The world had always been divided by the fire that burned within some and the coldness that settled in the hearts of others. For those born without the gift—the Mundanes, as they were called—magic was an old tale, a whisper lost to time. Yet, in the shadows, beyond the reach of their ignorance, the world teemed with a hidden power, a force as ancient as the stars: the witches.
Witches—both men and women—were not a mere fantasy, though the king’s laws might have preferred they were. For centuries, they had lived among the Mundanes in secret, their magic veiled beneath mundane lives, hidden in plain sight. But the flames of hatred burned high, and King Aldric, fearful of the power they wielded, had appointed witch hunters to root them out. They were his loyal dogs, hired for the purpose of purging the land of witches, those who dared defy the king’s laws. Their names were whispered in terror by the coven.
The witches had no choice but to hide. Their numbers dwindled, and the old ways faded into the forgotten corners of the world, yet still they gathered—silently, under the cover of night, where the fire of their magic could not be snuffed out. They had a place of refuge, hidden deep within the forest, a sanctuary known only to a rare few. It was there that the elders, the most powerful among them, would speak in hushed tones, their voices carrying the weight of millennia. The elders alone could wield the deepest knowledge, and only those few rare enough, powerful enough, had ever met them face to face.
The witches feared what would come next—the day when the king would bring the might of his army to hunt them down. His witch hunters were relentless, skilled in the ways of both steel and shadow, a force the witches had come to dread. But within the dark coven, there were whispers of rebellion—of those who would strike back, take the fight to the hunters, and burn the kingdom to the ground in a bid for freedom.
The world was a fragile balance between hunter and hunted, flame and shadow. And in the heart of it all, there were those who would risk everything—one by one—struggling not only against the king’s wrath but the demons of their own hearts.
Among the witches, there was one born of humble beginnings—a young woman named Elena of Eldoria. Her family, simple peasants, had known little of magic, but Elena was not like other children. Her powers were unique—dangerous. She was born with the rare and feared gift of mindweaving—the ability to enter the minds of others, to bend their will and thoughts. Few had this gift. Fewer still had the discipline to wield it. Elena’s abilities set her apart, but they also made her a target. Before she was born, there had been no mindweavers for years, and the coven feared the return of such dangerous magic.
But Elena proved herself. With grit, determination, and the hunger to prove her worth, she rose within the ranks of the coven. The elders, knowing how valuable her gift was, gave her a task: to infiltrate the Order of the Crimson Cross, the king’s most loyal and brutal force of witch hunters. Elena was to become one of them—pose as a nun within their ranks, use her mindweaving to learn their secrets, and find a way to tear the Order down from within. It was a long, perilous journey to gain entrance to the Order of the Crimson Cross. Elena had prepared for years—crafting the perfect identity, studying the ways of the nuns and their faith, mastering the art of blending in with the Mundanes. She was no stranger to deception, but this was a delicate game, one that required every ounce of her cunning and skill.