Private Tales When Fire Meets Shadow

A private roleplay only for those invited by the first writer
She watched as Azrakar dropped to one knee not of his own volition....For the first time.

Vyx’aria stood exalted, towering, her shadow-wreathed form pulsing with Maelzafan’s divine touch. Her skin shimmered with runic flame, edges blurred with smoke and power. She said nothing.

Around her, priestesses screamed. Five more fell to the ground, their eyes weeping blood, their flesh burning from within as the binding consumed them.

But Vyx’aria did not flinch. She only looked at him.

His gaze met hers, not with fury, not with wrath, but sorrow. It twisted something inside her, but her face revealed nothing. Silent. Impossible to read.

And then she turned.

Each step echoed with finality as she walked away, leaving Azrakar to his new mistress.

-----------------------------​

Several Weeks Later – The Spine, Surface Camp

The wind howled through the Spine’s jagged peaks, biting cold and stinging snow sweeping across the camp’s perimeter wards. They were back where she had first met Azrakar.

Vyx’aria stood before the fire, arms folded. The divine pulse still hummed faintly beneath her skin.

Lysdania approached at a measured pace, watching her mistress with scrutiny. “The demon… was almost convincing,” the commander said at last. “A waste to lose him.”

Vyx’aria’s lips curved into a knowing grin. “Oh, Azrakar was not entirely deceitful.”

Lysdania stopped walking. “…Then why give him to Matron Elzyrra?”

Vyx’aria’s gaze flicked toward the mountains, voice cool and deliberate. “Because I expect him to break out. In fact, I’m counting on it.” She turned fully now, eyes gleaming like daggers. “If I moved against Dalrithia’s agent myself, I’d have torn the Underdark into civil war. The goddess sees everything within her realm. But now? Elzyrra owns him. So when he escapes… she will be the one who failed Maelzafan, and by extension Dalrithia. Their entire regime crumbles in one fell swoop without any mass casualty or war between houses.”

“And who do you think Maelzafan will turn to then?”
she asked with a smirk. “Her favored daughter.”

Lysdania arched a brow. “Why not tell Azrakar?”

Vyx’aria scoffed. “Because his pride would never have allowed it. I tested him. I asked him to kneel to Maelzafan.” She shrugged once. “He refused.”

A long pause followed. Then Lysdania said quietly, “Perhaps… he would have done it for you.”

Vyx’aria’s jaw clenched. The flicker of heat in her eyes returned, sharp, defensive. But she said nothing.

Instead, she stepped past the fire and changed the subject. “Gather his best orcs. Position them to infiltrate Elzyrra’s sanctum and target the priestesses. The ones responsible for reinforcing the bindings. Set the orcs loose and tell them it's to retrieve their King. Stay uninvolved. Maelzafan cannot see our hand in this.”

Lysdania nodded. “…And when he’s free? Will he not come to kill you?”

Vyx’aria stopped walking. “..I'd like to see him try."

Azrakar
 
Azrakar awoke to a darkness that tasted of iron and incense.

The sanctum was carved deep beneath Zar’Ahal, a chamber of black basalt veined with violet crystal that pulsed like a dying heart. Chains of iron wrapped his wrists, ankles, throat. Each link etched with drow runes, burning cold against his skin.

They did not merely hold him; they fed. Every heartbeat siphoned a thin thread of his infernal essence into the Matron’s waiting chalice, drop by crimson drop.

He hung suspended above a ritual circle, bare-chested, horns scraping the low ceiling when he shifted. The Matron - Elzyrra - stood below him on a dais of polished obsidian, her white hair braided with spider-silk and bone. Four Priestesses encircled the room in silent vigil, their eyes gleaming with fanatic hunger.

"You are stubborn," Elzyrra said. She lifted the chalice, swirling the stolen fire within it.

"Most creatures break within days. You have lasted weeks. Impressive… but pointless."

She stepped closer, trailing a clawed finger along one of the chains. It flared violet; pain lanced through Azrakar’s core. He did not flinch. His crimson eyes remained fixed on the far wall.

"I could make this far worse," she continued, almost conversational.

"Layer by layer. Feed your marrow to the goddess. Your screams would make exquisite music for her altars."

Still no answer.

Elzyrra’s smile thinned. She raised the chalice to her lips, drank deeply of his fire. Her eyes rolled back in ecstasy; shadows writhed around her like eager lovers.
When she lowered the cup, her voice was thicker, drunk on stolen power.

"She sold you cheaply," she purred. "A single night of betrayal for a taste of divinity. A traitor who managed to get some favour back with another betrayal. I suppose that is our way.

"Did you truly believe she held an alliance with you? Or cared for you? Or were you simply fool enough to hope?"

For the first time in weeks, Azrakar spoke.
His voice was low, rough, cracked from disuse.

"She did what she had to."

Elzyrra laughed, sharp and delighted.

"Still defending her? Even now?" She circled him slowly, heels clicking against stone.

"You are wasted on her. I could make better use of such loyalty. Swear to me instead. Give me your fire freely, and I will spare you the slow unraveling."

Azrakar’s head tilted - just enough to meet her gaze.

"I swore to no goddess," he said quietly. "And I will never swear to you."

The Matron’s expression soured. She gestured sharply; the chains tightened, runes flaring brighter. Fresh agony tore through him, deeper this time, seeking to break what weeks of siphoning had not.

He closed his eyes.

And smiled.

For some reason, one strand of the web holding him in place had just snapped. His eyes glanced back and forth. None of the priestesses here seemed to have noticed.
 
Quiet shapes moved in single file, hulking forms draped in soot-dulled cloaks, footsteps carefully muted despite their considerable bulk.

At the front was Commander Gartz, a towering orc with a jagged scar across his brow and intelligent eyes that missed nothing. Unlike many of his kin, Gartz did not snort or grunt. He gave signals in swift hand gestures, each one obeyed with eerie precision. All taught to them by the Drow.

They had been given a path.

Lysdania’s intelligence had pointed them to an old merchant’s artery, long forgotten, now used only by smugglers and spies. A narrow spine-path wrapped around the undercliff and led to an old checkpoint carved into the wall of the underrealm itself.

At the checkpoint, a figure waited, a Rous, hunched and cloaked, tail twitching.

“You walk paths not made for you,” the ratling rasped, eyes narrowing.

Gartz stepped forward, expression unreadable. “Ash-tide rises on a still river.”

The Rous blinked, then broke into a sharp-toothed smile. “Lord Skavius Drytail offers you welcome, courtesy of the Exiled Queen.”

With a sweep of his paw, he pressed a rune. A stone slab groaned open, revealing a passage cloaked in fungal mist.

The orcs dispersed into the underrealm city like phantoms, spreading out across the tiers of Zar’Ahal. Cloaked in shadow, guided by tunnels and whispered paths, they moved not like raiders, but like hunters.

In the center of a moss-lit shrine, a priestess knelt in prayer, her voice a whisper of sacred chant. A blade slid through her back.

She arched once, then crumpled forward onto the obsidian floor. No sound.

Gartz stood over her, exhaling slowly. “For the king,” he murmured, and gestured.

More hand signals. The others peeled off, each targeting a priestess. No war cries. No guttural howls. Just clean, silent executions, the precise opposite of what the drow would ever expect from the surface orcs.

Within minutes, the bindings fraying beneath Azrakar’s prison began to snap. One. Then another. Then two more in succession.

In the bowels of Zar’Ahal, where Azrakar was held, the ritual chamber trembled.

Another snap.

Then…

A familiar sound echoed faintly from beyond the chamber.

“O what decadence grows in the shade of the leaking pipe! Soft as rotted silk, with notes of copper and despair! Truly, a vintage mold for the ages!”

Elzyrra’s eyes narrowed in fury. “What in the screaming hells is that?”

One of her attending priestesses faltered, the lines of her chant warbling.

Elzyrra turned on her. “Investigate. Now.”

The priestess scrambled from the chamber. Outside, a deep baritone howl rose in majestic crescendo.

It was unmistakable.

Orcish opera.

Azrakar
 
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