Manga AI

Manga AI

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	The neon sign above the trailer buzzed with the irritable hum of a dying insect. It read Ground support, thought the 'U' in ground was flickering out, Leaving the company to announce itself as Grond Support. It fit the aesthetic of the surrounding yard, which was a graveyard of rust excavators, Coils of orange conduit and piles of gravel that looked like forgotten burial mounds. Alex Barry stood at the Chain-link gate, the dust of three state lines coating his black cowboy boots. He was twenty-one, but the shadows under his eyes belonged to a man twice his age. He ran a hand through his short, cropped black hair, wincing as his shirt sleeve rode up. The ink on his forearm, a jagged tribal design he'd gotten in a basement parlor in New Mexico. Hidden again as he yanked the fabric down. He wasn't dealing today, He wasn't running packages. He was trying to vanish and the best place to disappear was beneath the earth.
	He pushed open the door to the office trailer. The air conditioning hit him like a physical blow, smelling of stale coffee and toner. “We aren’t buying whatever your selling, kid.” a voice rasped from behind a desk that looked more like a barricade of paperwork. Shane, the owner sat there like a toad on a lily pad. Squeezed into a polo shirt so tight and pristine white that it looked like it had been painted onto his soft, round torso. He didn't look up from his spreadsheet, his pen tapping a frantic rhythm. “I'm not selling,” Alex said his voice rough from days of silence. “I'm looking for work. Sign out front says you need laborers.” Shane finally looked up his eyes narrowing as they swept over Alex. He took in the dust, the nervous energy the way Alex stood with his weight on his back foot, ready to bolt. “I need laborers, Not liabilities. You got a rap sheet? You look like you got a rap sheet. I don't pay for insurance risks.” Alex clenched his jaw. “I work hard. I don't ask questions. That's my resume.” Shane waved his hand. “Get lost,” Returning to his papers. “Go peddle your drama somewhere else. This is a respectable establishment.
	Alex turned to leave, his hand gripping the doorknob. It was the same old story. The world saw the grim on him and assumed he was trash. He was about to step back out into the scorching heat when the light in the doorway was suddenly eclipsed. A mountain of a man blocked the exit. This was steel At forty-four, he was a wall of muscle and scar tissue, wearing biker boots that clunked heavily against the cheap linoleum. He had to duck to enter the trailer, his presence immediately sucking the oxygen out of the room. He smelled of diesel and wet earth. Steel looked down at Alex. It wasn't a glare, It was an inspection. He looked at Alex's face, then down to the dusty cowboy boots. “Nice boots,” Steel rumbled. His voice sounded like gravel tumbling inside a cement mixer. Alex didn't flinch “They walk fine.” Steel smirked, a terrifying expression that somehow reached his eyes, He looked past Alex to the man at the desk. “Hire him, Shane.” Shane sputtered, his face turning a shade of indignity pink. “Steel, look at him! Hes a stray. Probably steal the copper wire first chance he gets.”  Steel steps closer to the desk. “Kid wears boots like that, he ain't running from work,” Steel said just as another figure steps inside. If steel was a mountain, Mathew was the sapling growing on the cliff edge. The Nineteen Year old squeezed past Steel. Carrying a hydraulic pump over his shoulder with effortless, wiry strength. Long blond hair flowed out from under a hardhat that had been modified with a wide brim, making it like a plastic Stetson. “Morning, Shane! Morning, Steel!” Mathew chirped
	The neon sign above the trailer buzzed with the irritable hum of a dying insect. It read Ground support, thought the 'U' in ground was flickering out, Leaving the company to announce itself as Grond Support. It fit the aesthetic of the surrounding yard, which was a graveyard of rust excavators, Coils of orange conduit and piles of gravel that looked like forgotten burial mounds. Alex Barry stood at the Chain-link gate, the dust of three state lines coating his black cowboy boots. He was twenty-one, but the shadows under his eyes belonged to a man twice his age. He ran a hand through his short, cropped black hair, wincing as his shirt sleeve rode up. The ink on his forearm, a jagged tribal design he'd gotten in a basement parlor in New Mexico. Hidden again as he yanked the fabric down. He wasn't dealing today, He wasn't running packages. He was trying to vanish and the best place to disappear was beneath the earth.
	He pushed open the door to the office trailer. The air conditioning hit him like a physical blow, smelling of stale coffee and toner. “We aren’t buying whatever your selling, kid.” a voice rasped from behind a desk that looked more like a barricade of paperwork. Shane, the owner sat there like a toad on a lily pad. Squeezed into a polo shirt so tight and pristine white that it looked like it had been painted onto his soft, round torso. He didn't look up from his spreadsheet, his pen tapping a frantic rhythm. “I'm not selling,” Alex said his voice rough from days of silence. “I'm looking for work. Sign out front says you need laborers.” Shane finally looked up his eyes narrowing as they swept over Alex. He took in the dust, the nervous energy the way Alex stood with his weight on his back foot, ready to bolt. “I need laborers, Not liabilities. You got a rap sheet? You look like you got a rap sheet. I don't pay for insurance risks.” Alex clenched his jaw. “I work hard. I don't ask questions. That's my resume.” Shane waved his hand. “Get lost,” Returning to his papers. “Go peddle your drama somewhere else. This is a respectable establishment.
	Alex turned to leave, his hand gripping the doorknob. It was the same old story. The world saw the grim on him and assumed he was trash. He was about to step back out into the scorching heat when the light in the doorway was suddenly eclipsed. A mountain of a man blocked the exit. This was steel At forty-four, he was a wall of muscle and scar tissue, wearing biker boots that clunked heavily against the cheap linoleum. He had to duck to enter the trailer, his presence immediately sucking the oxygen out of the room. He smelled of diesel and wet earth. Steel looked down at Alex. It wasn't a glare, It was an inspection. He looked at Alex's face, then down to the dusty cowboy boots. “Nice boots,” Steel rumbled. His voice sounded like gravel tumbling inside a cement mixer. Alex didn't flinch “They walk fine.” Steel smirked, a terrifying expression that somehow reached his eyes, He looked past Alex to the man at the desk. “Hire him, Shane.” Shane sputtered, his face turning a shade of indignity pink. “Steel, look at him! Hes a stray. Probably steal the copper wire first chance he gets.”  Steel steps closer to the desk. “Kid wears boots like that, he ain't running from work,” Steel said just as another figure steps inside. If steel was a mountain, Mathew was the sapling growing on the cliff edge. The Nineteen Year old squeezed past Steel. Carrying a hydraulic pump over his shoulder with effortless, wiry strength. Long blond hair flowed out from under a hardhat that had been modified with a wide brim, making it like a plastic Stetson. “Morning, Shane! Morning, Steel!” Mathew chirped
The walk up to the main house was short, a gravel path lined with solar lights that flickered weakly in the twilight. Steel’s property was an oasis of rural quiet, a stark contrast to the neon anxiety of the Starlight Motel. As they approached the house, the golden glow of the kitchen windows spilled out onto the porch. They wiped their boots on the mat; a ritual Steel performed with a surprising delicacy and entered. The kitchen was warm, smelling of rosemary, roasted beef, and yeast rolls. Stephanie was at the stove, stirring gray with the focus of a chemist. “He’s here,” Steel announced, Hanging his keys on a hook. Stephanie turned, wiping her hands on her white apron with a giant red A on it. “About time, Wash up Alex. Use the good soap, not that grease cutter stuff Gerald keeps by the sink.” It was then that Alex noticed they weren’t alone. Sitting at the round oak table, nursing a glass of iced tea, was a young woman. She looked up as he entered, and Alex felt his boots root to the floor. She was petite, perhaps a few inches shorter than him, with long, chestnut hair that fell in loose waves over shoulders. She wore oversized tortoise shell glasses that magnified eyes, the color of polished sapphire.
	She was wearing scrubs- navy blue with a stethoscope still draped casually around her neck like a scarf. “Alex,” Stephanie said, gesturing with a gravy ladle. “This is Devon. She works with me at the hospital. Devon, this is the stray Gerald brought home.” Alex could feel the heat creeping up his neck as he mumbled. “I’m not a stay, I’m an employee.” Devon smiled, and it changed her whole face, softening the intelligence in her eyes into something warmer. “Nice to meet you, Alex the Employee. Steph say’s you’re the one who saved your boss from a falling plate?”
Virella leaned close to his ear.

“You’ve been cutting this tree for five hundred years.”

The man’s face drained of color.

“You haven’t moved from this spot.”

Her voice grew colder.

“You haven’t chopped any wood.”

“You haven’t taken anything home.”

“Your sister and your mother have been dead for five hundred years.”

The world seemed to collapse around him.

“You have no home.”

She whispered the final truth.

“You don’t even have a name.”

In color.
Moments later she appeared in the forest.

Before the tree.

Before the woodcutter.

“Greetings, woodcutter,” she said casually.

The man turned and smiled.

“Greetings, traveler.”

He raised his axe slightly in greeting.

“Would you like to accept a quest?”

Virella tilted her head.

“Tell me something first.”

The woodcutter blinked.

“Yes?”

“Where is the wood you’ve gathered?”

He hesitated.

“Well… the wood I gathered is…”

His voice faltered.

Virella stepped closer.

“Where is your house?”

“I… live with my mother and sister…”

“And what are their names?”

Silence.

The woodcutter’s breathing quickened.

Virella’s eyes gleamed with faint magic.

“When was the last time you brought wood home?”

“The last time I—”

His voice broke.

“How long have you been cutting this tree?”

“I have been cutting this tree for…”

He froze.

In color.
The next day, Kaelis stood before another goddess.

Virella.

Younger than Lysera, but far more dangerous.

Where Lysera embodied order, Virella embodied something older—magic, shadows, curiosity.

Kaelis explained everything.

The woodcutter.

The broken destiny.

The impossible choice he made.

Virella listened with mild amusement.

“You want me to test him,” she concluded.

“Yes.”

Virella sighed.

“You won’t like the outcome.”

But she agreed.
They are both women with little armor in a marble palace they look divine while virela looks more like a darker outcast but still beatiful and divine

In color.
The next day, Kaelis stood before another goddess.

Virella.

Younger than Lysera, but far more dangerous.

Where Lysera embodied order, Virella embodied something older—magic, shadows, curiosity.

Kaelis explained everything.

The woodcutter.

The broken destiny.

The impossible choice he made.

Virella listened with mild amusement.

“You want me to test him,” she concluded.

“Yes.”

Virella sighed.

“You won’t like the outcome.”

But she agreed.

In color.
High above the world, within a realm of pale marble halls and endless skies, a young woman stood before a shimmering mirror of magic.

Through the mirror she watched the mortal world below.

Her name was Kaelis.

Daughter of Lysera.

Granddaughter of Aurelion.

Though divine blood flowed within her veins, Kaelis was not fully a god. Her mother had chosen a mortal lover long ago, making Kaelis something unusual among the divine—half god, half human.

Perhaps that was why she struggled to understand the indifference of her kind.

Behind her, another figure watched.

Lysera herself.

Elegant, distant, and composed in the way only ancient gods could be.

“You watch them often,” Lysera said calmly.

Kaelis didn’t turn from the mirror.

“They’re suffering.”

Below them the world unfolded in countless scenes—wars between kingdoms, starving villages, merchants cheating the poor, monsters tearing through travelers.

Lysera remained unmoved.

“This world functions exactly as intended.”

Kaelis clenched her fists.

“Wars… crime… corruption. People die every day. And we do nothing.”

Lysera’s voice sharpened slightly.

“That is not our role.”

“They worship us,” Kaelis said. “They pray to us. They believe we protect them.”

Lysera stepped closer.

“Destiny governs this world. Mortals walk the paths laid before them.”

Her gaze hardened.

“And destiny cannot be changed.”

Kaelis looked back toward the mirror, frustration burning behind her eyes.

But what she saw next made her heart stop.



In color
High above the world, within a realm of pale marble halls and endless skies, a young woman stood before a shimmering mirror of magic.

Through the mirror she watched the mortal world below.

Her name was Kaelis.

Daughter of Lysera.

Granddaughter of Aurelion.

Though divine blood flowed within her veins, Kaelis was not fully a god. Her mother had chosen a mortal lover long ago, making Kaelis something unusual among the divine—half god, half human.

Perhaps that was why she struggled to understand the indifference of her kind.

Behind her, another figure watched.

Lysera herself.

Elegant, distant, and composed in the way only ancient gods could be.

“You watch them often,” Lysera said calmly.

Kaelis didn’t turn from the mirror.

“They’re suffering.”

Below them the world unfolded in countless scenes—wars between kingdoms, starving villages, merchants cheating the poor, monsters tearing through travelers.

Lysera remained unmoved.

“This world functions exactly as intended.”

Kaelis clenched her fists.

“Wars… crime… corruption. People die every day. And we do nothing.”

Lysera’s voice sharpened slightly.

“That is not our role.”

“They worship us,” Kaelis said. “They pray to us. They believe we protect them.”

Lysera stepped closer.

“Destiny governs this world. Mortals walk the paths laid before them.”

Her gaze hardened.

“And destiny cannot be changed.”

Kaelis looked back toward the mirror, frustration burning behind her eyes.

But what she saw next made her heart stop.
Moments later she appeared in the forest.

Before the tree.

Before the woodcutter.

“Greetings, woodcutter,” she said casually.

The man turned and smiled.

“Greetings, traveler.”

He raised his axe slightly in greeting.

“Would you like to accept a quest?”

Virella tilted her head.

“Tell me something first.”

The woodcutter blinked.

“Yes?”

“Where is the wood you’ve gathered?”

He hesitated.

“Well… the wood I gathered is…”

His voice faltered.

Virella stepped closer.

“Where is your house?”

“I… live with my mother and sister…”

“And what are their names?”

Silence.

The woodcutter’s breathing quickened.

Virella’s eyes gleamed with faint magic.

“When was the last time you brought wood home?”

“The last time I—”

His voice broke.

“How long have you been cutting this tree?”

“I have been cutting this tree for…”

He froze.

Virella leaned close to his ear.

“You’ve been cutting this tree for five hundred years.”

The man’s face drained of color.

“You haven’t moved from this spot.”

Her voice grew colder.

“You haven’t chopped any wood.”

“You haven’t taken anything home.”

“Your sister and your mother have been dead for five hundred years.”

The world seemed to collapse around him.

“You have no home.”

She whispered the final truth.

“You don’t even have a name.”

Memories flooded his mind.

A small house.

A loving mother.

A laughing sister.

Cold winter nights.

Then darkness.

Chains.

Magic.

Pain.

His scream tore through the forest.

“No… no this can’t be real… this can’t be real!”

His body trembled violently.

For a moment—

it seemed the enchantment might break.

Then he turned back toward the tree.

And raised his axe.

“I need to gather wood,” he muttered weakly.

“My family needs it for the winter.”

Kaelis watched from the mirror, tears falling.

Virella smiled faintly.

“Then live in ignorance for another five hundred years.”

She turned away.

“The god who destroyed your life doesn’t even remember you.”

Her voice faded as she disappeared.

“And neither will I.”

In color
Moments later she appeared in the forest.

Before the tree.

Before the woodcutter.

“Greetings, woodcutter,” she said casually.

The man turned and smiled.

“Greetings, traveler.”

He raised his axe slightly in greeting.

“Would you like to accept a quest?”

Virella tilted her head.

“Tell me something first.”

The woodcutter blinked.

“Yes?”

“Where is the wood you’ve gathered?”

He hesitated.

“Well… the wood I gathered is…”

His voice faltered.

Virella stepped closer.

“Where is your house?”

“I… live with my mother and sister…”

“And what are their names?”

Silence.

The woodcutter’s breathing quickened.

Virella’s eyes gleamed with faint magic.

“When was the last time you brought wood home?”

“The last time I—”

His voice broke.

“How long have you been cutting this tree?”

“I have been cutting this tree for…”

He froze.

Virella leaned close to his ear.

“You’ve been cutting this tree for five hundred years.”

The man’s face drained of color.

“You haven’t moved from this spot.”

Her voice grew colder.

“You haven’t chopped any wood.”

“You haven’t taken anything home.”

“Your sister and your mother have been dead for five hundred years.”

The world seemed to collapse around him.

“You have no home.”

She whispered the final truth.

“You don’t even have a name.”

Memories flooded his mind.

A small house.

A loving mother.

A laughing sister.

Cold winter nights.

Then darkness.

Chains.

Magic.

Pain.

His scream tore through the forest.

“No… no this can’t be real… this can’t be real!”

His body trembled violently.

For a moment—

it seemed the enchantment might break.

Then he turned back toward the tree.

And raised his axe.

“I need to gather wood,” he muttered weakly.

“My family needs it for the winter.”

Kaelis watched from the mirror, tears falling.

Virella smiled faintly.

“Then live in ignorance for another five hundred years.”

She turned away.

“The god who destroyed your life doesn’t even remember you.”

Her voice faded as she disappeared.

“And neither will I.”
A final low-angle side view, still slightly from behind, freezes the moment where the two girls are one in front of the other: the nearer girl's is leaning slight forward to the girl she is talking to, creating a small crescent shadow under her shoe; the farther girl's has her feet closed to eachother standing elegantly. The banded sunlight narrows into brighter stripes on the floor; the locker vents cast thin vertical shadows. it's all in black and white. The secondo pannel is the girl with black that is composed and smiles, her mouth is slightly open as she speaks, we can see the first chaarcter’s head from behind cause she is slightly Lea ed forward to the other girl to see her better and analyze her
  🎬 PAINEL 01  — Skyline de Seul ao amanhecer

VISUAL: Painel panorâmico, full-width. Vista aérea de Seul às 7h da manhã. Prédios espelhados, sol nascente em laranja e rosa. No centro, um arranha-céu com o logotipo NEXORA em azul neon.

NARRAÇÃO (caixa no topo, letra delicada): "Seul, 7h da manhã. Em algum lugar nessa cidade, alguém está prestes a cometer um erro muito, muito caro."
✦ SFX: sons de trânsito matinal, pombos

  🎬 PAINEL 02  — Interior do arranha-céu — Lobby da NEXORA

VISUAL: Lobby minimalista, todo branco e vidro. Funcionários bem vestidos cruzam o espaço em ritmo apressado. No centro, um painel com os dizeres: "NEXORA — Engineering the Future."

ÂNGULO: Close no relógio digital na parede: 07:58.

NARRAÇÃO: "A NEXORA é a startup de tecnologia mais bem avaliada do país pelo terceiro ano consecutivo. Graças a um único homem."

  🎬 PAINEL 03  — Close em Han Joon-seo — Grande impacto visual

VISUAL: Painel de impacto alto. Joon-seo entra pelo lobby em câmera lenta visual. Terno preto imaculado, expressão neutra, xícara de café na mão. Os funcionários ao redor se endireitam discretamente quando ele passa.

ÂNGULO: Low-angle shot, fazendo-o parecer monumental. Foco desfocado nos funcionários ao fundo.

NARRAÇÃO: "Han Joon-seo. 30 anos. CEO. QI 147. Zero tolerância para incompetência — ou para pessoas que chegam atrasadas."
✦ SFX: silêncio dramático, trilha sonora de fundo que soa épica

  🎬 PAINEL 04  — CORTE — Rua externa, 08:01

VISUAL: Painel CÔMICO de contraste. Yeon Mirae correndo desesperadamente na rua, mochila saltitando nas costas, cabelo desgrenhado, fone de ouvido no pescoço, bagel na boca.

EXPRESSÃO MIRAE: Pânico total, olhos arregalados, bochechas vermelhas.

BALÃO DE PENSAMENTO (forma irregular, letra caótica): "Primeiro dia. PRIMEIRO DIA. Por que — por que eu dormi? Por que o alarme não tocou? Por que eu existi?"
✦ SFX: FWOOSH — barulho de corrida frenética

LEGENDA DE TEMPO: 08:01 — Reunião de onboarding: 08:00

  🎬 PAINEL 05  — Entrada do prédio — Yeon Mirae vs. porta giratória

VISUAL: Mirae empurra a porta giratória com força demais, tropeça, e entra no lobby em total desequilíbrio. Os funcionários ao redor olham. Ela se endireita fingindo que foi intencional.

MIRAE: "Bom dia a todos! Tudo... tudo normal aqui."

REAÇÃO DE FUNDO: Funcionário A sussurra para o Funcionário B: "...ela tropeçou na porta giratória."
✦ SFX: BANG — porta batendo
📝 Nota: Expressão de Mirae: sorriso forçado de 'não aconteceu nada'

  🎬 PAINEL 06  — Frente ao elevador — O grande erro

VISUAL: Mirae corre em direção ao elevador. Dois elevadores: um com placa dourada discreta "CEO" (pequena, que ela ignora), outro normal. Ela aperta o botão do elevador CEO sem ler.

BALÃO DE PENSAMENTO: "Décimo andar, décimo andar, décimo andar—"

VISUAL: As portas se abrem. Dentro: Han Joon-seo, sozinho, olhando o celular.

EXPRESSÃO JOON-SEO: Sobrancelha levemente erguida. Não está acostumado com pessoas neste elevador.

  🎬 PAINEL 07  — DENTRO DO ELEVADOR — A catástrofe do café

VISUAL: Mirae entra correndo, freando em último segundo. Mas a inércia faz o café dela — que ela não percebeu que estava segurando — voar em arco perfeito.

PAINEL CÂMERA LENTA (efeito visual): O café em slow-motion no ar. Expressão de horror de Mirae. Expressão de incredulidade de Joon-seo. O café pousa no peito do terno dele.
✦ SFX: SPLASH — barulho exagerado de líquido

EXPRESSÃO JOON-SEO: Congelado. Olha para o café no terno. Olha para Mirae. Temperatura da sala cai 10 graus.
EXPRESSÃO MIRAE: Branca como papel. Fone de ouvido ainda tocando — trilha sonora inapropriadamente animada vaza pelo fone.

  🎬 PAINEL 08  — Reação — O silêncio mais longo da história

VISUAL: Painel estreito e alto: apenas os olhos de Joon-seo, olhando para baixo para a mancha. Depois os olhos de Mirae, olhando para cima para ele. Silêncio visual pesado.

ÂNGULO: Alternância de close nos rostos, como um duelo de faroeste.

MIRAE: "Eu... eu sou muito boa em consertar situações. Isso aqui... definitivamente não é uma delas."

  🎬 PAINEL 09  — A cena cômica — Mirae tenta resolver

VISUAL: Mirae tira o cachecol da mochila e tenta tampar a mancha no terno de Joon-seo. Ele a para com uma mão, expressão indescritível — entre irritação e fascinação involuntária.

JOON-SEO: "O que exatamente você está fazendo?"
MIRAE: "Solução criativa de problemas! Aprendi num TED Talk."
JOON-SEO: "Pare."
MIRAE: "Parado."

BALÃO DE PENSAMENTO DE MIRAE: "Ele está com raiva? Parece com raiva. Isso é a cara dele de raiva ou a cara dele de sempre? Homem difícil de ler."

  🎬 PAINEL 10  — Mirae ainda sem saber quem ele é

VISUAL: Mirae ajeita a mochila, faz respiração funda, e decide adotar postura profissional. Joon-seo a observa como se fosse um fenômeno meteorológico inexplicável.

MIRAE: "Olha, sinto muito pelo terno. Mas, honestamente? Você deveria soltar mais. Você tem cara de chefe que estressa a equipe."

EXPRESSÃO JOON-SEO: Pisca. Não processou direito.

JOON-SEO: "Perdão?"
MIRAE: "Liderança rígida demais cria ambiente tóxico. Li o relatório de clima organizacional da empresa semana passada — nota 6.2 de 10. Não é ótimo."

BALÃO DE PENSAMENTO DE JOON-SEO: "Ela... leu o relatório de clima?"

  🎬 PAINEL 11  — Chegada ao andar — A revelação

VISUAL: Elevador abre no andar executivo. Park Siwon está esperando com agenda na mão. Seus olhos vão de Joon-seo (terno manchado) para Mirae (cara de quem não sabe onde está) e de volta.

EXPRESSÃO SIWON: Máscara profissional perfeita, mas os olhos dizem "o que aconteceu aqui?"

SIWON: "Bom dia, Sr. Han. Sua primeira reunião em cinco minutos."

MIRAE — olha a placa do andar: ANDAR EXECUTIVO — DIRETORIA.

MIRAE — olha para Joon-seo.
MIRAE — olha para Siwon. Que discretamente aponta para Joon-seo e forma com a boca: "CEO."

EXPRESSÃO MIRAE: Colapso interno silencioso. Sorriso externo fixo no rosto como pintura.
✦ SFX: som interno de sirenes de emergência

  🎬 PAINEL 12  — O final do capítulo — Cena de impacto

VISUAL: Joon-seo já caminhou alguns passos em direção à sala. Vira levemente o rosto sobre o ombro para Mirae.

JOON-SEO: "Nota 6.2. Eu sei. Por isso contratei novos desenvolvedores."

PAUSA VISUAL: Close no canto dos lábios de Joon-seo. Quase — quase — um sorriso.

JOON-SEO: "Bem-vinda à NEXORA, Yeon Mirae."

MIRAE — boquiaberta.
MIRAE: "Como você sabe meu nome?"
JOON-SEO: "Eu contratei você."

ÚLTIMO PAINEL — full width: Mirae parada no corredor, Joon-seo desaparecendo pela porta da sala executiva. Siwon ao lado dela, oferecendo discretamente um guardanapo para o café que pingou no sapato dela.

SIWON: "Posso te indicar o caminho para o décimo andar?"
MIRAE: "...por favor."
When you surrendered... when you were on that ship..." 
"You didn't lose me," Lisa said firmly. "You came for me. You and that ridiculous, wonderful crew drove a burning spaceship through a dreadnought to get me back. You don't get to doubt us anymore, Mia. We're inevitable." Mia let out a laugh that turned into a sob, and then she was leaning forward, burying her face in Lisa’s neck. Lisa held her, rocking gently, feeling the tension bleed out of her wife's shoulders. "I love you," Mia mumbled into Lisa’s collarbone. "I know," Lisa murmured, kissing the top of her pink head. "Now, are we going to spend our honeymoon crying, or are we going to order room service and see if this 'king-sized' bed can actually withstand a wrestling match?"
When you surrendered... when you were on that ship..." 
"You didn't lose me," Lisa said firmly. "You came for me. You and that ridiculous, wonderful crew drove a burning spaceship through a dreadnought to get me back. You don't get to doubt us anymore, Mia. We're inevitable." Mia let out a laugh that turned into a sob, and then she was leaning forward, burying her face in Lisa’s neck. Lisa held her, rocking gently, feeling the tension bleed out of her wife's shoulders. "I love you," Mia mumbled into Lisa’s collarbone. "I know," Lisa murmured, kissing the top of her pink head. "Now, are we going to spend our honeymoon crying, or are we going to order room service and see if this 'king-sized' bed can actually withstand a wrestling match?"
When you surrendered... when you were on that ship..." 
"You didn't lose me," Lisa said firmly. "You came for me. You and that ridiculous, wonderful crew drove a burning spaceship through a dreadnought to get me back. You don't get to doubt us anymore, Mia. We're inevitable." Mia let out a laugh that turned into a sob, and then she was leaning forward, burying her face in Lisa’s neck. Lisa held her, rocking gently, feeling the tension bleed out of her wife's shoulders. "I love you," Mia mumbled into Lisa’s collarbone. "I know," Lisa murmured, kissing the top of her pink head. "Now, are we going to spend our honeymoon crying, or are we going to order room service and see if this 'king-sized' bed can actually withstand a wrestling match?"
The neon sign above the trailer buzzed with the irritable hum of a dying insect. It read Ground support, thought the 'U' in ground was flickering out, Leaving the company to announce itself as Grond Support. It fit the aesthetic of the surrounding yard, which was a graveyard of rust excavators, Coils of orange conduit and piles of gravel that looked like forgotten burial mounds. Alex Barry stood at the Chain-link gate, the dust of three state lines coating his black cowboy boots. He was twenty-one, but the shadows under his eyes belonged to a man twice his age. He ran a hand through his short, cropped black hair, wincing as his shirt sleeve rode up. The ink on his forearm, a jagged tribal design he'd gotten in a basement parlor in New Mexico. Hidden again as he yanked the fabric down. He wasn't dealing today, He wasn't running packages. He was trying to vanish and the best place to disappear was beneath the earth.
	He pushed open the door to the office trailer. The air conditioning hit him like a physical blow, smelling of stale coffee and toner. “We aren’t buying whatever your selling, kid.” a voice rasped from behind a desk that looked more like a barricade of paperwork. Shane, the owner sat there like a toad on a lily pad. Squeezed into a polo shirt so tight and pristine white that it looked like it had been painted onto his soft, round torso. He didn't look up from his spreadsheet, his pen tapping a frantic rhythm. “I'm not selling,” Alex said his voice rough from days of silence. “I'm looking for work. Sign out front says you need laborers.” Shane finally looked up his eyes narrowing as they swept over Alex. He took in the dust, the nervous energy the way Alex stood with his weight on his back foot, ready to bolt. “I need laborers, Not liabilities. You got a rap sheet? You look like you got a rap sheet. I don't pay for insurance risks.” Alex clenched his jaw. “I work hard. I don't ask questions. That's my resume.” Shane waved his hand. “Get lost,” Returning to his papers. “Go peddle your drama somewhere else. This is a respectable establishment.
	Alex turned to leave, his hand gripping the doorknob. It was the same old story. The world saw the grim on him and assumed he was trash. He was about to step back out into the scorching heat when the light in the doorway was suddenly eclipsed. A mountain of a man blocked the exit. This was steel At forty-four, he was a wall of muscle and scar tissue, wearing biker boots that clunked heavily against the cheap linoleum. He had to duck to enter the trailer, his presence immediately sucking the oxygen out of the room. He smelled of diesel and wet earth. Steel looked down at Alex. It wasn't a glare, It was an inspection. He looked at Alex's face, then down to the dusty cowboy boots. “Nice boots,” Steel rumbled. His voice sounded like gravel tumbling inside a cement mixer. Alex didn't flinch “They walk fine.” Steel smirked, a terrifying expression that somehow reached his eyes, He looked past Alex to the man at the desk. “Hire him, Shane.” Shane sputtered, his face turning a shade of indignity pink. “Steel, look at him! Hes a stray. Probably steal the copper wire first chance he gets.”  Steel steps closer to the desk. “Kid wears boots like that, he ain't running from work,” Steel said just as another figure steps inside. If steel was a mountain, Mathew was the sapling growing on the cliff edge. The Nineteen Year old squeezed past Steel. Carrying a hydraulic pump over his shoulder with effortless, wiry strength. Long blond hair flowed out from under a hardhat that had been modified with a wide brim, making it like a plastic Stetson. “Morning,Shane! Morning, Steel!” Mathew chirped, his smile bright enough to crack the cynical atmosphere and eyes as red as a lava pit. He dumped the pump on the floor and looked at Alex. “Who's the fresh meat?” “This is Alex,” Steel said deciding the matter was settled. “Hes on the shovel crew.” Shane slams his hand on his desk. “I didn't agree to this!” Steel just crosses his massive arms, not even phased by Shane's outburst. “We're down two guys on the sewer lateral downtown. Unless you want to come down into the trench and hold the shoring Shane?” Shane paled at the thought of actual labor. He grumbled, pulling a clipboard from the stack. “Fine, Minimum wage. No benefits and if you die, you're fired before the ambulance gets there. Fill this out.”
	Alex took the clipboard. His hands were shaking slightly, not from fear but from the sudden jarring realization that he had stopped moving. He looked at Steel, who was watching him with a knowing intensity. “Ever dig a hole, Alex?” Steel asked. “I've dug plenty,” Alex said quietly. Mostly to hide things sometimes to hide himself. “Good,” Steel clapped a hand on Alex's shoulder, the weight of it nearly buckling the young mans knees. “Because that's what we do, We fix the rot underneath the city so the people up top can pretend the ground is solid. Welcome to the Family, Kid.” Mathew tipped his hardhat. “Don't worry Alex, stick with me. I'm a prodigy. I'll teach you the art of mud.” Alex looked at the three of them- The mister, The giant and the farm boy. It was a circus, a freak show of underground construction. But he looked at the pen in his hand, Alex realized for the first time in five years he wasn't holding a weapon or a bag of product. He was holding a future.
 Hair Raiser: Project Hope — Case 18-1-2-9-5-19 is a science-horror novel about a secret underground research facility where scientists attempt to cure disease and repair damaged bodies using an experimental virus called HRV-13. At first the results appear miraculous—paralysis reverses, cancer disappears, and broken nervous systems regenerate. But the virus begins to behave unpredictably, amplifying the body’s natural processes instead of simply healing them. As the experiments escalate from animals to humans, the line between recovery and mutation begins to blur.

The story unfolds through the perspective of a lone survivor exploring the abandoned facility and reading the journal of the lead scientist, slowly uncovering how a project meant to bring hope turned into a catastrophic biological experiment.
 Hair Raiser: Project Hope — Case 18-1-2-9-5-19 is a science-horror novel about a secret underground research facility where scientists attempt to cure disease and repair damaged bodies using an experimental virus called HRV-13. At first the results appear miraculous—paralysis reverses, cancer disappears, and broken nervous systems regenerate. But the virus begins to behave unpredictably, amplifying the body’s natural processes instead of simply healing them. As the experiments escalate from animals to humans, the line between recovery and mutation begins to blur.

The story unfolds through the perspective of a lone survivor exploring the abandoned facility and reading the journal of the lead scientist, slowly uncovering how a project meant to bring hope turned into a catastrophic biological experiment.
A dark sci-fi horror story set in a massive underground research facility built beneath the earth to hide a classified experiment called Project Hope. Scientists there develop HRV-13, a modified virus designed to repair damaged cells and regenerate the human body without altering DNA. At first the results seem miraculous—cancer disappears, spinal injuries heal, and paralyzed patients stand again. Animals recover from fatal experiments, and the researchers begin to believe they have discovered a cure that could change the future of medicine.

But the virus does not simply heal—it amplifies the body’s natural systems. Muscles grow stronger but uncontrollably, nerves regenerate too fast, organs begin overproducing chemicals, and the human body starts behaving like a machine running without limits. Each patient’s biology evolves differently, turning them into unpredictable biological experiments.

The story follows a lone survivor who enters the abandoned facility years later. The building is silent, filled with flickering lights, empty laboratories, and sealed containment rooms. While exploring the corridors he finds the journal of the lead scientist, documenting the entire experiment—from hopeful beginnings to catastrophic failure. Through these entries the reader slowly learns what happened inside the facility: human trials, strange symptoms, military oversight, and the terrifying realization that the virus never stopped working.

The deeper the survivor goes into the facility—through research labs, animal testing wings, medical wards, and containment chambers—the more disturbing the truth becomes. The experiment meant to save humanity may have created a new form of life, one that spreads through biology itself.

The atmosphere is tense and claustrophobic: dark hallways, abandoned hospital beds, humming machines, and the constant feeling that something inside the building is still alive.
🌌 ASTRAL SOVEREIGN
Episode 1 — “The Star That Fell”
COLD OPEN
EXT. NIGHT SKY – MOUNTAIN RANGE

A vast star-filled sky stretches above jagged mountains.

Wind moves slowly through drifting clouds.

A distant meteor streaks across the sky.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
In a world where summoners bind creatures from distant realms… power determines the fate of kingdoms.

The meteor grows brighter as it cuts across the night.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
For centuries, summoners have commanded spirits, beasts, and ancient entities beyond imagination.

The meteor begins to fracture.

Thousands of tiny glowing fragments scatter like falling stars.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
But once in a thousand years… the stars choose a sovereign.

SCENE 1
EXT. CLIFFSIDE – NIGHT

A lone figure stands on a cliff overlooking a vast valley.

This is CIEL DOR.

Silver-white hair moves in the wind. His long black coat flows behind him.

He watches the sky.

CIEL
(quietly)
That star…

The meteor explodes into a brilliant cosmic flare.

Suddenly—

The constellations begin shifting.

The sky rearranges itself into a glowing circular pattern.

SCENE 2
CLOSE-UP – CIEL’S HAND

A glowing ASTRAL SIGIL appears on his right hand.

Blue light pulses through his arm.

CIEL
(startled)
What…?

The sigil spreads glowing energy.

Wind erupts around him.

SCENE 3
SKY ABOVE THE CLIFF

The clouds form a massive summoning circle spanning the sky.

Cosmic light pours downward.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
The Astral Realm had sensed its ruler.

A deep mysterious voice echoes through the air.

MYSTERIOUS VOICE (V.O.)
The Sovereign has returned.

Ciel looks around, confused.

CIEL
Who said that?

SCENE 4
SUMMONING EVENT

A glowing portal opens behind Ciel.

Stars swirl inside it like a galaxy.

Energy bursts outward.

Ciel turns slowly.

A massive silhouette appears within the portal.

Heavy footsteps echo.

SCENE 5
REVEAL – LYRA

A gigantic CELESTIAL WOLF emerges.

Its body is made of glowing stars and cosmic light.

Particles drift from its fur like falling stardust.

Ciel stares in shock.

CIEL
A… summon?

The wolf steps forward.

It lowers its massive head.

Then kneels before him.

SCENE 6
CIEL AND LYRA

Ciel slowly raises his hand.

He gently touches Lyra’s head.

CIEL
Why… are you bowing?

Lyra speaks telepathically.

LYRA (V.O.)
Because you are the Astral Sovereign.

Ciel’s eyes widen.

CIEL
Astral… Sovereign?

SCENE 7
WIDE SHOT – CLIFF

Ciel stands beside the massive celestial wolf beneath the starry sky.

The summoning circle fades slowly.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
On that night, the heavens themselves chose their ruler.

Lyra lifts its head and howls.

The stars flare brightly across the sky.

FINAL SCENE
EXT. SKY – NIGHT

The constellations shine brighter than ever.

Far away…

A dark crack forms in the sky.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
But every light casts a shadow.

Deep within a distant dimension—

A pair of red glowing eyes open in darkness.

NARRATOR (V.O.)
And the Void was beginning to stir.

END OF EPISODE

TEXT ON SCREEN:

ASTRAL SOVEREIGN

TO BE CONTINUED
Fat Lord Michael Fortinbras writing down in order every woman he has claimed, however is meet with uneasy from his Wife, the priest concubine, and his mistress woodcutter woman as they 3 explain they are pregnant now all of them after starting morning after sickness. Fat Lord Michael Fortinbras pats each woman belly in evil victory.
Fat Lord Michael Fortinbras, is brought 3 noblewoman widows whose husbands died in battle vs Lord Fortinbras in take over of the city. Thus Fat Lord Fortinbras kisses each of them claiming them as his new secondary wives.  Each woman with look of horror after each kiss and realization of marriage to the fat lord.
Fat Lord Michael Fortinbras successfully conquers a major city in enemy nation. At bar 3 female willing making out with the fat lord. The female adventure, female bard, female knight each wanting something different from the lord in exchange for sleeping with him.
Fat Lord Michael Fortinbras leading his troops across the boarder, comes across a mountain village, and claims two attractive commoner tribeswoman as his mistress, laying deep mouth to mouth kisses on both woman.
Panel 1 (Full-width splash, establishing shot)
Wide exterior view of Blackspire Keep at night, snow falling gently. A lone rider (Lady Seraphine in dark cloak) approaches the gates on horseback.
Caption (top): "Midnight. The eve of his nameday."
SFX: clip-clop… clip-clop…
Panel 2 (Medium shot)
Seraphine dismounts in the courtyard. Servants scatter in fear at her expression—eyes narrowed, lips pressed thin.
Close-up inset on her face: subtle disgust already flickering.
Thought bubble (small): …I only wished to surprise him.
Panel 3 (Tall vertical panel)
Seraphine strides down a torch-lit corridor, riding crop dangling loosely. Her boots echo.
Background: shadows stretch long.
SFX: thud… thud… thud…
Panel 4 (Wide panel, door POV)
The heavy solar door creaks open. Warm candlelight pours out.
Foreground: Seraphine's silhouette in the doorway, cloak billowing slightly.
Inside: chaotic bed scene just visible—bare limbs, tangled sheets, laughter frozen mid-breath.
Panel 5 (Large panel, reveal)
Full interior shot of the decadent bedroom: massive four-poster bed, candles guttering, furs and silks strewn everywhere.
Center: Fat Lord Fortinbras sprawled naked, belly shining with sweat, surrounded by four equally naked noblewomen (two mother-daughter pairs: Mirene & Celine Varnholt; Elira & Lyssia Drayce).
They freeze, eyes wide in horror.
Under the bed: two more half-hidden girls in shifts, peeking out in terror.
SFX: gasp!
Panel 6 (Close-up on Seraphine)
Tight on her face—eyes half-lidded, upper lip curled in revulsion. No shout. Just quiet, visceral disgust.
A single bead of sweat rolls down her temple (not from anger—from sheer distaste).
Thought bubble: …This… is what my husband chooses.
Panel 7 (Medium group shot)
The women scramble in panic: sheets tear, bare feet slap stone, arms cover themselves. Mirene clutches fabric; Celine bolts; Elira drags her daughter.
The two under-bed girls crawl out, red-faced, fleeing past Seraphine like rats.
Background: Fortinbras wheezes, trying to sit up, belly jiggling pathetically.
Panel 8 (Over-the-shoulder from Seraphine)
She stands motionless. View past her shoulder: the fleeing women disappear down the hall.
Fortinbras in foreground, small and ridiculous on the ruined bed, mouth open in excuse.
His speech bubble (stammering): "S-Seraphine… my love… this is—"
Panel 9 (Extreme close-up on Seraphine)
Her eyes only—cold, contemptuous pupils reflecting candle flames.
No dialogue. Just a slow, deliberate blink of disgust.
SFX: soft …
Panel 10 (Medium shot)
Seraphine steps forward one pace. She reaches out slowly and plucks a long auburn hair (Mirene's) from his damp chest.
Holds it up between thumb and forefinger like something diseased.
Her expression: lip curled further, nostrils slightly flared.
Panel 11 (Tight two-shot)
Close on Fortinbras's face—sweat pouring, small eyes darting, pleading.
Inset panel (small): Seraphine's mouth, corners turned down in pure revulsion.
Her dialogue (quiet, flat):
"You are… disgusting."
Panel 12 (Full-page splash, final blow)
Seraphine turns her back and walks out, cloak swirling.
The door begins to close behind her.
Foreground: Fortinbras alone on the wrecked bed, naked, small, surrounded by cooling candles and the stench of his own excess.
His face: crumpled in shame.
Background fades to black around the edges.
Caption (bottom, small text): She feels no fury. Only nausea.
SFX: click (door shutting)
(End scene.)
Panel 1

Wide shot: A vast noble bedchamber under low candlelight. Lord Michael Fortinbras, his wife, the priestess concubine, and the woodcutter girl all lie beneath the same tangled sheets in the great bed. Their state of undress and the disordered bedding make the situation clear without lingering on it. Fortinbras is already asleep, snoring heavily.

SFX:
GRRRHHH… KHHH…

Caption:
The lord slept soundly, as though nothing in the chamber could trouble him.

Panel 2

Closer shot: The woodcutter girl lies awake near the edge of the bed, clutching the blanket close to herself. Her face is tense and exhausted. In the background, the wife lies silent with eyes closed, unmoving, while the priestess concubine stares upward in weary thought.

Woodcutter (small text):
“…Are you awake?”

Panel 3

Priestess close-up: She turns her head slightly toward the woodcutter.

Priestess:
“Yes.”

Panel 4

Two-shot: The woodcutter keeps her voice low so as not to wake either Lord Fortinbras or the wife.

Woodcutter:
“Do you still believe?”

Priestess:
“…In what?”

Panel 5

Woodcutter close-up: Her expression is bitter, wounded, and searching.

Woodcutter:
“In God.”
“In justice.”
“In anything beyond men like him.”

Panel 6

Medium shot: Fortinbras’s huge sleeping form dominates the background; the women are smaller beneath the sheets in the foreground.

Woodcutter:
“We are made to share his bed whenever he desires.”
“He sleeps in comfort.”
“And we lie here as though our will means nothing.”
“So tell me…”
“What kind of God watches that and stays silent?”

Panel 7

Priestess close-up: Shadow crosses her face.

Priestess:
“There was a time I would have answered easily.”
“I would have spoken of trials, of divine order, of justice beyond this world.”

Panel 8

Half-panel: The priestess looks toward the dark canopy above.

Priestess:
“But such words sound different here.”
“They are lighter in a temple…”
“…than in a lord’s bed.”

Panel 9

Woodcutter close-up: Her jaw tightens.

Woodcutter:
“Then God is weak.”

Panel 10

Priestess turns to face her fully.

Priestess:
“Or distant.”
“Or silent.”
“Or perhaps men commit cruelty and call it their right, because no one dares deny them.”

Panel 11

Three-woman composition: The wife is now visibly awake, listening in silence, though she says nothing. The priestess and woodcutter remain the focus.

Woodcutter:
“Then we are powerless.”
“Even with God.”

Priestess:
“For now.”
“Faith does not unmake cruel men.”
“It does not break a lord’s power in a single night.”
“The powerless endure by learning where power lives… and waiting for it to crack.”

Panel 12

Final wide panel: All four remain in the same bed beneath the heavy blankets—Fortinbras asleep and oblivious, the wife silent and unreadable, the priestess grim, the woodcutter staring into darkness.

SFX:
GRRRHHH…

Priestess:
“Do not mistake silence for approval.”
“The heavens may be silent…”
“…but silence is not surrender.”

Caption:
And so the night endured beneath one man’s shadow, while three women measured the cost of living under it.
Panel 1

Wide shot: A dark noble bedchamber lit only by a dying hearth. The massive shape of Lord Michael Fortinbras lies asleep in the background, half-buried in blankets, his loud snoring filling the room. In the foreground, the Woodcutter Girl and the Priestess Concubine lie awake, staring into the darkness.

SFX:
GRRRHHH… KHHH…

Caption:
The lord slept soundly.

Panel 2

Closer shot: The woodcutter lies stiffly on her side, eyes open, face tired and hollow.

Woodcutter (small text):
“…Are you awake?”

Panel 3

Priestess close-up: She turns her head slightly on the pillow, eyes half-lidded, calm but worn.

Priestess:
“Yes.”

Panel 4

Two-shot: The woodcutter hesitates, clutching the blanket near her chest. The priestess watches her quietly.

Woodcutter:
“Do you still believe?”

Priestess:
“…In what?”

Panel 5

Woodcutter close-up: Pain and anger mix on her face.

Woodcutter:
“In God.”
“In justice.”
“In anything beyond this room.”

Panel 6

Woodcutter continues, eyes wet but hard: The shadow of Fortinbras looms blurry in the background.

Woodcutter:
“We are brought here whenever he desires.”
“He sleeps like a king.”
“And we lie here like we are nothing.”
“So tell me…”
“What kind of God sees that and says nothing?”

Panel 7

Priestess close-up: Her face turns solemn, almost haunted.

Priestess:
“There was a time…”
“I would have answered you easily.”
“I would have said suffering has purpose.”
“That heaven sees all.”
“That justice waits beyond mortal reach.”

Panel 8

Half-panel: The priestess looks toward the dark ceiling. Candlelight catches her tired eyes.

Priestess:
“But words like that are easier to speak in a temple…”
“…than in a lord’s bedchamber.”

Panel 9

Woodcutter sits up slightly, expression sharpening with bitterness.

Woodcutter:
“Then God is weak.”

Panel 10

Priestess turns to look directly at her.

Priestess:
“Or distant.”
“Or silent.”
“Or perhaps men simply commit evil…”
“…and call it fate so they need not fear judgment.”

Panel 11

Two-shot: The woodcutter looks shaken, but intent. The priestess remains composed.

Woodcutter:
“Then we are powerless.”
“Even with God.”

Priestess:
“For now.”
“Faith does not break locks.”
“It does not stop cruel men.”
“The powerless endure by learning where power lives… and waiting for the moment it shifts.”

Panel 12

Final wide panel: Fortinbras remains asleep in the background, snoring like some vast beast. In the foreground, the priestess stares into the dark with grim resolve, while the woodcutter lies beside her, silent and thinking.

SFX:
GRRRHHH…

Priestess:
“Do not mistake silence for approval.”
“The heavens may be silent…”
“…but silence is not surrender.”

Caption:
And so the night passed beneath the weight of one man’s power… and the fragile refusal of two women to let despair become truth.
Panel 1

Wide shot: A private chamber in the Fortinbras estate. Candlelight. Heavy curtains. The three women sit together—the Wife seated formally, the Priestess Concubine calm but guarded, the Woodcutter Girl nervous and out of place.

Caption:
Within House Fortinbras, even quiet conversations carried the weight of power.

Wife:
“Sit. We will speak plainly.”

Panel 2

Closer shot: The wife folds her hands in her lap, composed and stern.

Wife:
“You both belong to this household now.”
“So tell me… when my lord calls for you, how often does he summon you?”

Panel 3

Priestess concubine close-up: She averts her eyes slightly, but answers with controlled dignity.

Priestess Concubine:
“Often enough that I understand my place.”
“To him, companionship is not tenderness.”
“It is appetite, authority… and legacy.”

Panel 4

Woodcutter close-up: She looks uneasy, fingers tightened in her dress.

Woodcutter:
“I stopped counting.”
“When he wants someone, he sends for her.”
“That is all there is to it.”

Panel 5

The wife watches both women carefully. Her face is unreadable.

Wife:
“Then you understand the next matter.”
“If either of you becomes pregnant, what were you told to expect?”

Panel 6

Priestess concubine speaking: Calm, bitter wisdom in her expression.

Priestess Concubine:
“That the child will belong to House Fortinbras before it belongs to me.”
“That nurses, tutors, and household servants will raise it in the lord’s name.”
“That blood matters more than a mother’s wishes.”

Panel 7

Woodcutter speaking, tense: She looks smaller in the room, overwhelmed by the reality of it.

Woodcutter:
“I was told I would be watched day and night.”
“Fed well. Guarded. Kept safe.”
“But not for my sake.”
“For the child.”

Panel 8

The wife leans slightly forward. Her tone is firm, instructional.

Wife:
“That is the truth.”
“In this house, any child of Lord Fortinbras is part of the house’s future.”
“They are raised for rank, obedience, and usefulness.”

Panel 9

Half-panel focus on the wife, dark background behind her for emphasis.

Wife:
“They will learn the name Fortinbras before they learn their own desires.”
“They will be taught duty, inheritance, and power.”
“Some will strengthen alliances. Some will serve the estate. All will carry his shadow.”

Panel 10

Priestess concubine looks at the wife directly for the first time.

Priestess Concubine:
“And the mothers?”
“What becomes of us after the child is born?”

Panel 11

The wife answers. Her expression softens only slightly, but remains severe.

Wife:
“That depends.”
“A wise woman may gain security, comfort, even influence.”
“A foolish one will remain only what she was when she entered this house.”
“Useful… but never truly free.”

Panel 12

Final dramatic panel: The three women in silence. The wife sits upright at center, the priestess thoughtful, the woodcutter shaken. Candlelight flickers.

Woodcutter (small text):
“So the child is born into power… and we are not?”

Wife:
“The child is claimed by power from its first breath.”
“That is the way of House Fortinbras.”

Caption:
And in that chamber, each woman understood that motherhood in a great house was not mercy… but submission to legacy.
Fat Nobleman Michael Fortinbras buys the debt of House Veroman. Thus marriage occurs between their oldest daughter Amy and Michael, against Amy's will in exchange for the debt to be cancelled. Lord Michael kisses the bride.
Mor'Thul Prison. A plant sized prison that holds powerful entities from being loose to cause harm or wreak the universe.
avec cette fille aux cheveux rouge elle sort de la douche
creer moi une fille aux cheveux rouge
creer moi une fille aux cheveux rouge
Avec cette image fais lui son haut transparent et une jupe trop petite
Une jeune fille cheveux blanc en jupe de sport
A busy Roman street market scene focused on currency. In the foreground, a 'argentarius' (Roman banker) sits behind a solid wooden table covered in different types of shiny Roman coins: gold aurei, silver denarii, and bronze sestertii. He is using an abacus. A customer is exchanging money. Beside them, a small bakery (pistor) sells loaves of bread. Textures of worn wood and metal. Art style: Franco-Belgian historical comic style, clear lines.
patient in a dentist chair talking with doctor
caracter 1 smoking a cigarret
A beautifully detailed, warm, and inviting illustration for an Arabic children's storybook. The composition is a wide-angle shot from inside a girl's bedroom, filled with soft, warm morning sunlight. In the foreground, a young, smiling Arabic girl, 'Lene' (with her hair slightly messy from sleep, wearing cozy patterned pajamas), is sitting up in her bed. She has one hand over her mouth in a cute yawn, and is looking towards a window. A colorful little sparrow is perched on the window sill, outside, singing, surrounded by green tree branches visible through the glass. Her room, though slightly cluttered, has a cozy feel with books, toys, and a clock on a bedside table.
My story is about a boy named Vex Lobius, a high school student who lives in the city of Axstral, a place shrouded in eternal twilight and surrounded by ancient ruins. Vex belongs to the Lobius family, known for having once guarded a dark power that threatened the city. Because of this, everyone fears him and treats him like a monster, even though he has never done anything wrong.

One day at school, after being targeted and provoked by the bully Caleb, Vex loses control of his emotions and awakens a mysterious power within himself. The energy bursts out uncontrollably, destroying part of the classroom and terrifying all the students. From that moment on, Vex realizes that the dark power of his family has awakened inside him as well.

Frightened and confused, he runs toward the ruins outside the school, wondering whether he will truly become the monster everyone believes he is… or if he will manage to control that power and uncover the truth about his heritage.

The story is a mix of dark fantasy, school drama, and supernatural power awakening, with a gloomy and mysterious atmosphere.
💗 Sweet High School Lovers (Manga Style)
Name: Hana Saito
A 16-year-old girl with soft, shoulder-length dark brown hair that slightly curls at the ends.
Her eyes are warm hazel, always shining when she laughs.
She wears a neat school uniform: a navy skirt, white blouse, and a red ribbon tied under the collar.
Hana is kind, a little shy, and loves reading romance novels during lunch break.
When she’s nervous, she plays with the ribbon on her uniform.
Name: Ren Takahashi
A 17-year-old boy with messy black hair that falls into his eyes.
His eyes are deep gray and usually calm, giving him a cool but gentle look.
His uniform is slightly untidy—his tie is always a bit loose and his sleeves rolled up.
Ren is quiet and protective but secretly very sweet.
He likes sketching in a small notebook during class.
🌸 Their Relationship
Hana and Ren sit next to each other in class. At first they were just classmates, but they slowly became close.
Ren often walks Hana home after school.
Hana sometimes brings homemade snacks for him.
When Hana gets embarrassed, her cheeks turn pink and Ren smiles softly.
They like sitting under the school cherry blossom tree after classes.
Even though they are shy, their small moments together—sharing notes, laughing quietly, and studying side by side—make their love feel sweet and real, just like in a slice-of-life manga. 🌸
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