The clang of iron echoed through the towering spires of Atlantis, the once-thriving city now submerged beneath leagues of turbulent ocean. The water shimmered in shades of emerald and sapphire as bioluminescent marine life darted like fleeting stars across a velvet sky. A figure—sleek and contained like the eye of a storm—descended into the grand hall of collapsed columns and coral-encrusted masonry, her presence demanding attention even in a place long forgotten by time.
Her vivid green hair, glowing like kelp illuminated by sunlight, trailed behind her in tendrils. Her outfit, an elegant weave of obsidian-black scales meticulously layered to reflect light, clung to her form to suggest both power and practicality. Thin threads of bioluminescent material stitched into the seams of her form-fitting top and shorts glimmered faintly, akin to veins pulsing with energy. Armor in this age of the deep wasn’t forged in fire—it was grown. Her black boots, reinforced with iridescent plates of polished seapearl, made no sound against the salt-encrusted floor as she moved forward with determination.
The throne before her, carved from crystalized magma and rimmed with barnacles, loomed over an assembly of silent stone statues resembling former Atlantean rulers. It was clear they had been petrified mid-sentence, expressions of shock and betrayal etched into their countenances. Above them floated orbs of light, their illumination faintly throbbing like dying hearts. The air tasted of salt, ruin, and something far older—something watching.
“You’re late,” rasped a voice, watery and ancient, from the shadows. A figure stepped forward, cloaked in a billowing robe of tangled seaweed. His gaunt frame bent like driftwood under pressure, yet his one remaining eye, glowing with pale blue luminance, held fierce intelligence.
“And you, Orann, are living on borrowed time,” she replied, her voice cutting through the water like a dagger through flesh. Her eyes, glowing green to match her hair, scanned the room with barely contained contempt. “The deep knows what you’ve done. I didn’t come here to argue.”
“No,” Orann murmured, chuckling dryly as he leaned heavily on a staff of spiraled seacarbon. “You’ve come to seal your fate. The throne is a trap, child. It always was. It calls to my kind, to your kind, promising godhood and giving madness.” He cast a bony hand toward the statues around them. “Do you think I turned them to stone? No, no. They did it to themselves.”
“Enough,” she said, tightening her gloved fingers as the faint luminescence around her suit surged. Cracks of kinetic green energy raced up her arms, fracturing the water around her like lightning. “Whatever power that throne holds, I will take it. I refuse to let Atlantis rot beneath the mistakes of your generation.”
Orann’s lips twisted into an expression somewhere between a grin and a sneer. “Ah, the arrogance of the Bloomed. You call yourselves heirs to Atlantis, but you are merely remnants, strands of genetic code stitched into some grotesque experiment. You burn too brightly, and bright flames always—”
He never finished the sentence. With a flick of her wrist, a shockwave surged outward, slamming him against the stone wall. Sediment spiraled into the water, creating a murky haze. The room grew silent except for the drumbeat of her heart and the steady hum of the energy that now pulsed faster through her veins. As she ascended the dais, she felt the throne pull at her—not with promises of power, but with whispers of a thousand voices. It sang of water and war, of silt-encrusted empires and the eternal darkness above the ocean’s ceiling.
As she lowered herself into the throne, her fingers tightened around its armrests. For a moment, the world fell utterly silent. Then a voice—multitudes joined as one—spoke directly into her mind.
“Tell us, successor. Do you command the deep? Or do you succumb to it?”
A green light burst outward, flooding the chamber, illuminating Orann’s lifeless form and the crumbled remains of Atlantis. She screamed—not in pain, but in defiance. Her glowing hair turned to fire against the desolation. Through sheer will, she bent the overwhelming tide of the voices and became something more: not just an heir to the throne but its warden, the shepherd of Atlantis’s despair and its hope.
When the light faded, the room was still. In its center sat the Warden of the Deep, her green hair glowing faintly in the dimness. Her once minimalistic outfit had transformed, now adorned with intricate atlantean glyphs of power etched into her armor’s surface. The seas themselves quieted in her presence, as though even the tides obeyed her command.
But the question lingered, aching like an open wound: Was she now their savior—or their doom?
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: Cosplay Inspiration with a Minimalist Black Outfit and Vibrant Green Wig
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