She growled through gritted teeth as he drew the arrow from her back, not gently, not carefully, but with fire-laced precision, the heat of his touch cauterizing the wound as it tore free.
Agony flared and yet she stood still. Sweat slicked her brow, her chest rose sharply, and for a breathless moment the only sound was her own breath, the low hiss of burned flesh, and the smoldering silence between them.
In a way it was a brand. Not of ownership but of interference. She turned her head, eyes burning into his, red catching firelight.
“What happens,” she murmured, voice low, hungry, unflinching, “if I want to leave a mark on you, too?”
Her gaze didn’t waver, not from pain, not from pride. It was a challenge, veiled with something more dangerous: intent.
Then, without waiting for an answer, she straightened. Cool again. Controlled. Her expression sharpened as she reached for the segmented armor at her side, sliding it back over the scorched skin like ritual.
Every motion was deliberate, a warrior rearming, a queen resuming her mantle.
She did not flinch. She did not break.
Once buckled, she swept her gaze across the chamber, then lifted her chin toward her elite, the drow who had survived, bloodied and hard-eyed. She gave a sharp command in their native tongue.
They fell in behind her.
And without another word, Vyx’aria fell into stride beside Azrakar, her blade low at her side, her pace unhurried. Her injury pulsed beneath the plate, but she carried
but she carried it like a crown.
Into the dark they descended. The chase was not over.
Azrakar
Agony flared and yet she stood still. Sweat slicked her brow, her chest rose sharply, and for a breathless moment the only sound was her own breath, the low hiss of burned flesh, and the smoldering silence between them.
In a way it was a brand. Not of ownership but of interference. She turned her head, eyes burning into his, red catching firelight.
“What happens,” she murmured, voice low, hungry, unflinching, “if I want to leave a mark on you, too?”
Her gaze didn’t waver, not from pain, not from pride. It was a challenge, veiled with something more dangerous: intent.
Then, without waiting for an answer, she straightened. Cool again. Controlled. Her expression sharpened as she reached for the segmented armor at her side, sliding it back over the scorched skin like ritual.
Every motion was deliberate, a warrior rearming, a queen resuming her mantle.
She did not flinch. She did not break.
Once buckled, she swept her gaze across the chamber, then lifted her chin toward her elite, the drow who had survived, bloodied and hard-eyed. She gave a sharp command in their native tongue.
They fell in behind her.
And without another word, Vyx’aria fell into stride beside Azrakar, her blade low at her side, her pace unhurried. Her injury pulsed beneath the plate, but she carried
but she carried it like a crown.
Into the dark they descended. The chase was not over.
Azrakar