Disan (1st Moon)
She dislikes his endless talk of art in disease. To her, his plagues lack the permanence of forged steel. Still, she grudgingly admits his creations linger in ways even weapons cannot.
Hayasa (2nd Moon)
When he arrived later, Askede recognized his strength but found his obsession with punishment exhausting. To her, chains are nothing without blades to enforce them.
Niyarashi (4th Moon)
She acknowledges his mastery of magic but sees it as fragile without steel to shape it. Magic, to her, is fuel for relics — nothing more.
Natabut (5th Moon)
Askede regards him with suspicion. His power to absorb and reflect magic makes her relics vulnerable, and she respects that danger while quietly resenting it.
Loire (6th Moon)
His craft of shaping bodies fascinates her. She wonders what weapons or armor might be forged specifically to bind his creations. Yet his eerie manner unsettles her.
Barata (7th Moon)
Askede dislikes his indolence. To her, the forge is unending labor — so his sleep and languor feel like mockery. Still, she admits his aura is strangely overwhelming.
Sataku (8th Moon)
She respects Sataku deeply. Worlds and galaxies are the greatest canvases, and Askede secretly wonders if her relics might endure across universes.
Fune (9th Moon)
Liquid has little in common with fire and steel, and yet Askede sees balance in her. Water tempers the forge. She does not hate Fune, though their ideals differ.
Futika (10th Moon)
Askede distrusts her destructive nature. Where she forges to shape vengeance, Futika destroys without purpose. In Askede’s eyes, that is wasteful.
Asrade (11th Moon)
She has little to say, but she feels an unspoken kinship. Souls, like weapons, must be shaped. Both know the burden of crafting that which defines existence.
Inaroth (12th Moon)
Askede respects her authority but refuses to be overshadowed. Inaroth commands time and space; Askede commands steel and flame. To her, both are needed for eternity.