Vesper’s wrists burned under the cuffs, the Execution Tower’s wind cutting through her tattered jumpsuit like a blade. Terminus sprawled below, a tangle of cracked concrete and flickering neon, choked by the Griefmist’s metallic haze. Two years ago, she’d left Rune in the vault, his shouts swallowed by alarms as she fled. The heist was their way out—crack the bank, split the credits, escape Terminus’s hunger. But the walls collapsed, steel and stone burying her brother, and Vesper chose herself, her boots pounding pavement while his voice faded: Vesper, help. Now, the city demanded her dive, a skydive through the Drop Zone to face him in the sky’s cruel mirror.
The crowd’s jeers swelled, a thousand faces blurring in the mist, their eyes starved with hunger for her fall. You ran, Rune’s voice hissed, a shard in her skull, sharper than the tower’s rusted edge. The guards strapped her into a frayed parachute, the harness’s leather straps chewing her ribs, the buckles ice-cold against her skin. “Jump,” one snarled, his breath sour with stale rations. Vesper’s pulse thundered, her palms slick, fingers trembling as she gripped the harness. The tower’s lip was a jagged scar, the void below a churning glow of silver and red. The Griefmist, spiked with psychoactive gas, would claw into her mind, force her to see Rune, feel his pain, relive every second of her betrayal. Most divers landed mad, their minds shredded, or didn’t land at all.
She jumped, the city shrinking to a smudge, the Drop Zone’s blur swallowing her whole. The wind screamed, tearing at her jumpsuit, the chute’s straps yanking her shoulders until they ached. Her stomach lurched as she spun, the harness creaking, cords twisting like veins. The Griefmist burned her lungs, its taste pungent as decay and regret, coating her throat. Rune’s wraith rose, his face half-melted, one eye a glowing ember, the other a black pit leaking shadow. “You chose yourself,” he spat, his voice a rasp that echoed her own, layered with pain. The sky twisted, clouds morphing into the vault—its steel walls buckling, Rune’s hands clawing at rubble, his breath choking on dust. Vesper’s scream ripped free, the chute jerking as the Griefmist sank its hooks deeper, her vision deteriorating at the edges. The Drop Zone wasn’t a fall. It was a reckoning, and she was already breaking.
The sky warped, the Griefmist painting memories in choppy streaks of red and black. Vesper saw the heist: Rune’s quirky smirk as they pried open the vault, his trust heavier than the gold shimmering in the dark. She saw her panic, the alarms shrieking like banshees, the ceiling caving in slabs of concrete that shook the floor. She’d bolted, her heart pounding louder than Rune’s shouts, her boots slipping on oil as she left him to the rubble. The memory shifted, and she was Rune, trapped, his lungs burning, his fingers scraping stone until they bled, nails tearing, bones snapping. His last thought was her name, not a curse, but a plea that cut deeper than any dagger, a wound that bled into her now.
“No,” Vesper gasped, the wind spinning her, the chute’s cords snarling, the harness bruising her ribs. The air was so cold it stung her teeth, her breath fogging in the cloudiness. Rune’s wraith circled, its form flickering—now the boy who’d shared his last crust of bread in their squat, now a corpse with a crushed skull, now her own face, eyes hollow, lips curled in a sneer. “You knew I’d die,” it said, voice hers and his, slick as oil, suffocating. The Griefmist clawed deeper, and another memory surfaced, one she’d buried under lies: Rune, days before the heist, whispering to a contact in a smoky alley, planning a bigger score, one that didn’t include her. She’d overheard, her heart twisting, and told herself it justified everything. Her betrayal wasn’t just fear—it was revenge, a choice made before the vault’s walls ever fell.
The truth slammed into her, knocking the air from her chest. She’d lied to herself, claimed she ran to survive, that Terminus’s hunger left no room for loyalty. But the sky saw it all, its film a mirror to her shame. The Drop Zone muddled, clouds hardening into mirrors, her reflection showing Rune’s eyes, his blood on her hands, her hands. “You’re me now,” the wraith said, its fingers brushing her chute, ripping the cords with a touch that burned like acid. Vesper’s stomach lurched as she spun faster, the ground a distant blur, the wind a howl that matched her pulse. The Griefmist was unraveling her, blending her with Rune, her guilt a weight heavier than the chute, pulling her toward madness. Her vision doubled, her reflection splintering into a dozen Vespers—thief, sister, traitor—all staring back, all accusing, their mouths moving in unison: You ran.
“Forgive me,” she screamed, the words grated by the wind, her throat piercing. The wraith laughed, a sound like glass shattering on marble. “Face yourself first,” it said, its ember-eye flaring, bright as a dying star. The sky tilted, and the mirrors cracked, shards falling upward, slicing her skin, drawing blood that hung in the air like mist.
The Drop Zone became the vault, its walls closing, the air seething with dust and despair. Vesper stood in Rune’s place, his fear hers, his weight crushing her chest. The wraith knelt beside her, its face softening, almost Rune again, his old scar above his brow catching the Griefmist’s sickly glow. “You heard me plan to leave you,” it said, voice low, almost tender, but edged with pain. “But I didn’t. It was a bluff, a test of your loyalty. You failed it.” Vesper’s chest heaved, tears stinging her eyes, mixing with the mist’s acrid bite, her face wet and cold. She saw the truth: Rune’s plan was a game, a way to push her, to see if she’d stay. She’d betrayed him first, her fear poisoning their bond before the vault ever fell.
The vault sputtered, now a memory of their childhood—Rune teaching her to pick locks in their crumbling squat, his laugh warm as the last sunlight, his hands steady as he guided hers. She’d loved him, trusted him, until Terminus’s hunger carved her into something sharp, selfish, a sword honed by desperation. The wraith’s hand touched hers, cold but not cruel, its fingers tracing the blemishes on her knuckles, the ones she’d earned fighting for scraps. “Beg me,” it said, “but mean it.”
Vesper’s voice broke, primal as the wind, her throat scraped raw. “I’m sorry, Rune. Not for surviving, but for not believing in you. For not staying. I should’ve pulled you out, died trying, anything but running.” The wraith’s ember-eye dimmed, and the vault dissolved, the sky slowing her spin, the chute’s cords steadying, their creak a faint comfort. The Griefmist thinned, and Rune’s form grew solid, his face whole, young, the brother who’d dreamed of a Terminus where no one starved. “Live better,” he whispered, his voice a breeze, soft as the moment before a dive, carrying the weight of forgiveness.
The chute snapped taut, jerking her upright, the harness biting her shoulders, pain blooming in her joints. The Drop Zone faded, the ground rushing up, a patchwork of dirt and broken asphalt littered with the bones of past divers. Vesper braced, her body slamming into earth, pain searing her knees, her breath ragged, tasting of blood and filth. The crowd’s jeers had quieted, the sky clear for the first time in years, its gloom lifted like a veil. She lay there, alive, the Griefmist’s grip loosening. Her hands shook, unmarked but heavy, as if Rune’s fingers still held them, steadying her. The wraith was gone, but his words echoed: Live better.
Vesper stood, the guards cutting her free, their blades flashing in the neon, their eyes wary, as if she’d brought something back from the sky. The crowd was silent, their faces softened, as if the sky’s judgment had touched them too, a ripple of quiet in Terminus’s endless noise. She walked away, her legs unsteady, her jumpsuit torn, no longer just a thief, no longer just a survivor. Rune’s forgiveness wasn’t a clean slate—it was a charge, a weight she’d carry, lighter than guilt but just as real, like the chute that had held her through the fall.
In her squat, she found Rune’s old lockpicks, tucked in a cracked tin, their handles worn smooth by his hands. She held them, their metal warm, and saw his smile, his trust, not erased but reshaped, a kindle in the void. She’d steal again, but not for herself—food for the starving kids in the alleys, medicine for the sick, hope for the broken. The sky watched, and Vesper felt it, not as a judge, but as a witness, its silence vast and heavy. She’d fallen, faced herself, and landed. That was enough.
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I really like your story and I really wanna draw this scene so if you're interested you lemme know my socials are
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