*
In shadowed halls where silence weeps, The Daughter walks where ruin sleeps. With Mother bound by blood and flame, They speak of power, death, and name.
The cult once carved its sacred lies, In mirror halls and soundless cries. Apostles crawl through crown and creed, With whispered faith and hungered need.
One demon’s blood, once fierce and wild, Now sings within their perfect child. And from the tomb where frost bite, A vampire dreams in endless night.
Two threads of fate, in silence sealed, Their truths half-lost, their strength concealed. But Mother’s gaze sees through the veil and bids her daughter, “Show the trail.”
*
—
My curiosity about the unknown lands was satisfied, for now. I let the thought settle like ash drifting to the ground, and turned my attention back to Ysara. She had not yet finished.
Walking ahead of me, her steps careful but steady, leading me deeper into the lair’s corridors. My tail remained within her, a subtle reminder of what lingered between us, though neither of us gave it voice.
“The lair was not built for a single purpose, Mother,” she began, her tone reverent. “Beyond the ritual halls you have seen, there are chambers most never reach. Places made to unmake and then remake those who entered them.”
We passed a fork in the corridor. Ysara gestured to the left. “There are the Cells of Silence. No sound can enter them, not even the beating of one’s own heart. It is there the Apostles communed with the void, believing their words to vanish into eternity itself. What is whispered there cannot be carried away by any living ear.”
She lifted her chin slightly as we walked, her voice eager as though sharing a secret meant only for me. “Then there are the Mirror Halls—lined with glass polished until no flaw remains. One enters whole, and after a time no longer knows which reflection is theirs. They are taught obedience by losing all sense of self, until they cling only to the identity the cult hands them. Those who resist are left broken… their minds dissolving into the glass.”
I let a low chuckle slip, cruel yet amused. “Obedience through the shattering of self. How human.”
Ysara giggled, the sound soft and eager. “Yes, Mother.”
The torchlight traced her features, but her voice carried only eager certainty as she went on. “And the Vaults. Not of gold or jewels, but of words. Tomes written in blood, bindings of skin and sinew, fragments of what they dragged from ruins across the ages. They call it ‘preserved knowledge’ but most of it is madness.”
Her words flowed freely, given without restraint, as though each secret had only been waiting for me to ask.
I trailed a hand along the stone wall as we passed, feeling its faint pulse of warding, like veins carrying stale blood. These halls were indeed an empire, one built not for life but for suffering.
“And tell me, daughter, ” I said softly, tilting my head as I studied her, “is this their only den?”
She smiled faintly, her voice steady and eager. “No, Mother. There are many more. This mountain holds only one of their lairs. The Apostles spread their roots wide—beneath cities, within forests, across deserts, even buried beneath holy ground itself. Each nest breeds more of them.”
I smiled faintly, amusement curling at the edge of my lips. “Apostles. What grand names humans choose for themselves.”
“They call themselves the Apostles of Ruin,” she confirmed.
“And they are more numerous than most dare imagine. There are thousands of them—nobility, rulers, generals, even the Holy Temple is not free of their hand. The Apostles breathe within their walls. All of them serve in secrecy, hiding their devotion behind masks of loyalty and duty. Some know well the vows they have taken, while others are ensnared, their strings pulled without ever realizing who it is that moves them.”
Her steps remained steady as she spoke “They have infiltrated nearly every empire. Court, temple, armies—all touched by their hand.”
I let her words sink into me. It was not only knowledge—it was sustenance. To see the shape of the world’s corruption was to know what might be undone, or remade.
“And yet,” I murmured, brushing the back of my fingers against her cheek, “you would not speak so if they had conquered all. Who stands apart from their reach?”
Her cheeks flushed faintly where my fingers had brushed, yet her smile lingered, soft and unashamed. “The Solmorian Empire. The Luna Empire. And a handful of others that guard their borders with equal ferocity. The Apostles tried, but they failed.”
“How?” I asked, my tone not sharp but warm, coaxing, the way one might ask a lover to part with a secret.
“The Solmorians guard themselves with wards older than memory,” she said. “Their faith is unshaken, their laws absolute. Even their nobility are bound in chains of oaths, and to betray them is to bring death swifter than any blade.
The emperor of Solmaria is said to be among the strongest of men. His reign has endured countless years, under his hand, Solmaria has only grown stronger, its people unshaken in their faith and loyalty. Many have tried to conquer Solmoria, but all met only defeat, each ending in failure and humiliation for his enemies.
And the Luna Empire…” She continued. “The Luna carry bloodlines older still. Their rulers are tied to powers even the Apostles fear. Some say their queens are chosen not by mortal hand, but by the moon itself. To break them would be to break something sacred.”
Her words trailed into the silence of the hall, and for a moment only the low flicker of the wardlight answered us.
The Solmorian Empire. The Luna Empire. Names spoken with such weight, yet to me they were no more than sounds. I could picture no banners, no thrones, no faces to match the power Ysara described. This world spread vast before me, rich with empires, bloodlines, and histories I had never walked. I knew only fragments—the chains of my captivity, the taste of pain, the scraps Ysara now laid at my feet.
A faint smile touched my lips, though it was not warmth that shaped it. How amusing, that I should stand here wrapped in power, yet be blind to the stage upon which it all unfolds. Their empires, their rulers, their sacred legacies… all pieces of a game I had yet to learn.
“But, not now.” My eyes lingered on her, tracing the curve of her form, the elegance in every movement. How easy it was to forget the world’s weight when a daughter as beautiful as her stood before me. “There will be time enough for lessons. When I wish it, you will tell me every thread of this world, and you will not leave a single knot hidden from me. But for now… let us continue.”
For what use were empires and thrones, when the riddle of myself remained unsolved? Their world could wait—mine could not.
There was a question that had haunted the edges of my thoughts for longer than I cared to admit. It whispered to me in silence, lingered in the shadows of memory, and no longer would I allow it to go unanswered.
I let the silence stretch just long enough for her to wonder, then spoke.
“Tell me,” I said, “of the demon whose blood you poured into me. The one whose essence now coils through my veins.“
“Tell me of Baloria.”
At the sound of the name, Ysara tilted her head, curiosity flashing in her eyes. Then she smiled faintly, as though a puzzle had just been solved.
“So that is what she was called,” she said with quiet satisfaction. “We never knew her name. Only the trail she left behind.”
She stepped closer as she spoke, her voice rich with detail, eager to share what she knows. “It began with a noble household. When our hunters arrived, half the family was already slaughtered, the rest enthralled. She had twisted them into slaves.
We sent three full teams of ten to capture her alive—Veterans, every one of them. Skilled warriors, sorcerers, assassins, even blessed knights. But of those thirty, only three returned… dragging her broken body behind them. Her arm was severed, her flesh ruined, but even so she nearly killed them all.”
A spark of pride lit her expression as though the memory itself honored me. “They said she was magnificent. Enchanting their bladesmen to turn on one another, twisting loyal hearts into her thralls, cutting them down one by one. If not for the paladin among them, none would have survived. Even half-dead, she clawed and bit and tore, never ceasing. That was the creature they delivered to the cult.”
I could almost see it through her words: Baloria, proud and terrible, even broken. Her flesh torn, one arm severed, and still her jaws bloodied, her claws raking, fighting until the last breath.
“And once you had her?” I asked.
“She fought without end—biting, clawing, straining against chains as if they were little more than threads. Many died simply to keep her bound. yet we would not let her perish. She was kept alive, just …barely,”
Ysara answered, almost indulgently, as if recounting the steps of a ritual.
“Her blood was black as tar, thick like pitch. We drained it carefully, again and again. Every subject we tried to graft it into perished. Every one. Until you, Mother. You endured. You thrived. You consumed her completely. What she was, you have become. Stronger.”
Her smile deepened, reverent. “Her end was your perfection.”
I listened, silent, as she laid out the tale of Baloria’s capture—of blood spilled, bodies enthralled, the desperate victory that left a demon chained and half-dead. Her words painted a vivid picture, but one that stirred little in me. ‘This much I could have guessed; the tale of blood and chains was obvious enough, written in the stench of their work. What I sought was the shadow behind it, the truth that lingered.’
When she finished, I let the quiet stretch before I spoke.
“Is that all you know of her?”
“Yes, Mother,” Ysara replied at once, her words eager, “That is all we uncovered. No name, no origin—only what was taken.”
A soft exhale left me, more a sigh of dismissal than thought. So. That was the extent of their knowledge. Enough for them, perhaps, but not for me.
‘Even they did not see it. Even they did not know that what they captured was not her true body at all. A fragment, a vessel. The real one lingered elsewhere, in shadow, beyond their grasp.’
The realization brought with it no triumph, only a faint disinterest. They had drained her, caged her, made her into nothing more than fodder for my creation, and yet they had never once touched the heart of what she truly was.
My gaze moved from Ysara, “And the vampire?” I asked smoothly. “The other blood you wove into me. Whose was it?”
Ysara’s eyes brightened at once, as if grateful to be asked. “She was no common creature, Mother. Not a stray born in darkness, nor one of the half-blooded parasites that crawl through mortal cities. No—she was a duchess, an ancient one. Her resting place was discovered beneath a ruin so old the stones themselves had forgotten their shape. A coffin, buried deep within a chamber sealed in wards no mortal hand had written.”
Her steps carried her forward with a quiet reverence as she spoke, her voice touched with pride. “When we pried it open, we found her within—a body unspoiled, as though she had only just closed her eyes. Not the gray dust of the dead, not the shriveled husk of time, but perfection preserved. Her skin was flawless, her beauty… undiminished. Even as she lay in stillness, she radiated a presence that chilled us. It was as though she slept not in death, but in waiting.”
Her words drew me forward, each syllable painting the shape of the one she described.
Something in my blood quickened. I tilted my head, interest flickering. “You speak as though she yet lived.”
“She did,” Ysara said, her tone certain. “Her chest did not rise, her lips did not part, but every test we forced upon her proved it—she clung to existence. A slumber without end, a will unbroken by the centuries. She was not gone, only bound. Whatever fate had left her there, it had failed to claim her entirely.”
My lips parted in the ghost of a smile. Perfect. Untouched. Preserved only for me.
Her words spilled freely now, her joy in service plain. “The order was clear, she was to be drained if needed, bled dry to shape the experiments. And so we did, carefully, greedily. Her blood was unlike anything we had seen—it shimmered dark as night, yet burned like frost upon the tongue. Some said it was the essence of eternity itself. But no matter how much we took, her body did not wither. It remained untouched, perfect. As if she would not yield even to our theft.”
I let the silence rest a moment, the weight of her words sinking in. My gaze sharpened, a subtle spark kindling at the edges of thought.
“And is she still alive, this vampire?”
Ysara shook her head lightly. “I do not know, Mother. The last order given was to drain her as needed, and when your trial began, she was used without restraint. Whether she still endures or whether she was emptied entirely… I cannot say. But her resting place still lies within these halls.”
A faint hum stirred in my throat, thoughtful and low. I turned my gaze back to my daughter.
If she yet lives, she will be mine. And if she is only a husk… then even a husk can be remade.
“Then take me to her.”
