Jun 18 2021, 02:27 PM
Worth the risk, he called it. Worth something, anything, Lord Dhracia had hoped; both gift and curse, at least it was better than the stagnancy of ignorance. But Lord Dhracia wondered often if she would have been happier ignorant. If she should have just died the first time.
Her lashes lowered, a sober hum following Master Vargas' caveat. “You have my word,” she said. “I need you.”
Yes, Lord Dhracia might have been a snake, but even snakes had to eat and sleep and be safe in their den outside of slithering. What she spoke of was necessity. Reviewing her confession, Lord Dhracia couldn't identify any of it as a lie; if he suspected this to be treachery on her part, she intended completely to prove that it wasn't, no matter what it took.
Even if the first of her trials was to confront the internal despair of Master Vargas' subordinate. The Orthoclase--she remembered it--the one he had harmed to assert himself, the way Lord Dhracia harmed so many below her before. “I'll look into it,” said Lord Dhracia, although she wasn't entirely certain what it took to rehabilitate an abused dog when she was so often the unapologetically striking hand. She supposed that the road to redemption was paved with accountability for a reason.
The curtain of darkness slowly thinned. The glittering innate to her powers, holographic shimmer and prismatic exhalations, faded into translucence in the shade. As Lord Dhracia prepared to leave, the silver shine of her eyes, once evocative of something new, dulled again into pallid grey not unlike her mortal skin. His question made her smirk. “I was not seen.” Even now, raising the darkness and emerging once more into the atmosphere of Draco, she would guarantee that they were alone. Still, Master Vargas deserved his reassurances. “...But yes.” She trusted him to conceive of whatever lie necessary to protect their schemes.
Stepping away, Lord Dhracia turned her back to Master Vargas and mustered hissing oil at her feet. The darkness began to consume her. “Anticipate my return in a week's time,” she said, “and prime your eyes for daylight.”
And in a wisp of deep, black aether, Lord Dhracia was gone, leaving only glimmering dust in the voidlight.
Exit Lord Dhracia