Do you know if you'll survive another day?
A simple wounded teenager brought about dire changes.
If you can fight something invisible to everyone else?
When your own family can't see you.
When friends are possibly gone forever?
When promises may be broken?
Long ago, Ganondorf led the Gerudo and some Sheikah into the Sacred Realm, with the Triforce as the goal. In their element, the Goddesses banished them from the Realm of Light, chased them across the realms until they were banished to darkness.
Ganondorf wasn't lucky enough to escape with such a simple fate. The Goddesses imprisoned him in Limbo while they contemplated his fate. And while they did, the former criminals began to assimilate to their new lives.
They changed forms, and no longer did they hold those bitter feelings. They became the Twili.
A good decade or more later, Ganondorf finally faced judgment day. The Sages chained him down in the mirror chamber, and executed the villain.
However, Ganondorf held a shard of the Triforce, and was revived.
He killed the sage of water and, in a frenzy, the Sages activated the Mirror of Twilight and banished him to the realm. They buried the mirror so no one could get in.
Or out.
Until about a century later, when an evil known as Twilight spread across the lands of Hyrule and Cateline.
When no one knows what it is, would you be willing to fight it?
If you were just a normal person, could you save your homeland?
You don't know what it is.
You don't know where to find it.
You have one ally.
Every single odd is against you.
It's torn families and friends apart.
Bearing
All
Of
This
In
Mind.
Do you think you could take it on?
Disclaimer: No, I don't own Legend of Zelda. However, I do own many of the characters in this story, coz I put a lot of OCs in there! But they won't make your brain hurt, coz you're not the one keeping track of them!
This is my first LoZ story, and it's really long. On word, it's 129 pages. And it has a sequel in progress! By the way, the switching between bold facing and italicizing the writing wasn't a mistake. If you keep reading the story, you'll find that there's a meaning between the two.
