Fairy Legend Mizuki (Confirmed ●)
Mizuki’s philosophy centered on kehai (presence or atmosphere). He argued that spirits only manifest when humans are sensitive to this atmosphere, typically in peaceful times or ancient, natural places.
“May your Thread never tangle, May your Moon-step be sure, And when the veil grows thin between dusk and dream, May you remember: You are Mizuki. You are the legend now.”
If you are walking the path of Mizuki, remember these three rules: fairy legend mizuki
The name Mizuki is derived from the Japanese words "mizu," meaning water, and "ki," meaning tree or spirit.
| Court | Ruler | Temperament | Role in Legend | |-------|-------|-------------|----------------| | (Spring/Truth) | Lady Kagaribi | Honest, fiery | Grants Mizuki the Lantern of Unspoken Things . | | Dusk Court (Autumn/Secrets) | Lord Utsuro | Trickster, melancholic | Tests Mizuki with riddles; holds her mother’s forgotten name. | | Star-Refuge (Neutral) | The Scribe-Moth | Ancient, neutral | Records all fairy-human pacts. Mizuki’s safest haven. | You are the legend now
Mizuki finds a human boy crying behind the gymnasium. He whispers, “I gave my laughter to a fairy so my sick dog would get better. Now the dog is well, but I can’t laugh anymore. I don’t even remember her name.” The fairy who took the laughter now wears it as a bell. To free the boy, Mizuki must convince the fairy to trade the laughter for something greater—not a magic item, but a genuine human moment the fairy has never felt.
Mizuki's legend bears some similarities to other water spirits from around the world, such as the Greek myth of the Nereids, the Slavic myth of the Rusalka, and the African myth of the Mami Wata. | | Star-Refuge (Neutral) | The Scribe-Moth |
Avoid or outwit these; they cannot be fought directly.