The air in Prosperous Corner was a permanent, delicious fog. It was a smaller, more intimate district of Fragrant Harbour, a labyrinth of cobbled streets where the scent of sizzling scallion pancakes tangled with the sweet perfume of blooming night-jasmine and the earthy aroma of rare teas. Stalls overflowed with enchanted trinkets, whispering silks, and fruits that glowed with their own inner light. It was a place of serendipitous finds, and Panda, Chief Love Promoter for the Ministry of Amorous Affections, believed there was no better place to find love.
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Today’s mission was set up in a small square under strings of paper lanterns shaped like fat, happy carp. The event: a board game meetup. Panda believed board games were a perfect microcosm of romance—they involved strategy, cooperation, shared triumphs, and the occasional playful betrayal.
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“See, Bam?” she said, adjusting a tablecloth that kept trying to flutter away on a cinnamon-scented breeze. “It’s all here. The shared experience! The laughter over a failed dice roll! The way a well-timed move can feel like a secret shared between two people!”
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Bam Boo, her feathery assistant, hovered nearby, using his prehensile primary feathers to meticulously arrange a set of crystalline dice that changed colour based on the roller’s emotional state. “The only secret I’m anticipating is how long it will take for Mr. Peters to spontaneously combust from social anxiety,” he warbled, his beady eyes scanning the crowd. “His emotional aura is broadcasting ‘flight risk’ at a deafening frequency.”
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Panda followed his gaze. Peter had already arrived. He was a man in his late twenties, dressed in the impeccably clean but slightly rumpled robes of a junior bureaucrat from the Ministry of Temporal Flow—the people who ensured all the city’s thousands of magical and mundane clocks were in sync. He was nervously fiddling with a timepiece on his wrist, his shoulders hunched as if against a physical weight. He was successful, but he was also a ghost in his own life, always busy, always counting seconds, never truly present.
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“He just needs a reminder,” Panda said softly. “A reminder of who he was before he learned how to count minutes.”
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And that reminder was named Patricia. She arrived moments later, a wave of calm energy moving through the bustling market. She was a curator at the Museum of Mundane Marvels, a place dedicated to the magic of ordinary human objects. Her hands, which gently smoothed her simple linen dress, were used to handling precious, fragile things with care. Her eyes, a warm and patient brown, scanned the crowd and, for a fraction of a second, lingered on Peter with a look of ancient, familiar sadness before looking away.
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They had been high school sweethearts. Their paths had diverged after graduation—he into the frantic, precise world of chronomanagement, she into the quiet, patient world of history. Life, that relentless game master, had moved them to different boards.
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“Right,” Panda whispered to Bam. “Operation ‘Second First Impression’ is a go. Get the gadget ready.”
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“I still believe a simple, direct conversation would be less prone to catastrophic failure,” Bam chirped, but he was already unclipping a small, lacquered box from his utility belt.
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The games began. Panda, with the subtlety of a stage magician, guided Peter and Patricia to the same table for a game of “Grifftower,” a game of magical strategy and bluffing. The initial atmosphere was frostier than a Snow Yeti’s pantry.
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“Your turn, Patricia,” Peter said, not looking up from his cards.
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“Thank you, Peter,” she replied, her voice polite and distant.
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They played in silence for several turns. Panda watched from behind a stall selling animated dumplings, gnawing on her knuckle. “It’s not working, Bam! They’re more interested in the property values of magical taverns than they are in each other!”
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“I am monitoring a ten percent increase in shared, non-romantic frustration regarding the game’s resource allocation mechanics,” Bam reported unhelpfully.
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“Time for the big guns.” Panda nodded. “Deploy the Empath-A-Dice.”
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With a sigh, Bam floated over to their table. “Ahem. Patrons. To enhance the interactive experience, the Ministry would like you to trial our new premium dice set. They are… slightly enchanted to encourage strategic transparency.”
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He presented the lacquered box. Inside, on a bed of velvet, were two dice. One was a deep blue, like a night sky. The other was a warm, earthy brown.
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Peter, ever the pragmatist, looked suspicious. Patricia, the historian, looked intrigued. She picked up the brown die. “What do they do?”
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“They are tuned to the players,” Bam explained. “The blue die reveals a strategic thought. The brown die reveals… an emotional context behind the move. A way to understand your opponent’s heart.”
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Peter looked like he’d rather swallow a live eel. Patricia, however, gave a small, curious smile. “Alright. I’ll try.”
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The game continued. Peter, forced to use the blue die, rolled it for a move. It landed and glowed. A tiny, projected thought appeared above it: “If I secure this trade route, I can block her access to the crystal mines.”
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Patricia raised an eyebrow. “Ambitious.” She rolled her brown die. It landed and shimmered. A soft, whispered feeling emanated from it, felt by everyone at the table: The satisfaction of a perfect plan coming together.
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Peter blinked, surprised. He’d only been thinking about winning, but the die had revealed the simple joy he took in it.
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The ice had been cracked. They played on. A roll from Patricia’s blue die revealed: “He always forgets to defend his eastern flank.”
Peter’s brown die in response emitted: A fond remembrance of a familiar pattern.
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He looked up at her, a question in his eyes. She offered a tiny, almost shy smile. “You used to leave your scrolls unguarded on the east side of your desk in history class. Old habits.”
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He almost smiled back. “You used to borrow them.”
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The game faded into the background. The Empath-A-Dice did their work, not by creating feelings, but by excavating them. A roll of strategic aggression from Peter was paired with the brown die’s emission of Nervous energy, a desire to impress. A defensive move from Patricia was paired with Protective concern, a fear of being hurt again.
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They weren’t just playing a game; they were reading each other’s hidden stories. The years of distance began to melt away under the lantern light, replaced by the rediscovery of the people they had been—and still were.
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Panda watched, her heart swelling. “It’s working, Bam! They’re talking! He’s not looking at his watch!”
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“A seventy percent decrease in chronometric anxiety,” Bam confirmed, sounding mildly impressed. “And a corresponding spike in nostalgic synaptic activity.”
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And then it happened. Peter made a bold, risky move that left him completely vulnerable. It was a terrible strategic decision.
Patricia looked at the board, then at him. “Why would you do that? I can take everything now.”
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Peter wasn’t looking at the board. He was looking at her. “I know,” he said, his voice quieter, softer than it had been all evening. “Your turn.”
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She rolled the blue die. The projected thought was simple: “Checkmate.”
She then, slowly, deliberately, rolled the brown die.
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It glowed a deep, warm gold. The emotion that washed over them was so potent it made the lanterns seem brighter. It was Love. Not nostalgic love for what was. Not fondness. It was a deep, unwavering, and present love that had been waiting, patient and silent, for its chance to be seen.
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Tears welled in Patricia’s eyes. Peter reached across the table, his bureaucratic confidence gone, replaced by the vulnerable boy she’d known. “Patricia, I… I’ve been a fool. I thought I had to build a perfect life before I could… before I deserved to ask you back into it. But all I did was build a very lonely clocktower.”
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“Peter…” she whispered, her hand moving to cover his.
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Just as their fingers were about to touch, the temperature plummeted. The warm, delicious scents of Prosperous Corner were choked by the familiar, grave-cold stench of rotting lilies and damp soil. The happy carp lanterns flickered and died.
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From the shadowy mouth of a nearby alley, they shambled out. A dozen figures, grey and rotting, their milky eyes fixed on the couple about to reconnect. Their A.L.A.R.M. badges—Anti-Love And Romance Movement—seemed to gleam in the dim light.
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“Seeeee…” the lead zombie moaned, its jaw unhinging. “The pointleeeeess gambit… the emotional risk for no strategic gaaaaain… A waste of preeeecious energy…”
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The crowd screamed and scattered. The magical board game lay forgotten on the table, the Empath-A-Dice dark.
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Peter instinctively moved in front of Patricia, his body tense. But his old insecurity returned—he was a timekeeper, not a fighter.
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Panda, however, was already in motion. “Not today, you joy-sucking party poopers!” She vaulted over a noodle stall, landing between the zombies and the couple. “Bam, mood music! Something triumphant!”
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Bam Boo, fluttering to a vantage point, began to warble a complex, heroic melody. A shimmering gold aura pulsed from him, pushing back against the zombies’ aura of apathy. But these zombies seemed more determined, their moaning a focused, dissonant chord that fought against Bam’s song.
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The lead zombie lunged for Peter and Patricia. Peter froze.
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But Patricia didn’t. Her historian’s eyes darted around. They fell on the game board. On the dice. On a half-eaten bowl of noodles from a nearby abandoned table.
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“Peter!” she yelled, her voice not panicked, but clear and instructional. “The timepiece! What’s its resonance?”
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The question was so absurdly specific, so her, that it broke through his panic. “It’s, uh, it’s tuned to the second-chime of the Celestial Clocktower! A harmonic G-sharp!”
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“Perfect!” she said. She grabbed the bowl of noodles and flung the broth at the advancing zombie’s feet. It slipped, stumbling forward. Then she snatched up the blue Empath-A-Dice and thrust it into Peter’s hand. “You’re a Scorch-Singer! You harmonise with raw energy! Sing to the die! Sing its frequency!”
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Understanding dawned on Peter’s face. He wasn’t a fighter. But he was a master of resonance. He clutched the die, focused on the harmonic G-sharp of his own watch, and sang.
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The note was pure and precise. The blue die flared with brilliant, azure light. It wasn’t designed for this; it was a tool for whispers, not weapons. But under the force of Peter’s focused will, it didn’t project a thought. It projected a concept.
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A shimmering, complex blueprint of the zombie’s own knee joint materialised in the air before it, highlighting every ligament, every point of structural weakness. It was the strategic thought of how to make it fall, made manifest.
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Patricia, seeing the blueprint, didn’t hesitate. She grabbed the heavy Grifftower game board and, with the practised precision of someone who handles priceless artifacts every day, swung it like a cricket bat, striking the exact point highlighted on the blueprint.
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CRACK. The zombie’s leg gave way with a dry snap, and it crumpled to the ground, groaning in confusion.
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Panda, meanwhile, was a whirlwind. She sprayed another zombie with a mist of ‘Essence of Mortifying Regret,’ making it stop to cringe at its own life choices. She tripped another with a well-placed extendable tape measure from her utility belt.
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Bam’s song grew stronger, now bolstered by the powerful, new emotion radiating from Peter and Patricia—not just love, but trust. They were a team again.
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Together, they made short work of the zombies. Peter would sing a frequency—sometimes to a die, sometimes to a nearby singing teacup from a stall—revealing a critical weakness. Patricia would exploit it with whatever was on hand—a rolled-up silk carpet, a well-thrown steamed bun. Panda provided crowd control with her perfumes, and Bam’s music ensured the zombies couldn’t overwhelm them with despair.
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Soon, the zombies were all sitting on the ground, tangled in carpets or simply staring into space, deeply embarrassed by Panda’s emotional aerosols.
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The square was a wreck, but it was quiet. Peter and Patricia stood amidst the chaos, breathing heavily, staring at each other. The Empath-A-Dice, now quiet, lay on the ground between them.
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Peter reached out, not for a die, but for Patricia’s hand. “I’m sorry,” he said, his voice raw with emotion. “I’m sorry for all the time I wasted.”
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Patricia laced her fingers through his. A single tear traced a path through the dust on her cheek. “Then let’s not waste another second of it.”
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He pulled her into a kiss. It wasn’t a kiss from their youth—it was better. It was a kiss filled with the weight of years apart, the relief of reunion, and the fierce, triumphant joy of having just fought off the undead together.
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Panda wiped a happy tear from her own eye, sniffing dramatically. “Now that’s a happy ending.” She looked at the dazed zombies. “Well, not for them. But you can’t have everything.”
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Bam fluttered down, making a note on his crystal slate. “Post-battle analysis: Successful neutralization of anti-love entities. Primary objective: exceeded expectations. Recommend forgoing board games and simply deploying zombies at all future events for maximum efficiency.”
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“Don’t be ridiculous, Bam,” Panda laughed, slinging an arm around his feathery shoulders. “Where’s the romance in that?”
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She looked back at Peter and Patricia, who were laughing now, picking their way through the mess, their hands firmly clasped. In the heart of Prosperous Corner, they had finally found their most serendipitous treasure: a second chance. And for Panda, that was the greatest victory of all.
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