We are the Veyu’lin
Not all who dream are asleep. Some of us walk through memory the way others walk through light. The Veyu’lin do not burn — they drift, smoke-touched, vision-marked, dancing between truth and what hides just beyond it. They see not what is, but what might become.
“Truth does not owe you clarity.”
Circle Traits Summary
| Attribute | Description |
| Circle Name | Veyu’lin |
| Translation | “Those Who See Through Flame” |
| Element | Smoke, Mist, Light |
| Domain | Prophecy, Dream, Memory’s Echo |
| Calling | Seers, Whisper-Prophets, Mistwalkers |
| Known For | Dream sigils, veiled eyes, spiral smoke patterns |
| Shared Law | “Truth does not owe you clarity.” |
Sacred Sigil Use

Basic Sigil (Body Mark)
The Basic Sigil of the Veyu’lin is a soft spiral of smoke — faint, transient, and personal. It’s often applied on the temple, wrist, or throat using ash, ink, or breath-touched pigment. The mark is not meant to last forever. Like the truths the Veyu’lin speak, it may vanish… but never truly disappear.

Advanced Sigil (Veil of Sight)
The Advanced Sigil is complex and fluid — a shifting design of layered spirals and drifting lines. Typically woven into veils, etched on mist-colored scrolls, or inscribed using dream-ink, it represents the clarity found only in the blurred. It is a symbol both of foresight and forgetting, seen fully only in smoke or dreamlight.
Ritual Description
The Breath Between
The initiate breathes in sacred incense while blindfolded. As visions begin to form, they speak aloud only what is not seen — what lies in the periphery, what haunts the pause. These utterances are recorded in smoke script and later burned, never to be read. It is said what is destroyed in this ritual is not forgotten, only buried in the dreaming.
Visual Placement Guidance
- Body Sigil: Temple, throat, wrist
- Cloak/Costume Symbol: Embroidered veils, floating ink designs on robes
- Student Variation: Can use incense ash, mirrored patterns, or watercolor bleed effects
Codex Law of the Circle
“Truth does not owe you clarity.”
(To see clearly is not always to see kindly. Vision is a burden, not a gift.)

