They arrived in silence.
The fog was thicker here.
Not natural fog — not the sort that collected in low places on cold evenings and lifted by noon.
This was denser, more deliberate, with a heavy, almost wet quality, like breath trapped in the air. It clung to the skin, to the throat, to the edges of vision, making distance feel uncertain and shapes at the edge of sight seem briefly alive.
The street had widened into a small clearing that looked less like part of a village and more like the heart of sothing older.
The buildings around them were dark and close together, their walls marked with symbols painted in ash, chalk, and sothing darker than either.
Thin strips of cloth hung from windows and beams, each one tied with careful knots. Charms dangled from doorfras. So were made of bone. So wood. So looked like they had been stitched from scraps of prayer and desperation.
What they found stopped them both.
A ritual space.
Large. Circular. Careful beyond reason.
Every surface had been touched by intention — the ground, the walls of the surrounding buildings, the low stone posts that ringed the clearing.
Even the air above it seed dense with the weight of repeated ceremony.
Symbols were painted in layered arcs, so faded by weather, others fresh and black as wet ink. Clay bowls burned with dark herbs, sending up thick smoke that curled in serpentine ribbons.
Dozens of candles flickered in a wind Celestia could not feel on her skin, their flas shivering as though the space itself breathed.
Animal blood traced lines across the ground in intricate patterns, converging at the center in a design that resembled both a star and an eye, depending on how it was seen.
The scent was strong here. tallic. Bitter. Earthy. Sacred in the oldest, most unsettling sense.
And at the center—
An elderly woman.
She sat cross-legged in the middle of the ritual circle, hands resting on her knees, eyes closed. Her stillness was so complete it almost seed she had been carved there instead of placed.
Old. Ancient, almost.
The kind of face that had accumulated so many years it had stopped looking aged and started looking tiless. Her white hair was braided and pinned with bone combs. Dark robes layered over her thin fra with the solemn weight of ceremonial cloth.
She did not react to their arrival.
Not imdiately.
The candles did not flare. The smoke did not scatter. She remained perfectly motionless, as though she had already known they would co and had simply been waiting for the exact mont.
Then — slowly, like sothing surfacing from very deep water — her eyes opened.
Pale. Clear.
The eyes of soone who had spent so long looking beyond the veil that ordinary sight had beco almost unnecessary.
They moved first to Drazeil.
Assessed him.
Moved on.
Then they found Celestia.
And everything in the old woman’s expression changed.
Not with fear.
Not with the terror the villagers had shown.
But with sothing else entirely.
Sothing that had been waiting.
Patient. Certain. Old enough to have beco faith.
The elder unfolded from her sitting position with the slow grace of soone whose body required patience now, but whose spirit rembered when it had none.
She rose to her feet, and for a mont the shadows from the candles stretched long behind her like the remnants of wings.
Then she bowed.
Deeply.
Fully.
The specific bow of soone acknowledging sothing they considered significantly above themselves.
"You have finally arrived," she said.
Her voice was quiet, but it carried through the ritual space as if the fog itself were helping it travel.
"The Moon Seraph."
The words settled heavily in the air.
Celestia blinked.
Drazeil made a sound beside her — low, thoughtful, almost inaudible. His attention sharpened slightly as he studied the woman.
So it communicated without words.
She is more than simply a Celestial being.
Celestia’s brows drew together.
"Huh?" she said. "Do you know ?"
The elder straightened slowly from her bow and looked at her with those pale, clear eyes.
"Your Highness," she said. "Please. Save us from the Quiet Taking."
Celestia repeated the title under her breath, as though testing its shape.
"Your Highness..."
It sounded strange.
But not unfamiliar.
The elder’s expression did not soften, but sothing painful moved behind her eyes.
"I know you well," she said. "From when you still walked among the Celestial beings in your full form. Before—"
She stopped.
The pause was small.
But it changed everything.
"Before what?" Celestia asked.
The elder looked away briefly, and in that mont the weight of withheld knowledge beca almost physical in the air.
"Who was I?" Celestia asked again, quieter now. "In that form... what was I?"
The elder looked at her for a long mont.
Sothing crossed her face — careful, pained, like soone holding back words that wanted to spill out.
Then she lowered her head.
"You do not rember," she said softly.
"No," Celestia answered simply.
The elder exhaled slowly, as though accepting sothing heavy.
"I cannot tell you," she said. "Forgive , Your Highness. The mories must return to you on their own terms. If I speak them before you are ready to receive them—"
Her voice tightened slightly.
"It could damage what has not yet healed."
Celestia studied her quietly.
There was no panic in her expression.
Only stillness.
The kind that ca when sothing inside had shifted without permission.
"Your Highness," she said thoughtfully. "I like the title."
Drazeil turned his head slightly and looked at her.
She caught him looking and smiled faintly.
He looked away imdiately.
The elder, anwhile, watched both of them with sothing unreadable in her expression.
Not fear.
Not surprise.
Recognition.
Or perhaps concern.
"The Quiet Taking," Drazeil said suddenly, cutting cleanly through the silence.
His voice returned everything to structure.
"This is where it began. We are investigating. Tell us everything you know."
The elder looked at him.
Then at the ritual space.
Then back at him, as though deciding how much truth could safely exist in one mont.
"Investigating," she repeated slowly.
"Why are so many people investigating these days?"
Celestia frowned slightly.
"What do you an?"
The elder folded her hands neatly.
"You are not the first to co asking about the Quiet Taking recently," she said.
Drazeil’s gaze sharpened.
"Who else ca?"
The elder lowered her eyes briefly to the blood-marked ground.
"A spirit witch," she said. "She ca perhaps two weeks ago. Asked many of the sa questions."
Celestia’s expression shifted slightly.
"Did she find what she was looking for?"
"She said she was looking for a na," the elder replied. "Though I suspect she did not know it herself."
Drazeil remained silent, but the stillness in him deepened.
"She did not stay long," the elder continued. "But she took sothing with her when she left."
The candles hissed softly.
"What did she take?" Celestia asked.
The elder looked around the circle, as if the answer were written into the air itself.
"Information," she said quietly.
"About you, Your Highness."
The fog shifted.
The smoke thickened.
Sowhere beyond the clearing, a bell rang once — then stopped abruptly, as if cut off mid-breath.
Celestia’s eyes narrowed slightly.
"About specifically?"
"About the Moon Seraph," the elder corrected gently. "She seems to know you so well"
"Do you know her?" Celestia asked
"I might but I could not see her very well, but her aura felt familiar" she replied.
Celestia exhaled slowly.
"Tell us everything," she said. "From the beginning."
"About the Quiet Taking or about the Moon Seraph"
"Tell us both, we are here to investigate about how all this disappearances started and why it is becoming rampant, but now I have discovered another information about myself, I need to know sothing, even if you can’t tell all, just tell what you can about "
"Then after, you tell us how the Quiet Taking started," Drazeil added.
The elder looked at him for a long mont.
Then she sat back down in the center of the circle, folded her hands in her lap, and began.
"There was a ti," she said, her voice sinking into the smoke, "when the moon was not only watched from below."
The fog shifted at the edge of the circle.
"The Moon Seraph was not born in this realm," she continued. "Nor was she always lost."
Celestia’s breath caught slightly.
The elder’s pale eyes lifted to hers.
"She fell"
The candles all went out at once.
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