“Dalmascan Night 2” is not a song of battle or victory. It is the sound of a people remembering how to breathe after the fist has loosened. Each note is a footprint in ash. Each pause, a glance toward the horizon—waiting for a prince who may never return, or a dawn that may not come.
The first night had been chaos—screams swallowed by fire, the stench of burning spice markets, and the heavy march of Galbadian armor on ancient cobblestones. But the second night… the second night was quiet. The kind of quiet that follows a wound too deep to weep. Dalmascan Night 2
Through the alleyways, a stray dog nudged a child’s wooden toy. No one came to claim it. A merchant’s stall, overturned, still held dried dates in a cracked jar—sweetness abandoned. And somewhere in the Muthru Bazaar, an old woman lit one candle behind shuttered windows. Not for celebration. For vigil. “Dalmascan Night 2” is not a song of battle or victory
In the palace ruins, a single flag still flew—torn, but not fallen. Wind teased it gently, as if apologizing for the siege it had once carried. Each pause, a glance toward the horizon—waiting for
The second night after the fall of Rabanastre was not like the first.
(A nocturne for zither, distant drums, and fading memory)
But if you listen closely, just before the last string fades, you’ll hear it: not hope, exactly. Something older. Something stubborn.