Superstite + Invite Only
When she had received word of the war, the whispers circulating through her mind, she had known the chances of her walking out alive were slim to none. It had nothing to do with the target painted on her back, or the fact that the wonderful Tytonidae had returned. It was simply a matter of time. She had managed to survive this long without turning to ash, and so, she knew that the seconds were ticking by and fate would intervene as it always did. So, when she found herself in the vast nothing, she could only laugh, shaking her head.
She wasn’t angry, she wasn’t sad.
In fact, she was happy.
So happy, that when she had looked up from arming her trap, her finger testing the strength of the dart, she only smiled when she saw the man she dubbed ‘Neanderthal’ barreling towards her. The look she had cast him was filled with pure amusement, and she took her time standing to her feet, gun dangling between blood-soaked fingers. Applying pressure to the trigger, she could only laugh when her shot missed, that laugh the last thing he’d hear from her as his bullet pierced her skull, sending her spiraling into darkness. He’d won nothing in that moment in taking a kill he’d done absolutely no work for, though she was certain he’d find satisfaction in her death.
After all, he’d had a hard-on for her for what felt like years now.
Shaking her head, she held her hand out in front of her, watching the way the strange, ethereal form shimmered in the shadows. Despite her death, she hadn’t lost. It was impossible for her to lose in this scenario. She had gone into the war knowing she’d die. She had gone in knowing that she truly didn’t care what side won. Oh, she would have had a lot more fun dealing with the chaos versus the order, but she could see the bigger picture. Both options had something to offer, something to work with. It was only the narrow-minded that struggled with change, and that wasn’t an ailment she suffered.
Humming quietly to ease the silence, she felt her lips twitch as she caught rare glimpses of the outside world through the fade portals. Her sire had told her stories of this place, preparing her for the pressing silence, for the lack of emotion, of being devoid of light. It wasn’t as difficult as she thought it might have been, but she couldn’t help but to worry about Luca. He had been near her when she fell, and she knew that he wouldn’t be far behind. If his sire had been anyone but Every, she would have been rushing through the shadows to find him, but she knew that the woman would have filled him in. Still, that didn’t ease the worry, and she swept her gaze lazily across her surroundings until she caught sight of another shimmering form, this one muscular - and familiar.
Luca.
“How are you holding up, doll?”
Her voice was quiet, and though she was focused on him, she had also opened herself to see through her thrall’s eyes as the woman slipped in through the hospital doors in search of Sullivan.