He is fire. She is morning light through smoke. And somehow, together, they burn without turning to ash. Mattheo Riddle has a reputation that precedes him—a serpent with storm-filled eyes and fists that speak before his mouth does. No one dares cross him twice. Professors have given up lecturing; even Snape watches him warily when he’s in one of his moods. He doesn’t talk much, doesn’t laugh, doesn’t offer anyone more than a glare sharper than a blade. In Slytherin’s dim common room light, he’s the embodiment of controlled violence—until Y/n walks in.
Long before Yokohama’s gifted walked the streets, the world was called Teyvat — a land shaped by gods, visions, and the elemental pulse of creation itself. But Teyvat fell, and its name vanished with time. The oceans swallowed sacred cities, legends turned to dust, and history began anew under another name: Earth. Only one soul remembers. Y/n, long ago known as Lumine, lives hidden in a mansion deep in the forests outside Yokohama, surrounded by echoes of a world no one else remembers. Beneath her home lies a vast, secret library preserving what remains of Teyvat — journals, manuals, half-faded cookbooks, and letters written in a language the world has long forgotten. Every word is a memorial to those she loved and lost — including her brother. Centuries later, she meets Kenji Miyazawa, a boy chasing after a cow who stumbles into her hidden garden — and quietly into her long-broken heart. He is the only one who knows of her existence, though he has no idea she once walked among gods. Now, as Abilities rise and the world begins to echo faintly with Teyvat’s lost powers, Y/n must decide whether to remain a ghost of the past or step once more into the story of humankind’s second chance.
Elowen is all soft green silk, gold-threaded leaves, and the kind of grace that makes even the old palace roses seem to lean closer. Caelan is all dark velvet, silver embroidery, and restrained tenderness, the sort of prince who looks composed until he’s near her. In the Kingdom of Thalorwyn, Prince Caelan has spent years pretending that duty is enough, and Lady Elowen has spent just as long pretending she doesn’t notice the way he always finds her in a crowd. But when the court begins pressuring him toward an arranged engagement, the careful balance between them starts to crack.
“They say if a writer loves you, you never die. So let me offer you immortality. I’d hide you within my pages where I’m the only one who can read you.” (Spinoff of The Five Princesses by @cicil. OG is really good, so check it out 😊)
Long before Yokohama’s gifted walked the streets, the world was called Teyvat — a land shaped by gods, visions, and the elemental pulse of creation itself. But Teyvat fell, and its name vanished with time. The oceans swallowed sacred cities, legends turned to dust, and history began anew under another name: Earth. Only one soul remembers. Y/n, long ago known as Lumine, lives hidden in a mansion deep in the forests outside Yokohama, surrounded by echoes of a world no one else remembers. Beneath her home lies a vast, secret library preserving what remains of Teyvat — journals, manuals, half-faded cookbooks, and letters written in a language the world has long forgotten. Every word is a memorial to those she loved and lost — including her brother. Centuries later, she meets Kenji Miyazawa, a boy chasing after a cow who stumbles into her hidden garden — and quietly into her long-broken heart. He is the only one who knows of her existence, though he has no idea she once walked among gods. Now, as Abilities rise and the world begins to echo faintly with Teyvat’s lost powers, Y/n must decide whether to remain a ghost of the past or step once more into the story of humankind’s second chance.
Taiga Hoshibami is the kind of character who walks into a scene like he owns it, then immediately proves he’s willing to burn it down if it amuses him. He is the captain of Sinostra, a third-year at Darkwick Academy, and the owner of the house’s casino, which fits his mix of charisma, greed, recklessness, and raw force perfectly.
Alan Mido has three rules when it comes to you - Rule one: Never let her face danger alone. Rule two: Shield her power's limits. Rule three: Affection through action more than words.
Song by Rose Betts. Her: “My mother says I have Irish eyes Irish eyes, Irish eyes My mother says I have Irish eyes They go ever so blue under stormy skies But they're never so blue as when I let them cry” Him: “My father says I have English hair English hair, English hair Brown like the bark of an oak somewhere Like the bed of a lake where the hemlock grows Like the thorn in the stem of an English rose”
Jin Kamurai is the kind of character who feels imposing the moment he appears: a third-year, Frostheim’s captain, heir to a powerful family, and someone who carries himself with polished confidence even when he’s being rude. He tends to project aloofness and authority, often speaking in a blunt, profane way, but that sharp exterior covers a highly capable, intelligent, and surprisingly considerate person who prefers control, solitude, and efficiency.