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Welcome to Charming, the year is now 1895. It’s time to join us and immerse yourself in scandal and drama interlaced with magic both light and dark.

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One of the cheapest homeless shelters in Victorian London charged four pennies to sleep in a coffin. Which was... still better than sleeping upright against a rope? — Jordan / Lynn
If he was being completely honest, the situation didn't look good, but Sylvano was not in the habit of being completely honest about anything. No reason to start now.
you & me & the war of the endtimes


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nobody hates you more than your own reflection
#1
No one had ever told him that he had been adopted after his whore mother had fallen pregnant and had no clue who his father was, although perhaps it would have been better if someone had. Then everything that came after would make sense instead of making him linger in the memories, turning over each one carefully as he tried to determine where he had gone wrong. People abandoned him most of his life and there was no one to blame but himself, right?

Summertime 1873, an estate just outside of Hanyang

Morning sunlight filtered through the white gauze of the curtains that someone must have opened before he roused, a hazy gold that always made the nursery look like something out of a fairytale. Taesu’s earliest memories were bathed in that gold color – the kind that lived in the folds of his governess’s skirts and in the reflections of the polished wood. The house always seemed to smell faintly of plum tea and persimmon, and everything he touched was always smooth against his skin.

At three, he did not yet know this was a luxury. He only knew that hunger had never gnawed at his stomach and when he cried, whether it was from loneliness or something else, someone always came to him immediately to comfort him. When he smiled people seemed relieved, which made Taesu do it often. His governess, an extremely tall woman with hair that greyed around the edge of her face, had very soft hands and a careful voice, always called him our little blessing. He thought blessings were things that belonged to God, and since everyone had said he’d been given to his parents by an Angel (this would make sense later on, once he realized he was not biologically theirs), Taesu assumed she was right.

The couple he called Mother and Father were kind to him, often doting on him as if they could not believe he was actually here. Taesu didn’t understand, not really, but Mother often pulled him into her arms and rocked him, her hand stroking through his hair. Father smelled of ink and pipe smoke, his laughter filling the halls when he returned from work late in the evening. Whenever he lifted Taesu high enough to see the painted dragons near the ceiling (if he was lucky, his Mother would make them dance and spit fire for him), Taesu giggled until his ribs hurt. Those were the good days – measured by the end of laughter echoing throughout their house, the clink of porcelain cups and the hush of bare feet on polished floors.

Those first three years of his life were not void of love and attention.

Sometimes the governess would take him into the gardens at the back of the state. There, under fig and plum trees, the air was often alive with bees. They merely buzzed around them, stopping to rest on flowers before moving along. His governess would sit him on a bench far too large for him, his feet dangling off the edge as he kicked, pressing red apples into his hands to eat. He did not realize what luxury apples were simply because they were always so abundant around the estate, and there always seemed to be at least one for him to eat. Taesu never realized that there was a life beyond these walls. Why would he? He had everything he could possibly need right here.

When the governess brushed crumbs from his chin, she looked at him strangely, her hand lingering against his face. It felt as though she was trying to memorize a face that might soon change. She must have been leaving because she was here one day and gone the next. Mother was introducing him to another governess a few days later, all while insisting that Taesu was just a charmer and that was that.

Taesu was not sure what charmed meant, but he certainly learned how to do it early on in life. If he laughed, the servants laughed with him. If he pouted (which was often during his terrible twos), the servants rushed to console him. He thought this was what unconditional love was: love was just the ability to make people soften. Love was always wanting to have people around, and those people wanted to be there, too. He used it without malice, much like a child discovering that light can be bent through glass to make rainbows dance on the floor.

But once, when he ran to show his mother one of the rainbows because he felt the colors were particularly bright that day, she stepped back from him as though he had startled her. The sunlight caught him full in the face so he didn’t exactly see how her eyes widened, although her expression, something fragile and frightened, remained glued to her face as he came closer, tugging at her hand to show her the rainbow. She knelt quickly, her hands smoothing through his thick, black hair, and told him he had startled her, nothing more. She oohed and awed over the rainbow, although she did not sit next to him nor did she stay long before telling the governess to care for him for the remainder of the day.

The next day and every single day after, Taesu noticed how her hands trembled when she adjusted the collar of his shirt and the way Father’s laughter no longer echoed throughout the corridors. In fact, Taesu noticed how he saw less and less of his parents altogether, and was simply too young to understand why. He felt the unease but couldn’t name it, even though he felt it. It reminded him of a draft that came under a closed door during the winter. Eyes followed him around as though everyone was waiting for something to happen, and every day they were free from incident, there was a collective sigh of relief.

Still, in his small world, life remained good. There were still silk sheets, sweet rice cakes and lullabies sung to him as covers were pulled to his chin. The governess still kissed his forehead each night after the song and told him he was loved so, so much. And so, Taesu slept easily in his bed, unaware that love, for most people, had limits – and that his had already been measured.


The following 2 users Like Taesu Jeong's post:
   Ahn-Bo Jeong, Seojin Jeong

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Credit to Fox for this beautiful set!<3
#2
Early January 1874, an estate just outside of Hanyang

The year began with the sound of rain. It felt for days and days without stopping, drumming softly against the windows, soaking the garden until the camellias filled with water until they sagged, the water running out of them as if they were crying. It was a sad sight, but there was not much that could be done to stop the rain.

Another birthday had come and gone, and Taesu was starting to realize just how things had shifted since the summer months had faded into autumn, and autumn into winter. Mother and Father did not spend merely as much time with him as they used to, although perhaps it was just because he was getting older. That’s what he told him, at least. Taesu was five years old, still small enough to be carried when he held his arms up, yet heavy enough to be set down more often. He did not understand why the adults spoke in lowered voices, only that they looked at him differently now, warily, as though expecting something strange to happen whenever he entered the room.

He began to draw attention from others that he did not intend to. Servants, who once smiled and doted on him, now went about their business, their eyes glued to the floor as if they did not trust themselves to look at him. Taesu wanted to ask why, but he was too young to ask these kinds of questions. His governess started sending him to bed earlier, claiming he needed more rest. He obeyed, though he could hear her whispering with another maid outside the door: It isn’t natural. People can’t look away from him.

It wasn’t Taesu’s fault. His mother had not divulged that she was a Veela because the couple, desperate for a child they could not conceive on their own, would not have taken him in. They would rather be childless than raise something not entirely human. Though the Veela blood in him was muddled with wizarding blood, it still worked its own quiet mischief. The first time his father noticed was during a family dinner. Taesu had been telling a story about a red kite they had been flying that afternoon, and that it had gotten stuck in a tree that no one could reach after he’d tripped and lost it. It had taken a well timed spell to get it down.

He remembered laughing with delight as he watched his governess try to grab it, but when he looked at his father, he was looking at his mother, who had said something to the effect of, if his governess could not prevent him from tripping then perhaps she ought not to be a governess. It was an odd thing to say because it had been an accident, but then again mother was becoming increasingly protective over him each day. She blinked once she realized what she had said, and her expression looked almost… frightened.

After that, he was no longer allowed to sit at the family table. The governess began serving his meals in the nursery. He asked why, but the only answer he got was a brisk because it’s easier this way, my dear.

The house felt different. People still smiled, but the smiles trembled at the edges. Taesu began to understand what loneliness was because when all he wanted was to see people and make friends, there was always an excuse as to why he could not leave the house, and why no one was allowed over to see him. Strangers started coming too, men and women carrying scrolls, poking and prodding him, and asking him questions he didn’t have answers for. Am I sick? He asked his governess, but she just shook her head because she didn’t know. Once, when he pressed his ear to the lacquered panel, he caught words he didn’t understand: Veela… contamination… no one must know.

That night, his mother sat by his bed for the first time in months. She didn’t speak for a long while. Her perfume smelled faintly of jasmine, a smell he would later come to hate because he associated it with the woman who had loved him so dearly and then abandoned him without a second thought. When he asked if she was ill, she touched his cheek and said, No, darling. You’re the one who must stay inside now.

From then on, the windows of the nursery stayed latched. The gold color he associated with his childhood faded into greys because the curtains remained drawn. He couldn’t peek through them because they were enchanted to stay in place. The garden was forbidden. His toys remained neatly arranged in toy chests and baskets, but the room felt smaller each week. When the governess brushed his hair, she no longer met his eyes. When his father visited, he stood in the doorway and said, You’re being very brave, as though Taesu were already gone.

He did not yet know the word heritage. He didn’t know that blood could frighten people more than some curses. He only knew that something invisible had shifted between himself and the world, and that he wished whatever it was would shift back into place so everything would be the same as it used to be.

Taesu tried his hardest to ensure that some things didn’t change, as some parts of him tried to make his parents smile, believing that if he could just be good enough, sweet enough, they might let him back into the light of the garden he missed so dearly. But each attempt only deepened their discomfort. By late winter, even the servants kept their distance.

He began to watch the rain again, tracing droplets down the glass with one finger, waiting for someone to come and sit beside him. No one did. The house that had once held him in silk and sunlight began to feel like a gilded cage. Taesu wanted friends, companionship, anything really, but nobody ever came.

When spring arrived with its warmth, he found that his parents had kept the coldness of winter. He caught the faint sound of carriage wheels outside, he didn’t yet know that they were preparing to send him away. Only that his mother’s voice sounded softer when she told him to pack his favorite blanket. She kissed his hair and said he’d be staying with his aunt, where he would get better.

He believed her. Children usually do.



The following 1 user Likes Taesu Jeong's post:
   Seojin Jeong

[Image: JJUdkv9.png]
Credit to Fox for this beautiful set!<3
#3
Springtime 1874, Unnamed Christian institution for displaced children, Joseon
Taesu did not know an aunt on either his mother or father’s side, but he was excited to meet her. Perhaps she would let him out into the garden and tuck him in just like mother used to do. He was loaded into the carriage with a bag, and although he wished more than anything mother and father would tell him they’d collect him soon, once he was feeling well enough to come home, yet neither of them were even outside to see him off.

His governess was though, and she spoke to the driver in a hushed tone as she told that Taesu would be visiting his aunt for a long while, somewhere the air was cleaner so his lungs could heal. He had never felt sick and no one had ever told him he had bad lungs, but he’d been taught not to argue with adults so he settled into the corner of the carriage, ready for his adventures to begin. He remembered the journey mostly by its sounds: the wheels clattering over stones and gravel, the hiss of rain against the carriage because spring always brought a lot of them, and the muffled voice of the driver muttering to himself.

When the carriage finally stopped, Taesu blinked through the fogged glass of the carriage’s windows and stared at a building that did not resemble a house at all. He did not feel like this place was cleaner than his parents home and wished that he could return to them. The walls were pale and bare, the sides of the building a muddied mess instead of having a beautiful garden to walk through, and the wooden cross tilted on the roof made him uncomfortable. A bell rang somewhere out of sight. It wasn’t an unpleasant sound but it still made him jump.

A woman who was dressed strangely came out of the front door and hurried over to him. The carriage driver unloaded the luggage and Taesu before seeing himself off. Taesu stared at the strange woman – she did not resemble mother or father in the slightest and her accent was… weird. She also didn’t speak the language they used at home, at least until he stared blankly at her. She told him he’d learn English in time, as this was what they spoke here. She took his hand and squeezed his fingers tightly despite him not resisting, and Taesu wondered if she was apologizing for something she could not say aloud.

Inside the air was cooler than outside. A woman in a grey robe greeted them, her eyes darting between Taesu and his greeter. She spoke in the halting rhythm of a foreigner who had learned his language by rote. Her eyes were kind but distant. While the adults spoke, Taesu studied the floorboards. They were worn smooth by many feet. He thought of the polished wood of home and wondered if the children here were allowed to run. When he looked up again, the first woman he had greeted him was leaving. Taesu cried and reached out for her despite not knowing her, and although she froze mid-step, she did not turn around. She stepped through the doorway, and the latch clicked shut.

For the first time, he was truly alone.

The missionaries called this place his new home, meant for children who did not have families like him; Taesu wanted to argue, he did have a family. Mother and father would come for him once he was over this sickness. The woman just shook her head because he was wrong – his parents, for whatever reason, did not want him anymore. She took him on a tour of his new home, although he just cried the entire time, not caring to look around. She sharply told him to stop with the tears because they had no place here; whatever he had done to upset his parents to abandon him was over, and there was nothing he could do to change the outcome.

The home was run by a handful of foreign sisters who wanted to save children like him. Everything was scheduled: wake with the bell, pray before breakfast, work before supper. The food was plain and gross. He had to eat what was put in front of him or go hungry. Taesu often did the latter because he did not eat food he did not like.

The other children came from everywhere – street orphans who had been found wandering without a place to sleep, abandoned infants, and an occasional girl rescued from disrepute. Some of them were kind to him at first, offering him a place next to them as they played with toys and ate the disgusting food. Others avoided him, muttering that he was strange, that there was something off about him. He didn’t understand why. He only knew that when he smiled at them, they sometimes stared too long, or else looked away in shame, crossing themselves as if warding off temptation.

The matrons noticed, too. They began giving him extra chores that kept him apart from the other children: scrubbing the stone steps until his fingers ached, fetching water from the well that was further away from the school because the water was cleaner than the one closer, weeding the empty garden because hadn’t he said once how much he loved being outside with the trees? They never said why, but he could feel it in their tone. It was a cautious distance, the way one might speak to a dog they suspected might attack them at any moment.

At night he lay in a narrow bed crammed into a corner, the bed sometimes empty next to him because children didn’t want to get too close. Sometimes he could hear another child crying softly a few beds over, although the one time he had gotten out of bed to try to comfort them, Taesu was met with harsh rejection and told to go away, no one wanted him here. The sisters would come and whisper prayers, but the crying never stopped; it only became quieter, as if even grief had to follow the rules here, too. Taesu hated it.

He missed the gardens and the trees he used to walk underneath. He missed the governess’s perfume, the rainbows he could see through the glass, his mother’s smile and the way his father used to lift up to see the dragons painted near the ceiling. He tried to pray, because that’s what everyone did before bed, but the words felt heavy in his mouth. When he said amen, it came out like a question.

Weeks passed. Then months. Time blurred together when every day was the same shade of gray. The governess never came back. Neither did the mother who had promised he’d get better. The thought that they might never return came slowly, although Taesu refused to believe it. He had to hold onto hope for something. Mother and father had loved him dearly, so they wouldn’t abandon him without telling him why, right?

One afternoon, the sister who had first greeted him caught him humming to himself while folding linens. The woman’s expression tightened, and she said sharply, "Silence is obedience." Taesu nodded, lowering his eyes to stare at the linen he still clutched tightly in his hand. But as he walked back to his chores, he couldn’t help humming again, quietly, under his breath. The tune made the world feel less empty, even if no one wanted to hear it.

He learned that hunger came in more than one form.



The following 1 user Likes Taesu Jeong's post:
   Seojin Jeong

[Image: JJUdkv9.png]
Credit to Fox for this beautiful set!<3
#4
Autumn 1876, Courtyard of the unnamed Christian institution for displaced children, Joseon

The courtyard smelled like jasmine and smoke that day, the kind of cool autumn morning where his breath was wispy, and reminded him of steam. Taesu was sent out to fetch water from the well because they were running low, so he took his bucket, a small one in comparison to the ones used by the older children, and ventured outside. It was a cool day, and Taesu lifted his head toward the sun before continuing on. He enjoyed this chore; it was quiet, away from the shouting and the chaos that often came with living with so many other children, plus he could see hills in the distance when the sky was clear.

Fortunately today was one of those days. He was lowering the rope into the well, his gaze on the tops of the hills in the distance when he heard footsteps scuffing behind him. Taesu didn’t turn although he did quickly tear his gaze away from the hills in favor of staring at the bucket. It was almost to the bottom.

“Hey,” a boy said to him, although he seemed to keep his distance. “Hey!” He said louder, and this time Taesu turned toward. The boy was maybe a year older than he was, sturdy, with cropped hair and a scowl that was permanently etched onto his face. Myung. He’d come in just a few months ago but the sisters already liked him because he was useful, loud in his prayers and good at whatever chores they gave to him.

Myung stared at him like he was expecting a response, but Taesu wasn’t sure what to say. The air felt strange between them, stretched thin, as if the space itself were waiting for something.

“What’re you smiling for?” the boy snapped, his hands balling into fists.

“I’m not,” Taesu said, though he had been. Sometimes he smiled when he was nervous, but he didn’t realize it.

“The sisters say you’ve got the look of an akma*. That you make people do things they don’t want to. I wish they’d make you go away from the rest of us.” Myung spit out, and although he didn’t sound angry, Taesu picked up the resentment toward him in his tone. He didn’t know why – Taesu hadn’t done anything to him outside of trying to be friendly since his arrival. He remembered how frightening it was to suddenly be in a new place where you didn’t know anyone or what the rules were. He flinched as the boy stepped closer.

Taesu shook his head as he knelt down to begin to pull the bucket back up. It was heavy. “That’s not true.” He didn’t understand the boy’s reasoning – he wanted to tell Myung that he’d never made anyone do anything against their will, that he really only wanted people to like him, and it wasn’t his fault if people stared or faltered when they were near him. All Taesu wanted was one person to call a friend. But before he could speak, Myung shoved him.

It wasn’t a hard push, but it was unexpected. Taesu’s heel caught the edge of the well’s stone rim, forcing him to let go of his grip on the rope attached to the bucket so he could catch himself. The bucket clattered into the water below, and for a moment, the splash was the only sound between them. At least he had not fallen into the water below; Myung probably would have let him drown down there.

Myung froze, his face suddenly pale. “Akma!” He shouted, even as guilt crossed his face like he wasn’t sure why he was saying the word. And then he turned and ran, boots scraping across the ground until the sound disappeared behind the chapel. At least the bells didn’t toll.
Taesu did not chase him. He couldn’t. His hands throbbed from where the rope had burned them and the cool autumn air only made the sting worse. He crouched beside the well, the bucket bobbing in the water below. There was no way he was going to get it out now. His reflection rippled back at him. He looked small, pale and frightened.

He didn’t know when he’d started crying. It came quietly at first, just wetness against his cheeks that the breeze turned cold, and then small, shuddering breaths that he couldn’t stop no matter how hard he tried. He wanted to go back inside, to curl under the blanket in his bed, but his legs would not move no matter how much he willed them. If he went back now, someone would ask what happened, and Taesu was not sure how to even answer that.

Why didn't the other children like him? He tried so hard to be good. He worked hard, never complained about the chores he was given, said his prayers, and shared his bread when he could. It helped that he didn’t like to eat all that much, and the others around him were happy to take more food. Taesu smiled because he wanted to show that he was friendly, although when people returned his smile, it was never for very long. Being near him always seemed to make them uneasy.

By the time the bell rang for midday prayer, his tears had dried into faint salt streaks. He wiped his face with his sleeve and stood. His throat ached. The bucket was gone. He’d have to tell the sisters he dropped it. They would scold him, maybe give him extra chores. That was fine. He could take that. It was easier than trying to explain the rest.

When he stepped into the chapel for prayers, one of the sisters reached down to smooth his hair, murmuring, “Poor child, you’re always so quiet.” Her touch was gentle, protective. He leaned into it without meaning to, desperate for warmth that didn’t vanish.

She smiled down at him, kind but puzzled, as if she didn’t know why she wanted to keep him close. Unfortunately, neither did he.

akma* // devil




The following 1 user Likes Taesu Jeong's post:
   Seojin Jeong

[Image: JJUdkv9.png]
Credit to Fox for this beautiful set!<3

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