The Aziza live in a magical savannah, a diverse and vibrant world filled with fairies, butterflies, and small animals. They are a free-spirited race of fairies with butterfly wings, known for their benevolent magic and deep connection to nature. The fairies thrive by healing the plants and trees, using their fairy dust to maintain harmony in their whimsical home, where flowers bloom in radiant colors, and streams flow with crystal-clear water. However, their idyllic existence shatters when a mysterious plague begins to infect the savannah, linked to human-caused climate change and its devastating effects on ecosystems. The protagonist, a gender-fluid Afroqueer fairy with the ability to feel the earth's sickness, senses the first signs of the disease and rallies the other fairies to combat the threat.
Initially, the fairies succeed in healing the infected plants through their magical abilities, nurturing saplings back to health and reviving wilting flowers with their fairy dust. As they study the symptoms and effects of the disease, they realize it is morphing due to shifting environmental conditions caused by capitalist societies to the west, rapidly spreading throughout the ecosystem, manifesting as wilting leaves and dying wildlife.
Throughout this journey of creation, they discover ways to blend their ancient magic with modern science, establishing a harmonious balance that allows them to flourish. They harness their collective strengths to cultivate an enchanted realm filled with diverse flora that can withstand climate fluctuations-where every plant thrives alongside them-and foster resilience against future threats. As they work together to build this new world amidst swaying grasses and blooming gardens, their relationships deepen further; intense connections arise amid shared labor, celebrating their diverse gender experiences through passionate interactions that embody love and trust.