Open Chronicles The Return Of The Queen

A roleplay open for anyone to join

This takes place in the Underrealm in the city of Zar'Ahal, but anyone from the Surface is also welcome within reason. Please do not derail however :)


The Coronation Ground
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The obsidian tiles of the Queen’s Plaza, in front of the Queen’s Palace, glistened with fresh polish, their black sheen cut through with glimmering veins of red-tinged quartz that pulsed softly in the lowlight. Spider silk banners stretched between carved pillars, drifting faintly in the subterranean currents. From the tiered rows all around the plaza, all the city could look down upon the sacred space that would bear witness to its new ruler.

It was not the Cathedral of Maelzafan or the temple, as many had expected and insisted, even. The high priestesses had protested Vyx’aria’s decision with all the hissing diplomacy they could muster, reminding her that no queen had ever been crowned outside the shadow of the goddess’ sanctum.

But Vyx’aria had been unmoved. The temple had served the old order. She would not be its echo. She had chosen this plaza, a place of war councils, of public executions, of revolts crushed beneath boots. A place of sight. The people would see her rise, not hear of it in whispered canticles behind holy doors.

In the end, the priesthood relented, so long as their rites were performed. Their black-robed mages moved through the plaza even now, staining ritual glyphs onto the black stone with blood drawn fresh by willing tithe or prisoner’s veins; it mattered not. At the center of it all stood the coronation dais, a crescent-shaped elevation chiseled from onyx and webstone, surrounded by high tiers where nobles, generals, and foreign delegates would soon take their seats.

And beyond the plaza…Zar’Ahal sang.

The Streets of Zar’Ahal
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Down the roads and across every causeway, Zar’Ahal throbbed with life.

The city was alive tonight, pumping sound and motion through every avenue as the coronation neared. From the basalt chasms of the Deepmarket to the narrow heights of the noble terraces to the tight alleys of Lowtown, drums thundered with deep rhythm, slow and bone-deep. Their cadence reverberated through stone and spine alike, accompanied by the shrill tune of whisper-flutes and the groaning calls of deep horns. The percussion built and broke like waves.

Tor’Rahel’s banners loomed from every outcrop and archway, their edges embroidered with spider-thread glyphs that glimmered in red and black. They whipped overhead, strung between towers by silk-suspended walkways. Below them, the masses gathered, over two hundred thousand souls, packed shoulder-to-shoulder. Drow of every caste and origin, emissaries from distant cities, and curious underfolk drawn to spectacle all swelled together in a tide of faces. Even Surface dwellers were invited to this.

The streets had been transformed into corridors of wonder and threat. Fountains spilled with luminous wine, glowing indigo and gold, ladled out freely to those who could elbow their way close enough. Slave-dancers moved in hypnotic loops along floating platforms, their skin oiled, their faces masked, trailing shimmering veils enchanted to leave behind brief afterimages in the air. The crowds cheered or hissed depending on their origin, but none looked away.

Spell-etched illusions flickered to life overhead, shifting murals of Tor’Rahel’s sigil, scenes of Vyx’aria’s victories, and silhouettes of monstrous creatures she had vanquished or bent to her will. Firewalkers strutted barefoot through trails of psionic embers. Children wore carved wooden masks, some shaped like crowns, others like her helmet. And all the while, the scent of smoke, sweat, fruit, and braised meats mingled into a thick, heady perfume that clung to hair and lungs alike.

Drinks flowed from carved obsidian dispensers ranging from mead, fungal ale, venomous spirits drawn from deep vaults, each sip capable of hallucination, arousal, or forgetfulness depending on the brew. Raucous laughter rolled from balconies. Wagers were shouted across the crowd, bets on the procession’s order, the priesthood’s reaction, even the odds of an assassination attempt.

The Last Of Her Name

In a distance, in a tower, Vyx’aria stood alone.

Her chambers, temporary, until the rites were complete, were silent save for the distant, muffled echo of celebration far below. She stood near the open arch of the window, shoulders lit by the flicker of emerald flame-torches. She was still just in her silk robes, not having dressed for the ceremony yet. Her hands gripped the stone ledge.

Outside, the banners of Tor’Rahel snapped in the updraft. The sight carved through her. She was the last. Every member of her house was slaughtered. Betrayed. Burned in the dark, cast into nameless graves in tunnels now sealed. Friends who had followed her, believed in her, were long gone. And her youngest sister… soft-spoken, gentle, too enamored with books and music, with dreams of the surface. Too good for this world. Vyx’aria could only hope that her death had come quickly.

Her breath hitched. She blinked, and the weight in her chest turned to iron. She pushed back from the window.

And vomited, hard and sudden, into the bronze bucket beside the table.

The retching echoed in the chamber, drowned a moment later by the thunderous pounding of the drums below, the rising chant of the people, and the low, melodic intonation of the priesthood beginning their rites.

No one would see her like this. No one could.

She slid weakly to the ground, her whole body trembling as her eyes began to mist.
 
The Lowtown alleyways buzzed with spillover from the high city's pomp and pageantry, drums echoing faintly down the stone corridors, muffled by distance but still powerful enough to rattle grime from the ceiling cracks.

Zairyn’s ears twitched. The drums didn’t come out often.

He leaned lazily against a crooked stall made from scavenged spider-wood crates and half a silk banner that still bore the sigil of a noble house long extinguished, probably the same one whose larder he’d nicked the mushrooms from. His cloak was thin, his boots were worse, and his smile was just a little too wide to be trustworthy.

He cleared his throat with great ceremony, then threw out his arms like he was the bloody Herald of Maelzafan herself.

“Come one, come all!” he bellowed. “To witness, taste, and possibly survive the most magical of mushrooms this side of the Umbral Roads! Foraged at great personal risk, which is to say, I had to run very fast, and smuggled past pitborn and a territorial beast who may or may not have licked one!”

A few heads turned. Mostly the curious. Or the bored. Or the already-drunk.

Zairyn beamed, sweeping a hand toward a shallow stone bowl filled with shriveled, pale-flecked fungi, arranged as artfully as one could with exactly three mushrooms and half a rind of stale lizard jerky. “Enhance your coronation experience! Heighten your senses! Smell the priestesses from five tiers away! See the Queen’s aura! Hear the whispers of your ancestors judging your fashion choices!” He paused, then added helpfully, “Side effects may include existential dread and profound euphoria. But who’s tracking?”

He winked at a passing noble's servant girl who looked simultaneously scandalized and intrigued. Business was slow. It usually was. But in a city where the drums only sounded once in a generation, everyone got a little bit foolish. And Zairyn knew better than anyone..

When the nobles dance above, Lowtown makes coin.

Slaine Aylwin Theceran Dinien Nyssiel
 
“I certainly hope our dear queen apparent understands the lengths we are going to satisfy her, frankly juvenile whims.” Hissed Hebemarri.

The dragon lounged at the central platform, tapping her claws against the stone as she watched the finishing touches were applied to a towering and immaculate statue of Maelzafan. The plaza already had a statue, which had stood within it for many centuries. but, it wasn’t big enough—certainly not for a coronation. As such, Hebemarri herself erected the new statue with her command of stone, with the details and adornments left to the hands of small winged Gloamkin, who took to the statue like busy bees. Inscribing runes and inlaying gemstones.

The plaza had been closed to the public as this work was done, as well as the tasks of preparing the auditory runes and sanctifying the space as a whole. No less then two dozen priestesses were hard at work, reading prayers and lighting incense to make the space fit for a coronation, and protect it from the stain of common feet and houseless eyes.

Already, Hebemarri was well aware of the spectacle this was going to be. Drow of all ages were beginning to amass along verandas and vantages to see the site being readied for the ceremony. The merriment of the general public echoed down the closed off streets and could be heard clearly through even the hammering of chisels and the singing of prayers.

Hebemarri’s tapping became louder to compete, and the High priestess grumbled about Vyx’aria’s insistence to preform the coronation in such a public space, such a faithless space! It felt like the little black spot of Vyx’aria’s ascension speech was turning into a hideous weed in the garden of this promising new era. In Hebemarri’s eyes, however, plucking weeds was a lot like killing vermin: the foolish deal with the symptoms, the wise deal with the source. Hebemarri suspected the source was little more than Vyx’aria’s fear from her deposing betrayal. She just needed to have her trust in the priesthood re-nurtured. To be shown how the holiness of the drow was core to their very existence.

*CRASH*

Just then, a Gloamkin who was working on the statue collided with the ground, limp and motionless. Then, as Hebemarri began to sigh, the shadows that composed much of it form began to evaporate as it lay there completely dead.

VAIROS!” Shouted Hebemarri. “One of your imps has expired and needs to be replaced! Recall that time is of the essence and I am not fond of having it wasted!”

Meanwhile, up in Vyx’aria’s chambers, the sound of leather boots and a wooden crutch could be heard echoing down the outside hall. At first the pace was slow and lame, the gait of an old Berger almost. But, as it drew closer a confident and calculated quality began to swell, the way Quarro always tended to walk when away from public eyes.

*Knock knock knock* “I shan’t be long yer highness” said Quarro from beyond the chamber door. “The hounds have all come back to the yard, and the lot of them have got their noses keen for any suspicious sorts that’d ruin yer special day. Swear on my life and my blood stained knife.”

Quarro turned to leave but then stopped after only a few paces. “Oh, and for all that it’s worth Vyx’aria, me and my mongrels all stand more fond of yeh than we did that heartless and headless bitch who tried to do away with yeh.”
 
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The day that Zathria had spent countless nights dreaming about had finally arrived. For years she had dreamed of vengeance and retribution against those who had wronged them and driven them out. Now the debt had been paid and balance was restored to Zar'ahal. Soon it would be restored to the entire Onyx Kingdom and then the Underrealm.

House At'Arel moved through the streets of Zar'ahal with a rhythmic and disciplined march of perfectly synced boots. Its arrival was heralded by banners of black cloth sporting a silvered outline of a wolverine head, vicious jaws spread wide to snap down on its prey. It was the perfect sigil for House At'Arel which had never been the largest noble house or the most politically saavy, but its combatants were of the highest quality. At'Arel warriors and battlemages had held the line against enemies of Zar'ahal for centuries and would do so for centuries more.

Zathria - the woman who had purged her family's name of stain - rode at the forefront of the At'Arel procession atop the back of a Vornyx. The Matriarch was dressed in the finest armor that money could buy: plates of segmented emril were weaved together with ornately crafted leather over a shirt of gambeson, the weave serving to deafen the sounds of movement while in combat. At her side, a pair of custom-designed twin sabers hung in a shared sheathe, their emril lengths infused with magical components extracted from weapons she had found in a chimera horde on the surface. And finally, each of her ears was lined with earrings, potent and perhaps the most powerful of all her magical artifacts that she had taken from the head of the traitorous matriarch controlling Shay Tiirloc.

Behind the mounted matriarch stretched a procession of her house. Those tied to her in blood rode atop Vornyx's of their own, each a warrior worth a dozen soldiers, each a loyal servant to Queen and Matriarch. Behind them marched warriors, bannermen, and sworn servants to the House, the pinnacle of discipline, stony faces unflinching and perfectly in sync with one another.

Of note, there were two toward the rear of the procession who seemed not quite the same as all the rest. Ispir Sione and Vel'duith were not the standard retinue of a noble house, but they were presented as honored guests of At'Arel and clothed in fineries bearing the At'Arel crest as if the matriarch dared anyone to speak a word about it.

As they reached the coronation grounds, Zathria took her seat, her eyes nearly glowing with excitement for this day long awaited. While Vyx'aria was acting like she had morning sickness, Zathria was having the time of her life.
 

Nimruil was on his way in his vornyx carriage to the Queen's Plaza, when an enterprising voice cut through the din:
“Come one, come all!” he bellowed.
It wasn't often that Nimruil stopped for street peddlers; but he made the gesture all the same. Certainly, his assistant riding the carriage gave him a befuddled look. But his own medicaments struck him as particularly dull today. It hardly alleviated the growing aches of his spine, nor the prickles of pain subtly throbbing below skin and bone; and certainly not the steady, burning fire in his throat.

But more than anything, he was plagued by nerves -- loathe as he was to admit it.

He didn't quite know what to expect of Vyx'aria's oncoming rule. They had come to the end of a cycle. He recalled her saying as much, echoing his thoughts. But would it be for the better? Or would it . . .
“Enhance your coronation experience! Heighten your senses! Smell the priestesses from five tiers away! See the Queen’s aura! Hear the whispers of your ancestors judging your fashion choices!” He paused, then added helpfully, “Side effects may include existential dread and profound euphoria. But who’s tracking?”
Nimruil sat in silence for a spell. Then he pulled the curtain to his carriage, absorbing the young commoner's wares from a distance. A welcome delay to an inevitable event; one which would bring him within proximity of many enemies, and many dubious allies.

Heighten or dulling his senses, he would gladly take any alteration to their current state.

Less than a minute later, his boots thudded gravel. And the archmage of Suulet'jabar paid patronage to the humble stall and its . . . eclectic wares. A handful of attendants fanned out behind him. Nimruil ignored their dubious glances, prodding at one of the mushrooms with a thin rod of dark iron. A large fungus with a white cap and black dots, glowing with faint bio-luminiscence.

"Your wares seem a little scarce. But perhaps they are as potent as you claim?"

His low voice wrapped around Zairyn, as it might whenever he tested students. He searched the man's expression, and his large, unctuous smile. No doubt he would sell a useless wad for the price of gold. Yet, these mushrooms did catch his eye all the same . . .
 
She was not seated long before Sazalam was attending Zathria.

"Care for a drink Commander?"

The goblet, carved impossibly fine from obsidian and trimmed with silver leaf, contained the unmistakable scent of wyrmwine. Not made from wyrms but fermented in ones extracted belly. The bacteria that die during fermentation give it the heady full flavour. Only the best was being served to the Queens Court.

Even he was done up. A new dark cloak and boots, sleek trousers of a fine if slightly old fashioned cut. He looked the proper manling. The only thing off about him was the orcish dagger he wore about his neck, a keepsake, the weapon that almost killed him and then saved his life. It hung from his neck attached to his choker which was also new.
Slight touches of makeup about his eyes made them appear slightly larger than they were and he wore sweet scents for the occasion with his usual red orb earrings.

In short, Sazalam had cleaned up well and he was genuinely happy to see her. They had been through much together since they met on the surface.

"It's not life saving elixir but it tastes much better."

Zathria At'Arel
 
Veins of moonlight trapped within dark steel. It was curious to observe the changed state of emril, when it returned to its home in the Underrealm; how it nearly seemed to glow and flicker with an innate, pale light that sought escape from its obsidian confines, hardly shedding a lumens.

The short blade was a gift. As fine a make as House Yldore was ever like to craft; its steel growing cold in the presence of demons, and hot in the presence of magic. But more than allowing detection of such elements, it allowed one to injure and stab that which boasted quasi-existence and incorporeal forms.

It had been Rae'twyn's suggestion to offer a stilleto rather than another sword, sharp and sleek as an irrefutable argument. Apparently, this Under-Queen possessed plenty of larger weapons at her disposal and boasted much better access to emril. But no doubt one could use a thin, easily concealed blade with strange foreign properties; particularly in matters of court. Xeraphine should know.

The Portal Stone of Alliria had taken them here. A gateway of teleportation was now open between two of the greatest cities in the world; the surface dominion of Alliria's merchant state, and, if rumours could be believed, the quickly expanding iron grip of a drow kingdom below the earth. Upon nearing the stone, the vision of a bright blue sky and sun had snuffed like a candle before sudden darkness.

Xeraphine had never been to Zar'ahal. She had scarcely ventured out of Alliria, breathing its sea air and walking on its cobbled bones for as long as she could remember.

Now, here she stood in a pitch-black hall in the company of many a merchant guild, family house and looser collectives willing to answer the call of the queen. Vyx'aria Tor'rahel's summons had brought an interesting amount to the stone; mostly minor nobility and adventurous merchants, willing to take the chance and make some distinction for themselves.

Then, lights gradually lit. Thrown from crystals lodged into dark stone walls rather than from any wick or torch. A gathering of armed and armoured drow encircled them in the vaulted hall, now revealed by the light. The lone portal stone also appeared; looking more like some misbegotten rock than the most important part of this architecture.

For a moment, her gloved hand tightened around the hilt of Whisper, her personal and sheathed stiletto. But then, the black shoulder-guards and shields parted. The white lights led outside the building; into a street of even more vibrant and strange lights . . .
 
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Theceran walked beside his sister Slaine Aylwin they weren’t one of the enterprising houses. Not yet. So they didn’t move towards the chambers. As they moved through the streets he heard a voice calling out.


He stopped and turned to look at the Drow man shouting about mushrooms. A devious smirk crossed his face as he turned and gave Slaine Aylwin a shit eating grin, “You think he has one to regrow your tongue?” He drawed out holding back a chuckle, “I doubt mom and dad thought I’d have to be your mouth and shield at once.” He said his gaze growing distant.

Slaine Aylwin
 
It had been a whirlwind few weeks since Vel’duith left Vyx’aria at the Alliria portal stone.

After following several wrong paths for several days, she finally recognized the one that she had ridden down in the elk-cart, and followed it back up to Crobhear Keep. Slipping inside under the shadows of night, she quickly discovered that Sigrun had already left on another mission. She slipped into a vacant room with a table in the lower area, got out parchment and pen, and wrote several letters in her fastidious, elegant hand.

She left one letter weighed by a small moonstone inside the axe-maiden’s locked chest, addressed with flourishes on Sigrun’s name, but filled with an awkward, rambling apology for all the things she had said (as well as a number of things she thought she had said but had really only merely thought) in anger in the tower argument in Quarry Hill. She left another letter on Gabriel’s desk, weighed down by her Yaegir-pin, admitting having failed her oath by getting embroiled in politics, and thanking him for having received her so kindly. She left on Voe’s table a flask of bluecap oil, a sack of various Underrealm mushrooms, and a brief note thanking him for his culinary expertise and thoughtfulness. And she left one last letter slipped under the door to Karskgorak’s room, saying she had recovered the stolen ax as she promised and was presently returning it to the tower in Quarry Hill whence it came, and thanking him for the stories and fellowship shared over a hot bath. And then she had cautiously, silently slipped back over the wall of the keep into the cold night.

She followed the road down to the tower, and unwrapped the Rubyaxe. She ran her fingertips over it one last time, remembering Orebith brandishing it playfully, her eyes welling up as she let the reverie play out for a few moments. And she took out her last brief note: "To Mssr. Largo Rubyaxe, my promise is hereby fulfilled- V.” She had then wedged the note atop a fencepost leading up to the front door, heaved up the ax, and thunked it through the edge of the note into the pole. Instantly, she had ran off under the cover of the night towards the Spine, and the secret door leading back down.

She had taken many unnecessary twists and turns on her way back down, subsisting on ripplebark, a bottle of wine she had taken as her severance, and whatever spring water she could find. She often remembered Orebith in the passages, mixed with newer memories of Vyx’aria, Szesh, the roguishly funny rivvil Dante Storta and the quiet, sad one J'rell, and even A’ni Zathria who had for so long eyed her as sourly as if she were a particularly repulsive kobold.

Finally, she returned to the crossroad cavern where her planned two-days-quick, there-and-back-again, grab-and-escape adventure had become two fortnights of deadly peril and unexpected fellowships led by the most unlikely ally imaginable, the former Valsharess, Vyx’aria Tor’Rahel herself. Despite the assurance of free passage, Vel’duith still feared her mother’s survival and wrath if she were seen before being safely back in Vyx’aria’s fold. So she followed the same path down to the springs, the same side passage, and the same detour. She covered herself in a comically oversized hooded cloak stolen from the supply room. And she summoned a small magical flame into her hand as she entered the nest. She stepped through with lightly crunching steps until she felt something hard underfoot. She looked down and gasped aloud - it was her mother’s silk-wrapped rod, splattered in dried drowish blood. She had dropped to her knees, weeping, sobbing, touching the rod, then pulling her hand back as though she had been struck anew. The telltale flicker of the flame she held told her it was time to go. And up to the very highest middens she had levitated.

She had dropped the smelly cloak back down the middens, and cleaned herself with a quietly whispered cantrip before carefully creeping out. Hearing a familiar voice inside a room down the hall, she had crept to lean just outside the door, and softly cleared her throat, exactly as she had when they very first met after the slaying of the worm. She playfully waggled Vyx’aria’s invitation as the half bemused, half-irritated matron emerged, then the diminutive rogue bowed low in greeting.

“I read here that congratulations are in order, O illustrious Ilharess of the Second-House!”

The next week had the briefest of reunions with Vyx’aria, then nearly a week exploring the nearly deserted compound of House Tor’ahel. She found a room with cobwebbed bookcases, a lyre, drums, a flute -she briefly imagined Sigrun playing the flute, and wondered what sort of music she might play. She spent a good while cantripping away all the dust and cobwebs, before taking up the lyre and seating herself. It was very fine, much better than the one she had haggled for in her youth, that had set her mother off on such a deliciously violent tirade. A beautiful, chiming bell tone, even under her months out of practice fingertips. She chose something triumphant for a few moments, giving thanks to… she stopped and wondered. Less than a moon ago, she would have said Seelah. But her adventure on the surface was no less perilous or disaster-tempting as the one below. And had she actually stayed to hand the ax over to Largo with no other Yaegirs along, she had no doubt that she’d have been seized, jailed, or worse. Vyx’aria was different now than she remembered her. She had shown Vel’duith nothing but grace and kindness ever since that one momentary misunderstanding. Vel’duith had earnestly tried to repay Seelah’s grace, and she had met some on the surface who showed her a degree of kindness. But would she ever truly belong there? She only truly fit in at all with the other most inhuman outcasts. Vyx’aria had promised belonging; didn’t she owe it to herself and Vyx’aria to see what that would mean?

The day of the coronation arrived, and Vel’duith arose early. She proceeded to the House At’Arel compound and presented herself to Matron Zathria, who gruffly scolded her off, to ‘go make yourself at least presentable enough not to embarrass my house.’ She had found robes in the appropriate household hues to fit her in an old wardrobe with what appeared to be clothes from the later years of someone’s childhood. And a pair of gently used spidersilk slippers that fit nearly perfectly. She smiled at the plush sensation of the soles as she test stepped around on the marble floor. She bathed, dressed, fastidiously fixed her hair in the household style, and returned to Zathria's court. She was quite surprised to see Ispir Sione there, similarly garbed in At'Arel's colors.

"Why, if it isn't one Ispir Sione! Dare I presume that you have reconsidered the perils of bathing and consorting with those of my ilk, young master?"

She grinned very nearly as mischievously as the night she and Melfa had made their playful invitation to the young bard, prompting him to all but flee up the stairway.

She marched as inconspicuously as she could manage among Zathria's kin and bannersdrow while being next to the surfacer, quickly learning the correct cheers and responses. The spectacle was thankfully quite distracting to most onlookers as they reached the coronation plaza. She took the appropriate seat for someone in the rearward train of a great house, her garnet-hued eyes furtively darting about, seeking Vyx'aria.
 
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A figure, hulking for what appeared to be a masculine drow, stepped astride the dais that the high priestess now rested upon. His face was placid, as still as the eye of a storm, but the violet umbral energy that wreathed his face and crested above his head like antlers pulsed as though a quiet fury was stirring within him.

"Yes, Mistress," Vairos replied simply, a rich, deep voice that spoke both with compliance and boredom. He moved past the dragon and knelt beside the collapsed body of the umbral laborer. It was already beginning to melt and dissipate, as was the fate of those imps who had nothing left to give.

Vairos right hand, seemingly made of the same stuff as the imps themselves, plunged into the body before him. Dim light drew upwards as he drained what little energy remained from its corpse, and in moments the body had dissolved entirely.

Barely anything. The thing had likely starved to death, too pathetic to even feed upon the warmth of a nearby torch. Vairos stood, his brow flattening into something resembling a look of disgust.

"Weaklings, all," the skall intoned, eyes like firelight scanning over the umbral imps that scurried about the scene. The thought that they were in some way kin was almost sickening. "If you cannot handle this menial task, perhaps you should return to the shade pits."

One of the umbrals landed and skittered towards Vairos and began to complain in the chattering whispers of its native Uxtan language. Sure enough, the imps were fast fading from a lack of sustenance. Vairos huffed his irritation.

"Find yourselves fire. Feed, quickly. Then double your efforts."

The imp started to thank him, but Vairos held up a hand to quiet it.

"Don't. You're worth slightly more alive than dead. I'd keep it that way if I were you."

The lead umbral and all its companions swarmed away to feed. Vairos turned and strode back to Hebemarri.

"The work will be done," he reported flatly.
 
With a frowning pout, Tyrnael inspected the bare remnants of her once glorious house - second-house no more! - arrayed in their most handsome finery, ablaze in gilt crimson spider silks with only obviously cosmetic hints of armor. Most of her bannerdrow were fresh from cadre, as their ill-fated predecessors had stood behind the Tuin’znars and duly died by spear, spell, and ghoul-gnash.

After her return to Zar'Ahal after helping Zathria and Hebemarri quell the rebellious city of Shay Tirloc, Tyrnael discovered that of her onetime panapoly of siblings, only one brother, Ferzil, the fop who passed for the house wizard, and her youngest sister, Nemriel, who was still in cadre, remained alive and marginally in favor. K’mindu had stupidly died accosting the queen’s forces just within the gate. Two younger sisters, Theriel and Nael, died allied with the Tuin’Znar cohort. Only the extremely timely and significant gift that Tyrnael had presented to Valsharess Vyx’aria, Dalrithia’s head, had likely prevented her own execution and the dissolution of what little now remained of her house.

Tyrnael had spent most of the past week penning letters promising commissions or adoption to all her cousins out in the out-cities, hoping to lure them to bolster her flagging house. But she would very likely need to find a consort post haste to solidify her house's viability. And so, the youngest matron's eyes were not only seeking the Valsharess as she took up her effigy-hooded standard, mounted her vornyx, and led her meager procession out the gate toward the coronation plaza.
 
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Beksesha rode in a lavishly gilded vornyx-carriage with her latest consort, Bethuil, the young guard-captain who had been comforting her over the past couple moon-cycles, throughout her traumatic recovery from the nearly spectacular collapse of decades' worth of schemes to position herself for the throne. She had just learned that her previous consort died in Dalrithia's siege, too, leaving her to order his chambers to be tidied up for Bethuil's use. And the daft young fool had apparently brought along with him to the field that jewel-encrusted dwarf-axe one of her unexpectedly successful students had taken as spoils in a blood raid - her special gift! - and now doubtlessly despoiled by the deep dwarves. And the inexorable situation had forced her to once again swallow her prodigious pride and pledge support to the indefatigible and now physically omnipresent Vyx'aria Tor'Rahel. Her brother Nimruil had pivoted to this task remarkably adeptly, and his prowess had factored very prominently, perhaps even in excess of her own! - in helping the Valsharess reclaim her throne.

But her position was at least not weakened severely. She was of course terribly upset to learn that her first-daughter and carefully groomed heir Zurieth had fallen in Dalrithia's vanguard barely a week before the idiot warrior herself had finally gone down. Suulet'jabar remained Third-House, though, and her old rivals Elzyrra Myrlochar and Phaeless Tuin'Znar were dead and their houses diminished or eliminated entirely. Her old protege, Tyrnael Myrlochar, had obviously absorbed her lessons better than the rest of the family. She had showed up with Valsharess Vyx'aria's most trusted ally, Ilharess At'Arel, and hoisted the head of Dalrithia herself on a pike before the queen, swearing immediately her undying loyalty. A bold maneuver that brought her from a certain and ignominious end to being among the queen's inner circle. The newcomer's loyalty would be her only prop for quite some time, however, for her house could not have been more thoroughly gutted without failing to exist entirely.

And that left her, Matron Suulet'jabar, in quite an envious position in relation to the other matrons present. Instrumental to seizing back the throne for a queen with no obvious heir, no house to back her no matter what, the same two key allies she had always had, only with half the strength of houses they previously enjoyed, and her having lost half as many veteran warriors, battlemages, and priestesses as any other major house. So really, all she had to do was wait for the new queen to stumble in any of the dozen new conflicts she was planning to seek, and who else could Zar'Ahal really turn to but her?

So all in all, Ilharess Beksesha Suulet'jabar was more jubilant than any save the queen herself as her daunting entourage marched proudly across the whole length of the upper causeway into the coronation plaza, with her personal entourage of herself, her new consort, her brother, his new favored apprentice, and her now first-daughter and newly named heir, Jan'riel, seated in the front row.
 
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Dinien had spent much of the day in the Hounds’ barracks kitchen, making use of the oven while the bulk of the Hounds were deployed among the upper city throngs, sniffing for trouble. He had been given special orders to “not be seen anywhere in the upper city, and especially not within eyeshot of Ilharess Suulet’jabar.” And that was fine by him! He had rows upon rows of steaming hot mushroom buns arranged in a strapped tray, looking for all the world like a drow version of a ballpark hotdog vendor as he prowled the lower third of the ramp leading up from the slave pens to the upper city. Oh, and he kept an eye on the crowd. After all, he was on duty, too.

“Duulakah here! Fresh baked, you know they’re hot! One silver scale! A dozen for a vyx, and don’t you dare say a drith!”
 
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Zairyn’s eyes went wide the moment the figure stepped from the carriage.

“Well, well… don’t see too many Sul’jabs down here,” he purred, straightening his posture and flicking a bit of imaginary dust from his stall’s edge.

He flashed a grin so polished it might’ve been sharpened. “Course, boldness deserves proper wares. Something a bit more refined than the usual... sniff-and-swoon nonsense, yeah?”

Zairyn reached below the stall with a little flourish, producing a carved onyx tray with three pale mushrooms, their caps softly glowing with pulses of green-blue biolight, almost like they were breathing. He leaned in a little, voice dropping into his best stage whisper.

“This one here? Just a bite, and your thoughts’ll float smoother than spider silk in an updraft. Mind like water, nerves like molasses. Nobility-grade calm, Archmage.”

And just as he was about to really launch into the upsell, his eye caught a familiar, annoyingly responsible silhouette lower on the ramp.

His smile twisted into a scowl.

“Oy! Din!” he barked, pointing a long finger past Nimruil’s shoulder. “Aren’t you supposed to be off escorting the surfacers or doing something that smells a bit more like duty and a bit less like stealing my sales?”

Zairyn gestured broadly at his stall, then back at Nimruil with exaggerated flair.

“Leave the pitchin’ to me, yeah? Professional work, this.” He flashed a grin full of teeth. “Wouldn’t want to embarrass us with substandard hawking.”

He turned back to Nimruil, all charm again, as if nothing had happened.

“Now then. Where were we?”

Nimruil Dinien
 
Nimruil's gaze drifted from Din back to the oily salesman. The men here in Lowtown fought like cave fishers in the sewers for scraps, willing to climb on top of one another for paltry gains.

A kinder soul might have felt pity at this sad sight. Nimruil observed it rather with the eyes of natural philosophy; an obvious consequence of the end of a decadent rule.

This seller might be speaking up his wares. But these mushrooms *were* in fact rare. Perhaps he didn't know their true worth.

"Yes, very impressive, very impressive indeed . . ." Nimruil said at length, playing along. Sharp eyes seized upon Zairyn suddenly. "Can you name them?"

Another test. Or perhaps a trap.

Zairyn
 
Zathria got herself into her seat when she saw Sazalam approaching, a faint smile tugging at her lips. She liked to think that he had rushed over to be near her, and her ears swiveled up just slightly at the thought and at seeing him.

Mmm, look at you. You're looking good, she said, taking the offered cup from him.

My, my, only the best from you, then, she said as he handed her a cup of fine drink, take a sip of it and letting it settle on her tongue with a few smacks of her lips.

Delicious, she said letting her eyes flick over him with the faintest bit of a smirk. She was definitely talking about the wine. Oh yeah, for sure the wine.

Sazalam
 
“Oh, you mean those bluecaps, sir? Fine specimens. ‘Twould be truly a shame and a pity to press those beauts into oil and dry the skins to grind for flour. Why, I’d pickle those gems, I would.”

He tossed a piping hot bun to Zairyn with a wink and a grin.

“Sale’s yours for the taking now, I think! ‘Ever Vigilant,’ Hound!”

He clapped his comrade’s shoulder, pointed at him with each finger in turn as if to say ‘go get ‘em,’ then resumed his hawking pitch as he strode away.

“Haaaawt duulakah here! Only one scale! Dozen for a vyx, don’t you call it a drith!”

Nimruil
Zairyn
 
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A day off was rare in the life of the Hounds. Yet here it was, plain as day...an instruction from the Houndmaster to enjoy the coronation unarmed. Of course, some still thought of her as the unpredictable swordswoman who had challenged the Queen. She felt it herself.

Instead, here she was, down the road in Zar'Ahal, watching the streets glow with a warmth she had not seen in over a century. A new Queen's coronation was usually a matter of pomp, of course, but this far exceeded the last coronation.

Slaine was angry. As always. Doubly so - her family had been barred from the honor of the proceedings. She felt their judgement, drowning it under a glass of surface-made mead. But she couldn't hide her enjoyment of the music, the festivities, and the pomp. Zar'ahal was on the rise. Even if she was low now, if she stayed loyal, her clan would grow in the ensuing conquests.

Her foot tapped, unconsciously, to the music all around them. Something almost like a smile crept to her face. Until her brother appeared.

Theceran appeared like specter, quick with a joke. The little male hadn't borne any serious consequences from their melee. When he joked about her tongue, her hand raised to punch him in his chest.

Afterwards, she signaled. She pointed at the mushroom salesman - raising two fingers high for Theceran to purchase two doses of mushrooms. If she were to endure the day, she would do it in a haze of drunkeness and psychedelics.

As they got closer, the man almost looked familiar. Was he a hound? Or did all males just have that look about them?

Zairyn Theceran
 
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The war of complex emotions within Ispir was something that had bade him to spend every second since Zar'Ahal came into sight in quiet thought. He always did feel most comfortable among the crowd, spreading joy and cheer the likes of which currently enveloped an entire city! At least, almost like the merriment he found waiting for him there. The first thing he had felt when hearing the murmurs of celebration and festivities had been, after all, excitement at the prospect of getting to see Ria and Zathria At'Arel 's world when it was at it's most joyous.

The second emotion that had come to him was that familiar, vague sense of trepidation that always tingled in his stomach at the thought of moving among a large crowd, or performing before a new one. A familiar but traitorous emotion that honestly made it feel like he had to go to the bathroom but by now he was well used to it enough to simply drink in the atmosphere without too much trepidation.

As they had passed the gates of Zar'Ahal a third pair of emotions had greeted him as if they had personally manned the gates themselves. A thrumming, lightning-like eagerness that surged from his mind down to the extremities of his limbs. Like bolts of lightning that coiled like serpents throughout his entire body. Excitement. Along with a heavy, coiling weight in his stomach that wound like a choking vine up his chest to bind his lungs in webs of spider-silk, only to coil higher and make it hard to even swallow. Like a noose softly tightened about his throat. Anxiousness.

In a way that made him smile a bit to himself he did murmur about blaming Vyx'aria for those last two emotions. Since it was due to the gift he had brought for her, his anxiety of her reaction to it, or to THEM he supposed, that had him so excited. So anxious. Obviously this 'blame' was good-natured, friendly, playful, but that did precious little to loosen the cord about his throat that she may as well have tied by her own hand. It didn't help at all that he could already see in his mind's eye those rose-red eyes gazing down at him in amusement, an amused smirk upon her lips, as she questioned whether or not he had gotten her a book of riddles.

In any case he had also been both dressed up and aided in his own dressing up. A good bard never left home without an outfit fit for finer audiences in his belongings after all. Gone for now was his musician's cap. Though he kept a flower in his hair to add some sort of softer color to his ensemble. His usual undershirt was replaced with an off-white button-up, for a subtle base-layer to the rest of the outfit which was all darker colors. Though it was form-fitted well enough to show that despite what his usual outfit suggested he wasn't quite ALL skin and bones. Lean, runner's muscle could stand out against the fabric when he moved in certain ways. He did, after all, walk the world.

Alongside the shirt was a pair of simple, pressed dark pants. Slimming and fitted in such a way to make him seem just a tad bit taller. Along with the symbol of House At'Arel upon the seat of the pants like some designer's mark. Meanwhile, over top of the undershirt was a deep, emerald green vest an even darker shade than his aquamarine eyes and twin tails. Complete with a matching bow of the same hue at the base of his throat. The outfit was completed, of course, by his shoulders being shrouded in the dark cloak Ria had given him, even if it wasn't of necessarily fine make, being a travel cloak and all, he had nonetheless refused to part with it.

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So it was that as Ispir had made his way through the city as part of Zathria's procession, being more than a little thankful for her being willing to accept him so easily, he was all but mesmerized by the theatrics of the city. Multitudes of banners bedazzled him, for surely there was no deeper meaning behind the one on his cloak being most prominent of all. The performances and spectacles earned appreciative smiles as he was so caught up in scrutinizing the dance and music he did not catch the undertones of desperation and servitude in the slave's performances.

Indeed it wasn't until Zathria had seated herself, that they were among the nobility and aristocracy around some great, dark statue that Ispir was drawn out of his distraction. At first by that very same dark statue, regal, imperious, and a thing that transfixed him with a gnawing sense of... dread? Concern? He shrugged off the emotions as his anxiety only growing worse despite the large dragon Hebemarri that stood alongside it. Her countenance... not friendly? Oh, he knew that look. She was stressed. Very stressed. From the looks of things also the one organizing this whole festival. With a bit of a grimace she had Ispir's sympathies. It couldn't have been easy to help set all this up.

But what really pulled the metaphorical rug out from under his feet was the appearance of Vel'duith and her teasing about bathing with people again. A jab that managed to still earn a deep blush from him as he sighed and gave her a shy wave. Explaining as best he could over the din of noise.

"A-Actually I umm... I'm here looking for a friend of mine."

He paused, looking around, then back to Vel'duith and... oh. This was awkward. He couldn't remember her name. To avoid this inconvenient, embarrassing fact as she had called out his name effortlessly he added.

"B-But given the number of people here I don't think giving a description would be any help. So... it was nice to see you again but I think I will go look around. I doubt I will see her but I can at least get more familiar with the place...."

Giving Vel'duith a wave that was both quick and sincere he would let her take her seat and begin to walk through the crowds of Zar'Ahal. It was only when he had taken a few dozen steps away that he nearly facepalmed. Feeling incredibly stupid. He had completely forgotten that he could just shape a likeness of Ria out of light rather than relying on a description! Grumbling to himself in such a way that made it obvious that if HE were an elf his ears would be doing that cute twitch thing Ria's did sometimes he nonetheless did NOT want to go back and be teased by Vel'Duith even more so he kept walking and looking about. The crowd was both strangely thick but also... parted for him? The eyes of passerby seeming to linger on him, or more accurately his cloak, as he thought to himself.

'Huh. Everyone here is so polite....'​
 
Change. Zar’Ahal was a light with it. Even now as the coronation of the new queen was getting under way, workers were pulling down effigies of The Usurper Queen. One dynasty torn down and the other elevated. None of it mattered to Fain. His house, House Uthral, had secured their place in this new world, and cemented their place as the Fifth of the Great Houses.

Sol’aufain Uthral ushered his Matron's carriage toward the plaza with his head held high. He was adorned in ornate armor, it was black steel with matte black trim. His chest was decorated with thin silver etchings that resembled a spider’s web scrawled across the larger portions of armor. His rapier was sheathed at his hip, and his off-hand was swathed in a wrist bracer that matched his chest piece. Below his sword belt he wore black trousers that disappeared behind matte black greaves. His snow white hair was pulled back from his slate colored face leaving his burning coal colored eyes to shine upon any who stepped into his gaze.

Besides him his mother, Uldrezia, shifted, beckoning him to her carriage’s window, “Stay close, I’ll not have you out of sight should anything go a wry, here today.

Fain nodded, a near imperceptible motion, and his mother continued, “Our house has been elevated, and I will see us elevated further, remember that Sol, remember that everything I do, I do for our house.

Fain’s eyes flicked to his mother. She wasn’t known for sentiment, she was known for being the shrewdest matron in Zar’Ahal, and her words carried that weight.

As you say my Matron,” Fain responded, his harsh whisper of a voice curling up and out for only her to hear.

House Uthral’s host entered the plaza, horns and criers called out from various places across the space, announcing their arrival. Above the procession mist had begun to gather. Within that mist massive crystals of ice began to form, glimmer, and flit.

As they reached the center, the carriages of the house formed a circle, above them, the ice grew breaking, reforming, shifting, until finally a massive glittering spider stood poised above the house. From where Fain stood, he could see his mother and her most powerful working the glacial arachnid puppet. The spider scuttled forward, a collective gasp was caught in the throats of the gathered crowd, it leapt into the air high above the plaza, and then shattered into millions of glittering shards that fell to the ground as miniature flakes of spider shaped snow.

House Uthral had arrived.
 
The lead umbral and all its companions swarmed away to feed. Vairos turned and strode back to Hebemarri.

"The work will be done," he reported flatly.

“Good.” Responded Hebemarri. “I shall return to the Temple then. To prepare my body for the role I shall be playing in the ceremony. For that time, the sanctity of this space is in your hands, Vairos.” Hebemarri then turned to spot a few of the nobility who had decided to arrive remarkably early, flaunting their influence while the plaza yet remained closed to the public. “Oh, and do try to keep an eye on our early arrivals. I would hate to see this glorious day turn into even more of a circus performance than it already has.”

Though no names were named, Hebemarri’s eyes did not er from Zathria and her entourage even as she spoke. The Queen apparent’s closest friend and ally had proven her skill well during the siege of Shay Tirloc, but here she seemed little more than a flashy gadabout. Taking the time to drink deep her wine and her consorts visage as she accompanied herself with a drow who seemed more fit for a lesser house seat and some kind of Exotic, sparkly eyed, pet.—Then, house Uthral arrived in an aggressively magical display and Hebemarri realized that she was just wasting her time at this point. As such, The Dragon priestess of Maelzafan unfurled her wings and took to flight towards the Grnad Temple

The grand temple of Maelzafan was then, a welcome sight. Majestic, stately, and hardly still stained by the brief schism that occurred a few days prior. Hebemarri landed gracefully upon her favorite balcony and strode into the massive stone complex, where quickly a number of priestesses and handmaidens amassed to answer her questions.

“Are the royal artifacts prepared?”
“Yes my lady”
“And my ceremonial raiments?”
“Yes my lady”
“Does the priestly precession stand ready to make for the plaza?”
“All priestesses who were chosen to attend are cleansed and adorned, my lady.”
“What of the other high priestesses?”
“They have not wavered on their agreement to have you serve as acting head priestess, my lady.”
“How kind of them, I half assumed they too would try to fill this day with inconveniences.”
Hebemarri motioned with her claws and a path was opened for her to go further into the temple.
“I shall be preforming a rite of sanctity in the pools of cleansing. Do not disturb me even if the peaks of The Spine begin to collapse .”
“Your will is ours, my lady. May Maelzafan bless you in your duty.”
 
Zairyn didn’t so much as blink at Nimruil’s challenge.

He caught the bun one-handed, grin flashing as he glanced to Din, then took a casual bite as if being tested were a street game he’d played a thousand times before. Crumbs dusted his fingers. He swallowed, wiped his thumb against his palm, and finally turned his attention back to Nimruil.

“Bluecaps,” he said easily. “Harvested past the Gray Wyvyrn Pass. Shade-grown. That’s why the caps curl like that.”

Confidence, not bravado, delivered like fact, not argument.

He tilted his head, studying Nimruil in turn, eyes sharp with the knowing look of someone who understood the board far better than the pieces upon it. Nimruil may have been well-read, but even the wealthiest didn’t know how to come out unscathed in the arena of the lowborn.

His hand came out, palm up. Waiting. Coins.

Then..movement. In the distance, a familiar shape cut through the lantern-lit crowd. Two of them.

Zairyn’s grin widened.

“Well I’ll be damned,” he muttered, eyes locking onto Slaine and Theceran. Everyone knew the story. Everyone knew the dishonor and Vyx’aria cutting off Slaine’s tongue. And yet, backbone like that didn’t go unnoticed in Lowtown.

He raised his voice, sharp and irreverent. “Oi! Slick Slaine!” A pause.

“I wouldn’t mind you lickin’ my mushroom-” He cupped a hand to his ear theatrically, leaning back. “Oh? What’s that? Don’t hear you saying no.”

A snicker followed, quick and unapologetic, as he plucked one of the hallucinogenic mushrooms and tossed it her way in an easy arc.

The street swallowed his laughter as he turned back to business, hand still outstretched for the coin.

Dinien Theceran Slaine Aylwin Nimruil
 
The fist that caught Dante’s cheek glanced off as he rolled with it. His bare back sank into the coarse hemp rope as it rebounded him back into the ring. The Sellsword flashed a bloody smile for all to see, “You hit like my mother, and she’s dead, mate.

The little drow across from his screamed, Dante laughed, and once again the pair collided. Storta put a knee between the Drow’s legs, their battlecry became a strangled whine as his knee pulled back. Dante didn’t let up, he drove his elbow into the Drow’s jaw and snapped his white head to the side where it continued to the floor.

Guess scrambling eggs is universal,” Dante muttered between ragged breaths. The ringleader rushed in, checked on the Drow, then proclaimed Storta the victor. The Sellsword smirk spread into a sneer as a roar of disapproval filled the fight pit.

Dantes stumbled out into the street, his tunic open down the front and his leather chest piece thrown into his back, he spun around, snatched up his armor, and made an obscene gesture at the ringleader who made one right back, they went back and forth a few times until finally Dante overheard some guy selling a load of bull shite to the passing masses. He watched the event play out, noting the being, being sold too, and his sneer returned.

Then for no other reason than he felt like it, Dante decided to help the sell a bit.

Storta staggered forward, shirt still open, armor half on, “I can smell them!

Dante’s voice carried over the immediate crowd, a mother and daughter scurried away, the mother pulling her child closer as Storta’s voice rang out, “I can smell the Pristesses! They work!

His voice carried a euphoric quality that hinged on mania, but anyone who understood addiction, who understood the siren’s call of good stuff would hear in his tone, that the mushrooms this Drow was selling were top tier. Dante staggered forward pushing in front of Nimruil, as if he didn’t exist saying, “I’ll take two more, please!

Nimruil Zairyn
 
Nimruil nodded, satisfied.

Coin soon found its way to Zairyn's palm; with an extra tip, compared to the true value of the Blue Caps.

"It is good to see that expertise still thrives." Even down here, was the unspoken addendum expressed by his scrunched-up nose and unimpressed glance at their surroundings.

It was about that time that an ill-dressed and even worse mannered human staggered in front of him. He was of a mind to test his disentigration spell then and there; erasing the addict like some grievous error on part of the universe. But perhaps his curious behaviour could be informative of the Blue Caps' effect.

His glance caused him to spot Slaine and Theceran. Recognition washed away his restrained disgust, giving way before renewed curiosity.

The pair of fighters who had challenged Vyx'aria on her day of conquest. He remembered them well. The short haired alchemist-fighter and his hulking, savagely dressed warrior companion. Since Zairyn was addressing Slaine, he took the opportunity to engage Theceran in casual conversation.

"Resupplying our volatile vials, are we?"

He still recalled the sting from Theceran's Sunburst concoction. Blast, even remembering nearly summoned that painful glare back to his eyes.

Theceran
Zairyn
Slaine Aylwin
 
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Quiet pride showed in face as he arched his head, letting the bright red of his hair shield his lips from others as he formed words into an intimate whisper before standing upright again.

"Your pleasure is mine own, Zathria!"

His emphasis on addressing her so formally in such a setting was as risky as he'd dare but it was brazen all the same. Still, she had asked him to use her name and he usually only employed it in strict privacy but with all that had happened between them he dared this indulgence upon her for the day that was in it.

"You have more than earned it Commander."
His formal tone returned for the part of their conversation that might be overheard.

"All that you have worked for has come to fruit and the Kingdom is richer for it. Many wrongs are being righted today. There is much to be grateful for."
A fleeting glance down at Zathria hopefully let her know what he was grateful for but he suspected she was well aware, as he was.

Zathria At'Arel