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Hiros53
Hiros53

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The Sphinx's Whisper (Persona 5 Mc Tg/Tf)

It started with a tremor.
Subtle at first, like a breath drawn from deep below the stone.

Ann had only taken a few steps from the group, running her fingers along the sun-warmed edge of a carved mural. She admired how the golden hieroglyphs caught the drifting dust. A sunbeam painted everything in gold. Beautiful, but—

The floor gave way.

“Whoa—!”

Cracked stone crumbled beneath her boots.

Makoto shouted. Joker’s hand reached out, too late.

Ann fell.

The world spun, then slowed, then softened.

There was no pain. Only warmth. The feeling of sand cradling her weight as she landed with a muffled thud.

She coughed, blinking in the haze.

The silence was thick.

Ann sat up slowly, brushing golden grains from her skirt. Her eyes adjusted to the dim, dust-silvered glow of the room around her, an underground chamber, circular and smooth. The walls were lined with towering statues of Egyptian goddesses, arms folded in peace. Carved eyes stared downward in everlasting calm.

But it was the statue in the center that made her breath catch.

A regal figure reclined like a lioness, its body shaped like a sphinx, yet unmistakably feminine. Eyes closed. A gentle smile upon her lips. Hanging from her chest on a delicate chain was a large, glimmering crystal pendant, faceted and elegant, catching the shaft of light shining from the hole high above.

The gem pulsed faintly, catching the sunlight just right. Warm colors: Soft rose, honey gold, and flickers of turquoise danced across the room.

Then, a voice. Soft as falling dust.

“Ahhh… you’ve arrived.”

Ann’s head snapped up.

She was alone. Definitely alone. No speakers. No shadows moving behind the statues.

“You’ve wandered far, little flame, and you’ve done well. It’s all right to rest now.”

The voice was gentle, feminine, comforting in a way that made her chest loosen without meaning to.

But Ann tensed. “I… can’t. I need to get back.” Her voice echoed, smaller than she expected.

“You’ve been brave,” the voice continued, unbothered. “Always fighting. Always running. It’s no shame to pause. Just for a little while.”

“No,” Ann said, firmer now, getting to her feet. “My friends are up there. I can’t leave them waiting.”

The statue remained still, but the voice came again. Still calm. Still inviting.

“Of course. I understand. You wish to return. Let me help you.”

That made Ann pause.

“…You’ll help?”

“There is a way. A small test. But I believe in you.”

The chamber brightened slightly. Torches along the walls flickered to life, not with flame, but with soft magical light. Behind each statue, glowing murals shimmered into view, each depicting a goddess holding a crystal pendant. The pendants were different in each one. Some red. Some green. Others deep violet, blue, or golden-yellow.

Ann stepped forward cautiously.

“These goddesses carry their own truths,” the voice said gently. “But only one color flows from the goddess who guards the door.”

There was indeed a door, an archway half-buried in sand at the far end of the chamber. Smooth stone, no handle. A small panel glimmered beside it, five colored glyphs arranged like buttons.

Ann stepped toward it.

“So I have to figure out which goddess is the guardian, right? Then match her pendant to the code?”

“Yes,” the voice whispered with a smile woven through the sound. “Very clever, little flame.”

Her heart thudded in her chest. She took a breath. This was doable. This wasn’t hypnosis or weird palace magic. Just a puzzle. Like so many they’d faced.

Still… something about the voice lingered in her mind. Not pressing. Not invasive. Just there. Like warm hands gently guiding her shoulders.

“Take your time,” it said, serene. “There is no need to rush. The others will find you soon.”

Ann focused. She turned from the central statue and examined the murals one by one, mind running.

The light shimmered from the crystal in the center.

But she didn’t look at it.

Not yet.

Ann examined the first mural.

The goddess carved into the wall held a scarlet pendant in one hand, and a scale in the other. Red.

She nodded to herself and moved to the next one.

A second figure stood beneath the rising sun, her necklace the color of deep, royal blue.

“Red… blue…” Ann whispered under her breath.

“So observant,” the voice cooed behind her ear, though she knew no one was close.
“Your mind is sharp. Your memory is strong. It’s no wonder you’ve come this far…”

Ann gave a faint smile despite herself. It felt… nice, being praised like that. Genuinely nice. Not a shout of victory in battle, not a compliment on a flashy pose. Just soft, quiet approval.

Still, she had to stay focused.

She moved to the third mural.

A soft green gem shimmered against the carved figure’s chest, cradled in her hand like something sacred. She murmured it aloud.

“Green…”

Fourth one. A golden pendant, warm and luminous, gleaming like sunlight trapped in crystal.

“Yellow. Okay. Red, blue, green, yellow…”

She turned back to the door, heart steady. Her eyes found the panel.

And then… she paused.

Her brows drew together.

“Wait. Which one was the green one again?”

The sequence blurred just slightly at the edge of her thoughts.

“You’re doing so well,” the goddess said again, her voice like silk soaked in honey. “It’s natural to forget small things under pressure. Your effort is still beautiful.”

Ann frowned. She turned to look at the murals again, then walked to the second.

Was this the blue one?

No… maybe it was green?

She turned back toward the door, only to realize she couldn’t remember the first color anymore.

Red… blue… yellow?

No, that wasn’t right.

She blinked. A faint, low buzzing stirred somewhere behind her eyes. Not painful. Not distracting enough to worry about. Just… present.

“So many colors to remember,” the voice mused softly. “So many images to hold in your mind… But you’re trying. That’s what matters. That’s what makes you special.”

Ann smiled again, distracted by the warmth in her chest. The praise felt… earned. Deeply earned.

But her steps had slowed.

Her gaze lingered longer on the glowing torches. Her hands touched the wall, following the engravings, not entirely sure why.

“Where was I?”

“Shh,” the voice breathed, no louder than the hush of distant waves. “You’re safe here. You don’t need to rush.”

Ann let out a breath she didn’t realize she was holding.

She stood again before the murals. Tried to repeat the pattern.

“Blue… red… green… no, wait… green was first?”

The buzzing deepened, soft and low, like a purr inside her skull.

She closed her eyes. Tried to concentrate.

Nothing.

“It’s hard, I know,” the voice whispered with such compassion. “Your mind carries so much. Maybe… you’ve done enough.”

Ann’s eyes fluttered open.

“I… I just need a second,” she murmured.

“Of course,” the goddess cooed. “You’ve done more than enough. All that matters now… is peace.”

The murals seemed to shimmer in her peripheral vision. Her breath slowed. Her fingers, once tight with tension, now hung loose at her sides.

“Would you like one more hint, little flame?”

Ann nodded slowly. The motion felt heavy. Like swimming upward.

“You only need to remember one color,” the goddess whispered.
“The color of truth. Of purpose. The color that shines through me…”

Ann turned toward the central statue, mind wrapped in cotton.

The gem at the goddess’s neck gleamed.

Soft pink. Warm rose. Just a little too bright to be natural.

It shimmered again.

Ann stared.

“Yes,” the voice whispered.

The crystal flared.

Warm.

Gently.

Softly.

Ann’s eyes widened, then stilled.

Her lips parted.

Her body did not move.

The buzzing behind her eyes fell away… replaced by nothing at all.

“That’s it,” the goddess said, warm with triumph and affection.
“Now, let’s talk… about what you truly are.”

Ann didn’t speak.

Her lips parted slightly, her gaze locked on the gem’s glow, soft pink light pooling in her eyes. Her arms hung limply by her sides, shoulders rising and falling in a slow, steady rhythm that no longer belonged to conscious thought.

“There we are…” the goddess whispered, velvet-smooth.
“You’ve done so well… so beautifully well.”

“Tell me, sweet flame… Have you ever imagined what it would be like… To be a sphinx?”

The word echoed in Ann’s mind like a warm breeze curling around her spine.

She blinked slowly.

“…A… sphinx…”

“Yes… strong, elegant… ancient and wise. Watching from above… adored, respected… feared…”

“So lovely. So mysterious. So powerful.”

The crystal’s light deepened, rose into gold, then dipped again into rose. With every flicker, Ann’s breath grew softer, shallower. She shifted slightly where she stood, her back arching just a little, toes curling in her boots.

“Can you picture it?” the goddess whispered. “Your feet… softening… changing… your soles kissed by golden fur… your toes becoming velvet paws…”

Ann let out a slow, foggy breath.

Her boots shimmered and melted into gilded wrappings as her feet began to reshape, toes elongating, hard nails darkening, pads forming beneath. Gentle tufts of fur began to peek out around her ankles.

A faint smile brushed her lips.

“That’s it…” the voice encouraged. “Feel the strength returning… not as a burden, but as truth. This is what you are…”

A soft purring hum filled the air—whether it came from the statue or from Ann herself was unclear.

“So graceful… So complete…”

Then, a sound.

The rumble of boots landing on sand. A voice calling, sharp and clear:

“Ann?!”

The spell did not break.

But Ann’s head turned slowly.

From the shaft above, two figures dropped into the chamber, Joker in his mask, Makoto beside him, fists clenched and eyes wide as they landed. They stopped at the sight of her.

She stood in soft gold wrappings, feet no longer human, her posture too poised, too relaxed. Her lips still parted faintly as if she were listening to music no one else could hear.

“Ann—what’s happening to you?” Makoto rushed forward, but stopped herself just a few paces away, unnerved.

“Ahh…” the goddess’s voice cooed.
“You made it. I’m so pleased.”

Joker’s eyes snapped to the central statue. “That voice… is it coming from… her?”

“Of course. I only speak to help.” The voice remained calm. Smooth. A lullaby spoken aloud.
“When your friend fell into this chamber, she was struck by an ancient curse… A cruel enchantment buried deep in this tomb.”

Makoto frowned, stepping protectively in front of Joker. “You expect us to believe that?”

“I expect nothing. But I hope… for your trust.”

“You see the signs, do you not?” The voice remained utterly tranquil, as though explaining a bedtime story. “The curse took root the moment she fell… Gentle, yes… but relentless.”

Makoto’s fists clenched tighter. “Then how do we break it?”

“She solved the riddle,” the goddess said with quiet pride. “She was clever. Strong. Brave. She uncovered the key… but the curse touched her just before she could take the final step. A tragedy, but not an end..”

“All you must do… get her to speak the right code, and get her out of this place.”

Ann shifted slightly, her golden-wrapped feet pawing at the sand without awareness.

Makoto glanced at Joker. He nodded, barely, but didn’t lower his guard.

“…We’ll get her out,” Makoto said, low and steady. “And if you’re lying…”

“I would never lie,” the goddess breathed. “I only wish… to preserve such beauty. Now, my dear Ann… What do you remember? I cannot name the colors aloud… but perhaps, if you listen closely… your mind will find them again. And I can help in some way too.”

The air in the chamber was still.

Makoto stood just a pace ahead of Joker, tense but quiet, watching Ann with wary eyes. She hadn’t moved more than a slow sway, her wrapped, golden paws brushing through the sand, her hands hanging relaxed by her sides. She looked… peaceful.

Too peaceful.

“Now, my dear Ann,” the goddess said, voice a gentle hum in the mind. “Let’s remember together… You were so close. Four colors… and then, the last…”

Ann blinked slowly. Her eyes reflected the glow of the pendant. Her lips parted as though the words were rising from somewhere else.

“…Red.” she whispered.

The gem on the goddess’s chest flashed red.

A pulse of warm light spread outward—soft, like a heartbeat. Joker’s gaze flicked to it without thinking. So did Makoto’s.

It was nothing. Just a light.

“Good,” the goddess whispered.

“…Blue.”

The pendant flashed again. Blue this time. A slow, swirling ripple of sapphire glow.

Both Makoto and Joker looked again.

Just a flash.

Just a flicker.

Nothing important.

But neither of them blinked.

“…Green.”

Flash. Emerald light, rich and soft, bathed the statues and sand in a faint glow.

Makoto’s fingers twitched at her sides.

Joker leaned forward slightly without realizing.

The light didn’t hurt their eyes. It welcomed them. Warm. Safe. Familiar.

“…Yellow.”

Flash. Gold, like sunlight through silk.

Both of them were staring now, eyes wide but calm. Breath soft. Movements still.

Neither noticed how quiet the room had become.

How slow their thoughts were moving.

“You’ve done so well, sweet flame,” the goddess cooed.
“Just one more color… one last memory. Can you speak it for me?”

Ann nodded slowly, eyes still on the pendant.

“…Pink.”

And the pendant flared.

Not a flash. Not a blink.

A deep, soaking glow of violet light that pulsed once… twice… then held.

A quiet shhhhhh seemed to spread through the chamber as if the air itself was exhaling.

Makoto’s lips parted slightly, but no sound escaped.

Joker’s shoulders relaxed, the tension leaving his limbs like dust in the wind.

Their eyes stayed on the gem. Neither moved. Neither blinked. Thoughts faded like echoes swallowed in sand.

Ann stood silently, chest rising and falling in rhythm with the light.

And the goddess’s voice, barely more than a breath, drifted through their quieted minds.

“There now… so calm. So quiet. So still.

Just a little longer… and you’ll understand what you were always meant to be.”

The pendant’s soft pink glow still bathed the chamber in its silent pulse. Joker and Makoto stood unmoved, silent statues in the sand.

And Ann… stood at the center of it all. Head tilted gently. Eyes glazed with reverence.

“Can you imagine,” the goddess purred, “What it would feel like… to have legs not made for running away… but for resting. For reigning. For power?”

Ann blinked once. Her body shifted, slowly, peacefully. Her thighs thickened, calves stretching longer, reshaping. Her feet, already furred, grew larger, denser with strength. Her stance changed. More grounded. More regal.

“Can you imagine,” the voice whispered again, “Your knees no longer bending forward… but arching like a lioness… always ready, always still…?”

Her legs bent back with a soft, feline grace, toes curling with satisfaction into the warm sand. Golden fur spread upward, covering her now fully feline limbs.

“Can you imagine… having a body built not for hiding… but for watching, waiting… your lower half long, luxurious… a throne you wear with pride?”

Ann’s back shifted. Her waist stretched, hips widening, spine elongating with slow, sensual grace. She leaned forward on instinct—only to feel her balance shift. Her arms reached downward,and she touched the floor with a second pair of paws.

She didn’t flinch.

She simply breathed.

“Can you imagine… four strong legs beneath you… muscles rippling under golden fur… no longer human, no longer fragile… but eternal… divine?”

Her new feline body stretched long and majestically behind her—powerful haunches, sharp shoulders, a flowing furred tail that swayed softly in the torchlight.

She blinked. Her lips curled into a peaceful smile.

“Can you imagine… wings folding softly behind you… feathers kissed with sunlight… a guardian of secrets, a creature of sky and sand?”

Her back tingled, then bloomed.

Two great wings unfurled, curling over her back in a slow, sweeping motion. Feathers shimmered with gold and rose tones, light as air yet impossibly strong. They wrapped protectively around her form before settling into stillness.

“Can you imagine… raising your hands… only to see not hands… but paws… gentle and strong… velvet wrapped in strength…?”

Ann lifted one hand.

The fingers were shorter now. Rounded. Softly padded. Her nails glimmered like polished obsidian. They were still hands—but no longer human. They were the hands of a queen who never needed to grasp—only to gesture, and be obeyed.

“Can you imagine…” the goddess said one last time, the words like honey sliding into the soul, “Being a sphinx… truly… fully… utterly?”

Ann breathed in.

Her eyes glowed faintly with inner light.

“Not cursed… but crowned.”

She exhaled.

And she was.

Four golden paws beneath her. A long, elegant feline body. Wide, proud wings curled behind her back. Gilded cloth adorned her chest, neck, and arms. Her face was calm, knowing, a riddle kept in flesh.

The sphinx opened her eyes.

And she smiled.

The chamber held its breath.

Ann, the sphinx, stood beside the statue, regal and silent, wings folded neatly against her back. The gem still pulsed softly with its soft pink light, casting delicate shadows over the unmoving figures of Joker and Makoto.

The goddess's voice, still so warm, so endlessly patient, drifted through the air again.

“And now… the heart of the bull.”

Makoto’s eyelids fluttered.

She didn’t speak. She didn’t blink. But her breath caught for just a moment.

“Can you imagine… your feet no longer soft… but strong… heavy… hardened… ending not in toes, but in hooves?”

Her boots shimmered and shifted.

Makoto’s stance widened slightly as her calves reshaped. Her feet grew heavier, more solid. Each step now would strike the earth like a drumbeat of command. Her new hooved legs were sleek, powerful, with skin like dark polished stone.

“Can you imagine… your legs becoming pillars of strength… not delicate things, but living engines… built to charge, to endure, to crush all who would stand before you?”

Her thighs grew thicker. Her calves bulged. The joints in her legs shifted back slightly, just enough to signal something no longer human, and yet… she stood with pride.

“Can you imagine… what it feels like to become strength itself… your body, no longer confined by limits… your muscles, built not by training… but by truth?”

Her spine straightened.

Her shoulders pulled back, and power bloomed.

“Can you imagine… your arms, swelling… each line sculpted, each curve divine… your biceps bulging like they’ve been carved from stone… as if the gods themselves chiseled you from muscle and might?”

Makoto’s sleeves strained, then dissolved into golden wrappings as her arms surged with mass. Her biceps rose like rolling hills, her forearms thick with strength. When she curled her fingers slightly, cords of muscle rippled under her skin, pulsing with purpose.

“Can you imagine… abs so hard, so perfect… that even steel would hesitate to strike them? Each breath making them ripple… each movement a symphony of control?”

Her midsection flexed.

Lines formed.

Eight of them.

Each one gleaming under her golden wrappings, cut deep and hard as steel plating. Her stomach rose and fell with a serene rhythm, like a titan resting between battles.

“Can you imagine… horns curling from your temples… not as weapons, but as a crown… the crown of a guardian, a queen, a beast born to protect the sacred?”

From her temples, two sharp bovine horns spiraled outward—thick, strong, smooth and dark with subtle gilding at their base. Her hair fell around them like a warrior’s mane, her head held high, unshaken.

“Can you imagine… no longer questioning your strength… but being your strength…? Not human. Not weak. Not burdened… but become…”

Makoto inhaled deeply.

“A minotaur.”

She exhaled, slow and deep.

Her new body stood tall, statuesque, radiant with power. Arms folded across her chest, abs flexing beneath golden cloth, her hooves solid against the stone. The soft pink glow from the pendant reflected in her calm, unblinking eyes.

She did not speak.

She didn’t need to.

The goddess’s voice sighed in satisfaction.

The chamber was silent.

Ann stood in her sphinx form, wings draped like silk.
Makoto towered in her new minotaur body, radiant with strength.
And in between them… Joker.

Still standing.

Still frozen.

Still… listening.

“And now,” the goddess whispered, the words pouring into him like warm rain, “My clever little trickster…”

The light of the gem pulsed gently, reflected in his eyes.

“Can you imagine… being a girl?”

His body didn’t flinch.

But his breathing shifted, just slightly. Softening ever so little.

“Can you imagine your chest rising with new weight… soft, warm… adorned in delicate scales… not armor, but beauty… protection that shines with femininity…?”

Across his torso, soft flickers of iridescent scales began to bloom.

They trailed across his sides, up his shoulders… and over two new curves, gently forming beneath his golden wrappings.
Breasts, full and feminine, wrapped in glimmering reptilian patterns, each rise and fall of breath more rhythmic than the last.

“Can you imagine… those scales traveling downward… curling around your hips, wrapping your legs in sleek, serpentine strength… your feet no longer human, but clawed and sure… perfect lizard’s feet, fit for a guardian of stone and shadow?”

Her boots dissolved in motes of light.
Her feet shifted, lengthening, narrowing, claws replacing toes. Smooth scales layered upward from the ground, like vines climbing her calves.

“Can you imagine a tail,” the goddess breathed, “Strong and sinuous… swaying behind you like a dancer’s ribbon… so long, so powerful… so perfectly yours?”

From her lower back, a strong, elegant tail began to grow, scales glinting in green and gold, each inch stretching outward with purpose, coiling gently behind her.

Still, Joker did not move.

She only listened.

“Can you imagine… scales kissing your cheeks… not to hide your beauty… but to frame it… little gemstones of armor to highlight your soft lips, your pretty eyes, your perfect little smile…”

The skin of her jaw glimmered, two delicate arcs of scale forming beneath each eye, like jeweled makeup. Her face—still her own—now radiated a new femininity. Not forced. Not faked. Just… true.

“Can you imagine… your hands reshaping… the fingers growing long, strong… your nails curving into claws sharp enough to slice stone… dragon-like… elegant… deadly…”

Her gloves withered into dust as claws extended from each fingertip—curved and lethal, but beautiful in their symmetry. Her palms were scaled, her grip would be impossible to break.

She raised one slowly, like it floated.

“Can you imagine… being a lizard girl… proud… serene… beautiful… and completely, completely yourself?”

She exhaled.

Long. Slow. Satisfied.

Her hips swayed slightly as her new tail curled, her claws flexing softly, her chest rising with each gentle breath.

The gem on the goddess’s chest dimmed to a low, pulsing glow.

The chamber had stilled.

Three figures stood in the sand, statues of grace and strength:

A proud sphinx, wings folded like silk behind her.
A towering minotaur, chest rising slowly, arms at rest.
A sleek, poised lizard girl, tail curled around her feet.

Their eyes were open now.

Glazed.

Soft.

Still utterly under her spell.

Their breathing matched the rhythm of the room.

And the goddess, ever gentle, spoke again.

“I want you all to imagine something for me… just one last time.”

Their eyes fluttered closed—in perfect sync.
They didn’t hesitate. They didn’t speak. They simply obeyed.

“Can you imagine,” she began, her voice velvet-drenched,
“Being older… fuller… riper…?”

Each breath they took now felt deeper, more deliberate.

“Not young and unsure… but mature… alluring… shaped by time, but not weakened by it… ripened to divine perfection…”

Their bodies began to shift again.

Their curves filled in, fuller hips, softer, heavier breasts, thicker thighs.
The tautness of youth was replaced with the lushness of maturity, not worn, but worshipped.

“Can you imagine,” the goddess cooed, “having the kind of presence… that makes others kneel? The kind of body that draws in every eye… not out of lust alone… but out of awe?”

Lines of age didn’t form, only grace.

Only confidence.

Only the beauty of women who knew themselves.

“Can you imagine… being someone who could be called… Mother?”

Their lips parted slightly. Smiles touched them now.

Soft.

Warm.

Inviting.

“Can you imagine how good it feels… to be needed… to be adored… to be the one others turn to for comfort… for discipline… for praise?”

The sphinx’s wings unfurled, vast and regal. The minotaur’s chest swelled with pride, her arms folded like a throne around her. The lizard girl tilted her head with quiet serenity, her claws curled in patient readiness.

“Can you imagine giving everything… for your Palace Lord?” the voice whispered, more reverent than ever.

The three women whispered together, breathless:

“…For the Palace Lord…”

“Can you imagine loving her… with every thought… every movement… every breath?”

Their voices again, soft and sure:

“…Futaba…”

“Can you imagine being called her monsters… her guardians… her beautiful mothers…?”

A final pulse of violet light swept through the chamber.

The spell settled in their hearts like a vow.

“Then go,” the goddess breathed, smiling into their minds.
“Watch over this tomb. Protect your Lady.

You are not cursed.
You are perfect.”

And the three mature, monstrous, motherly beauties turned—one by one—and walked calmly into the shadows of the temple.

No doubt.

No fear.

Just quiet purpose.

And smiles, soft as moonlight on golden sand.

You have done well Phantom Thieves for coming into this tomb. Only one puzzle left to solve, but should you choose to stay here forever, I will gladly help you get used to your positions as guardians.


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