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=EC 2025= Grand Arena

 
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8/12/2025 23:10:09   
  Starflame13
Moderator


Silence reigned in the vacant stands surrounding the Grand Arena. Its walls, witness to countless years of slaughter and carnage, ever yet stood firm at the boundary of the pit. Sands stained in hues of scarlet and crimson, thanks to the tribute spilled upon them year after year. The dunes gleamed in the sunlight, gorgeous enough to mesmerize - were it not for the aura of hunger, of excitement, of desire for further satiation that permeated them.

No wish came without a cost, and the Arena would exact its toll.



As noon crept ever closer, the entrances to the stands swung open. Crowds rushed to fill the empty seats, an excited babble filling the air even as the throng filled the stands. They elbowed and shoved, rushing to claim the spots closest to the coming bloodbath. Yet throughout the chaos, all kept half their attention on those already present in the frontmost row. Delicate scarves and long, multi-colored robes hid the faces and features of those chosen to speak for the Lords. With heads bowed and arms clasped before them, they stood as statues in stark comparison against the scrambling spectators. Watching. Waiting.

Then the sun reached its zenith, sliding into place directly above the center of the Arena. As one, the criers moved; heads raising and hands extending to command the attention of the abruptly hushed crowd. Calm lasted for but a moment before they spoke, a multitude of tones and voices that melded into one as they issued forth their decree. “Fights of glory and deceit, acts of mercy and cruelty, moments of hope, despair, and fury; all have we witnessed in the Trials on this day! Now the Lords have chosen, and as they once passed Judgment on the Champions of Old, now will they decide the most worthy of those before us today. Witness their chosen heroes. Witness the Paragons!”


An unsettling gloom spilled out across the sands, absolutely silence following on its heels. Colors dimmed and excitement wanted as the pool of inky blackness spilled forth, coalescing into an obelisk of smoothest obsidian. On it stood a towering figure, with glimmering violet armor and claws at the ends of her gauntlets. The half-drake regards the stands with a haughty disdain, leaning on a massive greatsword wrapped in chains. Her wreath of scales lay across either brow, the flickers of amethyst plates an echo of those barely seen against her cheeks. The Pillar of Darkness gifts peace to those who honor it - and horror to those who do not.

"A favored child, with death woven deep within xyr soul. Xyr roots broke skin and bone within the Submerged depths of the Fountain. Witness Marrow of Ulve, Paragon of Darkness!”

A single drop of rain fell from the sky. Then another. And another. The heavens opened and people dove under their seats for a modicum of cover against the sudden deluge. It drenched the sands, pooling until a pillar of salt rose upwards from the soaked ground. Upon it stood a simple Drakel, regarding the suddenly-dry crowds with bright eyes. He leaned on a long staff as bits of salt continued to rise from the drying sands, forming delicate patterns as they worked their way along his scales - the last pieces settling in with a series of gentle plinks. The Pillar of Water held dangers in its depths that lurked far beneath its still surface.

Then - the Pillar collapsed, salt falling and folding within itself until it was no more. “None have been found Worthy by the Lord of the Waters. No Paragon stands in their name on this day."

A series of notes, clear and sharp, reverberated from an invisible flute. Motes of crimson began to twist, dancing in time to each tone. The ground shivered, trembled - then convulsed. The music broke with a high shrike as the sands cleft in twain. A great chasm yawned forth, stones emerging from the depths below. Plates carved with intricate scenes of a thousand worlds crashed together, overlapping to form a great pillar of stone. A lumbering beast hauled itself atop it, her slightless face turning this way and that to survey the crowd. The demon smiled, sunlight catching at the glittering, prismatic crystal of her horns as she stilled upon her perch. The Pillar of Earth was a foundation for all worlds and could just as easily crumble away.

“A blood-stained reaper, with iron blessed and cursed in equal measure. His weapons carved gashes through the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Drakesthai Morian, Paragon of Earth!"

The roar of an ancient dragon split the air. A great maw of flame erupted from the ground, filling the arena with an unbearable heat as mirages flickered in the corners of the watching eyes. Curtains of scarlet parted to reveal the great serpent’s skull, crimson and gold etchings clear against bleached bone. It rested upon the brow of a mouse-like figure, coal black fur shedding waves of dust onto the opal pedestal below. The rodent curled a long tail above his head, one paw resting upon the estoc gleaming at his belt. Keen golden eyes tracked the last wisps of flame before his gaze turned to the center of the arena, dust slowly settling about him. The Pillar of Fire burned all - friend or foe - that stood between it and victory.

“An ever-burning dragon, molded into tenuous flesh. Her flames scorched fury through the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Roxelana Ebontwin, Paragon of Fire!"

A beam of radiant dawn, stronger than even the noon-day sun above, illuminated the scarlet of the sands. The unrelenting brightness brought with it an unrivaled calm until even the most restless of the crowd fell still. It alit upon a diamond podium - and from the glow stepped the twisted figure of a werewolf. It blinked at the brightness before shifting, folding into itself to form a tall, wiry paladin, the glow of heaven-light ever present against her ragged locks. She pushed the hair out of her face with one hand and summoned a battleaxe with the other, leaning on it as she turned to observe the arena. The Pillar of Light would blind the unworthy, yet heal those who held faith in its glow.

“A beloved apostle, alit with divine illumination. His song seared the infidels within the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Radiance, Paragon of Light!"

The sands sparked. A snap of static crackled into a storm and a rush of raging anticipation sent watching hearts beating ever faster. A bolt of lightning cleaved the sky in twain, streaking downwards with a thunderous crash. Sky-fire poured forth from the heavens, pelting flecks of burning crimson and molten cullets across the sands. In its wake rose a shimmering pillar of glass. Electricity surged across its length, twining to shape a tall, formidable woman, face lined with wrinkles and scars. Fangs glinted at her neck while vines of lightning curled at her temples - lighting captured and bound, but never controlled. Even claimed, the Pillar of Energy tamed itself for no hand - its chaos known far and wide to all.

“A lost specimen, adrift from all that she knows. Her claws shredded the dangers within the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Zephyra, Paragon of Energy!"

A slash of air sent motes of sand flying, bringing with it cackling laughter in its wake. Air convulsed, merging into a twister that swallowed the dunes hungrily even as its growing reach scoured at exposed skin for more. The cyclone gave a blood-chilling screech, then collapsed inwards, a plinth of silver rising upwards from the carnage. At its center emerged a giant of a woman, broad muscles and scared visage on full display as she glowered at those before her. The last vestiges of wind caught her remaining braids, entwining them through twigs and leaves to weave a nest across her brow before smoothing downward into an expressionless mask. A single eye glinted hungrily from its surface. The Pillar of Wind provided the air of life itself, yet could steal that breath away with a mere thought.

Then - the Pillar collapsed, silver convulsing and twisting within itself until it was no more. “None have been found Worthy by the Lord of the Winds. No Paragon stands in their name on this day. "

A bone-deep chill settled over the crowd, frost creeping over the edge of the arena’s walls. People pulled close together, as if to defend against the sudden bite of bitter cold. Snow fell from the cloudless sky - piling upon itself until it formed a sculpture of an immense fur-covered creature, wicked claws digging into the crystal stand beneath it. The bear reared up onto its hind legs, a show of strength made all the more impressive by the gleaming armor covering most of its form. It bared sharpened fangs in a silent roar as the snow ceased, a torc of iron and gem glinting at its throat. The Pillar of Ice preserved the worthy, and slew the rest.

Then - the Pillar collapsed, crystal fragmenting and imploding unto itself until it was no more. “None have been found Worthy by the Lord of the Ice. No Paragon stands in their name on this day."



Silence returned to the stands once more, tension heavy in the air. People held their breath, leaning forward as if desperate to get just that much closer to the fight. A single moment of calm before the storm. But just a single moment.

The pressure broke. The crowds roared. And above them all came the joined voices of the criers. “We now bear witness to the Trial of the Desert Sands. Let the Judgment of the Arena begin!”

AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 1
8/16/2025 23:06:34   
  Chewy905

Chromatic ArchKnight of RP


Nothing compares to the new void in Radiance’s heart.

Song’s crack against his skull, wielded by an undeserving empty child. Blow after blow of the boy’s weak fists, returned in kind by Radiance’s own. Blood weeping from his chest and arms as his life seeps away.

None of it compares.

This was supposed to be the solution! A sacrifice, to keep his Love’s Divinity alight forever! Yet he cannot bear this… emptiness. It chews at his insides, clawing its way out in his flowing tears, in his sobbed wails and screams of rage. Every punch thrown at the boy is dragged through the muck of grief. Every strike Radiance accepts travels through the expanse of freshly-fled nothing to ring hollow against his soul.

You tossed her away, Radiance, because you are but a withered burden. She will live on. She will! Without you.

He can’t accept that. He must be with her. He must…. He must.

The world turns cold. A single tick of the gears echoes impossibly over his own heartbeat, over his foes choked shouts. Liquid metal that bursts from the shattered crystal in an echo of his grief. He has naught the chance to shout before he is consumed without and within, cold steel carrying him away from this field of blood and tears. He swims desperately, surfacing just long enough for one final breath before up becomes down and air becomes impossible to find.

And in a wave of sorrow, Radiance disappears.




He wakes upon his workshop floor.

The well-crafted room stands much like it did when he last left it so many months ago. There, in the corner, lies the same splintered chair that he lacked the tools to repair. There, within that basket, sits the emptied, marred Lusters that he had set aside after testing.

And yet… the light is not right.

His score of candles —each with their wicks trimmed to an exact measurement— glow with a light that is not mere flame. He rises to one knee and almost topples over from the sudden bloom of pain in his chest. He blinks the sting from his eyes and glances down. Torn open armor greets him, countless wounds both shallow and deep slicing through its tattered leather, yet no blood flows from them. He looks closer. The liquid itself looks squished, as if it's pressed against a film to keep every last drop from seeping out. He looks closer still. The film is light, condensed and solid, yet not like his own that runs through the cracks in his body. He casts his gaze once more upon the candles. They are the same; pulsing light that permeates every inch of his workshop and thumps like they’re the world’s own beating heart.

Finally he turns his gaze sunward.

It’s wrong.

His workshop is designed to embrace the full shine of the sun at every hour of the day. Its rays should be shining through the hollow ceiling, matching a precise angle depending on when it is so that Radiance would never work past its setting gleam and into the night. And yet there are no rays. Instead there is the same rhythmic light that holds his wounds closed and flares from every candle. It fills the room like a floodlight, leaving not a single corner to the Blasphemous Dark, painting every sharp edge in bright brilliance.

Radiance shelves the tight remnants of grief and forces his mind towards distraction, towards this new puzzle. Perhaps this is an illusion, crafted by some sly new foe that had spent the entire battle hidden. No. Those waves of liquid steel were too powerful to be a mere mortal’s handiwork, and this place too perfect to be anything but the grandest of powers.

The Lords, then? But if he has been whisked from the arena, is it as preparation or as punishment?

Radiance steps closer to his workshop’s center. He keeps his eyes skyward, staring down this strange everlight. There’s a weight to it, a viscosity he has to push through to advance forwards. With each push the light clings to him, wrapping tightly to his form. It slips over his wounds, pulling tight the film to staunch the last wisps of bleeding and steal away the pain. It slips into his mind, clearing away the fog and re-sharpening the senses. It feels… similar to how She would care for wounds he acquired in his foolishness, and yet it distinctly isn’t Her.

It isn’t Her.

Unacceptable.

“Unhand me.” He declares to the empty room, voice still burdened by pain.

Oh Radiance, should you really speak to the Lords with such arrogance?

He clears his throat and calls again with new reverence and respect. “Please.”

The alien light slips away the instant the plea leaves his lips. Freshly closed wounds re-open, dripping golden blood to his workshop floor. His mind fades slightly, the fog of pain and blood-loss taking hold once more. The aged hero staggers forwards and catches himself on his workbench’s edge.

He straightens up, failing to blink the pain from his eyes. Words of gratitude slip from whispered lips before he clears his throat and declares aloud: “Lord of Light, if you are listening, I beseech thee, let my call reach Her.”

Radiance does not wait for a response. He lowers to his knees, clasps his hands before him, and tips his face up towards the light. With eyes open wide and love upon his lips, the man calls to Her with words spoken so rarely, so scarcely, that he almost stumbles over them.

“Come, oh beloved Lumira. I have need of thee.”

The pulsing light of every candle turns at once to flickering golden flame that bathes the room in a beautiful dancing luster. The alien glow from above condenses to the noonday rays of sun, shining straight down upon Radiance like a spotlight to illuminate the rest of the room.

And from those rays she arrives. She gazes at the Hero before Her, his devotion the foundation of every act she takes. And She says, in a voice that has faded with Time, in a voice that still echoes from every flickering candle, from the rays of the sun above, from the veins of gold that line the man’s skin and the flared opulence of his eyes: “Hello, oh Radiance. I am here.”

Radiance collapses into her. Strong, warm arms wrap tight around his back. The last time he had felt her touch was merely a day ago, yet it feels like so much longer. Since before his sleep. No, since even further before that. Her head comes to rest upon his own, golden locks falling like willow vines to entangle with his strands of silver. He tries to hug her back, to convince himself that She is truly here once more and not some cruel trick of the Lords’. His arms cannot well up the strength.

His Love lowers him to the ground, commands that he lie perfectly still. How silly; it is if he has not received her tending countless times after every brash adventure. Those times, though, were blessings of healing light and holy magic. Nothing as crudely, wonderfully human as this. He complies, of course. He would never dream of doing otherwise, nor could he in his current condition. From places unknown come bandages and medicines to replace armor and blood. She treats him in silence, though he knows she’d rather speak. Perhaps she simply wishes him not to expend strength on chatter, for the moment.

Radiance loses track of time, though not for lack of trying. His eyes watch the rays of sun overhead, but never do they move from their noonday position. As such, he knows not how long it took for the pain to completely fade away, for the fog in his mind to be cleared by love and care. He unwraps the bandages together with Lumira, revealing mere scars. A final tap of her hand turns scarred flesh to brilliant solid gold, filling the cracks in skin and armor alike. A new embrace, a new bulwark of faith. He rises to his knees and gazes at his goddess with all of his Love.

She looks away. Face downturned, eyes averted. Why? He scans her again with a new focus, drinking in every last detail. Her glow is ever so slightly lessened. Where once her form alone could light any room, here in his workshop the candles and sun must support her brightness. He reaches forwards, taking her chin gently in one shaking hand, turning her face towards his own. Their golden eyes meet. The dimmed glow of fading divinity and the weary tremble of aged glory. A thousand words pass in their gaze. A sly smile from the hero, a simple nod from the goddess. Whatever it takes to keep these moments together, they will find it. One shall not fade to bone or dust before the other.

They lean forwards in harmony, lips pressing ever so softly together. Divinity tastes of gentle morning dew and wrathful flickering flames. It forces Radiance’s heart to skip a beat, driving a pulse of such intensity that almost tricks him into feeling young again. Then with reluctance they rise and turn to face the workbench together. Wrath sits upon the left of the table, blade stained with blood. Song sits on the right, bloodstains secondary to the dents marring its length. Radiance cannot tell which were granted by his foe’s skull and which were from his own. He catches Lumira stifling a giggle behind one hand, and throws her sly glance.

“Amused, are we?”

She meets his gaze with unabashed joy. “‘Tis not every day mine Song rings as beautifully upon thine head as it does within.”

Their harmonized laughter banishes the last drops of doubt that clung to his mind. She is here. He feels he could slay Time itself with her at his side.

“You witnessed it all, then?”

She shakes her head. “Nay. I had no need to. Even covered in wounds, I knew you would return. I turned mine gaze upon the others for amusement.”

Radiance returns a warm smile. “I suppose that leaves us stories to share, then.”

The aged hero turns back to the workbench. Grace, in all its shattered, discarded glory, sits upon the bench’s center; a place of honor. The weapon is barely recognizable; it must have slipped between the gears before their final ticks to have been crushed and broken so thoroughly. His breath catches in his throat and he sneaks a glance at his Love’s face, knowing he won’t see disappointment yet afraid of it all the same. Her eyes instead hold a quiet contemplation, focused and determined. He can see her mind, turning the pieces of the weapon over and over like a puzzle. The sight of it is enrapturing, dragging his own mind into circles of admiration and pleasure. How often has he had the chance to just… watch her like this?

Her voice breaks him free from stupor. “Quite the damage indeed. Would it be swiftest to dismantle it entirely, so we may rebuild it from scratch? We cannot be certain its conduits still channel mine light after such...”

She tilts her head, unable to find the word she desires, before simply sweeping a hand across the debris of Grace in an evident show.

Radiance heart leaps. The way she speaks of Grace, the way she looks at it and gestures towards it. She knows it, remembers it all from its first construction so many ages ago. He fights the urge to kiss her once more: there is work to do.

So instead he nods, taking up Wrath in his hands and beginning to wipe a cloth against its surface. The blood upon its steel comes off in brief traces; it will take patience and muscle to clean it fully. It’s an irony: for all the cruelties that time thrusts upon them beyond this arena, within this Lord-borne realm it seems to be boundless. The Lords themselves truly can hold back the sands.

Unfortunate, then, that nothing can hold back Time forever.

He loses himself in the work, fatigue and the hours both vanishing beneath the pleasure of company and the distraction of beloved labor. Wrath is cleaned by his hand while Lumira tends to Song. They swap stories while they work. From the hero comes tales of fierce raptors and empty children. He spares nothing, sharing his full shame upon the floors before his Beloved and begging forgiveness once more. Her reply is swift, demanding only that he cease his atonement.

Oh how he loves her.

In return, Divinity describes a tale of a hunter in the dark of the sea, battling witches and pirates. There’s even another ancient hero in the mix, whose description almost feels familiar. Radiance imagines the scene in a marvel; it certainly sounds like a ridiculous clash. Though, he supposes, no more so than his own.

When their own tasks are complete, the pair turn their attention to Grace. Divinity was right, of course; the weapon is so damaged that the only way to truly ‘repair’ it is to dismantle it to its core and start from scratch. He begins, tools reaching carefully for the delicate pieces.

His hand shakes.

Stop that.

It doesn’t.

He shuts his eyes and stifles a scream of frustration before a new warmth closes upon his hand. The shaking… stops. Replaced by a gentle stillness. His Love’s voice whispers at his ear with just a hint of amusement in its musical tones.

“Careful now, my Radiance. Let me guide you.”

And she does. His hands are led with care, hero and goddess dismantling Grace together like a beloved toy. And once each piece is apart and repaired as best as it can be, once the entirety of the weapon is cleaned, they begin the process in reverse. Each time Radiance thinks they cannot continue, that a piece of importance is damaged beyond recognition, his Love impossibly procures a replacement from nowhere.

The Lords provide, oh Radiance.

He loses himself further in these moments. They are bliss beyond measure; her hand upon his, their conversations flowing so naturally, their dedication to this simple work. Every piece of his beloved devotion is known more by Her than himself, treasured by Her as much as by himself. He can speak of precise components and she knows them instantly; he can move to fix one part and she can guide him to the next without any need for instruction.

A single thought, a single idea, slips into his mind. It’s blasphemous, heretical, sinful. Yet…

Lords, how dare he?

He pulls his grip from Hers with such haste that she gasps. Her confused glance meets his shocked eyes, but he dares not, dares not give her an honest answer. He simply disguises the motion with a stretch and a smile before taking her hand in his for one moment, then allowing her to guide him once again.

Such a thought must remain buried.




Radiance stands before grand steel gates, beloved sunlight streaming through their cracks. Beyond them lies oh so much sound; the crowd screams like children while the chanters declare names known and unknown. He turns and leans against the portal, absent-mindedly flicking the latch on Grace open and closed. The Lords’ pulsing, alien light had appeared right after the pair had tested the newly repaired weapons. They had been granted just enough time for a final embrace and some words of encouragement before Radiance was spirited away. Since then it had merely been minutes of meditation before these gates, banishing the remaining shame of the Factory and resetting himself for this new stage. There will be no repeat performance of such shoddy quality; he’s a hero and he’s going to damn act like it.

One final hurdle, Radiance. Falter not in these moments.

“Witness Radiance, Paragon of Light!”

It is time. He pushes off the gate before it opens, stopping himself from tumbling backwards into the crimson sands. A confident, surprisingly swift stride carries him across their heat and into the noonday sun and the screaming crowds before he stops beside the towering diamond paladin. He turns to each side, performing practiced bows and waves while whispering joy to his Love. The motions hide tricks of the trade; a Greater and Lesser Luster both roll from hand to shaking hand with care before crossing the arm and traveling the back to return to their places upon his belt with newfound glows. It had taken so many years to learn how to play a crowd properly, but the many joyous villages became the fruits of his labor. Might as well make use of it here, as well: by the rise in their cheers, the stands certainly appreciate it.

And the criers speak.

“We now bear witness to the Trial of the Desert Sands. Let the Judgment of the Arena begin!”

With the masses sated and an energetic bounce in his step, Radiance turns his attention to his foes. Only one is unknown to him; a cloaked hunter that perfectly matches the description of Divinity’s tall tales. The lone champion of the deep sea, then? Slayer of witches, pirates, and heroes? His grin widens. His Love will find great joy in this bout. The way Her voice had risen and fallen whilst describing the hunter’s feats belied Her favor towards them. Marrow, the chanters had declared. Yet the raptor now deemed ‘Zephyra’ stands between them, and Radiance’s new golden scars weep with memorized pain. The hunter will have to wait.

His attention moves instead to the foe across the sands. The emerald witch, playing the crowd even better than Radiance did. He’ll take this chance; The Lords and his Love deserve a show, and the two of them seem best fit to perform. He advances, eyes catching the plodding approach of the overburdened ‘Weapon Reaper’ Drakesthai. How dull; can he fit not a single spring in his step, with all that youth available to him? That simply won’t do.

Radiance calls across the sands, voice emboldened by fresh care from his Love and a stage more fit for him than the shackled light in the Factory. “Aside, dear Drakesthai! You had your chance with the lady, yet her staff remains safe in her grasp! Go play with the beast and the hunter, and perhaps claw and knife will be easier for you to pilfer.”

He flashes a wide smile at Roxelana before dropping into a polite, showy bow. “By the Grace, Wrath, and Song of my Love, I alone shall slay the dragon.”

The crowd’s roars echo from every direction. Beneath his feet, every last grain of bloodied sand pulses in time with his pounding heart and his trembling arms. A frustrated smirk paints his face. May these tremors be mistaken for mere nerves.

And may this distraction hide the blasphemy in his heart.

Post #: 2
8/17/2025 22:07:37   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


A cold dawn drapes the borderlands in a thin shroud of frost, the world itself holding its breath. From high above, the land is a tapestry of scars—broken earth, withered grass bowed beneath the weight of another winter. A battered road winds between empty fields, tracing a slow path to the house at the world’s edge.
The manor is smaller than he remembers—more tomb than stronghold now. Stone walls cracked and pitted. Old battlements crawling with moss, like the bones of something long dead.
Mist clings to the courtyard statues—figures he once knew by name, now faceless in the cold.
There is no music here, not anymore—only the wind keening along the ramparts, and, somewhere distant, the hollow ring of a smith’s hammer, beating time for a house that forgets how to die.
Once, the house of Morian held the line against the world. It still does, even now, as it waits—empty halls, hollow rituals, and too many sons gone to war.

Gray dawn presses against the ancient gates, their iron teeth streaked with old rust and chill dew. Saelistra stands before them, wrapped tight in a heavy cloak, her figure painted in the wan half-light. She is the last outpost of order—posture taut, eyes shadowed with sleepless calculation.
Her lips are set in a line that might be determination, or doubt.

Will he come? her stance seems to ask, even as her gaze rakes the barren horizon. She is the kind to expect disappointment; every line of her face says as much.
A faint shiver of movement in the periphery—two younger figures, Eryssan and Veyla, draw close, their steps hesitant, voices barely a breath.
“Who are you waiting for?” one whispers, eyes darting to the distant, empty road.
“Is it the enemy? The armies?”
Saelistra’s reply is measured, careful—almost gentle, but laced with iron. “Not the enemy, no. They will not reach us for quite some time.”
The dawn light is as weak as the hope in the air; that is to say, it is very, very dreary. Oppressive, weighing down on the soul. And the mist seems to swirl.

Will he come?
She breathes one word. “Family.” The word falls with the weight of a curse or a prayer.
The ground itself seems to respond.
A dull tremor stirs beneath the stones—a warning or an omen, hard to say. The guards at her side shift, knuckles whitening on polished halberds. Cold morning air thickens, shadows pooling at the threshold.
A shape emerges, at first little more than a suggestion—a hulking silhouette, drawn from mist and memory.
Each footfall is deliberate. Seismic. The earth answers grudgingly. Feeble sunlight snags on curved blades and jagged armor, on the bone-white mask that devours the lower half of the giant’s face.
Halberds come up with a ringing chorus. “Who goes there? Halt!”
Saelistra’s voice cracks across the tension, sharper than steel:
“You would raise steel to him? That’s no stranger at the threshold. Lower your weapons.”
The guards faltered. Blades and stonelike armor glinted menacingly as the giant strode forward, the air soaking through with palpable killing intent.
Now!”
A hush falls, broken only by the wind and the slow, relentless approach.
He steps from shadow into the pallid light, pausing just within the gate’s embrace. There is no hesitation in his stance—only a glimmer of something unreadable behind the mask. His gaze flicks from Saelistra, to the guards, and back again—measuring, weighing.
For an instant, the lines of his mouth shift beneath the mask. A smirk, perhaps. Or perhaps it is only a trick of the dawn.
“Still standing watch, Saelistra?” rumbles Drakesthai. “Some things never change.”
She inclines her head, the gesture cool but respectful—something almost fond ghosting at the corners of her eyes.
She turns, cloak flaring behind her, and gestures for him to enter.
The gates groan as they swing wider.
He knows this walk. Knows the way the stones tilt underfoot. Even if it feels like someone else’s memory now.

They move through corridors shrouded in memory and dust. Every step echoes—no voices, no laughter, just the soft thud of boots on ancient flagstones.
Drakesthai’s gaze skims the faded banners, the empty weapon racks, hearths grown cold and gray. Once, this place breathed war and pride. Now, it holds its breath. Or, rather, it would have held its breath, if it had any to hold.
Saelistra breaks the hush. “It’s quieter now, of course. Most of the old retinue are gone.”
He answers, voice dry as old parchment: “Where are the others?”
“At the border,” she replies. “The old enemy gathers armies.”
A pause.
He doesn’t look at her. “And your husband?”
“Selrik is with him. Still holding the line. As are the others.”
“When did he last write?”
“Two weeks, four days, and give or take, perhaps about seven hours ago.”
Drakesthai’s reply is a low rumble. “Then you needn’t worry. Not yet.”
A long silence. Their footsteps alone seem to carry the conversation forward.
“We fight. They endure. The world keeps asking for more.” Saelistra’s words are nearly a sigh.
Drakesthai stops suddenly, voice harder: “Does he know?”
She hesitates, choosing her words. “He is—hoping. He doesn’t know I sent for you. Not really. But he will, soon enough.”
A pause as they walk. It is strange. He could always tell what Saelistra was thinking. Things have changed. He has changed. And so has she, it seems.
“You always did act first, apologize later,” Drakesthai prods her gruffly.
She doesn’t deny it.
He glances at her sidelong, then: “Why?”
Saelistra’s answer is quiet, but unwavering. “He said your name. Then he dismissed the thought. I did what I had to.”
They arrive at the last door—Kaeroth’s chamber. Saelistra stops, lingering at the threshold.
He studies the closed door, the way the handles snag on the edge of his blades. Drakesthai raises a clawed, armored foot to push it open instead.
Behind him, Saelistra’s voice—this time with the faintest catch—follows him: “Drakesthai. Please. Hear him out.”
He glances back, mask unmoved, voice level. “I’ll hear him out. That’s all I promise you, sister-in-law.”
He enters, and the door swings shut behind him with a final, echoing thud.

The room is dim, smelling faintly of sickness and stone.
Kaeroth Morian sits hunched beneath threadbare covers—a scarecrow of a man, veins stark against waxen skin, hair in sparse wisps over a sunken brow. His gaze, when it lifts, is fever-bright and piercing.
He does not need to look to know who enters.
“You’re here.” The voice is as sharp as ever, but the illness beneath it clings to every word.
Drakesthai does not break stride, nor does he bow. “You still recognize me.”
Kaeroth grimaces—somewhere between a smile and pain. “Of course. No matter where you wander, or how many years pass.” For a moment he seems poised to say more, but lets it die in his throat.
His eyes flick down, disapproving. “You still wear that accursed idol?”
Drakesthai’s fingers trace the Goat Dragon talisman at his belt. He doesn’t reply.
They trade barbs, words as blunt as old steel. “I half expected you to be dead,” Drakesthai says, “before I arrived.”
“Not dead yet,” Kaeroth mutters. “The house waits for its reaper.”
Drakesthai surveys the peeling walls, the gloom thick in the corners. “Manor’s falling apart. Suits the state of things.”
A weary sigh. Kaeroth’s shoulders slump further. “Your brothers are scattered. Selrik and Veythas hold the border, as they ever have. Malcion—”
“Dead?”
Kaeroth’s bitterness is almost a smile. “Who can say?”
“Surprised any of them lasted this long,” Drakesthai offers, flat.
“There is more to war than merely skill in killing,” Kaeroth snaps, a ghost of old authority flaring.
“It seems the other houses do not think so,” Drakesthai says, voice like gravel. “Why do the Morians suffer so? Where are the Capras, the Harrowings, the Lampriases? The Isurugis?”
“The Capras have retreated to their isles.” Kaeroth’s breath rasps. “The Lampriases fortify their borders, and the Harrowings—something’s happened. No one can spare the men to find out.”
“So, your allies have abandoned you. As I thought.”
Kaeroth is seized by a coughing fit—deep, rattling. Drakesthai watches, impassive.
“Where is Barlan?” he asks, once the old man quiets. “How could he have let that cough fester this long?”
“Barlan. The staff have thinned to shadows.” Kaeroth closes his eyes, exhausted. “He still limps the west hall, trying to keep things in order. Sometimes I wonder if he remembers why.”
“He is loyal,” Drakesthai says, “Like Saelistra.”
Kaeroth’s voice softens, the edge blunted by loss. “Saelistra’s doing, I suppose. She never lacked for initiative.”
“She did what she felt she had to do.”
“And so she did.” Kaeroth exhales, almost a whisper. “Truly, the greatest daughter-in-law a man could have wished for. The only true Morian by marriage.”
Drakesthai’s reply is as cold as winter stone. “More than you deserve. More than any of us deserve.”
“Ah,” Kaeroth observes. “
Us.”
Drakesthai doesn’t reply. An uncomfortable silence falls. Kaeroth’s eyes linger on the dying embers in the hearth.
The old man sighs. “Do you remember when you first held a blade? You were always too strong, too reckless. The others tried to match you, and failed.”
“Strength never won your approval,” Drakesthai says, shrugging slightly.
“No,” Kaeroth acknowledges. “You may be the worst of my sons, Drakesthai. But in the end, a Morian is a Morian.”
Drakesthai doesn’t flinch. He’s been called worse—by men who meant it more. But despite himself, Drakesthai finds his face hardening. Even under his mask, he feels his teeth clenching. “I see,” he deadpans. “Is this all you have to say, Kaeroth? I promised Saelistra I would hear you out, and so I shall. But if you have nothing else, I will take my leave.”
“You saw Eryssan and Veyla,” Kaeroth says, seemingly lost in his thoughts. A curious expression takes him. His attention seems to shift, softer, almost—? “They look to you, you know. Even after all these years.”
“Then they’ll have to find their own way,” Drakesthai says, none too kindly. “The world won’t spare them for my sake—or yours.”
“No,” Kaeroth admits, blinking as if Drakesthai’s words rouse him from reverie. “It will not. Unless—”
He gestures, slow and unsteady, toward a small, battered box on the table beside the bed. Its lock is tarnished, the wood gouged with old scars.
“Take it.”
Drakesthai steps forward, lifts the box in one broad hand. It feels heavier than its size would suggest. But also light enough that he knows it does not contain much. He turns it once, twice—testing the weight of both wood and expectation.
He does not open it. Instead: “What’s inside?”
Kaeroth’s lips thin, the words dragging out like old wounds. “The Morians’ salvation.”
A pause, breath catching in his throat. The old man’s gaze, for a moment, is less fevered and more lost—almost pleading.
Our salvation.”

The manor’s courtyard lies swathed in cold shadow, the sun still struggling to clear the highest walls. Drakesthai moves through it with a predator’s purpose—broad shoulders cutting through mist and silence, the box heavy in his hand.
Saelistra waits near the archway, her posture guarded but her eyes searching his face for any hint of hope. She intercepts him, voice low:
“Well?”
He stops, mask unreadable. “Well what?”
She steps closer, almost whispering. “What did he tell you?”
“Where to go.” His tone is flat, unmoved.
A breath, then her next question is gentler, almost vulnerable: “And will you?”
Drakesthai shrugs, the movement more armor than answer. “I promised you I’d hear him out. Nothing more.”
Before she can press further, two younger shapes appear from the shadows—Eryssan and Veyla, siblings by blood, marked by the same fierce eyes and stubborn chins. Eryssan stands taller now, shoulders squared as if trying to mimic old stories of heroes; Veyla lingers at his side, wary but unable to hide the flicker of hope in her gaze.
“Are you leaving again?” Eryssan asks, trying to sound braver than he feels.
Veyla, quieter: “Will you bring us something back?”
Drakesthai studies them—his expression unreadable, but something softer flickers beneath the mask. For a moment, his hand lifts, as if to ruffle their hair. He catches himself—realizes they are older now, no longer children—and lets the gesture fall.
Instead, he reaches into his cloak, producing the battered wooden box. It is now split in two, sawn in half and then viciously torn apart, splinters still sharp and raw.
Its contents are gone. The Morians’ salvation. The map to Bren.
He hands each half of the box to each sibling, his voice level but not unkind: “If I return.”
His gaze lingers on them for a heartbeat—hard, yet there is something else. There is something like promise in it, or perhaps only habit.
The dawn is weak and feeble, but it is still there.
Then he turns, strides across the stone, his silhouette swallowed by the pale blaze of morning. The echo of his footsteps lingers long after he is gone, ringing in the stillness—





Drakesthai came to with a sharp breath, his ears and temples still ringing—and a fist already moving.

His massive hand clamped down hard around a slender arm before thought even caught up. A startled shriek rang out. Fabric tore. “Woah, calm down! Sir, please don’t strike!” someone shouted—distant, warbled. It took him a moment to realize the voice wasn’t his own.

Light stabbed at his eyes. The room tilted and spun. He blinked hard, trying to force the glare away, and found himself strapped to a frame of some kind—restraining bands snapped clean through across his chest and wrists, flayed ends still dangling like frayed cotton string. Rend or one of the Talonstrikes had cut clean through a leather strap. The Predator’s Grasp configuration was still engaged.

Good. No one had tried to remove his weapons. Only strength equal to or surpassing his could have wrenched them out in any case.

The woman he held was small, red-and-white robed—some kind of Bren nurse. She trembled in his grip, but didn’t scream again. A man’s face appeared behind her, older, clean-shaven, bearing a medic’s insignia.

“Sir,” the doctor said calmly, raising his hands, “you’re safe. No one here’s your enemy. Can you release her?”

Drakesthai’s fingers relaxed. The woman backed away instantly, cradling her wrist. Neither she nor the doctor reached for a weapon.

“Good,” the doctor said. “You’re lucid. That’s more than we expected.” He stepped closer, keeping his hands in view. “Do you know where you are?”

Drakesthai grunted. “Bren.”

“How many fingers am I holding up?”

“Two fingers, on your right hand, slightly trembling. Callus pattern—blade training, but out of practice. Left knee injured; you favor it when you shift weight. You shaved recently, but rushed it—nick under the chin.”

The doctor, to his credit, wasn’t fazed in the slightest. “Correct. You were found unconscious near the basin’s edge. Took a concentrated blast to the head, if our readings are accurate. Seizures, circulatory shock, full facial trauma. And yet...” He gestured vaguely at Drakesthai’s face, eyes narrowing with clinical disbelief.

“You’re talking. Sitting up. Do you recall what happened?”

Images clawed their way back.

The fire. The witch’s breath, white-hot and searing. Vision going black in one eye. The sizzle of his own flesh. The smell.

He reached up with one gloved hand, fingers brushing the side of his face.
Smooth. No pain. No burns. No jagged ridge of ruin where the flames had chewed bone. His eye—his right eye—still saw.

“Bren’s medical sorcery,” Drakesthai said slowly, “is beyond anything I’ve ever seen. Or heard of. No healer could reattach nerves or regrow half a face in the span of a few hours. Even with advanced treatment, this should have taken months.”

“True,” the doctor said, a hint of pride showing. “Though it is wrought through the skill of our medical mages, it is powered by the Elemental Lords themselves.”

Drakesthai exhaled slowly, settling back into the creaking medical frame. His armor tugged stiffly at the shoulders. He was still armed, still armored. Still breathing.

The doctor’s tone shifted—less clinical now, more cautionary. “You should understand something. The revival you received was granted for surviving the Paragon phase. A gift, not a right. Should you fall in the next trial...”

The next trial.

“They won’t intervene.” Drakesthai finished the thought for him.

A nod. “Yes. You stand alone now. No second chances from here.”

The room fell quiet again.

Drakesthai leaned back further, gears shifting beneath his armor, shoulders relaxing just enough to feel the ache settle in. The lights still buzzed faintly overhead. Rend was quiet. The Talonstrikes waited. He had passed the first threshold. The slaughter before the selection. Now came the real test.

He let his eyes close just once more, briefly, like a soldier adjusting grip before a killing stroke. “Fortunately,” Drakesthai said, opening his eyes. Blue and gold blazed. “I didn’t fall the first time.”




The corridor stank of antiseptic—and ambition. Drakesthai paused just before the open door, feeling the weight of the Goat Dragon mask on his face and the heavier weight and reach of the Predator’s Grasp and Drake’s Maw Assembly—each still not retracted back to the Reaper’s Dueling Array yet. For a moment, he imagined bursting in—one clean kill, no witnesses, no more loose ends.

Rend, eager, raspy: Finish it here. Take the head, make it clean.
Ruin, cold, strategic: Not the place. Too many witnesses. Wait for the right field.
Spinescourge, an oddly mocking tone: Too soft, Draco Mori? Old ways gone dull?

The thought lingered, then faded. With the medics’ warnings still sharp in his mind, something told him that would be a very, very bad idea.

You stupid idiots, said one of the Talonstrikes derisively.

No, not yet. Something better occurred to him. Better, or—

Not every victory comes from the edge of a blade, boy …

He leaned against the doorframe, arms folded, the glint of blades in plain view. His eyes tracked Roxelana Ebontwin, that curious half-dragon witch with the split-colored hair, as she stirred from her cot, sharp and wary.

“Lady Roxelana,” Drakesthai rumbled. “I trust you’re feeling a touch less flammable than last we met. Perhaps our introductions were… overly spirited. Call it the heat of the moment. Shall we call it even?”

She spun at her name. “Oh there was heat alright.” Her gaze roamed over his restored features, making no secret of her disdain. “Will say, I think I liked you better with charred skin,” she said, the words flaring with a blade’s edge. Arms crossed, she pressed on, “But that’s beside the point. Speaking of which, what is the point? Don’t suppose you’re here to finish the job?”

For a moment, a certain kind of lilt in her challenge—sharp, but almost playful—stirred something old and half-buried in him. He’d known that tone once, from lips far gentler than these. “Tempting,” Drakesthai said, a little more good-naturedly than he would have liked, “but let’s save the murder for the grand stage. We’re both finalists, both still breathing—no small feat. You are a contestant. I am a contestant. Surely, there is common ground somewhere between us—at least until the field thins.”

Her brow quirked. The room tensed—dragon and dragonkiller, circling the same spark.
“No sense wasting steel—or fire—on each other here,” Drakesthai continued. “The medics would be scandalized. Besides, you strike me as someone who prefers an audience for such things.”

The urge to draw a blade thrummed at his back, the voices of Rend and Ruin eager as hounds. Not now, he thought, pressing them down. Not yet.

Roxelana hesitated, lips thinned. He watched her weighing him—hunter’s caution behind those slitted eyes.

“... Go on. What are you proposing?”

Drakesthai tilted his head, frank. “Let’s not dance around it. The next arena’s going to be a slaughterhouse. You know as well as I: if we go for each other first, neither walks out whole. But if we… coordinate, even loosely, we might both walk away richer. Simple mathematics.”

“Are you suggesting a truce? You and me?”

Fool’s gambit! Ruin snarled.
You’d let her walk? Spinescourge demanded.
The Censer of Hunger tittered unpleasantly. Let her fatten on hope. We’ll eat later.
You’re one to talk, the Censer of Scorn snapped. You tasted her first.

Drakesthai shrugged, the King Rex Mantles giving the innocuous motion a rather hideous appearance. “Truce, alliance, mutual blind spot—call it what you will. The odds say we gain more from cooperation, for now.”

She glanced to the window, searching the press of onlookers and—Drakesthai recognized that look—would-be killers. He followed her gaze, reading the tension.

“If you need a hand,” he offered, “I have a knack for solving… inconvenient problems. Even the kind that stalk shadows.”

“Inconvenient problems,” Rend guffawed.
What’s with that tone? a Talonstrike wondered.

“Ah, that’s all well and wonderful,” Roxelana snapped, turning her attention back to him. “Shame it’s still daylight.”

A twitch at the corner of his mouth behind the mask. “Night comes soon enough. I believe in professional courtesy. And you seem a woman who knows when business outweighs pride.”

“... Business, you say? Professionality?” For a moment, something raw flickered. “There is so much more at stake here than you can possibly ever know. Maybe if you took your eyes off of my staff for a single moment you’d understand that.”

Drakesthai met her words with mock offense, sharp-edged. “You wound me, Lady Roxelana. Your staff? Please. I’ve never stooped to pilfering walking sticks for my collection.”

A heavy silence settled, charged. Drakesthai let his voice drop, cool and intent. “If opportunity permits, I’d rather aim for something with real bite. And no, not your pet beast—though it has style. But even a reaper’s judgment can get… clouded, when the copper runs hot.”

“Indeed...” she mused, considering.

“So? What’s your answer, Lady Roxelana? The floor is yours—for now.”

She regarded him, measuring. “... Perhaps I misjudged you, Drakesthai.” Impossible to tell if truth or ploy. “But I think I will need a touch more faith.” Her hand extended, open, palm up. “You value your weapons so much, and I am starved for glory... Why don’t we create a scene? Hand me one of your weapons. If you keep your word, I’ll give it back in the arena. If not—well, I’m sure it’ll find its way home.”

He hesitated—a true pause. Her hand hovered, patient, as his own traveled over the array at his sides and back.

The blades erupted into a cacophony.
You’d hand one of us over? Rend pulsed with indignation. To her?
This is folly, Ruin rumbled, growing cold and heavy. Trust is for fools and the dying.
Spinescourge quivered in its socket, disgust threading through every serration. Let her earn a blade’s touch in blood, not barter.

Silence, Drakesthai commanded. He let the noise settle. There were a dozen calculations turning beneath his stillness—the hoarder’s instinct to guard, the reaper’s reluctance to part with any trophy, and the tactician’s cold appraisal. He would not risk Rend or Ruin; their loss was unthinkable. So too were Spinescourge, Gnawer, and the Talonstrikes; he would not part with his main armblades without a fight. The Censers—no, far too easy to use, not tokens for trust.

The Wyrms’ Embraces, or rather, the Left Wyrm’s Embrace. The blade that had nearly torn out her intestines—at least according to the doctor who had returned it to him—and now pulsed with a greedy memory. His fingers curled around the hiltless blade, reluctant, feeling the subtle resonance of the steel—a blade’s soul, restless at the thought of new hands.

“That’s a bold ask, Witch,” Drakesthai said slowly. “But you want a gesture of good faith, you’ll have it.”

He unfastened the Wyrm’s Embrace, holding it out between them, but not yet releasing. “This is the Wyrm’s Embrace. One of two sisters. I claimed this from Yashani the Rakshasa, a great warrioress of Shaochi.”

He saw her eyes flicker with recognition—whether real or feigned, she did seem pleased.

He angled the blade so the faint etchwork along the spine shimmered beneath the infirmary light. “You’ll notice the etchwork along the spine—each mark is deliberate. I’d be… devastated if you marred it.”

He extended it—balanced perfectly between two fingers, lingering, gaze sardonic. She reached with her draconic claw, careful, almost respectful. He could almost sense the blade’s anticipation, the silent judgment of its new bearer.

“She prefers a firm but caressing hand, hates the cold, and will bite back if slighted. Although she’s already tasted your blood, Lady Roxelana. Perhaps she’ll find you … familiar, even more to her liking.”

“Her and I both...” she said, voice like a matching blade. “If I am to her tastes, then I can only pray to find a better substitute. I’d prefer to keep my blood to myself, but if it must come to that... Hopefully it won’t be for a while.”

At last, he let the weapon slide fully into her grasp. A moment passed—a silent pact.

“Consider it a loan, not a gift,” Drakesthai rumbled. “I expect interest. As will she.”

“Then I aught to take my leave. Best of luck to you, Drakesthai; we’re both going to need it.” She moved toward the door, pausing at the threshold. A whisper, just audible—sharp as a talon. “... Soon, oh so very soon.”

He watched her go, already mapping betrayals and contingencies. The weapons on his person murmured with restless hunger, but he silenced them. Soon enough, he thought. The game had changed—and so had the odds.




Once more, Drakesthai found himself in the waiting room, little more than bare stone and old echoes, every surface scrubbed so clean it stank of crushed lichen and some medical distillate. He sat alone, elbows on his knees, head lowered so the Goat Dragon facemask caught the low light—throwing jagged facsimiles teeth and shadows across the far wall. The crowd’s roar filtered through stone, dull and distant, but close enough to rattle the blood.

He kept one eye on the corridor. Doors opened and shut. Someone called a name not his. The air pressed close, thick with the memory of steel and heat and the knowledge that only a handful of them would walk out again.

He drew a breath. It stuttered, uneven. Drakesthai caught it, tightened his jaw, and forced the next one steady. A tremor, nothing more. The old nerves. Not fear, he told himself. Not now.

His arsenal—usually a riot of hunger and jibes—felt off, like dogs leashed too long in the dark.

Rend, whose edge would normally sing for blood, now throbbed low, resentful. What did we trade away for hope, Draco Mori?
Ruin weighed heavy at his spine, its presence colder, more cautious than before. You let her close. That’s not like us. What’s changed?
Spinescourge was a nervous itch along his forearm, serrated and raw. No trust. No truce. You forget, you bleed.
The Talonstrikes flickered, searching for humor and failing. Allies now? Draco Mori’s going soft.

Even the Censers of Hunger and Scorn spun in their rings, unsteady, hungry in a new way. Victory tastes different when you wait. When you hope.

He snapped, a whisper behind his teeth. Quiet. But their agitation echoed his own—a pulse of uncertainty, sharp and unmoored.

He set his jaw, grinding the urge to fidget. What was wrong with him? It wasn’t the memory of pain—he’d tasted worse. The flesh-eating poison lacing Virescent Senn’s prized Gnawer, the blasts of Shaochi firesand wielded by Yashani the Rakshasa, the vicious snares of Berunath twisting bone. Nor was it the brush with death; that was as routine as breath. No, what unsettled him was how close he had now come—not just to loss, but to getting what he wanted.

He should be focused, hungry, above all unflinching, as he had always been. Instead he was pacing the walls of his own mind, chastising himself for letting his guard slip with Roxelana, for bartering away a weapon, for feeling not dread, but anticipation.

Risk had always been his game—his thrill, not an inherited lesson. Even as a boy, he’d taken chances for the sheer pleasure of beating the odds, confident that strength and cunning would see him through. That confidence had carried him further than luck or legacy ever could. But this felt different. This made his pulse skip.

Please, hear him out.
Will you bring us something back?
There is so much more at stake here than you can possibly ever know …
The Morians’ salvation …

Our salvation.


But the words turned. The echo deepened, broadened, as if a new mouth now spoke with all the gravity of the earth itself. The shadows along the far wall stretched; the air thickened, old dust and copper tang.

He stilled, breath shallow. The presence wasn’t sight or sound, but a heaviness—like being watched by something older than the city, older than memory. The Goat Dragon mask felt colder, as if the stone itself leaned close.

What is it you seek here, Drakesthai?


The voice was neither male nor female, but ancient, formed of pressure and slow-moving root. It spoke inside his bones, behind his scars.

Not the prize. Not the blood. The root. What do you hope to become?

He tried to shake it off. This was nerves. A conjured hallucination. Yet the presence persisted, shifting, insinuating.

What do you wish to reclaim—or bury?
Are you still only a collector of blades, or has the hollow grown larger?


He flexed his hands, trying to banish the chill. I don’t talk to stone, he thought, almost aloud. I don’t answer ghosts. But the unease wouldn’t lift. Even the blades had gone quiet, as if the presence had cowed them too.

He scoffed, low and bitter, trying to break the spell. “I’m here to win,” he muttered under his breath. “That’s all anyone needs to know.”

But the question lingered, echoing in the hollows of the waiting room—and in the rootbound places he tried not to name.




A voice echoed down the stone corridor—sharp, authoritative, impossible to ignore. Drakesthai rose without hesitation, the muscles in his back tensing as he adjusted the lay of his blades and set the Goat Dragon mask more firmly upon his face. The world outside the waiting room grew louder: the roar of thousands pressing in, surging like the tide.

Sunlight speared through the threshold as the doors swung wide. The sudden difference in light made him squint, but no matter. All that mattered was the path ahead: out, up, and into the waiting storm.

He stepped into brilliance and heat. The Grand Arena stretched out before him, sand and blood and ancient stone, all dazzling in the noon sun. The scent hit first—iron, salt, and the old dry tang of dust, churned anew beneath a thousand boots.

The stands were a kaleidoscope of color and motion, every seat a boiling knot of humanity. Yet at the very front, the true power waited—robed figures, silent and watching, their poise unbroken even as the masses shoved and howled behind them. The Lords’ chosen: stillness carved from the chaos.

Every step across the scarlet-stained sand seemed to echo with memory and hunger. His boots left a trail beside a thousand others, overlapping prints in a canvas painted by sacrifice. Somewhere behind his ribs, the familiar pulse of anticipation surged—this was the heart of it, the crucible, the only home that ever demanded nothing but strength.

His arsenal seemed to hum against his skin, a low, feverish thrum, as if the blades themselves hungered for the crowd’s gaze.

The air grew heavy, all noise pressed flat as the criers’ voices rang out—many, yet one. Their decree swept across the arena, each Paragon summoned to the pillars by title and deed.

A tremor ran through Drakesthai as he was named: A blood-stained reaper, with iron blessed and cursed in equal measure. His weapons carved gashes through the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Drakesthai Morian, Paragon of Earth!

He ascended his appointed stone, boots grinding against the slab, and surveyed the field—each pillar crowned with legend and threat. Darkness, Fire, Light, Energy. Each rival revealed, each watched and measured in silence. The crowd watched him, as if expecting a monster to bare its fangs.

They see the reaper, he thought, not the roots that hold the blade.

A whisper of amusement rippled from his arsenal. Show them the roots, Rend murmured, half in jest.

The crowd’s hush broke into a tidal roar, washing over the sands in a living wave. Drakesthai breathed it in, letting the heat and hunger settle into his bones. He scanned the arena, seeking every advantage—the lay of the sand, the slant of the sun, the distance to each pillar and each foe. Roxelana an emerald blaze on one side, Radiance gleaming on the other, Zephyra’s coils shifting just beyond. Marrow, a tower of darkness and disdain.

His arsenal prickled, alive with restrained anticipation—so close to violence they could almost taste it. He rolled his shoulders, grounding himself in the ritual of preparation, letting the moment stretch.

Blades sharpen in silence, but they sing in blood, Spinescourge whispered, the old hunger flaring to life.

Drakesthai let his fingers relax briefly, then clench into fists—reminding himself what was his, what was owed, and what he’d come to claim.

Across the sand, a familiar face stepped forward, his every movement a display—every gesture for the crowd and the Lords above. Drakesthai caught the old man’s eyes for a heartbeat, seeing the challenge there, the theater. A familiar taste of arrogance.

Radiance’s voice rang out, bold and clear: “Aside, dear Drakesthai! You had your chance with the lady, yet her staff remains safe in her grasp! Go play with the beast and the hunter, and perhaps claw and knife will be easier for you to pilfer.”

The crowd lapped it up, cheers cascading from the stands, hungry for spectacle, for rivalry, for blood, as Radiance gave a big showy bow to Roxelana.

A prickle of irritation slid beneath Drakesthai’s skin, sharp enough to set his blades murmuring. He hated that tone.

Old men who preen for the crowd should know better than to bait a hungry hound, Spinescourge muttered.

Drakesthai stepped from his pillar, rounding it, voice pitched to carry.

“How rude, for an elder to snatch up the challenge before his juniors even speak,” Drakesthai growled. “But who am I to question wisdom? They say to fear old men in our line of work—though I wonder what happens when the young unite.”

Fool’s gambit, Ruin?

A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth beneath the mask, eyes flicking to the dragon-witch across the sand. He raised his voice further. “Shall we test the theory, Lady Roxelana?”

His blades still rested in the familiar weight of Predator’s Grasp and Drake’s Maw Assembly—battle configurations, all fangs and threat, made for overwhelming force and wanton bloodshed. But this wasn’t the time for brute show.

He thrust his right arm downward, the motion sharp and practiced. With a click and a shift of balance, he slid only Predator’s Grasp—Rend and the Talonstrikes—back into the tight, lethal geometry of a Reaper’s Dueling Array. The steel settled with a low, satisfying snick, every piece right where it belonged. Rend pulled back ever so slightly, but still ready for action; the Talonstrikes retreated, folding into miniature shields against his forearm. Ready for precision, for the dance, as well as the slaughter.

Will you bring us something back?
If I return.

AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 3
8/17/2025 22:25:26   
kavyraya
Member
 

I had no time to think. The one that had laid so many wounds on my sides – not just any normal soldier – had leapt from the water, their silhouette cutting through the liquid copper, the edges of the blades glinting, poised to strike.

Too slow. Sluggish. Am I in the moment? Why am I confused still? My heart hammered in my chest, my claws slip and sliding across the smooth surface beneath me, my muscles coiling in the instant before–

CRACK!

A thunderous, blinding bolt of blue erupted between me and her and them, barely having the time to flinch before the air hummed with a new, strange energy, my quills standing on end like the ripple of static across a storm-scorched sky. Time seemed to stop, the world held in a frozen breath. The soldier’s leap stalled mid-air, their eyes wide, swords nothing but shadows. Her, my “trainer”, a blur of black and white and bright and fire, frozen too. All around me, the world had gone still, held in the tension of a single moment that stretched impossibly long.

Then the ground gave way.

I yelped– but the air was thick- then thin. I didn’t land with the usual crunch of earth beneath my claws, but the smooth, unyielding surface of stone. Concrete. Familiar. My breath caught in my throat as I instinctively tested the space around me, the scent of dust and age mixing with the hum of… machines. The buzz was low, almost soothing, as though the world here never stopped moving, even when it felt like it should.

Tick. Tack. Tick. Tick. Tack. Beep. Computers.

My senses locked onto that familiar, electric tang in the air. A quiet rhythm beneath the quiet hum. The blinking lights of monitors that seemed so far away yet so close. I know those lights. I knew them. They had been my companions in every waking moment. They watched me, they listened. And when the glass door slid open, they fed me.

My claws scraped across the warmed concrete floor as I shifted, muscles visibly relaxing to the sensation of being here again. Not in the gold-copper cage, not in the chaos of the lightning-strike. But here … in my Safe place.

But the scent was heavier here, metal, chemicals, the sharp tang of disinfectant that had clung to every inch of this place since I could remember. The smell of my waking and sleeping hours, my training, my being the only one in here. Nothing bursting out of the floors, or aiming at the lights. Just these walls, these boxes of blinking lights and wires that had become my world.

I padded closer to the glass. It was so cold against my snout, the sleek surface almost … alien in the way it reflected my head. I stared at it for a moment, realizing I could see myself clearly for the first time in what felt like ages– my sleek grey scales chased with blue, the wild curve of my tail, the black tips of my talons. I looked … wrong. Warped.

But before I could think much, a shadow appeared in the corner of the room. A figure.

Him.

I knew him. He never really interacted with me, not directly. Always behind the thick glass, always a silhouette staring at me past a tablet screen, eyes sometimes meeting mine. He was a presence. A figure that hovered in the background, the one who directed others– the trainers, the ones who brought me food and made strange noises with their hands that made me move when they wanted me to. He never needed to speak to me. He controlled everything with a few words to them.

He was just there. And I was used to that. It was a constant in the rhythm of me staying in my Safe Place. The hum of the computers, the buzz of the ventilation, and him. Always at the edge of my awareness.

But now, standing in front of me– closer than I ever expected– he was … different. Something was wrong.

My tail twitched, thumping at the ground once, twice, moving languidly from one side to the other, a warning– a curiosity? that I didn’t even have to think about. He stood there, but it wasn’t just the same figure I had known. There was something more to him. His form wavered, shimmered like a mirage on a hot day, flickering between what was and what should be. As if his face was… just the surface, masking something deeper beneath. It was as though the air around him was alive with cracks and distortions, like reality itself was stretching thin in his presence.

Glitches. The faintest of flashes, lightning in the air around him, or maybe it was just the storm in his wake.

I stiffened, instincts screaming at me to stay sharp, stay alert.

His scent barged through all others– heavy, thick with the pressure of an impending storm. That odd, metallic tang that usually came with the calm before a downpour. The air tasted like ozone, like it might crack open any second. Every muscle in my body pulled tight, coiled like a spring, ready for anything. His presence felt wrong, as if he wasn’t entirely … here.

I had never seen him up this close. I had only ever smelled his presence then quickly dismissed it in favor of a new toy or a bloodied piece of meat. But now, as he stood there– too close, too unsettling– it was clear that there was this new, strange, unsteady energy crackling in the air.

I met his eyes– or what I thought where his whole face would be. The same pale skin, the same hair, but it seemed flimsy. Like a mask. A skin that didn’t quite fit right. I blinked once, twice, and when I looked again, it was still him. But not him.

He was unbothered by my glaring eyes. He didn’t need to say much. Just the sound of his voice, smooth like oil, cut through the air, somehow colder than I ever remembered.

Well now, Zephyra,” he said, his eyes scanning me, flicking over my scales, my claws, my posture. I followed his every movement, tracking him like prey, watching the inhuman stillness, the absence of breathing and the way one of his hands stayed uniform in one pocket. “Is this really all you’re capable of? Just the basics? I thought we trained you for more.”

I growled low in my throat. The words were sharp, prodding, like a needle scraping across the bumps of my spine. But I couldn’t answer with anything other than my eyes. I couldn’t tell him what I felt. Just watch. Just wait.

His smile widened at my silence, as if he knew exactly how the words mattered to me. He leaned a little closer, eyes narrowing, and I could feel the air thickening again, like a storm was right on the edge.

You know you’re a disappointment. After everything we’ve done, this… this is all you can show me? Nothing new, nothing surprising, nothing special.” His voice dropped a little, as if he was talking to himself now, but loud enough for me to hear through the glass. “Maybe you’re just as not important as I thought. Not as special..”

I stiffened. My tail flicked, swiping the floor, dragging up dust in the air. My claws flexed at the cold glass, my heart pounding in my chest. He was poking at me. Taunting me. Trying to make me react.

And I couldn’t stop it. I lunged at him, a sharp screech erupting from my throat. My muscles stretched, my jaws snapping at the air, teeth bared, ready to tear at him–

IT STINGS! – electric, searing through me like fire. It made my whole body lock up, muscles jerking against the shock, my skin burning, but not the way it should. The pain was sharp but… it didn’t last. It couldn’t.

The shock passed, but not before I felt it– healed. The gashes on my hide had sealed itself in an instant. My chipped talon– fixed. Whole. But how? It was like the strike itself had mended me, but at the cost of my freedom. I could barely catch my breath as I staggered away from the glass, the pulsing energy from the shock still making my bones ache.

I grunted, deep in my throat. Another warning. My body screamed at me: Run! Attack! Fight! But I wasn’t stupid. I knew what would happen. The shock would come again. Worse.

He stepped back, unfazed. Not a flinch. Not a hesitation.

You know, I almost wish you’d surprise me. But I guess we can’t all be exceptional, can we?” His words dripped like venom. “You’re just … an animal. A creature. A tool.” He raised a hand, making a motion as if dismissing me. “Nothing more.

Another growl rumbled deep in my chest. I couldn’t help it. No. I wasn’t just that. I wasn’t just his tool! But when my claws scraped against the glass again, when I lunged at him once more, the air shuddered with the shock before I could reach him. My body seized, forcing me back. This time, the scratches around my muzzle closed upon themselves– I could feel my flesh knit over, forming new silver scars across my storm-gray skin.

My sides burned, but the pain was nothing compared to what was happening inside me. Why didn’t I move? Why couldn’t I just tear him apart? I had to break through. I had to fight back- But this wasn’t like before.

I could feel myself bending. I could feel the part of me that knew what I had to do– the part that wanted to fight, that wanted to tear this place apart, but couldn’t. The control, the shock, the healing – they had me trapped.

He was still smiling, still standing there, always out of reach. He leaned in closer, his gaze darkening, the words slow and deliberate as they cut through the air. “You’ll learn your place eventually, Zephyra. I made you. Every part of you. Every instinct, every spark of power. You came from me– do you really think you can escape that? I know you. Inside and out. I am you, and therefore… I will always be more.

One moment, the air was thick with the pulse of control– his words still ringing in my skull. The next, the world cracked open beneath me.

I felt the ground tremble, the world spinning like a whirlpool, and before I could even register what was happening, the shock hit me again– stronger this time, more intense. My muscles seized, my skin burned with the aftershock, and the electric sting was everywhere– inside my body, in the air, in my teeth.

I couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t move.

Then, the world shifted– Reality itself twisted and folded, like something heavy being dragged across the ground. A violent SNAP! – and the world I knew vanished, replaced with the low hum of energy and the scent of ozone filling my nostrils.

The arena was larger. The walls stretched out farther, but only just. The same cold, metallic scent clung to the air. But something was different this time. The floor was solid beneath me, but it had an unnatural shimmer to it– a slick surface, almost like glass, but too dark, too deep. Too alive.

Then, I saw it.

A pillar. Tall, reaching high to the ceiling, made of some strange teal gemstone that flickered with energy like it was alive. The stone hummed in the air around me, vibrating, alive with something that felt … ancient.

And then, from the base of the pillar, a form began to take shape. At first, I thought it was a shadow, stretching in the light, but as the figure took form, I narrowed my eyes to look at it better.

She was tall– maybe as tall as me. Her skin was lined with deep scars, but it was her face– her eyes– that held me in place. They were sharp, but also ancient, like they had seen too many things, too many battles. And from her neck hung fangs, glinting in the faint light, jagged and sharp, hanging like a promise of something dangerous, something untameable. Lightning had curled around her temples in thick, vine-like strands, the power of it crackling in the air. It was like the very essence of her being was lightning itself, sculpted in the form of a woman. And she was staring at me with a gaze that seemed to ask, “Little reptile, do you fight or do you quit?

Everything felt too sharp. Too bright. Too loud. I leaned against the pillar, my legs still shaky from the aftershocks, still reeling from the electric burns, from that snap that had thrown me back here. My claws scraped weakly against the surface, trying to brace myself from the static of the shouting crowds, their voices shrill like whining wires overloading. The power of it all– of him– it was so strong. And wrong. And so alien.

Steady. “Steady.” Steady. There were three voices. Or was it only one? I felt it before I even understood what was happening.

A hand. A touch.

It slid down my spine, firm but warm. Small. Definitely human. It wasn’t a forceful grip, not like the trainers’ holds, but a steady, calming pressure– like something pulling me back together.

I didn’t see it. I didn’t need to. The touch– it wasn’t just a hand. It was something more, something that … clicked. The warmth spread through me, pooling in my chest, in my limbs. I could feel my muscles coming back to life, like I had been starving for something, and now, it was filling me. I could breathe. I could think. The haze from the shock– gone. The ache in my bones, the weakness in my legs– gone.

I felt whole. Entire. Like if the shocks had cut me off from the world, and now– now I was here again, I was me again. Like adrenaline shots flooding in my blood, waking me up, making my heart race.

I stretched, claws digging into the floor, tail snapping behind me. My body hummed with new energy, everything sharp and clear, like the world sharpened around me.

A vision lashed before my eyes, quick and bright– scarlet, like a fruit I had never seen before. A flash of red, ripe and full... and something else, words. Strange, incomprehensible words, like they were whispered from far away, but somehow… they felt like mine. Like they were meant for me.

I couldn’t understand these new words, new commands, but I felt them. I knew them.

My muscles tensed. My teeth bared, but this time, it wasn’t from fear. It wasn’t from anger. It was something else. Something deeper.

The roar came from my chest– louder than before, rawer, vibrating through the air, making the quills on my back shiver in pleasure as I rear back. It was the sound of my power, of my release. Of something I have been waiting for.

I felt the arena’s air shimmer with sparks only I could see, my senses spreading wide and pinging on four shapes, also next to their own corresponding pillars. It wasn’t a challenge. It wasn’t a question. It was a declaration.

I am ready.
Post #: 4
8/17/2025 23:00:17   
Dragonknight315
Member

The tide rises—

Perhaps the Weaponhunter found his strength, or perhaps the flow of molten copper had a mind of its own. But as the last ounce of heated breath leaves the would-be dragon’s lungs, the world turns dark and cold. The liquid metal clogs her lungs to fill the void left by her bravado. It holds to her like a dear friend, its insistence pinning her to the ground. And as the sloshing fills her ears with metallic whispers, it drowns out all other sound... Save for something in the distance. Her twin calls her name...

“Roxelana.”

“Roxelana!”

“Roxelana, wake up.”



“Miss Roxelana, wake up please...”

A gasp, a flame— warmth kindles in the Witch’s chest as she wakes to the world once more. Her split minty orbs jut wide, the loss of consciousness unable to interrupt her beastly instincts. She rolls, ready to dodge the Weaponhunter’s next strike... only to fall right off her bed. “Oh dear...” A soft tone reaches Roxelana’s ears as she groans on the floor. When the Witch turns her gaze, a hand greets her. “Are you alright, miss?”

One of the orderlies— a nurse, to be exact. Sure enough, as Roxelana peers around to glimpse her surroundings it all begins to make sense. The rows of beds, the array of orderlies running here and there, piles of medical supplies... She’s certainly in a medical ward.

So, you’re alive.

The Dragon sighs as Roxelana takes the nurse’s hand and rises to her feet. “T-thank you,” Roxelana mumbles, still shaking off her slumber. “I take it you were the one treating me when I was out of it?”

“Yes, yes! That was me. And what an honor it was!” The nurse replies with a smile that could eclipse the mid-day sun. “Gotta make sure our Fire Paragon is in tip top shape!”

“... Excuse me?!” It takes a moment for the words to reach the witch’s heart, and another moment still for her to recover from the shock. “I’m... I’m chosen?” Fully awake now, she reaches out with both hands to shake the nurse. “Please tell me you aren’t joking, you can’t do this to—”

A flick to the forehead knocks the Witch out of her hysteria. It was more for her sake than the nurses. Indeed, the orderly seems amused as she stifles back a chuckle.

“No, I am being quite serious! You’re moving on to the next round! Oh, wait—” All of a sudden a light sparkles within the figure’s eyes and she turns to the side. “That reminds me. You should find all of your equipment here. We took the opportunity to restock your supplies. Once you are ready, there will be a guard in the outside lobby who will escort you to the arena.” With that piece said, the nurse looks back and forth before leaning in for a whisper. “You’re going to need it, there’s a whole crowd of adoring fans waiting for you outside~”

“F-fans?” The notion hits Roxelana like a sack of bricks, completely stunned into silence. By the time she recovers the nurse is gone along with everyone else. It’s just Roxelana now.

“... Well, I better get to it.” The Witch takes inventory as she puts on her equipment one piece at a time. Staff? Check. Grimoire? Check. Vials?... Sure enough, four vials hung from her harness, the contents unquestionably of her own design.

How did they...

The Witch shoves the thought to the back of her mind as she continues. Now is not the time for such questions, not when the most important moment of her life awaits her— Ascendancy.

With everything in its proper place, Roxelana plops herself back onto the bed and takes a deep breath.

So this is it, huh?

Roxelana traces her talon along her chest, Everbright Flame burning deep within her soul. She’s ready... or maybe not, anxiety clutching her nerves and turning her warmth against her. Doubt pins her to the bed. If only she could get one more hour of rest. Even if her body has recovered, her mortal flesh seems unwilling...

It is not the Dragon that frees her from her shackles, but the Dragonkiller—

“Lady Roxelana.”

A tremor shakes the Witch to her core as she whirls around to the source of the noise. There he is much to her despair, Drakesthai perched by the doorframe... The only exit out of here.

“I trust you’re feeling a touch less flammable than last we met. Perhaps our introductions were… overly spirited. Call it the heat of the moment. Shall we call it even?”

Hardly. The Witch’s face sharpens to a scowl as she slides herself off the bed and waltzes up to her would-be killer. “Oh there was heat alright—” Predatory eyes scan his visage. There’s not a scratch, let alone a burn mark to be found. He must have been restored as well... Which could only mean...

He’s chosen.

She ignores the question, instead putting on a brave face. “’Will say, I think I liked you better with charred skin.” Her split tongue sharp like twinned daggers, Roxelana wastes no time in her retort. “But that’s besides the point. Speaking of which, what is the point? Don’t suppose you are here to finish the job?”

“Tempting,” the figure chirps, refusing to mince words. He addresses her in a playful tone usually reserved for close friends. It reminds the Witch of how she’d talk to her brother... The thought sends a shiver up her spine. “But let’s save the murder for the grand stage,” he continues. “We’re both finalists, both still breathing—no small feat. You are a contestant. I am a contestant. Surely, there is common ground somewhere between us—at least until the field thins.”

The hunter confirms her suspicions, but it does little to sway the doubts in Roxelana’s mind.

What common ground could there be between Dragon and Dragonkiller?

“No sense wasting steel—or fire—on each other here,” Drakesthai presses on. “The medics would be scandalized. Besides, you strike me as someone who prefers an audience for such things.”

The words claw through her armor and past her skin, the Weaponhunter’s assessment striking true. And how could Roxelana deny it? It runs within her veins. It calls to her... So she bites her lip in hesitation, her beastly slits narrowing. “Go on. What are you proposing?" The witch already knows the answer, but she needs to hear him say it.

“Let’s not dance around it,” her rival reiterates, finally dispensing with the pleasantries. “The next arena’s going to be a slaughterhouse. You know as well as I. If we go for each other first, neither walks out whole. But if we… coordinate, even loosely, we might both walk away richer. Simple mathematics.”

The Witch tilts her head, unable to believe what she just heard. Mere moments ago the two were at each other’s throats trading blows. But now? “Are you suggesting a truce? You and me?”

“Truce, alliance, mutual blind spot—call it what you will...”

How about a joke? the Witch muses to herself. Still, the Dragon hears him out.

“The odds say we gain more from cooperation, for now.”

“... Hmm.” The mint-eyed woman keeps her peace as she turns to a nearby window. She’s surprised with a remarkable view— the room, a floor or two up from the ground level, captures a portion of the surrounding city quite well. Just as the nurse explained, rows upon rows of observers line the streets behind fences backed with orderlies in an attempt to greet the next champion in waiting... or cut their journey short. Heavens know that the announcement had to have brought each and every fool with a death wish out from the shadows. Even with the guard’s help, the Witch wonders if she’ll even make it to the battlefield...

Drakesthai reads her like a book, her concerns loud and clear. “... If you need a hand, I have a knack for solving inconvenient problems. Even the kind that stalk the shadows.”

“Ah, that’s all well and wonderful,” the Witch deflects as she turns back towards her rival, her humor cloaking her better than any spell could provide. “Shame it’s still daylight.” With nothing but wit to offer him, Roxelana leaves the offer on the table. But still he insists:

“Night comes soon enough. I believe in professional courtesy. And you seem a woman who knows when business outweighs pride.”

Pride? The flame roars within her veins, the Weaponhunter striking a nerve. Pride is her business, her purpose— for so long the Witch has had to swallow it, hide it, hide everything that is her from the world. For one with the title of Dragonkiller, he seems to know so little about them— only that which is needed for the slaughter.

“... Business, you say? Professionality?” She lets her temper rise in her throat. “There is so much more at stake here than you can possibly ever know. Maybe if you took your eyes off of my staff for a single moment you’d understand that.”

Indeed, does the Weaponhunter take her for a fool? She’s watched how his gold-and-blue eyes have peered towards the piece of steel on her back. But her rival retorts:

“You wound me, Lady Roxelana. Your staff? Please. I’ve never stooped to pilfering walking sticks for my collection.”

A death by a thousand cuts, the Weaponhunter makes a mockery of her worth. That’s not how it seemed back in the arena. Now that it is beyond your reach, suddenly it’s a mere walking stick? Is this how you intend to win me over? Please, don’t make me laugh.

As much as Roxelana wants to protest it, however, he’s beginning to make sense. “If opportunity permits, I’d rather aim for something with real bite. And no, not your pet beast—though it has style. But even a reaper’s judgment can get… clouded, when the copper runs hot.”

“... Indeed.” The Witch sighs as she crosses her arms. She moves past the comment about the pet. Something about the Dinosaur? Even she can’t make heads or tails of her ‘intervention.’ But it’s the latter note that catches her attention. Once the battle starts, it will be complete pandemonium. Having even the slightest of edges would save her so much trouble... But at what cost? Can Roxelana rely on his ‘good graces?’ How long will this partnership last before he turns on her?

Most importantly, will the Dragon forgive her for working with its killer?

“So? What’s your answer, Lady Roxelana? The floor is yours—for now.”

Thus, the Dragon answers, an opportunity presenting itself:

“Perhaps I misjudged you, Drakesthai.” She begins, her face hardened like her scales. “But I think I will need a touch more faith.” A test, a promise— she holds out her hand as if waiting for something.

“You value your weapons so much, and I am starved for glory...” An honest answer, her intent swaddled in a truth. “Why don’t we make a scene? Hand me one of your weapons.” She’s serious— dead serious. “If you keep your word, I’ll give it back in the arena. If not—well, I’m sure it’ll find its way home.”

With her offer given, now the Weaponhunter is the one to hesitate. His own thoughts seem unparsable as Drakesthai reaches for one of his throwing weapons. Perhaps he is simply weighing the grim calculus of her offer. Or maybe her bargain is enough to spur him to violence? But to her surprise the killer complies.

“That is a bold ask, Witch. But if you want a gesture of good faith, you’ll have it.” It takes every fiber of Roxelana’s being to hold back a smile as the Weaponhunter releases the killing instrument from his bindings. When he holds it out before him, the Dragon’s eyes go wide.

“This is the Wyrm’s Embrace. One of two sisters. I claimed this from Yashani the Rakshasa, a great warrioress of Shaochi.” Immediately she recognizes it. It’s the same blade that was buried into her side after the world caught on fire. Her torso aches as she recalls plucking it from her flesh. She lost it somewhere in the frenzy of the fighting; it must have found its way back to him. The witch takes note of the story, recalling that Drakesthai said some other piece back in the copper field.

Does he truly remember each and every story?... If he took my staff, would he remember her?

Lost in some kind of trance, her eyes follow the Weaponhunter’s instruction. “You’ll notice the etchwork along the spine—each mark is deliberate. I’d be… devastated if you marred it.”

... I’ll be gentle.

As the Weaponhunter holds out his prize, she reaches out with her draconic talon before finally grasping it. Her touch is light, as if the thing could turn to dust at any moment. Slowly, it’s as if his passion is infecting her.

“She prefers a firm but caressing hand, hates the cold, and will bite back if slighted. Although she’s already tasted your blood, Lady Roxelana. Perhaps she’ll find you … familiar, even more to her liking.”

“Her and I both...” The Witch forces out a dry laugh, yet her intent remains sharp ... like the blade in her grasp. “If I am to her tastes, then I can only pray to find a better substitute. I’d prefer to keep my blood to myself, but if it must come to that... Hopefully it won’t be for a while.” A cruel smile finds its way onto her checks as Drakesthai finally lets go— but not without a warning.

“Consider it a loan, not a gift. I expect interest. As will she.”

“Then I ought to take my leave,” the Witch concludes, ready as she will ever be. “Best of luck to you, Drakesthai; we’re both going to need it.” With that, the rival-turned-accomplice steps aside. As she makes her way out, a whisper dances on her double-speaking tongue just barely within earshot.

“... Soon, oh so very soon.”

Soon she will not have to make bargains like this ever again. Soon the Witch will be able to live her truth.


When she leaves the ward, a sea of angels greet the Witch— as if she stepped into Paradise.

“There she is!”

“Roxelana!”

“Show us what’s beneath your hat!”


The mint bleeds from her eyes and turns clear as tears trickle down the Witch’s cheek.

Finally... So this must be heaven. If only I could linger here for awhile~

Alas, she cannot, for devils walk the streets in broad daylight wearing everything the Dragon has ever wanted. Praise, adoration, the ability to lower her guard for just a single moment—

A row of guards keep the most eager of onlookers at bay. A stray orderly rushes to her side, determination flaring in his voice.

“Roxelana, you’re finally awake! We’ve been informed of your... Situation,” he puts it mildly earning a chuckle from the Witch. “Our orders are to escort you to the Arena. We don’t have long, so follow us.”

An emerald sleeve reaches up to wipe the tears from her eyes as Roxelana smiles. It’s then that she spies someone off in the distance, a green cloak amidst a sea of colors. Even now her twin is still protecting her.

Raven... I hope you know this will all be worth it. I promise.

Turning back to the orderly, Roxelana nods. “Gladly.”


Grateful does not begin to describe the feeling in the Witch’s heart as she makes her way towards the arena gates. The trip was entirely uneventful, all thanks to the City’s intervention. Roxelana knows she couldn’t have possibly made it on time— or in one piece— without their intervention. If an assassin had made an attempt on her life, then Rox is none the wiser for it. The message is loud and clear: she is under the Lord of Fire’s protection as their paragon.

Relief gives way to anxiety, however, once Roxelana reaches the end. Just beyond the gates she can hear the crowd in frenzied applause, their roar so loud it could be mistaken for a dragon. When the appointed hour arrives, the names are announced one by one.

“Marrow.”

“Zephyra.”


Two names unknown to her.

“Radiance.”

“Drakesthai.”


Two names that she does recognize, the Old Soul and the Weaponhunter.

Then— hers.

“An ever-burning dragon, molded into tenuous flesh. Her flames scorched fury through the ever-changing Flux of Factory. Witness Roxelana Ebontwin, Paragon of Fire!”

Showtime.

The time for tears has passed, now Roxelana plays her part. As the gates open, she dashes out onto the red sands eager to please the crowds. In her mortal hand she bears her Attention getter, the staff twisting and twirling with practiced finesse. In the other, the Wyrm’s Embrace— a fitting name now that it’s in her talons. She brings the two killing instruments together into an X, sparks flying as steel meets steel. The crowd goes wild—

“Thank you, thank you!” Shuffling the throwing weapon into her other hand, the Witch blows kisses into the crowd. As she does, her free talon runs along the rim of her hat and plucks it from her head before crossing it over Roxelana’s heart. It earns her an extra round of applause. Oh, how the Dragon wishes she could hear each and every shout, yet standing on the stands the calls come across as a uniform tide of enthusiasm. Granted, some of that is for her competitors, some for the tournament itself. Yet the Witch feeds herself fat at the moment. In the midst of her antics, she takes the time to look out across the battlefield.

“There’s Drakesthai...” She whispers, her skin crawling upon seeing him so close to her. Not far beyond him is Radiance now basking in the sunlight. Further away still is the Dinosaur, her name now known to the Witch. Then finally, a soul most unfamiliar to her standing before the pillar of darkness.

“Marrow... Well, it suits the vibe.”

With her appraisal finished, the witch props her staff up into her hat before swiftly setting it back into place. Just in time too—

“We now bear witness to the Trial of the Desert Sands. Let the Judgment of the Arena begin!”

The masses swiftly follow the announcer’s cries. The witch pumps her open talon into the air, the spectacle fueling her soul. “Yeah! Let’s get started!” Before the Witch can even consider her first move, the Old Man makes it for her.

“Aside, dear Drakesthai!” he calls out. “You had your chance with the lady, yet her staff remains safe in her grasp! Go play with the beast and the hunter, and perhaps claw and knife will be easier for you to pilfer.”

As the figure dips into a bow, Roxelana can’t help but snicker as she happily returns the gesture.

You tell him, Old Soul. Perhaps there’s some spirit still left in you.

“By the Grace, Wrath, and Song of my love, I alone shall slay the dragon.”

His declaration known, the Witch readies herself for a retort, but her accomplice strikes first.

"How rude, for an elder to snatch up the challenge before his juniors even speak. But who am I to question wisdom? They say to fear old men in our line of work—though I wonder what happens when the young unite. Shall we test the theory, Lady Roxelana?"

It’s now her turn to impress. She dips her hat down to cover her gaze, no one not even the crowd knowing her expression. There’s a moment of pause before the Dragon finally speaks, her voice everbright. “... Lets.”

Turning her gaze back to Radiance, the Witch twirls her staff again. “Radiance, was it? I wish you good luck in slaying this ‘dragon.’” Lifting it above her shoulders, she brings it up to the apex before slamming her Attention Getter back down into the sands. It sinks a few inches into the ground, deep enough to keep it upright for a moment.

“But I must say, if you think there will be a princess waiting for you on the other side then you are sorely mistaken.”

With a spare hand now free, the Witch grips the Wyrm’s embrace in her talons as her mortal one grasps a vial from her chest. There’s a pop, and the vial opens before she spills glistening red liquid across the surface of Drakethsai’s killing instrument. She gives it a brief twirl to ensure it’s stuck to the weapon before finally focusing.

“Drakesthai!” the Dragon roars to catch her accomplice's attention. “Consider this your payment!”

Winding up her entire body, the Witch tosses the blade straight towards the Weaponhunter’s position. As the blade spins, drops of ink fall along the path yet most stay fixed to the Wyrm’s Embrace. Surely her accomplice must have noticed her handiwork? Her intent is clear— a combination attack. The witch spins the blade towards him, and the Dragonkiller delivers the fiery payload to their mutual foe. But midway in the throwing weapon’s journey, it suddenly prematurely ignites—

Exactly as she had planned—

If her rival can adapt, then all is well. But if Drakesthai cannot, if the flaming instrument were to find its way into his flesh... what a shame~
AQ DF AQW  Post #: 5
8/17/2025 23:29:44   
roseleaf320
Creative!


“Hurry up, Silver-eyes, we don’t have all night!”

Marigold’s voice leapt freely through the crisp air, its echo swallowed by the orange leaves not-yet fallen from their branches. Its volume shot through its target like lightning, xyr body jolting backwards as one foot tore free of its heavy fur boot. Xyr heel hit the ground with a crunch, sending a burst of laughter into the air from one of her companions, and a hiss from the other. “Quiet, Marigold!” the shortest one chastised in a hushed whine. “Just because we’re awake at dusk and dawn doesn’t mean the whole forest is.”

“Oh lighten up, Dew,” Adder replied, his fowl-catch dangling from his shoulder. “She’s right, anyways, Marrow’s way far behind.”

Marrow was, in fact, at least twenty paces behind them, although the lost boot was at fault for at least five. The child sighed and shook xyr head, xyr plaited hair flicking like ropes behind xem. Xe usually loved returning Mari’s banter, but something about tonight felt… off. Marrow could not place why-- only that when xe had trailed from the party, it was to follow the piercing creak of a widow’s branch, loud enough to feel like it came from xyr own bones.

Marrow’s steps halt a second time. The unmistakable whoop of a night-hawk pierces xyr ears, the trees too low to swallow its sound. Marrow pauses xyr breath, all other sound rendered silent as the hawk repeats its call. In a dark, stifled corner of xyr mind, the hunter knows it is calling to xem.

“Marrow? Are you alright?” Marigold’s voice broke through Marrow’s mind once more, jarringly close. Xe jumped, startled, and when xe glanced towards the sound xe saw Marigold’s moss-green eyes directly above xyrs. When had xyr friend gotten taller than xem?

The hunter-in-training felt heat rise to xyr cheeks and forced xyr eyes away quickly. “Yeah,” xe spoke, pushing xyr low voice through an awkward crack. “I’m fine. Just thinking about the Wisp-Hunt.” It was only half a lie; the upcoming ordeal had been on Marrow’s mind near-constantly. Seven nights alone in the middle of the coldest moon of the year.

“Oh c’mon, Silver-eyes, it’ll be fine.” She swung her bow over her back and placed a hand gently on Marrow’s shoulder. “We’ve been velvets a year longer than most. Or more. My sister did it at sixteen! And besides, everyone makes it back. The wisps guide you out, Ulvenne guides you home.

Marrow nodded slowly, tucking xyr crossbow under xyr arm to touch the deer-head lapel pinned to xyr chest. It would clasp xyr cape when xe became a full hunter. That saying was usually true; but not always, and Marrow had developed a sinking sense that something about xyr path would be wrong. Xe sent a silent prayer towards the great god, letting xyr eyes lower to the dirt. Ulvenne of the forest, of its endless maze of roots. When time comes, please bring me back to mine.

Under xyr gaze, the dirt moved.

Marrow tilts xyr head; turns xyr gaze from the shifting ground to the skies above. The night is cloudless, the moon a stunning crescent above the trees. Marrow stares at it, eyes tracing the texture on its surface for the first time. And for just a breath, like a wink, the moon’s gaze flickers out.

“Go on without me.” Marrow’s own voice cut through xyr silence this time, and within it there is an echo of a second. Marigold’s surprise was clear in the slight shift of her foot and the tense of her hand upon xem, though Marrow did not look up to see it on her face. “I’ll be fine; we’re not far from the village.” The velvet forced a hint of warmth into xyr voice, and the echo faded. “I just need some time to think.”

Marrow heard the closeness of her breath, the slow inhale and exhale as she considered xem. “Okay,” she finally volunteered, her voice uncharacteristically quiet. “Marrow, I…”

“Are you guys coming or not? This turkey’s heavy!”

Marrow noticed xyr hunting partner’s sharp freeze, though xe did not know what it meant. She stood still another moment-- ten, fifty?-- before turning from xem. “I’m coming!” she called to the other two, holding a hand to steady the fowl that hung at her own waist. “Marrow’s gonna catch up.” The velvet bound towards her clanmates, leaving her unfinished words to the forest’s depths.

Xe turned from the trio and began to walk, xyr gaze never leaving the ground. Xyr eyes caught the briefest of motions: a rock shifting, a sapling flickering when there was no breeze, a leaf dropping to the ground. A flame of hope flickered inside xyr chest, doubt licking at its coals close behind. Ulvenne, xyr god, the People of Ulve’s greatest protector, actually… guiding xem?

Marrow forces xyr head upwards, lets xyr eyes flit to each flicker in the forest’s depths. A firefly; a dire cat’s eyes; a small shard of metal shaped almost like a scale. In the night’s darkness, the path becomes obvious. And though Marrow knows not what it leads to, xe knows it feels right.

By now, the trio was long gone, and Marrow was left in silence.

Not quite silence. The velvet tilted xyr head as xe noticed a soft noise flowing through xyr surroundings. A soft breeze that tickled the tree branches. And the whisper of something more, something that flowed within the dirt, a constant movement under the stillness.

Marrow is surrounded by xyr forest, by the sounds xe only hear in the night, when the sunlight has left and rendered daytime creatures silent. Night is the domain of crickets, of the soft rustle of raccoons through the bushes, of the near-silent chittering of bats as they swoop through the sky. Each is so loud now, Marrow wonders how xe ever overlooked it.

The forest’s sounds grew louder until they were all Marrow could concentrate on, xyr path abandoned or ended. If xe strained enough, they almost sounded like whispers. A group of elders, far away, as they traded gossip. When Marrow was a child, xe had taken to xyr own little game: without getting caught, figure out what the elders were actually saying.

So Marrow took quiet steps back and forth between the trees, listening for where their sound was the loudest. Xe gave a single, short nod to xemself when satisfied, choosing a spot where a fossiled stone met a large oak root. Xyr metal clips clinked together as xe reached down to teh catch at xyr belt, unhooked it, and laid it gently across a clean slate stone. A jackalope that must’ve come down from the northern mountains-- a find Marrow was proud of. Trophy safely kept, the velvet bent down, closed xyr eyes, and pressed xyr ear to the forest floor.

A flicker of light catches xyr eye-- several-- and xe raise xyr head from the dirt. Scale shards are scattered across the grass, rippling windows layering over Marrow’s memory as if through smoke. Within each scale, Marrow sees different reflections; the Fountain’s wisps, the moon’s crescent, xyr own glowing eyes.

Against the velvet’s chest, xe felt a gentle touch, a sapling’s root brushing across xyr skin as if questioning. Within its touch, Marrow felt the slightest hint of affection, heard the playful lilt of curiosity, like secrets whispered into xyr ear.

Marrow stands next to xemself, now, xyr young reflection pressed against the dirt beside the moonsilver scales. Xe reaches out towards xem, noticing the way xyr right hand falls at the wrist. Broken.

Marrow drew xyr focus to it and, with slight nod, willed it to speak, to let itself further into xyr mind, xyr heart. The velvet knew not what xe was agreeing to. Xe knew only that the root was the touch of Ulvenne. And xe trusted him.

The hunter draws xyr focus towards a single scale, angled to reflect nothing but the sky’s darkness. It is cool in xyr hand, curved to perfectly fit the arch of xyr thumb.

This time, as Marrow brings the scale to xyr lips and forms a single word against it, xe knows exactly what xe is agreeing to.


As root broke skin, Marrow finally heard the voice of Ulvenne, the god of Forest’s Roots, the beating blood beneath the Forest of Ulve.

Favoured.


As darkness blossoms across xyr lips, Marrow hears the voice of Night, of sound and light in all its reflections made richer by the dark.

Paragon.


Tendrils of darkness grasp the hunter, dancing across xyr skin and bursting through xyr bloodstream. A thick band curls around xyr wrist, and Marrow squirms as sharp sparks of pain arc across it, bone knitting back with bone. Across xyr upper arm, where earthy blood has scabbed over the swordswoman’s slash, inky blackness seeps from the wound to cover it whole. Night kisses, floods, from xyr forehead across the fracture lines on Marrow’s skull, the injured nerves left by the undead screeching across xyr face. Though Marrow cannot see it, xe smells the wetness of the forest after an evening rain, feels the dampness of dew clinging to xyr lips. And when xe looks into the scale, two wolf-like eyes stare back at xem, surrounded by black.




Cloth-covered feet sink into the arena’s sands, blood red meeting midnight black.

From beneath the Paragon’s heel, darkness erupts. It billows out before xem like a coming plague, consuming sands and sun alike in its grasp. Marrow dashes forward with it, letting its caress guide xyr steps. Within it, xe can focus on the way the sand shifts with xyr steps, how xe can slide if xe plants xyr toes just right.

The hunter reaches a free hand towards xyr heartroot-- a reflex, a want to share this newfound pleasure, though xe knows Ulvenne cannot reach the arenas. But the familiar texture of it is broken, ridged with unfamiliar curls of peeling bark. Marrow recoils.

Only one can lay claim.

Darkness rips from Marrow as quickly as it erupted, ink-like cloud condensing into solid stone beside the Paragon. Xe pulls xyr hood further down xyr forehead, a meager sanctuary against the sunlight that blazes above xem. But even under its gaze, the smell of the Night still fills Marrow’s nose. Xe inhales deeply, trying to calm the storm that threatens to break under xyr heartroot.

Xe could love Ulvenne and still need him dead. Long for his company while still realizing his hunger would consume xyr clan. Xe could reach for him on reflex and still do what needed to be done.

The Paragon’s adversaries are announced, each heralded by a swarm of voices. Marrow watches each in turn, xyr eyes constantly flicking back to xyr own Lord’s statue. To the scales that sat atop her head, forming a wreath.

“Drakesthai Morian, Paragon of Earth!" Earth. Marrow remembers the shape of those letters in berry-ink under xyr fingers. Yet Darkness had claimed xem instead; and Earth took another. The thought is… strange within xyr stomach.

The human that steps forth could be a Pillar himself. His figure towers above Marrow’s eyeline, and upon him lies enough metal to equip Marrow’s entire clan. His shine is too loud: the sunlight beats off every surface of his body, his reflection in Darkness’ crown a fuzzy, gleaming dot. Marrow places a hand on xyr Pillar’s surface to steady xemself. Its coolness slows xyr breath, sharpens xyr focus until xe can draw xyr thoughts to the mask this foe wears. A bone-like maw; not quite that of a wolf. A jaw too wide flashes through Marrow’s mind like it has too many times, diving towards hunters, teeth stained red. The hunter barely notices the growl that hums in xyr throat. Not yet-- the world was too bright, to busy-- but once xe got xyr bearings…

“Roxelana Ebontwin, Paragon of Fire!" A shorter woman, much less heavily burdened, accompanies her rodent-formed Pillar. Marrow’s eyes fix on her flame-colored hair, its glow made stark by the pure black of its other half. The hunter leans a step away: fire was… unkind to wood. Xe’d fare best staying far from her attention.

“Radiance, Paragon of Light!" Marrow shields xyr eyes from a surge of brightness as the Light-chosen is introduced. A quick glance at his face reveals an elder, from the dust of age upon his hair, time’s curve across his face. Older than most in Marrow’s clan. Marrow’s eyes find solace in xyr Pillar’s depths, focus enough to see two small, bright swirls flicker to life as they pass between the elder’s hands. Light magic.

“Zephyra, Paragon of Energy!" Night’s chosen fights the urge to shrink as Energy’s Paragon is announced with a deafening thunderclap. The chanters speak of claws, and from Energy’s corner steps not a humanoid, but a beast. It is unlike any creature from Ulve, not even something Marrow has heard of from the stories and myths that make their way to the forest from its neighbors. It stands on two legs, the gross mix of a fowl and a reptile.

Marrow has hunted those since xe could hold a bow.

This one will be first. Even chosen by a Lord, a beast has no place competing for a miracle it cannot possibly understand.

Marrow reaches to xyr back, feels the calming click of xyr crossbow as it unhooks from its home. A tight breath of relief slips past the hunter’s teeth as xe feels the wood still smooth under xyr fingers, sees the shaft whole and unchanged before xem. Even made from xyr god’s wood… this crossbow is xyrs. Only xyrs. It does not need Favour to sustain it, after all.

The hunter shakes xyr head, loses xemself in the weapon’s flow as two remaining Pillars erupt and then collapse. The tipping curve of the bolt as it shifts between xyr furthest fingers. The cool metal of the lever pressing against xyr fingertips. The near-silent click as it slides into place; the strong, centering push xyr palm against it as it primes the bow. The swarm of voices announce the beginning; fingers slip bolt into its groove; hunter’s eyes never leave xyr prey.

Ulvenne may have a cage around his people, consuming their faith, replacing their knowledge with his trust. But the People of Ulve will always hunt under the moon. And the moon, its night, its people, will live on long after their jailer is gone.

Night’s chosen exhales and fires.

Post #: 6
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