Penny stood before the pedestal, the mask in one hand and the red silk in the other. There were no prompts, no tooltips, no glowing indicators to guide her. Just the silence of the grand hall and the whispering pull of possibility.
She glanced around once more, taking in the sheer scale of the room. This wasn’t a place for fighters or adventurers. It was for artists. For makers. And in this mont, the only tool she had was herself.
"I guess this is the part where I start designing," she murmured.
The mask was blank, perfectly smooth, and yet sohow it felt like it was watching her. Or maybe it was waiting for her to choose.
Slowly, Penny raised the silk and began to experint. She draped it over the mask, and the fabric shifted, flowing into shapes and colors under her touch. Her fingers moved with instinct born from years of crafting and creating. She wrapped, folded, pinched, and tied, and the red silk responded like it was alive.
With each change, the mask began to shift as well. Subtle lines erged, forming cheekbones, brows, lips. A face that looked like it was ethereal, dangerous and seductive all at the sa ti.
She pulled away, breathing shallowly. A mask it may be but under her hands, the featureless mask had now taken on an indelible charm
Penny stepped back, eyes tracing the mask’s delicate curves. The red silk seed to have breathed life into the cold surface, weaving shadows and light into sothing fragile and fierce. She felt a strange mixture of satisfaction and hesitation, as if she had opened a door but wasn’t sure what waited on the other side.
As she stared at the mask, a second pedestal slowly rose up beside the first, this one displaying a worn sketchbook, a quill and ink. As she reached for them, the world around her shimred again.
The castle grew quieter. The light dimd slightly, almost like it was leaning in to watch her.
Penny flipped open the sketchbook. The pages were old, stained, and blank. Her quill hovered over the first page.
She didn’t hesitate.
She began to draw.
The first lines were jagged, impatient. But with each stroke, her breathing slowed. Her lines found rhythm. She sketched a pair of gloves embedded with tools.
She moved to a corset-style vest that had pouches for materials. A layered skirt, part functional, part flowing.
Boots that clicked on marble, heels made of crystal and steel. A silhouette that was sharp, confident, and undeniably her own.
As she drew, the lines shimred faintly. The design glowed with the sa muted light as the candles above.
When she finished, the sketchbook closed itself, and the mask on the pedestal pulsed once before dissolving into strands of red light.
"Very good~!"
A low voice echoed out from the darkness, a sultry echo of a voice that seed to be enamored with sothing.
Penny spun around, heart racing, but saw no one.
The room remained still, yet the presence behind the voice was undeniable. It wasn’t threatening. It was intrigued. Watching. Judging. Not with malice, but with expectation.
She turned back to the pedestals just as a third one rose from the floor.
This one was smaller than the others. Its surface was lined with velvet, and upon it rested an array of tools. Not weapons in the traditional sense, but the kind that belonged in a studio or a workshop.
There were shears with handles shaped like thorns, a needle the length of her palm glinting with a faint silver edge, a small hamr made of glass and stone.
Beside them sat a paintbrush, its handle carved with floral patterns, and a pair of scissors shaped like a bird’s beak.
Penny stepped forward slowly. Her fingers hovered above the tools.
She didn’t know what she was supposed to choose. No instructions, no criteria. Just instinct.
Her hand brushed against the scissors. Too sharp. Too clean.
The hamr? Too crude.
The brush? Beautiful, but sothing inside her whispered not yet.
Her fingers paused above the needle.
It was delicate but strong, impossibly well-balanced. Her hand closed around it before she could second-guess herself. The weight of it was perfect. It felt like it belonged.
The mont she lifted it from the pedestal, a rush of warm air filled the room, carrying the faint scent of roses and ink. Sowhere behind her, a soft chi echoed as if a lock had been undone.
The three pedestals pulsed once and then faded, their shapes lting back into the floor as if they had never existed. In their place a staircase leading down into darkness appeared.
Penny stared at the newly revealed staircase, its velvet-lined steps descending into a suspiciously dramatic darkness.
"Right. Creepy staircase leading into the unknown," she muttered. "Because that’s never how people die in horror movies."
She glanced over her shoulder, half-expecting soone to agree with her. The room remained silent.
The sll of roses still lingered, but now it had a slightly spicy note to it, like cinnamon just starting to burn.
With a sigh, she tightened her grip on the needle.
"Guess I’m the idiot who goes down anyway."
She took her first step down the velvet-lined staircase, the soft fabric muffling her movents like the place itself was trying to swallow every sound.
Each step she took was accompanied by a hush, the kind of silence that made your ears strain for sothing, anything.
The darkness ahead wasn’t absolute. It shimred faintly with a deep red hue, like light filtering through stained glass.
Shadows clung to the walls, dancing just outside her reach, moving like they had minds of their own.
The further she went, the more the air changed. It felt warr now, denser, like the air inside a sealed atelier filled with fabric, dye, and possibility.
The staircase curved gently, leading her deeper, until it finally opened into a new chamber.
The new chamber was circular, high-ceilinged and hushed like the inside of a cathedral. A warm red glow filled the space, cast by floating lanterns that drifted lazily through the air.
Their light flickered like candle flas, painting shadows across the etched marble floor in looping floral patterns.
At the center of the room sat a woman in a tall-backed chair, her legs crossed, her posture relaxed but deliberate. She was reading the very sa sketchbook Penny had been working in only monts before.
Penny froze.
The woman’s face was unmistakable. Every curve, every delicate angle, every line of expression matched the mask Penny had shaped by hand.
From the high cheekbones to the faintly smirking lips, it was her creation. Down to the crimson silk that clothed her, flowing and sharp in perfect balance, exactly like the outfit Penny had drawn.
The woman looked up from the book and smiled as if she’d been expecting her.
"You’ve taken your ti," she said, her voice rich and smooth like red wine.
Penny took a cautious step forward. "That face... it’s mine. I made it. I carved it onto a mask."
The woman arched a brow with polite amusent. "Have you now?"
"Yes," Penny said, her voice firr. "The mask. The sketch. You look exactly like them."
The woman closed the sketchbook with a quiet snap and rested her hands on the armrests.
"I suppose it’s only natural that you think that. But I assure you, my face has always been like this."
Penny stared, heart fluttering. "You’re telling that’s a coincidence?"
"No," the woman replied, rising to her feet in a single, fluid motion.
"I’m telling you that when you create from instinct, you’re not just building sothing new. You’re uncovering sothing old. Sothing that’s been waiting."
She stepped down from the dais and walked toward Penny, her heels clicking lightly against the marble. The glow of the lanterns pooled in the folds of her gown, casting soft shadows that seed to flicker with every step.
Penny didn’t move. Her fingers tightened around the needle in her hand.
"You didn’t invent my face," the woman said gently. "You rembered it."
There was no malice in her tone. No accusation. Just certainty, as if this truth had been carved into stone long before Penny had ever entered the castle.
"What are you?" Penny asked, her voice barely above a whisper.
The woman stopped a few feet away and tilted her head slightly, the sa way the mask had once done in her hands.
"Oh I am but rely a creator. Just like you and if you wish it. You can beco just like and maybe with ti, sothing far greater. The choice is yours."
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