"To Fix What Was Meant To Be Broken"
65 Glade 123
Red Rock Citadel
No sooner did the portal split the air to Talon's rear than Vrædyn's voice resonated across the chamber,65 Glade 123
Red Rock Citadel
"I apologise for interrupting your work, Dæmon, but I have news of Her Divine Radiance." He marched up to the statuesque figure of the foreign prince, "I think you would be best served if you allowed me to project my memory directly into your Symphony, for the sake of alacrity and clarity." His Rune was already primed to create the conduit between their two Symphonies and, once he was given the all clear, he would dip into his own recent recollections to divert them toward Talon's consciousness.
The Palatium Furiarum,
Royal Seat of the Luxian Court, Solunarium
Earlier that day
Vrædyn Princeps Pontifex strode through the familiar halls of the Blazing Palace, but something felt awry. It took a moment for him to process what was absent… Royal Seat of the Luxian Court, Solunarium
Earlier that day
“I am come at the invitation of Her Divine Radiance…” The prince informed the Aværyan guards who stood sentry at the ingress to her presence chamber. “Is she not hither?”
Wordlessly, the golden-armoured sentries uncrossed their pole-arms and stood aside, as the double-doors parted open as if of their own volition. The tall Moonborn elf stepped inside and regarded the glorious Radiant Throne. He felt the divinity in his blood and Emblem surge at the sight of Aværys’ own imperial seat. No one so worthy had occupied the throne in millennia and certainly not at this current moment.
“Vrædyn Princeps…” The lean, pale-haired figured lounging upon the high seat of the Luxium sneered down at Vrædyn.
“Your Serene Highness.” Vrædyn inclined his head to the Platinum Elf. “I come at your mother’s beck.”
“And she awaits you.” Arkænyn replied in Aurisian-accented Vastian with a snarl, as he tipped the goblet dangling lazily from his long, slender fingers toward his mouth. He poured copiously, gulping down the amber draught, some of which spilt down his angular jaw. He gestured down to one side of the daïs that served as pedestal to the Radiant Throne. “The sitting room.”
“Very well.” Vrædyn took long strides around the side of the high daïs and slipped behind the curtains to its rear, where he found the door to the sitting room ajar. Still he didn’t sense the powerful energy of Thalya IV Imperatrix. His match in the Craft of Mesmer, he couldn’t read her Symphony at the best of times, but he could usually sense its presence… particularly at close proximity. Upon stepping over the threshold, it would fall upon him like an ocean.
He blinked as he stepped, not into Her Radiance’s sitting room, but into an unfamiliar chamber… dimly lit and awash in shadows. He felt the Sovereign before he saw her. The shifting posture of a hunched silhouette turned to regard him.
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“Your Divine Radiance.” He bowed low, his eyes remaining high enough to note the flow of gemstones dimly lighting her face from the table over which she was bent.
“Why are you hidden from me?”
“I… Since I attained the status of Grandmaster Mesmer, you have never pressed to scan my Symphony. I'd assumed it was a matter of respect… or trust.”
Thalya chuckled,
“What scant trust I have deemed worthy of risk throughout my life has proven a miscalculation. I speak not of your Symphony. I speak of your Destiny…”
“I… do not understand, Your Radiance. Where are we?”
“In Auris. The portal is warded by my most potent Negators…” She gestured to the door through which he’d come.
“Ah… Your absence from the Luxium has been keenly felt, Radiance.”
“By those attuned to such things, perhaps… but I have not been blind to the goings on of my realm. Cithæra’s machinations on behalf of her dragon prince, the winnowing of support for the House of Sol’Aværys and the death knell of the Sanguinist ideal… Arkænyn‘s disappointing decadence that renders him unfit to lead.”
At this last, Vrædyn arched an eyebrow unabashedly.
“Yes. I can see that he is unfit... Even more so than I have been myself.” Thalya rose from her table, the sheen of her brass brocade gown glinting in the polychrome glow of the shards on the table below. “I have made many mistakes. I am not blind to those, either. But what I am blind to, Vrædyn, is you. Why is this?”
“As I said, Radiance, I’ve never been asked to open my Symphony to your assessm-…”
“Destiny, Vrædyn, not Symphony.” She stalked toward and then past her grandson. “As I said, I have made many mistakes. You are the victim of one of my gravest. I groomed you for succession, knowing that Arkænyn would supplant you. A platinum son of a sitting sovereign… It has never happened in all of our history. The Conclave of Electors would have had no choice but to select him… But I had to protect my blessing. He would not… could not be safe in Solunarium until he came of age. I could not be a part of his rearing without granting Cithæra the chance to scry his existence. I had to all but forget myself that he ever existed… my Platinum promise. Perhaps if I had raised him he’d have been worthy, but… Well, I have been wallowing in regret since the Ides of Wither.”
“Grandmother…” Vrædyn turned to face, where she stood gazing out at the sands of another desert than their own. “You still hold half the realm. You are hampered, not wholly usurped. There are avenues…”
“Oh, how well I know this, Vrædyn. How many paths I failed to take.” She lifted her gaze to the Aurisian skies. “The roads I see before me today are in decline… a reduction from what and whom I have been for a century. You could not possibly comprehend such a loss.” Slowly, she turned from the window to look Vrædyn in the eye for the first time since he arrived. Her gaze was frantic… almost feral.
“All is not lost, Your Radiance…”
“Indeed… Do you know my greatest mistake, Vrædyn?” He shook his head, unsettled by the question. “I should never have asked you to thwart the release of the Founders. How deeply I regret that command…”
“I am glad to hear this, Grandmother.” Vrædyn’s relief was earnest. That had troubled Solunarium’s pontiff deeply. “The return of the Founders has always been the heartfelt hope of every true Varværyn.”
“Oh, mistake me not. I do not regret evoking Aværys’ vaunted Ambition by seeking to prevent Him from supplanting me and stripping me of my Power. That was, perhaps, the most worthy endeavour I have ever attempted... But I know now that the endeavour was always doomed. You failed me… willfully, I suspect.”
“I-…” Vrædyn’s breath caught in his throat and he paused before replying, “I did, yes. Your power comes from Them. Their will supersedes that of any mortal Sovereign.”
“And They are returned.” She said, icily.
“Deus Vult.” Vrædyn replied just as coolly.
“Ego te absolvo, Vrædyn. The return of the Founders was inevitable… a fixed point in Fate. But my attempted betrayal… and all that it has and will cost me? That can yet be undone. My betrayal of you in favour of Arkænyn… this too can be revised. I can yet govern the entirety of my quondam realm… a vassal to the Founders and you, Vrædyn… you can yet succeed me. Arkænyn can be returned to lead a lascivious life in Auris and you can sit the Argent Throne presiding over a Lunar Court that presides over all of Solunarium… the Luxium, the Umbrium and the Atraxian sands.”
“How, grandmother?”
“With the Craft of my most recent Rune, grandson. I have not been idle in my absence… and once I have mastered the full might of my Æternus, I will use the knowledge I have accrued from these misadventures to reweave my Destiny… to stymie Cithæra and reclaim all that is mine: My Crown, my influence and the fond regard of the Founders.” Her crazed gaze seemed to warp before Vrædyn’s very eyes. Her whole body seemed to warp and distort, as if it were overlaid by faint outlines of her figure just slightly out of phase with her corporeal form. The harder he looked the more seemed to proliferate until the whole of the room seemed to be filled with dim outlines of Thalya.
“That the Phædryns are obscured does not surprise me- Ever a wily lot were they, but why am I blind to your Destiny?” She inquired in a thousand voices, a thousand versions of her Symphony shrieking out in a crazed cacophony. The sensation was deafening and only a sharp response from Aværys' mark at his wrist was enough to soothe the enfilade that sought to pierce his very being.
“Because it lies in His hands.” Vrædyn’s own voice was magnified by the might of his Majesty. At his wrist the Emblem radiated golden light, which spread to wash over his entire form. The thousand Thalya’s regarded the radiant Vrædyn for a lingering moment, until both æthereal energies began to dissipate leaving two elves in a dim room.
“If you accept my offer, you take nothing away from Them. They gain an ally and you only aggrandise yourself with the promise of a puissant throne… I imagine He would be pleased for you to take such a gambit.”
“I will consider the matter…” Vrædyn turned for the door.
“Do not betray me again, boy.” Thalya bade, “I may have been ill-prepared for my fall from grace, but I have always been poised to rend that which I cannot reclaim. Do not doubt the severity of my spite.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it, Your Divine Radiance.” Vrædyn replied in a neutral baritone as he turned to bow, before pivoting to step through the door that would lead him back to the Luxian throne room in Solunarium proper.