Opal City was a place that never truly
slept. It just changedits face depending on which
district you stood in. District One was the rougher side, where gang violence,
robberies, and disappearances were just part of the nightly soundtrack.
District Two was the opposite—quiet, suburban, safe enough that people left
their porch lights on more out of habit than fear. Between them sat the city's
beating heart, a strip of neon-lit businesses where both districts collided.
Clothing stores, shoe shops, fast food joints, arcades, game stores, and tucked
right in the center of it all, The Poison Kiss.
By day, The Poison Kiss was a restaurant serving
authentic Jehdanian cuisine—rich, spiced, expensive dishes only locals or
people from nearby towns even knew existed. By night, it transformed into
something else entirely. The outside glowed with a neon sign shaped like a pair
of fanged lips, pulsing pink and electric blue. Music thumped through the
walls, vibrating the pavement. Two security guards stood at the door checking
IDs, their black shirts stretched tight over their chests as they waved people in.
Inside, the club was alive. Bodies packed the dance
floor, drunk and sweaty, moving together under flashing lights that painted
their faces in quick bursts of color. The bass rattled the floor. The air was
thick with perfume, alcohol, and heat. Voices shouted over the music, laughter
rising and falling like waves.
Behind the bar, Meyano Ledger worked like he was born
for it. Twenty-five, dark-skinned, platinum curls catching every bit of neon,
full lips curved into a teasing smile as he poured two shots of tequila for a
new customer. His long eyelashes fluttered when he laughed, and the man across
from him—late thirties, maybe early forties, handsome with graying black hair
at the temples—leaned in like he couldn't help himself.
"What time do you get off?" the man asked, voice low,
hopeful.
"Two," Meyano said, sliding the shots toward him. "But
I already have plans." He winked. "Maybe next time."
The man laughed, shaking his head. "That's too bad. We
could've had a great time." He slipped thirty dollars across the counter. "Keep
the change."
He downed his sixth shot of the night, hopped off the
barstool, and disappeared into the crowd.
The night continued like that—drinks, spills, orders
shouted over the music. Friday nights were always chaos, but chaos paid well.
People in the Gemstone Nation worked themselves to the bone; weekends were the
only time they remembered they were alive.
Meyano wiped down the bar, restocked bottles, slid
drinks across the counter with practiced ease. He liked the noise. Needed it.
The music was the only thing loud enough to drown out the thoughts of
others—thoughts he never asked to hear. His telepathy wasn't something he
understood or controlled. It came in waves, sometimes whispers, sometimes
screams. The club's noise was the only thing that muted it.
By two in the morning, the rush finally thinned.
He slipped into the employee lounge, counting his
tips. "Five hundred," he muttered. "Not bad."
"Are you surprised?" Sima said, leaning against the
counter with a smirk. "That pretty face of yours could get you anything."
Meyano laughed, stuffing the cash into his pocket. "If
only you knew how wrong you are. I'm heading out. Text me when you get home."
"I will. Same to you."
He kissed her cheek, waved goodbye to the rest of the
staff, and pulled off his apron, shoving it into his bag. His hoodie went on
next—soft, worn, comforting. He hated walking home at night, but his car had
been in the shop for two weeks, and he refused to waste money on ride apps. The
shortcut behind the club cut the walk to fifteen minutes.
He stepped outside.
The air was cool, crisp, and blessedly quiet—a relief
after hours of heat and noise. The silence wrapped around him like a blanket.
For a moment, he just breathed.
Then he started down the back route.
It wasn't an alley, but it wasn't safe either. A
narrow service road lined with dumpsters, cracked pavement, and the occasional
flickering streetlight. Employees used it for smoke breaks. Strangers used it
for… other things. Tonight, it was empty except for a few homeless people
curled under blankets and a stray dog rummaging through a trash bag.
Meyano shoved his hands deeper into his hoodie pockets
and kept walking. The smell of garbage and stale urine hit him hard, but he'd
smelled worse. He turned the corner—
And froze.
A man stood ahead of him, tall and broad-shouldered,
his back to Meyano. Another man hung suspended in front of him—dangling in the
air, feet kicking uselessly a few inches above the ground.
The victim's thoughts slammed into Meyano's mind like
an echo.
Ah, fuck. He's going to kill me before I even start.
He didn't sound afraid. He sounded irritated.
Before Meyano could process that, the taller man
flicked his wrist.
The suspended man's body jerked sharply—an unnatural,
decisive movement—and then collapsed to the pavement with a heavy thud.
Meyano gasped.
Too loud.
The tall man stilled.
Slowly, he turned.
And Meyano found himself staring into the eyes of
someone who didn't belong in this world—or maybe belonged too much. The man was
pale, almost luminous under the streetlight. His jawline sharp, his dark hair
pulled back into a low ponytail, long bangs falling loose around his face. His
coat—long, black, elegant—moved with the wind like a shadow that had learned to
walk.
But it was his eyes that held Meyano in place.
Blue. Cold. Magnetic. Like the ocean right before a
storm.
He didn't speak.
He didn't need to.
His gaze alone said one thing: You shouldn't have seen
that.
The pressure hit next—a presence brushing against
Meyano's mind, testing the edges of him. Cold. Controlled. Ancient. His
telepathy recoiled, sparks of instinctive energy flickering through his nerves.
His other ability—something deeper, something he never named—rose like a
reflex, a ripple of invisible force pushing outward from his palm.
The man's eyes narrowed.
"You felt that," he said quietly, his voice low and
accented, Spanish curling around the edges.
Meyano's throat tightened. "I—I didn't see anything,"
he lied.
The man stepped closer, boots silent on the pavement.
"Most people cannot sense magic. Not unless they have their own."
Meyano's pulse hammered. He didn't answer.
The man studied him, expression unreadable. The
streetlight flickered again, shadows shifting across his face.
"Go home," he said finally.
The words weren't loud. They didn't need to be. They
carried weight—command wrapped in quiet steel.
Meyano nodded quickly and turned to leave. He didn't
run. He refused to run. But his steps were fast, uneven, his breath shaky as he
put distance between himself and the man who had just ended someone's life like
it was nothing.
He didn't look back.
He didn't have to.
He could feel the man's gaze on his back until he turned the corner
and the streetlight disappeared behind him. Only then did he let out the breath
he'd been holding. Only then did he realize his
hands were trembling—faint sparks of telekinetic energy flickering between his
fingers before fading out.
"What the hell was that,"
he whispered to himself.
And somewhere behind him, unseen, the man in the long
black coat watched the empty street, eyes narrowing with interest.
