Open Chronicles The Return Of The Queen

A roleplay open for anyone to join
~THE QUEEN’S PLAZA~

Vel’duith blinked, tiptoeing to see the commotion just ahead of Zathria and her flame haired aperitif apparent. Was that Archmage Nimruil?! And openly mocking the Valsharess?!

Remembering the archmage’s profound importance to Vyx’aria, she swiftly concentrated on garbing him in something to preserve his life and limb- a regal raiment indeed, that would be fit for a queen if not for the belled jester’s hat and exaggerated facepaint. Her embeddings softly shimmered while maintaining the illusion, but she was small compared to those before her, and, she hoped, inconspicuous enough to maintain the illusion long enough to save him.
 
Last edited:
  • Bless
  • Popcorn
Reactions: Sazalam and Nimruil


"Of course you should know these weaknesses of the new Queen to better guard her from their exploitation. To shield her in ways no others can. Only yours is the wisdom and grace to do so, my Mistress, for you are unequaled before our magnificent goddess."​
In the Grand Temple

There was no way to tell how Hebemarri felt at this answer as she loomed in her holy garb.

“A fine response~” Hebemarri cooed, “gentle, even… how well my garden breaths that such a fine and gentle flower can bloom in the web of Zar,ahal.” At her command, the doors to the chamber then opened by magical means. “Come then, let us see the center of this web. To grant my shield to this renewed heart.”

Awaiting the high priestess was a precession of clergy, 500 priestesses strong. All were adorned in gold ornaments and obscuring silken robes, holding items of incense burning and sound making. Besides the priestesses were also Gloamkin of numerous shapes and sizes, from small imps who perched like gargoyles to hulking figures that bore shrines housing holy artifacts of the drow. Hebemarri took her place near the head of the formation where she beckoned for Kiyari to join her. And then the Temple doors were opened.

All along the path to the plaza, drow gathered to watch the march. Some dropped in prayer towards grand Maelzafan while others were merely enraptured to see the priesthood on parade. Those who drew too close were prodded away with long poles wielded by golden masked umbrals and a cloud incense formed around the priestesses as censors were swung in perfect harmony.

In the plaza. The priesthood was heard well before it was seen. They formed around the now complete statue of Maelzafan— standing no less then 70ft tall and adorned with all manner of earthly gemstones. Even Hebemarri was dwarfed in size by the space and the statue, and she took her place between it and the queen’s dias.

Silently and solemnly the priesthood stood, awaiting the queen apparent to arrive.
 
  • Ctuhlu senpai
Reactions: Kiyari
Theceran had partaken in the drinking, but abstained from Shrooms. He needed to be able to see straightish. So he followed behind the hounds before he was spun into a crowd by Slaine Aylwin. He looked back with a scowl before he was grabbed by some other dancing drow.

The horn caused everyone to pause and he realized what it meant. Slaine began marching off with the others, the. He felt the nudge and a low groan escaped him. “If I die because she does toast one in my honor.” He said dryly before slinking off, stumbling slightly but not to the same degree as his sister.

He caught up to her and bumped into her, as they seemingly both stumbled, I’m more stable lean on me so you don’t fall.” He whispered to her as they continued up the ramp to the coronation.

Slaine Aylwin Zairyn Nyssiel
 
Half breed.

Vairos' jaw set. Some worm was speaking to him. Presuming to command him. A rush of anger surged through him. No one so beneath him was permitted to do so. No one. No one, except--

Vairos groaned as if in pain. A hand moved to his temple, umbral nails clutched at skin. His eyes wrenched closed, then looked around, wide, wild. He was...not where he thought. A banner above. A military one. A commander's, and a noble's. A house he did not know, but a house nonetheless.

A woman was speaking to him. A matriarch. Vairos had stepped to her, disrespected her as though she were a commoner. Why?

She ordered him to kneel. For her pet male.

"I...kneel before none but the queen..." he spoke as though it were a struggle. Why only the queen? He was also supposed to kneel before... "And the high priestess...Mistress Hebemmari..."

She had cast him to the earth and broken him. Vairos submitted to her.

"That said...forgive me. I was...disoriented. I meant no disrespect."

This he spoke truly. It was likely he could snap her or her servant's necks without so much as straining, but the kingdom's society demanded his respect. He did not know why, but he knew.

"You are right. I've duties to perform. If you'll excuse me..."

Much to do. Something about the queen. The new queen. The plaza. Vairos was in the plaza.

He dipped his head in something resembling a bow, the most his pride would allow him, and left. Back to his station, for whatever that meant.
 
Queen's Plaza

Academy mages and warriors stood in immaculate ranks, armor aligned, staves grounded, blades still. Discipline radiated from them like a held breath. When Vyx’aria’s vornyx came to a halt at the plaza’s edge, the last scraps of chatter died instantly, swallowed by reverent silence.

She did not move at once.

From the saddle, Vyx’aria surveyed the assembled masses, not as individuals, not as subjects seeking favor, but as a single living body bound by blood, faith, and history. Her gaze passed over them without settling, crimson eyes distant, unblinking, as though she were measuring something older than loyalty. Something deeper.

The vornyx shifted beneath her, massive and patient.

She could have dismounted easily. The distance meant nothing to her. But tradition mattered here. Ritual was power given shape. And so she waited for the servant of a Maelzafan priestess to escort her.
 
She could have dismounted easily. The distance meant nothing to her. But tradition mattered here. Ritual was power given shape. And so she waited for the servant of a Maelzafan priestess to escort her.

Such was Vairos' station. A duty bound to his very soul. The escort to the queen from her mount to coronation.

Others knelt and bowed and cheered. Vairos approached, silent, unreadable, mind clear.

"Your Grace..." he intoned, offering his hand.
 
Somewhere in the Queen's Plaza.

81 posts behind.

Definitely ten bottles ahead of everyone else though, hah.

"Mate, you've got it all wrong-" Grimn licked at his pinky finger and drew it slowly over a dark brow and then vaguely gestured to all of himself, "you can't improve upon perfection."

"All I'm saying," said a bodiless head presently tucked under his left arm, "is you could have worn your fancy belt."

Grimn looked down at his belt, something made of kelpie hide that gleamed between the deepest black with a sheen of aqua, evoking a sickening sense of angry ocean when one looked upon it too long. That same brow quirked over a hazey set of drunken, piss-hued eyes, "You're right."

The puca swayed where he stood, briefly embarassed for the state he was in. How could he come to a coronation without his fancy belt?

"Oh! You still got that doll?" asked the head.

"You can't have it," Grimn snapped with a suspicious pout.

"Not for me, Grimn, for your belt!"

Another moment of consideration, some squinting, a little stumble, "You're-" Grimn belched, "right! I must accessexuali - burp - accessorize!"

"Of course I am, give us your doll and we'll fix you up."

There was some fussing, a headless body in dull black armor with the insignia of the Goblin Market emblazoned in blood across the chestplate moved to jostle the puca about. When it finally stepped away again, Grimn's Little Doll was fastened to his belt, sitting directly over his groin like a queerly fashioned loincloth.

"Now there's perfection," said the head triumphantly beneath his arm, "how could the Queen possibly not agree?"
 
Vyx’aria accepted the offered hand and slid elegantly from the vornyx, the movement smooth and unhurried.

She let her eyes travel from the gold-robed ranks to the towering effigy of Maelzafan, and finally out across the sea of faces gathered to witness this moment.

When she spoke, her voice carried.

“Before we begin,” Vyx’aria said, “I will make plain why you stand here today. Why we gather beneath open stone instead of within Maelzafan’s temple.”

She turned slowly, crimson gaze sweeping the crowd. “History requires witnesses. And today marks the opening of a new chapter for the drow. A new era, one that will see many cities bound beneath a single banner.”

A pause. The air felt heavier.

“Such unity demands memory,” she continued. “And it demands reckoning. We remember not only Maelzafan’s favor, but the price of failing Her.”

At her signal, academy mages stepped aside. From the shadows, they revealed a small, bound group: priestesses and commanders alike, faces hollowed by fear. Vyx’aria crossed the distance in long strides and seized them by the hair, dragging them unceremoniously into the center of the plaza. She forced them down, one by one, until they knelt upon the stone before goddess and crowd alike.

Her dagger slid free with a soft, deliberate sound.

“Kneeling before you,” Vyx’aria declared, lifting her voice once more, “are the last remnants of those who dared to summon a beast that shattered Zar’Ahal’s streets… and those who clung to their loyalty to the failed queen, Dalrithia. Those who would drive drow to their destruction instead of bringing progress. Those who cost Maelzafan the last great sacrifice made to her."

She stepped behind the first priestess and, without ceremony, drove the blade home. The body collapsed forward, lifeless, the sound swallowed by the vastness of the plaza.

Vyx’aria did not stop speaking as she moved to the next.

“This,” she said coldly, “is how rot is excised. Not hidden. Not tolerated. Cut away, so that something new may rise in its place.”

The dagger fell again. Final. Unyielding.

Across the plaza, some in the crowd flinched. Others watched in rapt silence. And among them, if Azrakar stood concealed, he would recognize the truth with bitter clarity: nearly every soul brought to their knees here had played a personal role in his long torment.

Vyx’aria straightened, blade still in hand, and turned her gaze back to the masses. “The old sins end today,” she proclaimed. “The era that follows will not be gentle. But it will be clean.”

And Zar’Ahal understood exactly what kind of Queen would rise to claim it.

With the dagger still wet in her hand, she moved down the remaining length of the row, blood tracing faint lines along the blade that marked her lineage as surely as any sigil. Tor’Rahel steel, Tor’Rahel rites; a House long whispered of for its mastery of blood and the truths it compelled from flesh.

She stopped only when the last of the condemned lay still.

Then she turned.

Crossing the plaza with measured grace, she closed the distance to the dais and came before Hebemarri. Without flourish, Vyx’aria inclined her head in a calm, formal bow, dagger placed back on her hip, posture precise.

“I am ready,” she said simply.
 
~THE QUEEN’S PLAZA~

Beksesha Suulet’jabar watched the procession of executions emotionlessly. They were the handful spared from her Tuin’Znar ghouls: the offspring and retainers of her enemies, the Myrlochars and the Tuin’znars whose clumsy machinations had denied her the throne in favor of Dalrithia, and the extra fortnight these sorry creatures drew breath was of no significance to the venerable matron either way.

She stepped forward with the crown upon cue, turned first toward Hebemarri for the dragon-priestess’s blessing, then toward Vyx’aria. And there she waited for the Most Exalted to bestow her Benediction upon the Valsharess to be. She still dared not look at what she held. Her eyes burned at Maelzafan’s cruelty but her expression remained impassive.
 
Last edited:
~THE QUEEN’S PLAZA~

Tyrnael’s eyes widened. Her younger sisters, Theriel and Nael, knelt first in line among the condemned. She gasped softly for each as they left. She had harbored such hopes for them on the ride back from Blaithirk Undercity! -only to be told upon her return that they had perished, and as traitors to the new Queen. Just when she thought her mourning was complete, to see them alive again, and then slain before her eyes mere seconds later. Memories rushed back - why, she had practically raised them after cadre, before she was committed to the Temple. She was suddenly thankful to be situated on the opposite side of the ring, to have a precious few seconds to compose the mask her face needed to now wear. She turned to her remaining house with a severe scowl, warning away any wailing or cries.

Even as her own crimson eyes welled.

For once, Ferzil made himself useful, offering her a drink from where he sat behind her, surreptitiously drying her eyes with his robe-sleeve. Tyrnael held it pale-knuckled as she awaited the formal toast upon the crowning.
 
Last edited:
  • Yay
Reactions: Hebemarri
The Queen's Plaza


Ispir's steps took him as close as one could get in the crowd.... but not a step closer. Realization washed over him like a tidal wave as Ria, no, Vyx'ARIA finished her approach not into place as one of the noble houses present. But instead, of course, as the Queen apparent to all the Drow gathered here. The city he stood within, Zathria At'Arel and the house that had brought him here, it was all hers in a way. He was simply.... stunned. Eyes wide and confused, shocked for a moment as Vyx'Aria drove her dagger home, made her speech, made her examples, made her statements, and it all just felt.... distant.

He wasn't all that far away really, not in truth, but he may as well have been staring across an ocean he could never hope to pass. Perhaps, by some other turn of fate, if he had met her before this spectacle and wasn't experiencing both shock and swift executions in one moment he wouldn't be so... lost. Not physically, not really, but simply..... struggling to understand. Why had he met the Queen of the Drow in some random meadow upon the surface? Not even among the nobility. Ria had mentioned her family were all gone but.... none of this made sense to him.

He felt now less like a friend and more like..... a novelty? He'd shared with her.... much. He understood how it would be hard to talk about the title she bore but it just felt... unfair? That word didn't sound right even to him. She owed him nothing, after all, and some small part of him was just... worried about her now. But in the end he was too confused to decipher exactly what it was he was feeling so he stepped back into the crowd, watched Ria-..... no.... Vyx'aria ... approach an evil-looking dragon and prepare to receive her crown.

Ah.

That was it.

Her name was the situation. He had seen a piece, Ria, and thought it the whole thing. But that was as far as he got into that thought process before his pursed his lips together, drew the hood of her cloak up, and with all eyes on her he would shuffle to the very edge of the dais. Place a simple gift box bound with a bow of her favorite color on the edge of the dais, making as sure as he could to avoid the gaze of anyone on the dais.... and turn. Walking through the crowd without a word. Not sure if he felt lied to, tricked, protected or maybe even used.

A tiny piece of him held out hope that she had meant it when she said she was happy to have met him. But that piece was to him what Ria was to Vyx'Aria.

Just a piece.

And maybe a lie.​
 
“I am ready,” she said simply.
In The Plaza

The cheers of the crowd were numerous from throughout Zar’ahal. The humming magic of the mages guild was now transmitting Vyx’aria’s voice, and what a speech to share with her people.

From behind her mask and veil, Hebemarri’s eyes flickered with fascination. Yes, there was the flame that would burn down the rotten through branches, there was the makings of a queen.

“Very well.” The High priestess said, and unfurled her wings with such force, that a powerful gale swept across the plaza. As this occurred, a pair of metal cylinders began to click and then let out blood curdling screams that quieted just as rapidly as they occurred.

The lights of the plaza began to dim as the sounds of the world lessened and muffled. Black tar oozed out from the metal cylinders and pooled around the giant statue of Maelzafan. As it sat a pressure could be felt from beneath the stone, both terrible and sublime.

Purple lights shone from the statue’s eyes and the clamorous voices of mortal life seemed like little more than a distant memory. This, was a feeling all those who stood beside Vyx’aria before had known to well. As well they did the words Hebemarri spoke with presence like a sea that had no shore.

“THE DARK MOTHER IS COME! MAELZAFAN IS COME. LET ALL LIGHT FADE AND ALL TRUTHS PROVE FALSE, AS THE OATHS OF QUEENS ARE SPOKEN AND SWORN

It felt as if all in attendance were everywhere and nowhere. Whether this was the drow goddess in truth or some trick of dark magic, mattered very little.

“THY NAME IS VYX’ARIA? LAST KNOWN DAUGHTER OF HOUSE TOR’RAHEL, CLAIMER OF THE ONYX THRONE, WIELDER OF THE CHAPTER SWORD, TWICE RISEN CHILD OF ZAR’AHAL, CONQUEROR OF DHUNBOR, MISTRESS OF SHAY TIRLOC, SLAYER OF TRAITORS, BREAKER OF EXILES, SHE WHO WOULD WISH TO WEAR THE CROWN ONCE MORE.”

“DOST
THOU CLAIM THESE TITLES YOURS? DOST THY AMBITION YET STILL YEARN FOR GLORY MORE?”

“IN
THE FACE OF DROW KIND’S ENEMIES WILST THOU SLAY THE UNDERSERVING? CLAIM THE UNWILLING? PUNISH THE UNFORGIVABLE?”
 
Temple of Maelzafan


Kiyari simply bowed their head in supplication as their Mistress approved of their answer. Honored beyond words by every drop of her approval. As Hebemarri began to leave the temple they would walk, ever and always, in her shadow. Attentive, loyal, devoted, and silent. Each step taken in perfect rhythm with her longer strides, each breathe matching the swell of her amethyst flank that signaled hers, and he felt more comfortable nowhere at all than in the shadow of her wings.



The Queen's Plaza


As the procession moved into the Queen's plaza, as the Queen apparent arrived to make her statements, to proclaim their return to glory, it buoyed Kiyari's heart little. Which was no disparagement. Only their Mistress could lighten their heart so for the Valsharess to do so at all spoke volumes of the fire in her spirit. Kiyari's right arm would cross their torso to grip their left tricep, hugging themselves anxiously at even being so close to the center of attention, but as their Mistress unfurled her wings in a show of power THAT was what enraptured them.

The way her graceful neck arched backward, her wings reflected the pallid glow from the statue's eyes, the power and authority she radiated as she spoke in the name of their Dark Mother.

She was beautiful.

Though Kiyari's eyes remained exhausted-looking, rimmed with shadow, their expression blank, only Hebemarri could make the darkness of their irises widen to the point the soft blue of their eyes may as well have been an eclipsed sun behind the rapt adoration he gazed at her with.​
 
~THE QUEEN’S PLAZA~

Vel’duith somberly watched the unfortunates dragged one by one into the center of the plaza. Unlike the helpless victim she remembered squirming atop the Black Altar at Vyx’aria’s last coronation, these were priestesses and warriors who had actually fought against her. One priestess barely looked older than an acolyte. She most certainly had had no say at all in which side she fought on. Perhaps that was why she went first. A small mercy shown. A token slaughter, no doubt, to appease the dragon hungering for blood to be spilled to appease the deceitful demon-queen.

Vel’duith readily recognized the expression on Vyx’aria’s face. She had seen it up close once before. The mask of duty. Unlike that unlucky novitiate, she had lived to see the same face show remorse for actions taken while wearing the mask. Vyx’aria could not create the better world she dreamed of without the crown. She could not be crowned Queen of a city still under Maelzafan’s sway without sacrificing lives for the ceremony. Nor could she risk steeling her many enemies by showing mercy to any who had defied her so publicly. Whether they had truly wished to or not. And so she shed their blood. Whether she truly wished to or not.

Vel’duith silently resolved to be there for Vyx’aria later. Her need to do so was rooted far deeper than repaying oaths.

She loved her.

For Vyx’aria had given Vel’duith something profound, something she had never before experienced: belonging without preconditions. She had offered her a place to belong before asking anything of her for it. She had become the protective sister she had never had, the caring mother she wished she had been born to. And Vyx’aria had trusted Vel’duith with the most sacred task imaginable: rescuing the egg of Neha the Creator Herself.

Like Neha, Vyx’aria was destined to create beauty all across Arethil. Neha had only turned to destruction after all she had created, every single manifestation of her boundless love had been destroyed. Vel’duith would do everything within her power to keep that fate from befalling Vyx’aria again.
 
  • Gasp
Reactions: Kiyari