The team stood silent for a heartbeat after the Centerpied’s final hiss dissolved into the shadows. Mezzo rubbed his knuckles thoughtfully.
Suddenly, a cold chill swept through the room.
From the corner, a low mechanical rattle echoed.
The penguin zombie—once motionless, with glassy, empty eyes—now stirred. His eyes flickered to a ghostly, unnatural glow, an eerie green light pulsing within their sockets. Without warning, they snapped to life, emitting an unsettling series of clacks as they shuffled forward. One darted off toward the heavy vault doors that lined the far wall.
With a loud metallic grinding, the vault doors began to slowly creak open—revealing a dimly lit chamber beyond full of pods. Pitch and Ray worked hard to free them.
One by one, figures stepped into the flickering light.
Tall and regal, some draped in ornate robes; others gleaming with the raw power of their pureblood lineage. Mythics with shimmering scales and ethereal wings stood alongside hybrids whose features blended pureblood and mythic in uncanny harmony.
From the crowd, a familiar figure emerged—a pink bunny with soft eyes and a serene smile. Plum Clippings.
She stepped forward and reached out, shaking each team member’s hand with genuine gratitude.
“Thank you… for rescuing us,” she said softly. “We thought all hope was lost.”
Then her tone shifted, brighter, quicker, almost conspiratorial—like a journalist who’d caught the scent of something big. She tugged her news cap lower and pulled out a little notepad.
“Don’t mind the other purebloods,” Plum said, ears twitching with energy. “I’m very grateful. And… well, if you don’t know me, name’s Plum Clippings—blogger, reporter, all-around pain in the Council’s side. I’m here to tell the truth, no matter how messy it gets.”
Celeste blinked. “How… how do you know we’re hybrids?”
Plum’s grin turned sharp as she tapped her pen against the notepad. “Number one—the rune slots on the backs of your necks. Dead giveaway. Number two—that mana you just used? I’ve never seen anything like it. If you’ll let me, I’d love to feature your story. Share it far and wide. Make the purebloods see you not as troublemakers but as heroes.”
Pitch scoffed, twirling Lady Luck between his fingers. “We’re survivors, bunny. Not heroes.”
“Maybe,” Plum said, shrugging with a sly little smile. “But you could be. Maybe the start of hybrids getting the respect they’ve been craving.”
Ray folded her arms, hammer resting against her shoulder. “Maybe later. When we’re safe.”
Plum’s expression softened. She snapped her notepad shut and, without warning, hugged Celeste tight. “Thanks again. Really. Where are you staying?”
Celeste hesitated. “…The Egg Tree. In the park.”
Plum’s eyes lit up. “Perfect. I’ll meet you there—I need to get the scoop on this.” With that, she bounced off into the crowd, already muttering headline ideas under her breath.
Celeste stared after her, bewildered.
The rescued Mythics and Purebloods began to move toward the exit. But a group of Purebloods lingered, noses raised haughtily.
One scoffed loudly. “Mixed company,” she murmured disdainfully, eyes flicking over the hybrids. “Still, it’s… tolerable—for now.”
The hybrids exchanged uneasy glances as the purebloods turned away, their pride as sharp as their fangs.
Celeste’s blue eyes darkened.
The dragon wasn’t the end.
It was the beginning.
She stood there for a moment longer, staring after them as their footsteps faded into the trembling dark. It was strange, really—how the world could be ending and still somehow keep finding new ways to become even stranger.
Candy zombies. Dragons in the skies. Purebloods and mythics dragged from the same cages. A talking robot. A living book. Powers she still barely understood burning beneath her skin.
Her fingers tightened around her blades.
Not long ago, Celeste had just been trying to survive.
Now she could feel it every time she fought—that strange, shining pull inside her. The way her mana reached for others. The way it answered them. Borrowed them. Mirrored them. Turned fear into fire and friendship into strength. She still didn’t fully understand what she had become, only that it was changing her… and changing everything around her.
One zombie general had fallen.
And somewhere out there, the others would feel it.
Would they rage? Would they hide? Would they come hunting?
Celeste didn’t know.
But she knew they would move.
The thought should have terrified her. Perhaps it did, a little. But when she looked beside her—at Ray with soot on her fur and defiance in her eyes, at Mezzo still standing despite everything, at Pitch with his guarded smirk, at Skye, at Lumina, at C.H.I.P., at all of them still breathing and battered and here—something steadier settled into her chest.
They were a mess.
A weird, stubborn, half-broken mess.
And they were hers.
Maybe the world had become something frightening and absurd and far too sweet to survive. Maybe tomorrow would be worse. Maybe the city above them was still falling apart, piece by piece, under pink sugar skies.
But she wasn’t alone anymore.
And somehow, that made all the difference.
Together, maybe—just maybe—they would make it through this candy apocalypse after all.
When they finally climbed from the sewers, the air above Clawdiff hit her like a dream she wasn’t sure she wanted to wake from.
In the distance, the candy dome skyline shimmered pink beneath the fading light, glittering as though the whole city had been dipped in spun sugar. Glassy towers gleamed like sweets in a shop window. The new candy kingdom of Clawdiff stretched before them—beautiful, ruined, unreal.
High overhead, Marzipan flew across the sky, passing in a slow, graceful arc above the city like a guardian made of myth and memory.
Celeste lifted her face to the strange, shining horizon.
The world had changed.
So had she.
And somewhere beyond that glittering skyline, the next battle was already waiting.


