noah reflects on his fractured memories and questions who he even is. In the dungeon he meets Jestel Aegis, who shares the Bloodborn legend of being born on the moon. Noah calls the ancient prophecy, „far-fetched yet strangely romantic“. Freed by Aiona and Setti, they set out to save Empousa.
Empousa, resigned to death, sings the Moonblessed song as she waits in her cell. Noah arrives, remarking: “Such a beautiful voice. More gentle than the last time I heard it.” Their bond deepens—the blood resonance that links them means he can feel her pain. Yet Baphomet’s cruelty is unrelenting: he unleashes Empousa’s “sisters,” puppet doubles created to replace her. When Baphomet taunts her as the “first puppet,” Noah’s sharp tongue cuts him off with a blunt, “Shut up.”
In the final confrontation, Baphomet declares to Noah: “You’re the one I have waited centuries for.” He recalls once being defeated by a Bloodborn who looked just like Noah, proof that Noah’s existence runs deeper than even he realizes. But this time, Baphomet falls. Cain, revealed to have faked his death with Gilrain’s help, closes the chapter. In a conversation with Noah he mentions that there are still four more Moonblessed yet to be found. “Go and piece together the moon.”
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Lore seeds in this chapter:
• Blood resonance: Empousa and Noah share pain and memory through their bond.
• Bathory Tenets: secrecy; forbidding creation of new Bloodborn; succession struggles.
• Puppets: Empousa’s “sisters” were made to replace her.
• Moonblessed Prophecy: Born on the moon, destined to lead Bloodborn home. Ascension requires all Moonblessed to be gathered.
• Jestel’s tale: Baphomet lost his body after being defeated.
• Moonblessed Song:
“The stars are our birthplace; and thus we were exiled.
The moon is but a dream of the sun, and thus we were forgotten by the light.”
• Bloodborn identity: memory is essence. To lose memory is to lose existence.
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Some character notes
• Noah: Reflective, sardonic, yet startlingly sincere. Begins to question his identity: shell or self? Protects Empousa with both wit and loyalty.
• Cain: Fiercely protective, sharp-tongued, and loyal. Unafraid to challenge the elders or to scheme if it means saving others.
• Gilrain: Introduced as a cunning manipulator—dangerous, silver-haired, faking Cain’s death as part of his plans
• Empousa: Burdened by the secret of her puppet replacements. Still deeply loyal to Noah.
• Aiona: The spark that set the Moonblessed journey into motion.
• Jestel: Tortured survivor and warrior who wants to ascend with the Moonblessed.
Some quotes of note:
• Noah: “Who am I? Am I still the same person? Am I an empty shell of the man once known as Noah Nevernight? A curse left on this world by the Black Blood?”
• Noah: “If I’m merely an empty shell inheriting Noah Nevernight’s memories, then I’ve only existed for a day.”
• Cain: “As long as I’m here, I won’t allow anyone to harm them.”
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I will write down a summary of the prologue to keep track of the plot. The prologue throws us straight into the heart of Silver and Blood. Noah on the stake, fire rising, and then the flashback to how he got there. Across three short chapters, the game plants so many seeds that will shape the whole story. Between the Black Blood disease and the dream of the Moonblessed, the prologue sets the stage for Noah’s story: legacy, bonds, memory, and survival against impossible odds.
Summary:
The story begins with Noah, prisoner of the Inquisitor Agares, who confronts him with impossible questions about life, death, and memory. Their journey ends in disaster when the carriage crashes, forcing Noah to fight off Black Blood–infected knights. It’s here he meets Empousa, the mysterious singer known as a Moonblessed, who aids him. Soon after, Nefertari Setti of the Church appears, declaring that she will release him of his sins.
When Noah and Setti flee together, he reveals his past: his hometown was consumed by a Black Blood outbreak, burning everyone—including himself. Agares, the inquisitor responsible, took him prisoner afterwards. Setti explains that Agares is no ordinary man but one of the Twelve Bell Ringers of the Church. Their paths diverge when Aiona Alita enters the story, and Noah remains with her and Empousa.
The third part brings the group to Starfall Valley, a land scarred by a fallen meteorite and veiled in blood-colored mist. Here, Noah hears the mournful cries of a Blood Beast before Agares reappears, vowing to burn Noah with his own hands. Empousa bites him in secret. When Noah is tied to the stake and fire rises around him, Empousa whispers words that will define his fate: “No matter what. You will live on.”
Seeds planted:
•Black Blood as both incurable disease and source power.
• Bloodborn as myth and memory-keepers (Dracula precedent).
• Moonblessed as outcasts with a dream of returning to the moon.
• Through Agares, we glimpse the Bell Ringers—twelve chosen enforcers of the Church’s judgment. In the prologue, they appear less as an institution and more as one man’s fire, but the prologue already hints at the bigger role the Bell Ringers will play in the overall plot.
• Noah’s core: headstrong, a heretic, driven by the will to live on, anchored by promises and the belief that memory is proof of existence.
Important Noah quotes:
“Remember what I said when we first met? Even if I die, at least I’ve lived. You really did save me.”
and
“As long as we remember each other, that is proof of our existence.”
The prologue isn’t long, but it frames everything. Themes of death, memory, survival, and belonging, all wrapped around Noah’s first steps toward regaining his memory and identity and becoming what he’s fated to be.
Starfall Valley: The Land Itself Bleeding (Prologue Introduction)
When Noah first steps into Starfall Valley, it doesn’t feel cursed in the abstract. It feels wounded. Long ago, a meteorite struck, leaving behind a ravine that bleeds mist the color of blood.
Noah: “It looks like the land itself is bleeding.”
Aiona: “The Church once dispatched scores of laborers here to mine the meteorite. These days, the valley is filled with this bloody mist, like a wound that can’t heal.”
The imagery they are using says everything: a scar in the earth, a wound unhealed, a landscape that mirrors the corruption that comes with the Black Blood itself. The Valley is not just a backdrop. It’s a reminder that this world carries scars of its own, and that those scars seep into everyone who walks through it.
The prologue already introduces Black Blood as both disease and punishment. To the Church, it’s divine judgment—heresy given flesh. But in truth, it infects all living things without discrimination.
For those who carry it, the curse is double-edged: the mind corrodes even as the body strengthens. Villages fall to it, entire towns burned down in its wake. Noah himself was imprisoned for infection, branded a heretic for trying to survive.
But the Black Blood is more than plague. It calls. Noah hears the cries of the beasts. “Blood… join us…”. A yearning for all life to become one. It’s horrifying, but it also speaks to something deeper: connection twisted into hunger.
A curse. A source of power. A voice in the dark. In the prologue it’s shown that the Black Blood will never be just background in Silver and Blood. It is the wound and the temptation both.