The spectral hound, once a relentless predator on her trail, had been reduced to smoke and ruin beneath the Vaez’s latest conjuration, a snarling arc of violet energy that tore through the air like an angry spirit set loose from some ancient tomb. The
Drow didn’t smile, but there was a sliver of satisfaction beneath her calm exterior at the mage's efficiency.
Ahead, the draconian soared through the chamber with the kind of physical power she rarely saw outside of matron-guarded temples or elite slave pits in the Underdark. His hammer crashed into the crystal embedded in the wall, and in the instant it broke free, a ripple of spectral unraveling followed. The wraiths faltered, flickered, and then vanished, their forms collapsing into nothing. Only one knight remained, flickering at the edge of the chamber. She didn’t need to guess what would become of it. Vaezhasar would end it.
With swift steps and quiet certainty, Vyx’aria approached the final crystal. There was no hesitation, no dramatic flourish as she simply reached out and took it. The moment it left its resting place, the final knight dissipated into the air, leaving only stillness in its wake. The chamber, once a cacophony of clashing flame, echoing spells, and clattering steel, fell into a deep and unnatural silence.
She turned her attention toward the draconian, crossing the now-still floor to take a quick inventory of the crystals they’d gathered. Before she could assess them, the ground groaned with a deep, ominous resonance that caused a prickle down her spine. It was not a sound she could place and it felt seismic as though the palace itself were shifting beneath their feet. Her gaze darted across the frostbound chamber, and though she said nothing, her instincts prickled with sudden clarity. This was not over. Something had been triggered.
The floor split beneath them with a deafening
crack.
There was no warning, no chant, no tremor to brace against. The ice gave way all at once, fracturing like glass and collapsing in a thunderous cascade that sent all three of them plummeting downward. She could have used magic, but there was a
far more practical means of cushioning her descent. Without hesitation, she shifted her weight and leapt toward the dragonkin next to her, one arm hooking around his neck while her other hand braced against the ridge of his shoulder. She clung to him like a serpent, limbs secure and balanced, the maneuver executed not with desperation but with precision. Her face was close to his, her expression unreadable but sharp, and her voice, when it came, was low and entertained.
“Safer together,” she murmured, the words a deliberate echo of his earlier stated caution, combined with an amused smirk.
They landed moments later in a storm of ice and debris. The fall ended not in ruin, but in an eerily pristine chamber unlike the one above. Where the prior hall had been encased in age, this place bore no such scars. The air was still but warm with latent power, the light diffuse and strangely absent of source. The floor beneath them was smooth and unmarred. The crystals had landed nearby, none of them broken.
Ahead of them, seated atop an altar-like dais, loomed a throne of pale stone. Carved into it was a massive statue. It bore the shape of a woman crowned in ice, hands resting on the arms of the throne, gaze locked forward in eternal judgment.
And then, without ceremony or spectacle, a thin fracture appeared along the statue’s cheek. Another crept down from the collarbone. Across the body, hairline cracks began to spread with glacial patience, glowing faintly from within. Something behind the marble was moving. Something old.
Vyx’aria’s posture shifted as her hands dropped instinctively to her blades. Her eyes narrowed, and though her face remained composed, her mind was already calculating the shape of what might emerge.
The Ice Queen was waking.
Szesh Vaezhasar Drakspae