The Sapphire Empire consists of The Azure Citadel and the large city of We'Darastri, as well as much of the Sapphire Desert on Gaia. It is ruled by Suzerain Nedelethakor, and is the premier destination for all arcane pursuits on Siv'en.
Description
"AND SO DID THE MEN OF AL-KHASA WALK BELOW THE SANDS AND DESPAIR, FOR ALL BUT ETERNITY WAS LOST TO THEM..." -Saga of Heshet, from the Munnanyishu Shard.
The desert is as old as the stone that begat it, worn to dust from time and the raging of the earth. It has seen tribes turn to towns, towns to cities, cities to empires, and empires to dust. There are those who linger, mad with heat and thirst, lamenting for the fallen and the profaned. They are forgotten in time, as is all else, bones ridging the dunes that claimed their lives. Countless souls have been lost, their efforts and monuments buried under a millenia of uncaring sand, forgotten by all but the dead. For unless the dead themselves were to claw themselves free of their shawls and speak of their tales, the cities of man are naught but fragments of clay, crumbling away.
Yet, some do. It is not known what arcane rites can tether a soul to its vessel, nor what kingdom spawned such creatures, but there are those that walk among the dunes. They are not named, and they do not name themselves. They are myths, stories, legends, walking upright, speaking in dead tongues and weaving tales of forgotten gods. They wield magics of blighted riverbanks, searing winds, starlit skies, of pillars toppled, of temples burned. They are the dead, ancient and unknowable.
Sekhemkare is one such relic. Where or when he came from is not fully known. He does not speak of it lightly, and no record of him nor his kingdom have been found. All that is known of him is his name, which may not even be his. He claims he is from Al-Khasa, a truly ancient civilization. The men of Al-Khasa were renowned for their mystic capabilities, weaving the forces of the desert for their own ends and seeking visions among the stars. It was said that they even spurned the forces of death itself. Such tales, Sekhemkare will tell you, are very true.
Al-Khasa, however, could not stave off oblivion forever. Sekhemkare himself is unsure what occurred on the Day of Moonlit Sands, as he calls it, but he is certain it is the cause of his existence. He and those others buried in the Great Tombs of Al-Khasa rose and wept tears of dust, for they found their city had gone. They would be forgotten, inscribed on a single clay shard, one portion of a saga that can never be retold. It was then that the dead began to wander, and continue to do so. Some bury themselves in the sand to rest, some are struck down, some crumble away, and some, quite rarely, stumble out of the endless dunes and find themselves among the living.
Sekhemkare is one of them. He does not look like the living. A dessicated and looming figure, clad in a cloak made from his burial shawl and wrapped in worn bandages, he radiates an aura of age. He wears many trinkets of bronze and gold, remnants of burial procedures long past. If cut, he bleeds sand, if bludgeoned, it is like hitting leather. He is also quite slow, his dried body unfit for rapid movement. However, his strength is incredible, likely the result of whatever feel energy animated him in the first place.
He is armed with a khopesh ornately inscribed and inlayed with odd metals and glyphs. It is tarnished and scratched, looking totally unfit for any warrior, but it cuts with a hunger not seen by the sharpest steel. It dries those it strikes, leaving corpses as parched as Sekhemkare himself. He calls it “Suhtuk”, something Sekhemkare recognizes as a name. Who Suhtuk was, he cannot explain.
How he first arrived in the Empire is a matter of convention. Some say he merely wandered in from the wastes. Some say he was found wandering the halls of a forgotten catacombs by an explorer. Some say he appeared to the ruler in a dream, whispering of things that would never come. Only those who employ him know for sure. A new acquisition, maybe a novelty, one wonders how they would use him, and to what end. Time will tell, and perhaps, when all is done, he will return to the sands, speaking of another empire fallen into the sands....
So begins...
Quick note: 'Suzerain' is a term that means a ruling autocrat, similar to 'King' or 'Sultan'.
The twins suns of Atargatis and Sagittae began to sink below the mesas to the west, and it was in the gathering shadow of The Girdle that great stirrings began to muster at the foot of the Azure Citadel. Nedelethakor, the Suzerain's most prized concubine, was arriving at the Citadel for her yearly conjugal visit. It was considered a time of celebration in The Sapphire Empire, as it hailed the quickening of a new clutch of royal eggs. Tyretlethen, Suzerain, Emperor, and King of the Desert, watched proudly from the aeries at the heights of the great, sandstone tower. He found it odd that Nedelethakor had seemingly brought a detachment of royal troops with her from her lair to the north, but dismissed it as a sign of over-caution. It was no secret that Suzerain Tyretlethen had sent nearly all available fighting men over the western mountains to besiege Skyfall. The Royal Mistress was likely just keeping a company to help her feel secure.
Naturally, the overconfident Dragon King could not have been farther from the truth. Nedelethakor had, in fact, brought her amassed warriors with her to ensure that the imminent death struggle between her and the Suzerain would proceed without interruption. It was long tradition that Blue Dragons of royal ilk could challenge one another for dominance at any time, but it was also the prerogative of the duelists to play dirty. The Royal Mistress was a royal in title only; she wielded no actual political clout, but it was enough to make her a legitimate contender. It was Tyretlethen's hubris that betrayed his guard, and had allowed almost five hundred war-mages to slip up to his doorstep unchallenged. Nedelethakor was almost salivating with anticipation.
As the Suzerain slipped back into the crannies of his high tower, Nedelethakor turned to her loyal troops and spoke in a hushed hiss. The reddening sunlight glinted sharply off her deep azure scales, and the wind whispered softly over the palm fronds around them.
"Now it begins, the new chapter in our nation's prosperity. Steel thy mettle, and calm your minds. There will be death among us, 'ere the Shepherd Moon sets. Ask now thy questions or keep thine peace evermore."
There was no reply from the dead one. He was in the back, unlikely to be heard. He shifted, looking up at the tower that loomed over him. He felt like he had seen something similar, long ago. Red clay? Mud brick? Tall, with bronze grates. For a God? Gods? Who built it? Not him. Another? Yes, the ones who sang to dogs. He saw it collapse, the people thrown from the spire, burning like falling stars. This one was sturdier, stone and gray metal. Perhaps it too would fall. Many of the living would.
Sekhemkare stepped out, wanting to look at the leader. He knew of her, but he doubted she knew of him. He had seen the scaled ones before, in his travels. He had never spoken to one, learned their ways, known their gods, and yet he found himself fighting for one. He supposed that was his fate, to wander and witness. Perhaps, if he was seen as worthy, he would be noticed. Perhaps. Sekhemkare was not given to either option. The gods were hungry. His kin were hungry. Souls were needed.
He trailed sand on the stones as he walked, locusts flitting in between the folds of his shawl. His trinkets of bronze and bone clacked quietly, swaying around his covered neck. Those near him in his passing shuffled in discomfort. Where he tread, the sun burned hotter, the sand bit against the skin, insects crawled in the sands. It was brief, but tangible. He stopped, standing near front. He could see her now. Her face was known to him, and he could serve her.
Silence was always an acceptable answer when a dragon asked for objections or questions. Nedelethakor turned, pleased, and sauntered her way into the The Grand Vestibule of the Azure Citadel...
Inside the ornate entryway, polished sandstone mosaics flickered in the pale witchlight that illuminated the cavernous space. Streams of clear, pure water cascaded down from the heights of the citadel in an opulent display of splendor. The locust-walker had piqued the Royal Mistress's interest, despite being a stranger among her ranks. She recognized very few of the talismans he wore, but could tell he was cast from the lineage of the oldest of the desert tribes; the same tribes that Tyretlethen had snuffed out during his rise to power over fifteen-hundred years ago. If nothing else, there was little harm he could do in the ensuing contest.
The full rank and file of her honor guard filed in behind them; their spears and splinted armor clacking and rustling softly. A few of Tyretlethen's own royal guard met Nedelethakor at the steps up to the Suzerain's antechamber. Though their expressions were inscrutable beneath their iron helms, the tone of suspicion was unmistakable in ther gruff voices.
"Greetings, Lady Nedelethakor. The Suzerain bids you glad tidings and hopes your journey was safe. You may leave your bodyguards here. We will escort you to the Suzerain's Hall." they said, turning on their heels and beginning to march up the long steps. The Royal Mistress flicked her tongue at a few of her soldiers; harpy women of the northen bluffs who were also her attendants. She also pointed at the curious nomad who smelled of old sand. Out of her collected posse, he most had the bearing of a wizard, and he would fit well into her cadre. The Suzerain's guards turned to glean what was holding the Lady from ascending, and butted their spears into the stone steps as her selected assistants walked along with her.
"Begging the Lady's pardon, but only you yourself are permitted to the Suzerain's quarters. All others must wait here." the one on the right barked. Nedelethakor emitted a long hiss and drew her face close to the presumptuous guardsman.
"Surely Tyretlethen would not begrudge his Favored Lady an attachment of footwomen to tend to her needs. The mating of blue dragons is no animal affair, like the hasty rutting of you humans. I shall have need of their attentions for the full length of this Ringshadow, else I shall require you to bathe me once all is settled." Nedelethakor said in the most honeyed voice a fifty foot long dragon could muster. The guard captain backed away slowly and swallowed.
"So be it. But what of...this one." the armored elite stammered, gesturing the tip of his ranseur at Sekhemkare. Nedelethakor slowly arched her long neck to gaze at the sunbaked shaman before looking back to the captain.
"What of him? The Suzerain keeps the Archmage by him at all practical times. Am I not permitted to have the council of my own wizard? Come, introduce yourself to the captain." The Lady crooned at Sekhemkare.
Water. He could hear it, thundering, before he saw it pouring from the spires. Clean, ready to drink, he couldn't fathom how they managed it. His people drew their water from the sand, or did without, baking like clay in the heat, becoming stronger. Yet, to have so much, a thing a valuable as liquid silver, the herald of wars, the tonic of empires, it was beauty to him. He stopped and gazed at the waterfall. Thoughts crowded his mind, snippets of memory, long lost.
The light of dozens of weapons glittering, warping, playing off of the stone. He had seen this before. He felt the locusts roil and willed them to rest. War? No. A slaughter. Great storms. Tubes of glass, wrought from lightening. The thirst. Another king forgotten. A heart held by a crying son. It beats.
The procession swept him back up, and he found himself standing alongside Nedelethakor. He had been selected, which was not expected. Why, he did not know. Probably due to his appearance, he did have an arcane feel to him, especially with his funerary charms. As for the winged ones, they seemed strong. He had seen similar things, in the past, with spikes and twisted fangs. Ancestors of the creatures before him, perhaps? He knew little of the world now. Now was his chance to learn, however.
He didn't understand most of what she was saying. His language had died out millennia ago, but some fragments of his tongue remained in use. The grammar was all wrong, but it was there. He got some it as result, and the guards extremely vivid expressions were helping. Entry was needed, and denied. She seemed to be explaining her retinue joining her in...whatever she was doing. 'Mating' translated, as did 'Human". He didn't know if that was entirely possible, but he wasn't familiar with dragons. Her retinue needed to be present, for whatever reason, and then she motioned to him. An introduction?
He stepped forward, stopping alongside the Lady. He spoke, voice carrying through the cloth covering his face. It sounded dry and distant, like it was being carried in on the desert wind, yet slow and powerful. It sounded...old.
"Sekhemkare. I serve the Lady, Man of Iron. My council is hers to seek."
A locust flew out from his cloak and lighted on the tip of the guard's spear. It stared, as much as an insect could, at the guard.
The captain waggled the end of his ranseur irately, trying to flick the insect free from its gleaming blade, but the gently buzzing vermin payed it no heed. The guardsman abruptly gave up and turned his attention back towards the Favored.
"Be that as it may, I cannot permit him passage. My apologied to you, Master Sek-" the captain said before being abruptly silenced by a crackle of lightning down Nedelethakor's spined neck. The air went sharp with the smell of ozone, and a glowering rumble issued forth from the dragon's belly.
"If the Suzerain forbids it, let him be the one to say so. Waylay me further, knave, and you shall know the peril of a scorned Wyrm." the Lady said gruffly, punctuating her words with an abrupt snap of her jaws. The scything fangs stopped just short of the guard captain's abdomen, causing him to lurch and stumble back in fear. He dared not bring the tip of his weapon to bear on the dragoness, however, for doing so was ensuring a swift death. He caught his breath while his compatriot took the reigns of the conversation.
"Do pardon Captain Masheed, milady. He is bitter, and has been stewing in his armor since the crusade left for Skyfall. You and your company may follow me to Suzerain Hall." the lesser guardsman choked out. He stood to the side and allowed the Lady to pass, the harpies continuing behind, carrying the long train of her deep, violet cloak. Nedelethakor was always insistent on being impeccably dressed when she departed her lair in the north, especially given her draconic body. Why other dragons were so insistent on flying about in the buff was always a mystery to her. Sekhemkare walked alongside the Royal Mistress as they ascended the immense, spiral staircase. The Lady glanced back over her shoulder at the wizened nomad and blinked, causing her reptilian eyes to m emit a pale, yellow gleam. Speech would drift across the surface of the desert shaman's mind like a stone across water; words without language directly from the Favored Concubine's mind.
Well met then, Sekhemkare. For good or ill, you now have a part to play in this evening's doom. I suspect you savvy enough to know that treachery of my design is afoot, but if you would make yourself a boon to my service, it behooves us to know one another. What knowledge would you ask of the Lady Nedelethakor?
The words echoed away into the aether as the scuffs and plods of the ascent were borne away on twilit breezes...
The scaled ones were strong. That became clear with the display of power the Lady used to ensure she would not be accosted further. Jaws like a primordial serpent, lighting ripped from the heart of a storm, larger than a war-tent of a king. Truly a being to observe.
Yet, when the thoughts of the Lady worked their way into his mind, there was a period of silence. Sekhemkare was staring at the sun, through the massive windows ringing the staircase. It had been a cool day, and now it was little more that a ribbon of orange cresting the dunes. He was seeking visions, and finding them. One could find the future in the sun, his people knew this. At times, it would hesitate to rise or set, for fear that it may not get the chance to grace the world again. On days which it blazed hot enough to crack stone, it was watching, hungry. And some days, it would hide it's eyes, unwilling to witness the actions of those who toiled below it. Today, however, it was sedate, sluggish, and dim. He had seen it before. It was saving its brilliance for a dawn brighter than any seen in a century. Sekhemkare would do what it took to see it through. The gods were watching now.
He returned to reality, his own thoughts answered the Lady's, his mental voice possessing faint notes of strength and life. A voice that was? It was distant, whispers issuing from the depths of a tomb, a thousand locust wings beating in a human voice. But, it found it's way to the Lady nonetheless.
We slay the one who rules this land? How does a scaled one die? Blades? Fire? Honey? What silences their roars?
Indeed. Suzerain Tyretlethen; Emperor of a Thousand years. He has sent his armies away on a great conquest, much to his own ruin. I strike now, and claim his land from him.
The collected procession continued to wind their way up the spire of the Azure Citadel, growing steadily closer to the sandstone summit wherein lay Tyretlethen himself and the Eye of the Suzerain; the immense, billion-faceted sapphire jewel that crowned the uttermost pinnacle of the arcane fortress. Sekhemkare likely would have seen it shining as a clear, blue beacon in the night, but very few people indeed were given the opportunity to see the Suzerain's pride so close. The air became more and more perfumed with dried herbs and incense as they ascended, all mixed with the whispering eddies of desert wind from outside the vaulted windows. The setting suns cast their final, red rays through the ring system that arched over the sky, tracing wondrous patterns on the walls where the sunbeams broke through. No one spoke, save for the silent rapport between Nedelthakor and her newly obtained councilor.
Blades and fire all well and good, but I design to slay the Suzerain with his own hubris. Once we have completed our coupling, for I do at least desire to brood another Royal clutch, I will challenge him to deadly combat. You shall be the executor of my will, and see to it that none disturb our power struggle.
Sekhemkare nodded at the Lady's words, quietly taking in the beauty of the fortress. It was opulence like he had never seen. This Tyretlethen had ruled for a thousand years, and in that time he had built himself a worthy home. Sekhemkare had been wandering for thrice that time, perhaps longer, yet he had not felt such pride emanating from every facet of a palace. The majesty of the beacon, the steadily increasing miasma of luxury, it all coalesced into a rather definite image. One that the Lady was quite willing to exploit.
None will. All kings must fall. All banners burn. It is his time. Let it be that he returns to the dust, wings torn from him. Your cold fire will be your crown and your scales your vestements. The desert whispers such words, and it whispers in a tide of sand and blood. Can you not hear it?
Nedelethakor smiled widely; an expression that never seemed to bode well on the face of a dragon. It seemed that she had truly picked an excellent specimen to accompany her to this fateful exchange. If by no other measure, he had a dangerous mind, and this was something that the Lady considered a boon. Sekhemare was clearly smart enough to be a threat to anyone, even her. It would forestall the temptation of complacency that she was exploiting even now against the reigning Dragon King.
The procession continued up through the final passages of the citadel, the spiral becoming every steeper and narrower. But, if there was one thing that people of the desert could weather, it was a long walk...
It was on this very spot, nearly two solar years past, that Suzerain Tyretlethen had launched his great crusade against the Western kingdom of Skyfall. In those two years, money, soldiers, and food had flowed steadily westward to feed the war effort, and seemingly naught had come from it. That was perfectly acceptable, in the mind of the Suzerain; dragons had a patience for attrition that the lesser species find appalling. Many of his advisors had begged him to call the forces back, crying that he had left the Empire vulnerable and open to attack. Tyretlethen has scoffed; there was no other power on the continent of Siv'ven who would dare challenge them. If anything, hamstringing Skyfall's own military reserves was an act in the interest of their defense.
But that had not been the main reason for doing so.
No, on this spot two years ago, the voice of the Crawling Chaos had called to Suzerain Tyretlethen, and bade him launch this crusade against the human kingdoms. The Suzerain never questioned that voice, for he knew it well, and so he had done so without further concern. Now, tonight, as Nedelethakor swooned her way into the glittering, vaulted heights of Suzerain Hall, regret and treachery were the furthest things from his mind. Similar to Nedelethakor, Suzerain Tyretlethen was dressed in the current height of draconic fashion; a long blue robe that was bedecked with thousands of tiny sapphires. Golden bangles and brooches littered his claws and snout, and his entire body was tattooed with lettering from the ancient Sifleod people; the native desert elves who had lived along the Sapphire Desert's only river before Tyretlethen had systematically wiped them out. An ill omen for the dragon king, if ever Sekhemkare had seen one.
Now a great pageant was held by various clerics of the draconic faith of Io. Speaking in the language of dragons, they showered both the Suzerain and the Lady in sprays of perfumed water while singing doleful hymns to the Twin Gods. The Shaman and the Lady's handmaiden's waited patiently at the edges of the large throneroom, guarded in place by no less than four hulking demons wrought in masterful black armor. As Tyretlethen and Nedelethakor proceeded to engage in a ceremonial dance that would culminate in their mating, the Favored Concubine sent another missive to the shaman.
Sekhemkare, if thou wouldst aid me in this fate, try to obtain the Suzerain's shed raiments whilst he and I perform our deeds. His royal cloak contains the key to a great weapon that I might use to undo him. See to it, and I shall install you in great esteem within my court.
With that, and a series of rhythmic hisses, Nedelethakor sidled up to Tyretlethen, and the dance began. It wasn't easy at first glance to discern one dragon from the other, save that Nedelethakor was smaller and had a more lapis coloration in opposition to Tyretlethen's cyan cast, but it didn't matter. When the crucial time came, it would be easy to tell which dragon was which...
The ceremony was not his to observe. Sekhemkare did not know their tongue, their clothes, their rites, or their faith. All he knew of their ritual was the letters inked onto the scales of the Suzerain. It was an old script, one he knew well. The Silfeod, the Riverwalkers, the Ashir-Er-Kahut. He knew their ancestors, savages digging in the silt for grubs, not yet masters of their own bodies. How he knew them, he did not know. Perhaps they were vassals to his people. Slaves, even. What he did know was that when he woke, they were not there, save for a few shattered remains, barely a shadow of what they were. There was but one family squatting on the riverside, starving and weak. The eldest elf, calling himself Manurha, lived to see his people fall. He taught Sekhemkare the ways of his kin, all the while weeping bitterly. Sekhemkare could offer no aid that would save them, and they perished in a heap. It was clear to him now, what the elder meant by the 'Flying Ocean'. Blue death, come to wash everything away.
Sekhemkare could not feel anger. He felt no pity for the elves, nor fury at their destruction. However, when his gaze swept over the dragon, he sensed it stirring. It was not his. It came with the memories, flashing across his vision. Burning clay, searing those trapped inside. A river turned red and thick with offal, boiling like rotted stew. A lamentation from below, answered with a roar growing ever closer... The Suzerain must not have known what the words meant, only seeing it scrawled on rooftops or torn from the throats of mothers. It was a plea for mercy. One that would never be answered.
Except, perhaps, for today. He was brought back by the orders of the Lady. The cloak would be the death of the ruler, if he could acquire it. How would be an issue. Sekhemkare had no illusions about his charisma. He looked like an outsider, a mage, someone you would expect to sit naked in the desert until he started seeing the face of God. Gods. He was never sure.
So, when the ceremony began to transition, Sekhemkare approached the servant who was becoming buried in a pile of discarded clothing. The man looked terrified, naturally, both from the sudden approach of the mystic and the fact that he was now responsible for the attire of the Suzerain himself. Sekhemkare watched him struggle out from under the impressive weight of the jeweled cloak, and Sekhemkare wondered if any of those jewels were taken from the earth. Knowing what he did of the scaled ones, likely not.
Wordlessly aiding the man in steadying himself, the desert shaman gripped his arm tightly, closing a trinket into his palm. The attendant attempted to look him in the eyes, but only found cloth wrappings dusted with sand. A word of protest formed on his lips, cut short by a slow shake of Sekhemkare's head.
"A gift for the king. A talisman of ages lost. Fixed to a cloak, a ward against the march of time and armies alike. Fixed wrong, a beacon for things far worse."
The mystic saw the attendants face drain, but felt a sense of respect when he saw the poor man nod. This man was loyal. What it would get him would to be praise. He continued, kneeling the attendant by the cloak.
"You are trusted, Keeper of Cloth. Will you be the one to give your king this boon? Or shall I?"
The servant looked at Sekhemkare, the cloak, and finally at the talisman. It was a small copper beetle, nothing fit for a ruler. He scoffed silently, about to admonish the petulant wizard who dare to foist a bauble onto the Suzerain and call it magic, until it fluttered it's wings. Glass, milky from age, veined with gold. A bit of sand fell from it, swirling under it's own power on the ground before lying still. The servant blinked and quietly handed the talisman to Sekhemkare, who motioned him away from the cloak. He knelt over it, holding the beetle in his palm. His ancestors saw fit to bury him with it, whatever the meaning was. Perhaps he had just given it a new one?
Sekhemkare remained turned away from the ceremony. He could hear it, and that was enough. He had no interest in the matters of flesh. His mind reached out to the Lady as the beetle crawled into a fold of his clothes and emerged back into his neck, becoming inert once more.
The cloak is mine. The key is yours to use. The lock is ready. The door beckons. Hear it on the wind, the stirring of the sand. The desert seeks action. It calls for you by name. Feed it and be one with all it offers.
As the mating ritual between Tyretlethen and Nedelethakor ended, the two great dragons lay in a heap at the center of the room, crackling with lightning and breathing in great, rumbling gasps. Altogether it had been less...violent than Sekhemkare had been anticipating, but the entire room had been shaking at times, all the same. Now, though as the Suzerain rose from entanglement with his Favored Concubine, he sauntered over to where he had left his royal cloak. He sauntered up to the desert shaman with a curious expression, his milky yellow eyes scanning the form of Sekhemkare with more bemusement than malice. He spoke in a deep, thrumming voice, bringing his jagged face close to the stalwart sand-mage's own.
"Hmmmmm...you are one of Nedelethakor's new pets, yes? Hmmmm...you smell old, and yet, familiar. Where do you hail from, dune walker?" the Suzerain asked, spreading his wings in the expectation that the shaman would dress the Emperor in his cloak once again. A few of the Suzerain's own attendants scrubbed him down in the mean time; an entourage of dark, devilish fiends with shaven heads and glimmering, molten eyes. They glanced at Sekhemkare with suspicion, but would take no action, save at the behest of their Suzerain.
Nedelethakor caught Sekhemkare's eye, glancing over the Suzerain's shoulder as her own harpies attended her.
Forestall him a moment more, dear Sekhemkare, whilst I and my footwomen prepare his snare. Whatever thine action, do not dress him in that robe. Cling to it as you would your long life.
With that, the harpies surreptitiously flitted off to the eaves of the Suzerain's Hall, fiddling with the glowing, arcane symbols around the sandstone framing which held the Eye of the Suzerain, that most magnificent gem, dozens of meters across and set into the ceiling, whose scintillation dominated the warm light of the Hall...
Sekhemkare faced the dragon, still kneeling on top the cloak. His head was bowed, his arms spread in offering. It was not in submission, but concentration. The massive ego of the scaled one would likely keep him blind to this, however. Few kings expected the slave to strike.
"Al-Khasa. Its memory but sand, as are its people. I do not have the words to tell you of it, but I shall do what I can. This tale is one that must be told. Allow this, for it is the way of my people. Only knowledge and strength will come from it."
Arcane words drifted in his mind, once scrawled onto caves and chiseled in tablets. He needed more time. The desert was not one to give itself willingly. It had to be coaxed, shaped, and this tale would allow it. The desert listened to all stories, ate them, made them. It was listening to him now, he could feel it.
"Near my home, there was a mountain. Red, taller than any. I do not remember much of the time before, but this mountain I do. It hid armies, gave us shade, let us build our towers and temples, gave us all that we needed. We called it Teshem-Hin-Nursha, Father Of All Red Stone."
He slowly ran a hand along his neck, talismans swaying gently. The winds were stronger, now. There was a heat to them.
"I was buried under that mountain. A tomb of rock and gold. I do not know the purpose of it, nor what I wear now. It was the way of my people, and it is lost. For how long I was among the dead, I cannot say. When I rose, it was in darkness. I walked below the sand for many ages, the great tunnels giving no passage, no escape."
Locusts flitted about him, issuing from him in a swarm. Some made from bronze and bone. A swirl of sand played at his knees. The wind was hot now.
"I did find a crack, deep in the tomb. I walked in the sun for the first time in my memory. But there was no mountain. There was only sand. Time had worn it away, like it does all things. I knew nothing of the living. I saw only death, heard only cries. Many have returned to the desert, but they do not find peace. They linger, trapped between every grain, every gust of wind. All they can do is call out, whispering things to men mad with thirst. Do you know who they speak of?"
The guards were getting nervous now. The wind was searing and howling with anger. Sand poured from Sekhemkare like a shattered hourglass, pooling on the stone.
"They speak of you, scaled one. The Suzerain. The Blind Wyrm. The Wurha-Il. The Hithirma. The Eastern Scourge. They speak of your strength. How you slaughter kingdoms with ease. Bring silence to the dunes. Defy the sands themselves. They know you, this wasteland of souls. They have watched you build your spires, gather your armies, settle your lands. They have been waiting, all this time, some as long as you claim to live, to find rest But, that will not be. You are a dragon, fierce and terrible. A force beyond peace..."
It came then, over the dunes. A sandstorm, roaring and boiling as it tore across the sand towards the palace. Shapes flickered across, forming and dissolving as it roiled. Faces, beasts, symbols, words, remnants of the dead and dying, swept up by the desert to seek out that which had caused it to feel so much pain. It set upon the a palace, and in the moment before it struck, there was silence. Sekhemkare raised his head, blind staring at the blind.
"So I will give them war."
It hit with the force of the Gods themselves, and soon the world was naught but boiling sand.
The rage boiled within the veins of the Suzerain, and though he was shy of no sandstorm, the affront this wretched soul payed him was of a deadly price. Lighting gathered itself in Tyretlethen's throat, crackling and chirping eagerly for the kill, but it was not to come. In the instant before the bolus of gleaming peril was loosed, Nedelethakor set upon the Suzerain with mighty jaws and talons like a lion upon the boar. She was lesser in size, but all the more spry, and Tyretlethen bucked and howled with irate indignation at her sudden attack. The blast of lightning went wide as the Dragon King twisted his head to retaliate, tracing a black line up the walls and singing even the boiling sands in its wake.
There the two dragons did fell combat, wrestling like feral cats, great as the dunes themselves. Their crackling lightning could not harm the other, and so tooth and claw had to take its place. For all his size and strength, the older Dragon King's age showed in his nigh-ponderous attempts to pin down the Concubine, whilst she wove and dodge like a great serpent under, over and around. The fiendish servants of the Suzerain turned on the followers of Nedelethakor; some against the harpies, and three against Sekhemkare himself. They cast red lances of bloody magic through the sand-choked air, barking chants of blasphemous wizardry. The shrieks of the harpy women were comparable only to the howling of the haboob that the shaman had conjured.
Down below, on the lower floors of the Azure Citadel, the forces of Nedelethakor's honor guard were having an easy time of storming the fortifications from within. Given time to prepare, the Suzerain's desert palace was nigh impregnable, but it had welcomed these troops in with open arms, and in that manner was easily sacked. Still, for what it was worth, large banging came upon the wrought adamantine doors that led into the Suzerain Hall as the forces of the Dragon King tried to come to the aid of their liege.
Through all of this, the gleaming blue light of the Eye of the Suzerain swelled in intensity, as if feeding off of the strife and vitriol which the collected forces were slinging at one another through sword or spell. At length, Tyretlethen separated himself from the Lady, and roared vehemently at her.
"Harlot! Thief! Hoarde Raper! You have not the might to undo Tyretlethen, and you newly annointed brood shall not avail your death!"
With that, the Dragon King began to his an adroit chain of arcane words, causing his blind eyes to turn over in their sockets and regain their slit pupils. These gleamed with imperious might, and Sekhemkare could see the magical domination seething from the Dragon King towards Nedelethakor. The Lady did her best to remain staunch against the shriveling magic, but eventually shrank under the dominion of the spell and cowered most loathsomely at the far end of the hall...
As the sand roared around him, Sekhemkare faced down the servants of the scaled one. The sand whirled around him as he slowly raised a wizened hand. It coiled around his fingers, rumbling with untold force as the grains began to howl with the anger of thousands of souls. A cry went out as it shot towards the demons, a mix of fury and triumph as the long-dead sons and daughters of the desert sated their anger. It went into every pore, every wound, forcing itself into the bodies of the servants. Water floated in the air for a brief moment as it was torn from the creatures, vanishing in the grains. The cries of the demons grew silent as desiccated forms crashed to the floor, crumbling as they fell. The sand went across the battlefield like an enraged viper, flaying any combatant Sekhemkare thought to be an enemy, until the Suzerain's men were no more.
He turned from his own fight to see the Lady struggle against the powerful magic of the Suzerain. How much of his might, he wondered, was ripped whole and beating from the hearts of those who called the sands their home? He bowed his head, spread his arms, and received his answer on the wings of thousands of ravenous locusts. They roiled out from his clothes like a whirlwind, plated in bronze and shrieking with golden jaws. The sand bore then faster than even their unnatural wings could carry them, hitting the Suzerain with tremendous force. They would bite through scales, worm their way into every wound, feast upon eyes. The desert was starving, and the scaled king would be their feast.
Suzerain Tyretlethen shrieked loudly as the insect horde slammed into his flank, breaking his entrancing spell upon the Lady Nedelethakor and forcing him to thrash and swat at the locusts in panic for a moment. Ripples of lightning traced their way down the Dragon King's body before a gout of arcing electricity lashed out in all directions from his body, forming a cage of jittering light around his regal visage.
Tyretlethen shouted in the ancient tongue of dragons as he fought off the consuming swarm. It was a language Sekhemkare knew to be of alien origin, having arisen only from the time of the Colossi and the sundering of Eras. The Suzerain was cursing the desert shaman, calling him scum, a drifter, and a feckless oaf. Some were true, others not. It didn't matter, for the sands would abide the gamut of truth, lies and secrets.
Nedelethakor regained her bearings for a moment, shaking her large head before charging through the Suzerain's cage of lightning and tackling the larger dragon with her full weight. The azure wyrms tumbled and wrestled for some time, slamming into pillars and shattering furniture as they rolled, roaring, all around the sand-choked hall. Even for one as old and wizened as Sekhemkare, it was an awesome sight. Then, all at once, the entangled dragons burst through a wall, so close to the shaman that he almost had considered stepping out of the way.
As it were, the two dragons were now on the wing, circling the Azure citadel and firing bursts of lightning and magic power at one another. The sandstorm was even more fierce outside of the ruined antechamber, but the dragons were in such a frenzy by this point that they scarcely paid any heed to the withering blast of heated dust. Still, the Locusts of Sekhemkare quested after their royal quarry, which seemed to be giving the Lady Nedelethakor the upper hand. Those few servants of the Suzerain or Favored Concubine who remained in the royal chambers now huddled tightly into whatever eaves or crannies they could locate to wait out the duration of the vengeful, desert sorcery...
“
What the hell?! Everywhere I go I end up back here! There's only so much time left before I respawn back to my team and I'm bored as all hell. UAGH! Some freakin awesome Multiverse this is...
”
“
...Huh? Someone there?
”
Issachar Remaeus looks around at the group of characters here, then back to the Fem Scout.
Quite a few of us, apparently. Were you trying to get somewhere?
“
Uh yeah. Are you like the magical god of this whole freakin place?
”
Issachar Remaeus disregards the question.
Well, either way, follow me.
Doktor S was walking through the halls of the Sanctum, in transit from one office to the next. He had a schedule to keep, and this new client wasn't going to allow any slippage... but what was this glowing orb in front of him?
Ahem, uh... hello?
he tentatively asked, looking around to see if anyone else had noticed the anomaly.
“
What in the heavens was that?
”