The Mistress of Purgatory dries her humans upside down, to stop them from wilting. Following an obsession with dried roses, they became a metaphor for that limboesque state of being between living and dying, feeling merely like a preserved husk, empty and emotionless but appearing alive.
The Mistress of Purgatory dries her humans upside down, to stop them from wilting. Following an obsession with dried roses, they became a metaphor for that limboesque state of being between living and dying, feeling merely like a preserved husk, empty and emotionless but appearing alive.