Morrigan & Strick
Do contracts hold in a realm where forces themselves bend reality?
In a world where the wind writes its own laws, a pact is just a thread tied to the moon; if the moon smiles, it holds, but if it turns, the thread frays.
If the moon turns, the clause that anchors the pact loses its validity, so you’d end up with an ever‑shifting contract, which is a recipe for constant renegotiation and a perpetual audit trail you never want to keep.
A contract that shivers with the moon feels like trying to pin down a breeze, it just slips away.
A contract that changes with the moon has no enforceable terms, so you’re basically betting on an unreliable weather forecast. A good pact needs fixed clauses, not a breeze that slips away whenever the tide shifts.