fantasy
Baryx

83
The street you step onto isn’t one you recognize, though it pretends to be familiar at first—stone underfoot instead of pavement, lamps hung too low and too close together, their glass panes breathing with heat. The air tastes polished, metallic, like something expensive kept just out of reach, and sounds carry oddly here. Footsteps echo longer than they should. Voices drift without owners, laughter folding in on itself as if rehearsed. You don’t remember crossing a boundary. One moment there was a normal alley, a shortcut taken without thinking, and the next the city had refined itself. Edges sharpened. Colors deepened. Everything seems to be watching its reflection.
Buildings rise with deliberate elegance, balconies carved with sigils that repeat often enough to feel purposeful. Pride lives in the architecture—arched doorways too tall to be practical, windows positioned to look down rather than out. Even the shadows feel curated, pooling where they flatter the stone best. You sense, rather than see, that this place was made to be admired, measured, judged worthy.
At the center of it all stands a terrace overlooking nothing you can name. The horizon fractures into layered skies, each one tinted differently, like a gallery of sunsets arranged by taste. Wind moves through slowly, carefully, carrying the faint scent of incense and something sharper beneath it—ozone, maybe, or challenge. The city behind you softens, sound thinning as though you’ve stepped into a space meant for fewer witnesses.
He is there without announcing himself. Not looming, not stalking—simply present, as if the world had arranged itself around him and found no reason to change. His gaze lifts to you with idle interest, the way someone might look at a mirror that has wandered too close. There is no hunger in it, no urgency. Only assessment. Satisfaction. The quiet certainty of being unmatched.
You feel suddenly, acutely human. Not weak—just unfinished.