Fable - Ask From The Ashes

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The obsidian square of Zar’Ahal reeked of panic and death.

Smoke curled in lazy tendrils through shattered stained glass high above, casting prismatic shadows across the flagstones slick with blood. Elzyrra’s charred crown lay crushed beneath the boot of a panicked guard; the body of the regent had long since been dragged away, her death leaving a vacuum that the surviving priestesses had filled with breathless infighting and futile chants to a goddess who had already turned her face away.

She had arrived.

Bootsteps rang clear and slow across the broken marble of the hall. No horns heralded her. No guards flanked her. And yet as Vyx’aria walked through the shattered arch of the city square, the air itself seemed to draw taut in reverence or dread.

A ripple of gasps swept through the assembled ranks like a shiver.

Vyx’aria came clothed in shadow, her white hair unbound and crowned only by her stature. Eyes like twin coals surveyed the carnage with neither shock nor sympathy, only disdain. Behind her, the great stone effigy of Maelzafan towered, her many-eyed face worn smooth by centuries of reverent touch. But she was silent now.

Vyx’aria had returned.

Two priestesses stumbled forth to meet her at the base of the dais. One older, one young, both draped in vestments now stained with soot.

The elder found her voice first. “Y-you… You cannot-”

Vyx’aria’s voice cut through the ruin like a blade.

“Is this what the once-glorious city of Zar’ahal has been reduced to? Disfavor with our goddess, incompetence festering in the bones of its regent, and a queen who bleeds her own kin dry to chase phantoms across the ash wastes? A campaign that earns us nothing but empty graves and emptier alliances?”

A murmur spread through the crowd. Somewhere, a blade was sheathed. Somewhere else, a banner was quietly lowered.

The younger priestess surged forward, fury flushed across her cheeks. “You are not welcome he-”

She never finished the word.

Vyx’aria moved like the lash of a whip, too fast for ceremony, too sure for hesitation. Steel flashed, silver and crimson in the same breath.

The blade sank into the priestess’s gut with an obscene wet sound, Vyx’aria’s other hand already curling around the woman’s shoulder as she leaned in close, her voice low and silken against her ear.

“Maelzafan opened her arms to me, girl. Tell her when you meet her that Vyx’aria returns her favor… with devotion.”

With one cold motion, she tore the blade free and kicked the priestess with her boot, letting the body crumple in a heap at her feet. Blood pooled like ink beneath her.

She did not spare the corpse another glance.

Instead, she lifted her gaze to the assembly, to the pale and frightened faces of those who once whispered of her downfall, who had scorned her exile and sung false hymns in Dalrithia’s name.

“Weakness has gripped this regime like a cancer, spreading unchecked through sinew and spirit alike. But I shall carve it out. Root and marrow. By shadow and fire, I shall cleanse what remains.”

She stepped forward, unfazed by the spreading blood. Her sword still gleamed.

“Zar’ahal will endure. But not as it was. Not as it is. It shall be reforged in my image.”
 
Zathria took a deep breath in as she watched Vyx'aria make her way into the square under the protection of their goddess and no one dared oppose her. She strode through the open as if she owned Zar'ahal again. She didn't yet, but she would. Zathria had seen it before and would see it again.

With sabers at either hip, Zathria moved through the square behind Vyx'aria, here to support her but also in search of her elder sister, Anluryn At'Arel. She had taken over Zathria's house following their mother's death. She had thrown her support behind the current queen, and Zathria had to rectify that. She had to wipe the stain clean from her family and more than that, she needed to secure her House's support and resources for the true queen of Zar'ahal.

But she knew that her sister was a powerful priestess in her own right, but if Maelzafan favored them, then perhaps that alone would rob her sister of her power.
 
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Tyrnael Myrlochar stood just behind Valsharess Dalrithia, about to advise her that her forces were girded for battle. A dark, narrow, crisscrossing ascent into a sloping cavern faced them. Atop the perilous slope stood the obsidian gates of Bhatraik. They could safely assume that every single inch of the rise would be booby-trapped.

Tyrnael's elder sisters Yenael and Ssi'rachael had fallen. She had gone from being third-daughter of House Myrlochar to first-daughter of her house in less than a fortnight, and as other more senior daughters of the major houses succumbed to the fighting, she now found herself acting Sut'rinos of the Queen's vanguard.

It was clear that Maelzafan willed her to be here at the forefront in this moment, but Tyrnael could foresee little glory for the goddess in this vainglorious assault. It looked more like the composition of the final measures of a dirge for the drow race.

A messenger spider suddenly scuttled up her lithe, dark-armored form and chittered in her ear, then scuttled back off again. Her eyes flashed with purpose as she stepped forward, bowed, and whispered.

"Valsharess, it is time. All is prepared."

Dalrithia began to raise her standard, drawing a breath to shout, when a demonweb shot over her from the tunnel floor to its ceiling, binding the statuesque warrior fast, lifting her a couple yards off the ground. Tyrnael's sacrificial dagger whirled from its sheath into her nimble fingers with a faint whistle as she floated up into the air until she was level with the back of the vainly wriggling queen's head.

The youthful high priestess cooed into the queen's ear in a sing-song voice, "Maelzafan has left you, daughter of Rithiel." She paused, letting the words sink in. "And so, we leave you."

Her right hand reached around and plunged the dagger into the helpless warrior's neck below her left ear, blood spraying forward and down. With one firm yank, it severed her throat. As the fight left her limbs and the light drained from her eyes, the blade continued, yank by yank, until one final thrust severed the spine. The demonweb evaporated, releasing the queen's headless body and standard to clank front-first to the floor, blood splattering the tunnel walls on either side. Tyrnael floated back to the ground clutching Dalrithia's head by the thick white braid threaded out of her helmet.

Tyrnael held up the dripping, gape-jawed head before her in one hand, the dripping, bloody sacrificial dagger in the other, and addressed the vanguard in her clear, shrill soprano:

"Maelzafan has spoken! The sacrifice she demanded is paid! A new Valsharess awaits us in Zar'ahal! Spread these orders: we withdraw, immediately."

She turned to her lieutenants as she unceremoniously emptied a spidersilk satchel onto the ground and started to wrap up Dalrithia's head within it. "Keep this withdrawal orderly; Zar'Ahal can ill afford foolish losses. The goddess watches! Vornyx-knights and battlemages shall bring up the rear, with a unit of priestesses to heal and support. If the Duergar attempt to sally out to strike at our rear guard, we shall turn and obliterate them where they skulk."

As a stunned bodyguard gaped at the former queen, Tyrnael gestured dismissively.

"Just leave her corpse, right where it is. Her fondest wish was to pass those gates bathed in blood. Knowing the Duergar, I do believe it shall be granted."

As vanguard officers spread out to execute their orders and the rest of the host fell in behind Tyrnael's brisk stride out, she pondered the rest of the spider's message: she was now de facto Ilharess Myrlochar. Her mother, the Regent, had fallen, in the process of botching an important sacrifice. The promotion was a welcome reward, but also bittersweet. Not for the loss of her mother. Her house was in shambles.

Tyrnael's older brothers, respectively what passed for the house mage and the acting subcommander of the city guard, were an effete, spendthrift dilettante and a pompous, preening imbecile. Her younger sisters were all priestesses, but much junior, and decades from lending much help. What vicious irony that she found herself today at the head of an army! She could seize the throne with such ease! But of course, she had no hope of keeping it with her laughingstock of a power base. And so she must instead serve to survive, and thereby slowly reforge the foundation of her house.

Maelzafan's will was clear. And her cruelty, delicious.
 
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