The cathedral was silent, save for the soft echo of boots clicking against its cold, ancient stone floor. Scarlet light flooded in through stained glass windows high above, depicting twisted, almost heretical saints caught in moments of agony or ecstasy. The air was thick with incense, its sweet, smoky tendrils curling in the crimson light. And there she stood at the altar—an enigma wrapped in power, rebellion, and sin.
Her outfit was striking. A nun-like ensemble of glossy black and white materials clung to her slender form, interrupted by intricate strapping details that appeared both functional and ceremonial. The high collar framed her pale, angular face, emphasizing her otherworldly red hair, which was braided into an elaborate crown that seemed to defy gravity. She radiated confidence, a dangerous kind that drew people in while promising ruin. Her boots, thigh-high and polished to a mirror-like sheen, caught the bloody hues of the cathedral’s light, reflecting them like an unholy halo.
But this wasn’t a place for ordinary worship. The cathedral loomed more like a fortress, its massive gothic arches reaching toward a sky that was forever twilight. Beyond its walls, the city roared in chaos, a sprawling, dystopian black mirror of Earth with towers that shimmered like barbed obsidian spires piercing the heavens.
The woman’s name was Seraphine, though few dared speak it. A ghost. An assassin. A whisper shared amongst the powerful who feared their sins had finally summoned judgment. Yet, tonight, she wasn’t here to kill. No, her mission was far more elemental, its stakes far higher than mortal vengeance.
Behind her, on the cold stone floor, was a prisoner. He was bound with glowing, serpentine chains that writhed like living things, as if they resented his every breath. He groaned, trying to lift his head, revealing a face that had once been handsome but was now marked by scars and time. His tattered clothing hinted at wealth—brocade silks reduced to rags—but even in his vulnerability, his emerald eyes blazed with defiance.
“Do you know why you’re here, Alric?” Seraphine spoke, her voice low, melodic, and piercing in its clarity.
He coughed, blood staining his split lip, but he still managed to smirk. “A confession, Sister? I didn’t think you’d stoop to ecclesiastical theatrics.” His voice was deep, gravelly, with the edge of a man who’d faced death before and laughed in its face.
In response, she knelt beside him, her fingers brushing against the jagged symbol burned into the floor where he was bound—it looked ancient, arcane, a language lost even to the gods. Her amber eyes, glowing faintly in the dim light, fixed him with an intensity that made his bravado falter. “This isn’t theater. This is truth,” she whispered. Her lips curved into a soft smile, the kind a snake might offer before a strike. “And you’re going to give it to me.”
He flinched as the chains tightened around him, their light intensifying. His voice cracked as he spat, “I’ll give you nothing.”
Flashback:
Alric had once been a prince—the golden child of a kingdom that spanned half a continent. But power had bloated his heart, twisting his desire for conquest into something uncontrollable. His court wizards had warned him, begged him not to summon “the Unmaker,” the eldritch being whose presence could rip the threads of reality. He hadn’t listened. His ambition towered higher than his father’s throne, and that was his undoing. Now his kingdom was dust, its people wraiths, its lands cursed, all under the blood sky left in the Unmaker’s wake.
And Seraphine? She had been part of the Order—the shadowed arm of the Sisterhood of White Flame, sworn to contain the Unmaker. It had taken years, more lives than she cared to count, and all the faith she had left to imprison it. But the chains couldn’t hold forever. Not without him. Not without the truth.
Present:
“The seal weakens, Alric. Every minute you cling to your lies, the world draws closer to annihilation,” Seraphine said, her tone like a blade drawn across silk.
He stared at her, his silence heavy with agony and pride. Finally, he growled, his voice raw, “And what happens if I tell you? Do I die clean? Or do I just fade like the rest of the damned?”
She leaned closer, her breath warm against his ear. “No. You’ll live. But only long enough to know you’ve saved the world you condemned. Isn’t that what you’ve always wanted? To be remembered?”
The chains pulsed again, golden light throwing his distorted shadow against the cathedral walls. Slowly, painfully, his resolve cracked. “Fine,” he whispered hoarsely. “I’ll tell you.”
A soft wind rose within the cathedral, swirling the incense smoke until it spiraled upward like a prayer. Seraphine smiled, but the victory did not touch her eyes. For in her line of work, the end was never truly the end. And as she listened to Alric’s confession, the first dark ripples of what was to come already clawed at the edge of her mind.
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: Makima as a Nun in Chainsaw Man-Inspired Cosplay: Bold Fashion Meets Gothic Allure
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