The morning light filtered through the mall's broken skylights in thin, dusty beams, painting golden stripes across the sleeping settlement. Tony woke with a start, heart racing as if his dreams had been full of crashing symphonies and silent voids. He sat up on his mat, blinking against the brightness, and realized the air felt different—crisper, almost humming with possibility. The broken trombone pieces lay beside him like loyal soldiers, and when he touched the cold brass, a soft vibration ran up his arm, warm and welcoming.
Lila was already awake, crouched by their tiny stove, boiling water for instant coffee scavenged from some long-forgotten warehouse. She looked over her shoulder, eyes still carrying yesterday's mix of awe and worry. "You slept like the dead. Or like someone who just became a god. Which one is it?" Tony rubbed his face, grinning despite the lingering ache in his bones. "Both, probably. My head feels like a radio stuck between stations." He stretched, joints popping, and let out a small, testing hum. The coffee pot rattled gently on the stove, then settled as if apologizing for making noise. Lila poured two mugs, handed him one, and sat cross-legged in front of him. "We need to talk about what this means. Not just the power. The titles. Everyone who woke up strong got one. I got Aqua of the Sea. You got… something bigger. But you need to understand how the rest of the world works now." Tony sipped the bitter coffee, warmth spreading through his chest. "Hit me. I'm ready." She took a deep breath, voice dropping low so no one passing their curtain could overhear. "After The Resonance, the system didn't give everyone the same thing. Most people got nothing. Their souls shattered. The ones who survived but stayed weak? They got scraps—little tricks like always knowing which way is north or making plants grow a bit faster. Useless in a fight, but enough to keep them alive." Tony nodded slowly. He'd seen those people every day—quiet, careful, always on the edges of the settlement. "Then came the strong ones," Lila continued, eyes distant as if remembering her own awakening. "S-Class. The system calls them Titles. Not just powers. Titles. Like you're claiming a piece of reality itself. Only one person can have each one. No duplicates. The moment someone gets it, anyone else trying for the same concept gets blocked or downgraded." She lifted her hand. A thin stream of water rose from her mug, twisting into a perfect spiral before sinking back down. "Aqua of the Sea. I can command every drop on the planet if I push hard enough. Tides, rain, rivers, even the water in someone's blood. But it costs me. Soul Harmony drains fast if I overdo it. Push too far and the backlash hits—headaches, nosebleeds, sometimes worse." Tony stared at the water, then at her. "So there's only one Aqua of the Sea in the whole world?" "Only one," she confirmed. "And the system makes sure of it. That's why S-Class holders are so rare. And so dangerous. We become targets. Warlords want us. Raiders want to kill us. Cults want to silence us." She leaned closer, voice dropping even lower. "There are others out there. Big ones. Bale of Fire—he's a walking volcano, burns through anything, even magic shields. Mistress of Seduction—she can make you love her while you hand over your weapon. Whisperer of Winds—Elias, the scout we met once—he hears everything on the breeze, slices with invisible blades. Titan of Earth—he reshapes mountains like clay. Veil of Shadows—she disappears into darkness and chokes you with it. Stormcaller—lightning follows her like a puppy. Oracle of Visions—she sees futures, but it costs her sight for days. And more. Way more. Each one is the absolute best at their thing. No competition." Tony whistled softly, the sound coming out richer than he expected, making the mug in his hand vibrate gently. "And then there's me. X-Class. God of Songs and Music. Which means…" "Which means you're not just the best," Lila finished, eyes wide. "You're the only one. Ever. All sound. All rhythm. All vibration. The system called you God because there's no higher step. Ten times stronger than any S-Class, at least on paper. But you're still learning. Still raw. And if the wrong person finds out too soon…" Tony finished for her. "They'll come for me. Hard." She nodded, fierce pride and fiercer fear warring on her face. "That's why we stay quiet. You practice in secret. Small stuff. No big shows. Not yet. We move careful, like we always have. But when the time comes—and it will—you'll show them what a god can really do." Tony looked at the trombone pieces, then lifted them like a toast. "To bad ideas and broken instruments." Lila clinked her mug against the brass. "To the most ridiculous god the world's ever seen." Outside their curtain, the settlement stirred—kids calling, adults starting the day's work, the fragile normalcy holding on by threads. But inside, two siblings shared a secret that could reshape everything. Tony let out one quiet note, just for himself. The air shimmered. The lantern swayed in perfect time. And somewhere far away, in the shadows of ruined cities, the God of Silence felt the first faint tremor of sound he could not touch. He hated it already.Latest Chapter
cleaning jobs
Tony woke up to the smell of cinnamon and the sound of soft giggles floating through the air like bubbles. His eyes cracked open slowly, blurry from sleep, and the first thing he saw was pink smoke curling around the tent poles like playful ribbons. Seraphina was everywhere at once. One second she was dusting the high beams with a feather duster that definitely wasn't there last night, the next she popped out of a puff of smoke right beside a table and rearranged the chairs with a cheerful hum. Another puff, and she was sweeping sawdust into neat little piles, tail swishing happily behind her. The whole circus tent sparkled like someone had turned on fairy lights in every corner.He sat up on his sleeping mat, rubbing his eyes. Lila was already awake, sitting cross-legged with her arms folded, watching Seraphina with narrowed eyes. Elias leaned against a pole nearby, wind swirling lazily around his fingers, face unreadable but suspicious.Seraphina noticed Tony stirring and teleported
under the big top
The circus tent felt almost too cozy by morning, sunlight sneaking through the patched canvas in warm golden stripes across the sawdust floor. Tony woke up to the sound of Seraphina humming softly somewhere far off, the scent of fresh tea drifting on the air like a promise. He sat up slowly, rubbing sleep from his eyes, and noticed Lila already packing her gear with quick, practiced movements. Elias stood near the entrance flap, arms crossed, wind swirling lazily around his boots as he watched the outside world.Tony stretched, joints popping. "Morning already?"Lila glanced over, giving him a small smile. "You slept like a rock. Seraphina's tea must have magic in it.""Or she just slipped something in," Elias muttered, half-joking, half-serious. His eyes stayed on the flap. "We should move soon. This place is too loud for my liking."Seraphina appeared then, pink hair tied back in a messy bun, apron dusted with flour, carrying a tray of steaming bread and eggs. "Too loud? Darling, th
under the big top
The big top's entrance flap parted with a soft rustle, and Tony stepped inside first, heart thumping like a drum in his chest. The inside glowed with string lights draped like spiderwebs, casting warm yellow spots over sawdust floors and faded posters of acrobats who probably never saw the end of the world. Tables ringed the center ring, piled with fresh bread, canned fruits, and even some roasted meat that smelled like heaven after days of dry rations. About thirty people and creatures milled around—humans with tired smiles, a few mutants on leashes that looked more like pets than guards, all chatting and laughing as if the apocalypse was just a bad dream.Seraphina Lune waited in the center, pink hair shining under the lights, her smile wide and genuine now, no smoke or tricks in sight. She clapped her hands together once, and the chatter died down. "Welcome, darlings! Come in, sit down. You look like you've walked through hell and back. Let me fix that."She waved them to a table,
Pink smoke and bad ideas
The three of them had been walking since the ice rain, legs heavy but spirits strangely light, when the road decided to play a trick. One minute they were passing rusted billboards promising long-gone roller coasters, the next minute a sagging big top rose out of the dark like a drunk uncle who refused to leave the party. The circus tent was battered, red-and-white stripes faded to pink-and-dirt, poles leaning like tired soldiers. Fairy lights still blinked in weak yellow pulses along the entrance arch, powered by who-knows-what stubborn generator. Music—scratchy calliope notes—floated out, cheerful and wrong, like laughter at a funeral.Tony stopped first. "That's… a circus."Lila tilted her head. "In the middle of nowhere. After the world ended. Sure. Why not."Elias's breeze tightened around them. "Patrols," he murmured. "And they're not normal dogs."They crept closer. Two shapes padded along the perimeter fence—huge, too huge. German shepherds maybe, once. Now their fur grew in p
Rain of ice
The train wreck lay quiet now, the six wolf-mutants scattered like broken toys across the gravel. Tony's heart still hammered from the fight, but the new creature—the one that used to be human—stood tall in the moonlight, claws flexing, second mouth hissing on its throat. The pack circled it, growling low, welcoming their newest member.Lila stepped forward. "Stay back," she said, voice calm but iron-hard.Tony and Elias moved behind her without a word. The air around Lila began to change. It grew colder, sharper. Tiny beads of moisture lifted from the grass, from the puddles, from the very breath they exhaled. The humidity in the night air thickened, then pulled toward her like iron to a magnet. She raised both hands, fingers spread, and the water answered.It came fast.Droplets from every direction rushed in, spinning into a tight, swirling sphere above her palms. The sphere grew, darkening, until it was the size of a basketball, then a beach ball, then bigger still. The air itself
Train wreck
The road had curved away from the highway hours ago, dipping into what used to be a small rail yard. Twisted tracks snaked through tall grass and broken gravel, leading to a long line of rusted train cars that looked like a giant metal snake someone had chopped into pieces. One engine lay on its side, half-buried in dirt, its front smashed open like a cracked egg. The cars behind it tilted at strange angles, windows gone, roofs peeled back by time and weather. Vines crawled over everything, thick and dark green, turning the whole wreck into a green-and-rust jungle under the moonlight.Tony walked slower here, eyes wide, taking it all in. The air smelled wet and sour, like old metal mixed with rotting leaves. Crickets chirped in the grass, but not many—too quiet for a place this overgrown. Lila stayed close on his left, water skin already uncapped, a thin stream ready to whip out if needed. Elias walked on the right, breeze always moving around him, listening to things the rest of them
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