MasukThey called it "The Illumina Exhibit."
A final showcase for graduating artists at Hallowind College. Each year, the best students were chosen to present a single piece—one last chance to display their brightest and most beautiful work. The kind that attracted patrons, agents, gallery owners, and sometimes, fame. The catch? No names. Just art. Each painting stood on its own, anonymous and raw. no titles, no signatures on the front. Just a single identifying mark—your chosen symbol—etched quietly onto the back. A tradition meant to let talent speak louder than legacy. It was supposed to be fair. Clean. Safe. But nothing about my painting felt safe. --- “Let me guess,” Lila said as she leaned over, peering at the corner of my canvas. “You didn’t do the sparkly meadow assignment, did you?” We were tucked in the back of Studio 5, the scent of oil and paint clinging to the air. Paintbrushes cluttered our workspaces. Half-finished pieces leaned against the walls like silent witnesses. “I tried,” I muttered, wiping my hands on a rag. “But then my brain hijacked the canvas.” Lila tilted her head and whistled low “Holy hell.” Her voice was barely a whisper. “Girl. What is this? This isn’t like your other work. “Arabella…” Lila said slowly. “This one feels... intense.” Babe, it looks like your soul called a séance.” She wasn’t wrong. The painting wasn’t light. It wasn’t beautiful in the conventional sense. It was… "A circle of roses, bleeding. A silver crown pierced by thorns. A pair of red, slitted eyes above a mouth full of fangs. And in the center— A girl. Barefoot. Pale. Hands outstretched. Eyes wide. Offering." It had spilled out of me in a trance at home. I didn’t remember sketching it. Didn’t even choose the colors. My brush had moved like it remembered something I didn’t. “You sure you’re okay?” Lila asked, her voice softer now. “This isn’t just dark, Bella. It’s… haunting.” I stared at the girl in the painting, offering herself to a figure crowned and cruel. “I didn’t mean to make it.” Lila studied me for a moment. “You always say that about your best work.” I let out a shaky breath and picked up my brush again. There was one thing left to do. “Not signing it?” she asked. I shook my head. “No AV. Not this time.” “Then how will they know it’s you?” “They won’t,” I said quietly. “That’s the point.” And with a flick of black paint, I marked the back of the canvas with a symbol I’d never drawn before. A sharp, swirling rune—curved like a crescent blade split down the middle by a jagged line. My hand moved like it had traced it a hundred times before. “What the hell is that?” Lila asked. “I… I don’t know.” It felt older than the room around us. Like, it didn’t belong to this world. Lila gave a half-laugh, half-shiver. “Creepy. But weirdly cool. I vote you enter it.” “I already submitted it.” “You what?!” “I turned it in an hour ago.” “Bella!” too late now. --- The night of the exhibit came so fast . The College’s main hall was unrecognizable—soft music floated from a live string quartet, chandeliers bathed everything in a warm, golden glow. Staff moved through the crowd with flutes of champagne. Marble floors reflected the lights like liquid stars. Each painting stood beneath spotlights, framed in glass. No names. Just numbered plaques and hushed awe. Lila looked ethereal in her wine-red dress and combat boots. I felt like a shadow beside her, cloaked in black silk and nerves. “Number 27,” she said. “Yours. It’s already got three bids.” I didn’t respond. I couldn’t stop staring at it. The girl. The crown. The blood. It didn’t belong here. And then… they walked in. Three men. Not students. Not faculty. Strangers. One was pale as frost, with silver hair slicked back and a navy suit tailored to cruelty. The second had black curls, loose around his shoulders, with a half-lidded gaze that screamed danger. The last moved with a cane, but his posture said he didn’t need it—he just liked the authority it gave him. They weren’t looking at the art the way others did. They were searching. Their eyes swept the room like weapons. And then they stopped. At mine. Number 27. The man with the cane leaned forward, squinting. The silver-haired one cocked his head, lips parting slightly as if the image stirred some long-forgotten echo inside him. The third man stepped closer, his mouth curling into something that was definitely not a smile. Then, in a language I didn’t know—but somehow felt—the elder spoke: > “Verasha kai. En'dariel nuvess.” [“It’s her. She remembers.”] I couldn’t hear them. But I saw how the host paled when they handed her an envelope. They bought it. Full price. No questions. And still… they didn’t leave. --- *Elsewhere, that same night…>>> ——— A private lounge. Lights dimmed. The painting’s image projected on a tablet, glowing softly as the three men circled it. “It’s the Offering,” said the one with curls, pacing. “She painted the scene. Our scene.” “She remembers,” one of them said quietly. “Or she dreams,” the second replied, swirling a dark liquid in his glass. “Either way, the image is forbidden.” She signed it,” the third said, tapping the corner of the canvas. “That rune—it’s not decorative. It’s ancestral.” “Valreth os. Dareth'al nox vi’rellen.” [“A mistake,” said the elder. “It should have never surfaced.”] > “Kareth vossar. En’serath vi’daruun.” [“The bloodlines were buried. This mark was sealed.”] “Well,” said the one with silver hair. “Clearly not deep enough.” “The rune matches the old blood seals,” the silver-haired one muttered, pouring a deep red liquid into a crystal glass. A long silence passed. >"Ella es humana. No debería saber nada de esto. [“She’s human. She shouldn’t know any of this.”] “She couldn’t have known. Not unless…” “She’s related,” the elder finished. “Connected. Perhaps to the fallen lineage.” “She’s a threat.” “Or worse.” The elder touched the printed photo of the painting. His finger hovered over the girl in the center. “She’s a key.” “Then what do we do?” “We find her,” the elder said. “And destroy whatever memories she’s awakened.” “If she remembers more—” “She won’t.” --- I didn’t sleep that night. My room was too still. My hands still tingled from the brushstrokes. And the symbol—the rune—kept glowing in my mind like it had burned itself into my bones. I didn’t know what it meant. But I felt it watching me. And for reasons I couldn’t explain, I locked my windows. --- They came for me two nights later. But I wasn’t home. --- My brother had gone to school early for practice. I stayed late at the school studio that day. The only ones home were my parents. I found them the next morning. Blood on the floor. Silence in the air. The smell of something wrong. They didn’t just kill them. They hunted them. And I never understood why. ---POV: Arabella --- THE FOLLOWING MORNING; --- “Oh my God!” The words burst out of Arabella before she could stop them. She sat upright on her bed so suddenly the blanket slid halfway to the floor, her eyes wide as the realization slammed into her like a delayed lightning strike. “I totally forgot.” Her hand flew toward the phone lying beside her pillow. She grabbed it quickly and unlocked the screen, her heart beating a little faster now as she scrolled through her messages. There it was. Julian. The message stared back at her from the screen, timestamped from the evening before. Arabella pressed her lips together as she opened the chat. "Are you still open to going on a date with me tomorrow?" For a second, she simply stared at it. Then she groaned softly and dropped back against the headboard. “Great, Arabella,” she muttered under her breath. Julian had sent that yesterday. And she had completely forgotten to reply. Not ignored. Not intentional
POV: Arabella --- The next day; --- Sunlight had already climbed higher in the sky, spilling across the floor of her room in wide golden strips that crept slowly toward the edge of her bed. Her brow furrowed slightly as the word drifted through her thoughts again, stubborn and unanswered. Arabella rolled onto her side and reached for her phone on the bedside table. “If the internet doesn’t know,” she murmured groggily, unlocking the screen,She pushed herself up against the headboard and opened her browser first out of habit, staring briefly at the empty search bar before shaking her head.“No… not that again.”Instead, she tapped another app.Google Maps.The screen brightened with the familiar map of the city, little streets and districts spreading outward in neat grids around the blinking blue dot that marked her location.Arabella shifted slightly, tucking one leg beneath her as she zoomed out a little and typed into the search bar at the top.Libraries near meThe map a
pov: ARABELLA ---Ah—! The sound tore out of her throat as Arabella jolted upright, breath ripping sharply into her lungs. For a moment, there was nothing but darkness. Not the darkness of a quiet room or a dim hallway, but a suffocating, endless void that still clung to the edges of her mind like cold mist refusing to lift. Her heart pounded violently, each beat loud enough to echo inside her skull. A dream. It had not faded yet. It had begun quietly. Too quietly. At first, there had only been silence. Not the peaceful kind that accompanies sleep, but a deep, ancient stillness — the kind that felt untouched by time itself. Arabella had found herself standing somewhere vast and unfamiliar, though her feet had not made a sound when she moved. Beneath her a stretched cold stone. "Black stone." Polished by centuries, smooth as if something powerful had once walked those halls long ago… and then stopped. The air itself felt heavy. Thick. Like the atmosphere
POV : THE ELDERS COURT ---- Murmurs followed after the departure of the high Eldreth in the elder council Sound returned in controlled threads, low exchanges carried through tight jaws, and measured breath. Confusion did not look like panic among the Eldereth. It looked like calculation Then, the Elders began to speak. Nyra rose first. She did not wait for formal dismissal. “The Vault speaks of betrayal,” she said, voice slicing cleanly through the murmurs. “And we plan to disperse?” “We were given surveillance,” Nyra corrected. “Not resolution.” Across the chamber, Cassian Virell remained seated, long legs crossed, expression thoughtful rather than agitated. “Resolution without clarity breeds spectacle,” he said smoothly. “And spectacle weakens authority.” Nyra’s eyes sharpened. “Authority weakens when betrayal goes unanswered.” Druvien Mal’Serak leaned back in his seat, one arm draped casually along the edge, though his gaze was alert. “How invigorating,”
POV : THE ELDERS COURT >>>>> The Elders were called. Not by word. The summons came as a shiver, running through every bloodline that mattered. A vibration beneath the chest that made the heart stumble, the spine stiffen, the mind tighten around a single, unyielding instruction: attend:everyone must be present. No exceptions. Even Druvien Mal’Serak, who rarely obeyed orders and Kaelith Malrath’Thorne, who had avoided the Court for reasons best known to him, The two brothers was present. Every other Elder arrived, some by shadow, some by speed telephaty, all by compulsion. Seraphine. Cassian Virell. Elder Valerian. Elder Nyra. Elder Marcellus. Elder Maelis. And others whose names carried weight by mere mention. No one knew why this meeting was called. Not fully. And yet every Elder felt the same premonition: something had shifted. Something old, something dormant, and something dangerously precise. when every Elder was required at once— Something was awakening.
POV: ARABELLA ——— My phone vibrates against the mattress before my alarm goes off. Once. Then again. I don’t reach for it immediately. thinking it was one of those pointless notifications. Mornings have become strange lately. Not bad. Just… weighted. Like my thoughts wake up before I do, already halfway through conversations I haven’t finished having yet. I turn onto my side stare at the wall for a second longer than necessary. Then i finally grabbed my phone out of frustration from the buzzing sound, blinking my eyes open to take a glance at the screen, The name there sharpens my focus instantly. Julian Cross That alone is enough to push the rest of sleep away. I swipe open the message. HEY. I’ve been wanting to ask, but do you mind if we hang out this weekend? Maybe after work on Friday… or Saturday. I’d really love to tell you something. I sit up. The room is quiet, gray light seeping through the curtains. too early for this kind of decision-making
I didn’t realize how far I’d walked until my feet started to ache. At first, I thought it was just adrenaline leaking out of me in slow drips, the way it always did after something overwhelming—an exam, a confrontation, a moment that demanded too much feeling. But this wasn’t that. This ache was
Arabella's pov>> >>> weekends --- The air had softened by seven. Not warm—just forgiving. The kind of evening that made the city feel briefly merciful, like it might let you exist without asking for too much in return. Arabella hadn’t planned to go anywhere. She’d stood by the door fo
Lucien’s POV: ——— I don’t usually question myself. That has always been one of my defining advantages—clarity. Decisions come easily when you understand who you are, what you want, and what you will never allow. I’ve built entire systems—companies, hierarchies, lives—on that certai
Monday mornings always felt heavier than they had any right to be. The morning hit Aragon Enterprises with the usual operational velocity: inboxes exploding, printers choking on color jobs, and department heads moving with the kind of urgency that suggested someone, somewhere, had already messed







