Disan (1st Moon)
Asrade despises his obsession with plagues. To her, disease destroys souls without purpose, robbing her of what is rightfully hers to govern. She tolerates him only because corruption, too, eventually returns to her domain.
Hayasa (2nd Moon)
She respects his devotion to punishment but finds him overly rigid. Souls cannot be chained forever, she believes — they must be released when their time comes. His prisons bind bodies, but her hand decides the fate of spirit.
Askede (3rd Moon)
Asrade acknowledges Askede's eternal forge with rare respect. Weapons may endure, but without souls to wield them they are hollow. Between them lies an unspoken understanding: Askede forges vessels of war, and Asrade gives those vessels meaning.
Niyarashi (4th Moon)
She is wary of his reckless magic. Creation without balance often leads to collapse, and when it does, she gathers the souls left behind. To her, he is a child playing with sparks, whose fires she will inevitably have to extinguish.
Natabut (5th Moon)
She respects his discipline and silence, seeing in him a kind of inevitability. His walls can resist sorcery, but even he cannot deny that souls flow toward her in the end. He is a fortress, but she is the foundation beneath it.
Loire (6th Moon)
Of all the Moons, Asrade is closest to Loire. His husks are incomplete without her, and her souls require vessels to inhabit. Together they form life from silence and spirit, though she quietly fears that without her, his art would remain hollow forever.
Barata (7th Moon)
She finds Barata's slumbering indifference frustrating, but she cannot deny the weight of his aura. Souls dream, and in dreams he has sway — yet it is she who decides whether they wake at all. She views him as passive where she is decisive.
Sataku (8th Moon)
Asrade acknowledges Sataku's role as creator of universes, but believes her suffocating embrace weakens life within them. To her, a universe without freedom is a cage of souls, and Asrade alone can unbind what Sataku smothers.
Fune (9th Moon)
She respects Fune's devotion to balance. Water sustains and destroys, much like souls endure and perish. The two share a quiet bond of mutual understanding, though Asrade believes Fune's justice is still bound by mortal ideals.
Futika (10th Moon)
Asrade despises Futika's reckless catastrophes, for they scatter souls needlessly and force her to gather the broken remnants. She sees Futika not as brilliant, but as wasteful destruction incarnate.
Inaroth (12th Moon)
Inaroth is the only one Asrade bows to in acknowledgment, for time and space contain all souls. Yet Inaroth, in turn, treats Asrade as indispensable — for without souls, time flows through emptiness. Between them lies a rare balance of equals, one of inevitability and one of existence itself.