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Vassalord Rayflo X Cherry

Zone X

After the Global Reconstruction Decree, the kingdom of Hoperito ceased to be a land of freedom and compassion. Authority was seized by Yarrie, a prince believed to be cursed, who rose to power through the murder of his parents and a trail of blood and fire. Under his rule, the kingdom was transformed into a militarised fortress, divided into specialised sectors. Zone Z became a haven for the aristocracy. Zone A was assigned to the army and human experimentation. Zone Y was left for the common folk. And Zone X was turned into a dumping ground for failed experiments, mutated beings, prisoners, and the unwanted dregs of society. While the ruling class luxuriated behind steel fortresses, the children of Zone Y were relentlessly hunted, captured, and turned into tools of war. Among the few who survived, Paul witnessed his younger sister being taken during a brutal military raid. During a later pursuit, he managed to escape but found himself lost inside the infamous Zone X. There, to his shock, Paul was reunited with Emily, the sister he had presumed dead. She was no longer the frightened child he remembered, but a warrior shaped by pain and survival. Alongside other survivors in Zone X, they began to uncover hidden truths about Yarrie’s regime, ancient curses that had shaped the royal bloodline, and the dark experiments that created monsters in human skin. In the shadows of abandonment, a quiet rebellion began to stir. The story follows Paul, Emily, and an unlikely band of mutated rebels as they decide not only to endure, but to rise. Their quest to bring down Yarrie’s tyrannical rule leads them deeper into the heart of darkness, where the line between hero and monster begins to blur. As they fight to reclaim their future, they must also confront the question that haunts them all. Can freedom be won without losing who they are?
Leoooop · 438 Views

Beneath the Cherry Sky

The first time Ren saw Aoi, he was crouched beside the old vending machine outside the corner bookstore, sketching something into a tattered notebook. His blue hair shimmered faintly in the spring sun, like the sea had gifted him a crown. Ren almost walked past him. But the breeze carried a whisper of graphite on paper, the soft rustle of pages turning, and something made him stop. “You’re drawing?” Ren asked, unsure why he even said it. Aoi looked up, blinking once like he was waking from a dream. His eyes were a startling grey, like rain on glass. “…Yeah,” he said quietly. “You’re blocking my light.” Ren awkwardly stepped aside. “Sorry.” For a moment, they stared at each other. Then Aoi returned to his sketch, and Ren left, but something about that moment stayed with him — like a bookmark placed in a chapter he hadn't meant to read. Ren had moved to the seaside town of Hoshinawa after his mother passed away. He lived with his aunt above a quaint little flower shop, spent afternoons helping arrange lilies and writing poems he never let anyone read. The town was quiet, and Ren liked it that way — until he started seeing Aoi everywhere. At the bookstore. Near the cliffs. At the library where he sat in silence, scribbling in his notebook, always alone. They spoke rarely, but when they did, Aoi’s words were careful, like he measured every sentence before letting it out. He didn’t smile much — but when he did, it was faint, fragile, like a star peeking through a cloudy sky. One day, Ren found a sketch slipped into his poetry book at the library. It was a pencil drawing of the cherry tree that bloomed outside his flower shop — and beneath it, a figure that looked suspiciously like him. The next time he saw Aoi, he waited until they were both at the vending machine again. “You left this?” Ren asked, holding up the drawing. Aoi flushed, eyes darting. “Maybe.” Ren smiled. “I write poems about that tree.” “I know,” Aoi murmured. “I’ve read them. You leave the scraps behind.” A silence stretched between them — but it wasn’t uncomfortable. It felt… intimate. “I think,” Aoi said slowly, “your poems make me feel less alone.” Ren’s chest ached, soft and sudden. “I think your sketches do the same,” he whispered. And that was how it started. Over the weeks, they met more often. Exchanged words, drawings, half-written poems. They didn't need grand declarations. Their closeness grew in the quiet spaces — the brush of hands as they reached for the same book, the shared silence watching the sea, the way their shadows leaned into each other as the sun set. One day, under the blooming cherry tree, Ren turned to Aoi and said, “You make me want to write again.” Aoi looked at him, eyes gentler than ever. “Then write me something I can keep.” Ren leaned in, nervous but certain, and kissed him — soft, slow, like poetry in motion. And in that moment, the world wasn’t loud or broken. It was just them — beneath the cherry sky, finding something beautiful in each other.
Diya_Tejal · 501 Views
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