They were children of House Drazhal.
Their mother, QueenâMatriarch Maelthra Drazhal, ruled the Infernal courts with iron law and older fire. Their aunt, Veythra Drazhal, taught the royal methods and burned failure out of the slow. Their father, PrinceâConsort Kaedor, spoke little and watched much.
Azrakel was firstborn. Iskara came two years later.
And from the day her veins lit, every eye followed the younger one.
* * *
Azrakel Drazhal, at age ten, rose every day before dawn. When the palace torches still guttered and the servants slept, he was already in the yard, warhammer in hand, slamming its dull edge against slabs of stone.
His palms blistered. His shoulders ached. He used this as an exercise to make casting Skills harder. The recoil from the warhammer tried to break his concentration, but he kept going while he circulated Mana into his own Constitution Skill.
No one had ever seen a talent like hisâ
not before his sister
.
His breaths rasped in the cold air. He counted every strike, every crack, every repetition, because no one else would.
The servants whispered he had his fatherâs iron. His tutors whispered he had his motherâs pride. Azrakel heard none of it. He only heard the rhythm of blows on stone and the pulse in his veins, begging them to become stronger, to evolve, to just be⊠more.
If I work harder than anyone, if I sweat enough, if I bleed enough, the veins will answer.
The quality of oneâs veins, given the nature of the harsh Mana Infernals were required to tame, could make or break a talent. Up to a few years ago, when Iskara Drazhal, his sister, got tested for the first time, he had been slated to be the designated heir, to inherit all the best Skill Crystals that his family had hoarded for their future ruler.
Yet, his sisterâs test changed
everything
.
No one had
ever
seen a talent like hers. Her Mana was simply out of this world, more akin to a Devilâs than an actual Infernal.
She was celebrated like a divinity and, yet, she was soâŠ
Sheâs nothing. She doesnât deserve it.
Sometimes, many hours since Azrakel started, Iskara watched from the balcony. She yawned, sprawled in the sun, skipped drills to nap in the garden or steal honey cakes from the kitchens. When pressed, she flicked her wrist and sparks danced in her palm. The tutors gasped and applauded her incredible talent, leaving her more and more wiggle room to just laze around. Azrakel grit his teeth and swung harder.
And yet, in these early years, he was stronger. His grip on the practice blade was steady. His stance never faltered. He ran longer, lifted heavier, fought harder. In sparring bouts, he bested Iskara again and again, leaving her scowling in the dirt while he himself stood upright, unfazed.
âSee?â he told himself after every match. âHard work wins.â
At night, while Iskara snored on silk cushions, Azrakel soaked his hands in salted water until the sting made his teeth clench. He lay awake staring at the ceiling beams, whispering the names of Skills he swore he would master, promising himself he would outpace the miracle child who didnât even care.
For a while, he believed it. For a while, he was ahead.
* * *
âAgain,â Lady Thrazkal, a MithrilâRanked Knight and their Tutor, said.
Azrakel braced the crystal with both hands in the room of the tower where they went for lessons. He breathed. He drew. Nothing flowed. The crystal fractured in dull light and spat grit into his palms. His veins ached like split glass.
What they were doing was an exercise not unlike the ones that Veythra, their Aunt, would teach years later at the Academy.
Iskara stepped up without a word. She touched the next crystal once. Light rushed into the glass and made it change color several times before it started gently levitating and humming.
âHold the flow. Do not push,â Lady Thrazkal sighed at Azrakel, who seemed unable to learn the Mana pathways sheâd been trying to impart to the siblings.
Iskara held. The light steadied.
âIt hurts,â Azrakel trembled, feeling his entire body in pain. He had overdrawn his Mana one too many times and his veins were starting to
bleed
.
QueenâMatriarch Maelthra turned her gaze on Azrakel.
âYou will not speak of pain, Prince Azrakel. You will bring me a Skill worthy of Drazhal blood. Your mother was very clear. You either show us
some
talent or you may not come to table tonight. Youâll eat with the servants once again.â
He bowed his head and tasted copper.
That night he once again ate with the servants, isolated even among those plebeians.
* * *
Banners hung over the black stone. The great hearth burned high with Infernal flame, and goblets clinked in celebration.
âTo the jewel of our line,â Maelthra Drazhal declared from her high seat. âTo Princess Iskara, who bears Luciferâs Veins.â
The nobles roared the name. Servants poured finer wine, brought richer cuts of meat, showered her in praise.
Azrakel sat lower down the table, his right arm bound in fresh black wraps. His attempt at forcing a lesser Skill that morning ended the same as every otherâpain, fracture, blood. The wraps hid the swelling, but not the tremor in his fingers.
He lifted his goblet, but his throat would not swallow.
Kaedor, silent as always, passed behind him. He did not slow. He did not touch. His words dropped like cold iron:
âDo not bleed on the marble.â
The command was so casual, so final, that Azrakel felt smaller than the servants clearing trays at the hallâs edge.
When the nobles dispersed, he remained in his seat until the fires guttered low. He waited because standing too soon would have shown how badly his legs shook.
* * *
Later that night, the palace slept. Azrakel climbed to the roof beams, palms raw, veins throbbing from the dayâs failures. He held one of the practice crystals, now cracked and dull, the edges biting into his fingers. He rolled it between his hands like a stone he could not put down.
Iskara appeared barefoot, hair loose, carrying two cups of water and a strip of cloth. She didnât bother hiding the yawn that stretched her face as she padded across the tiles. She sat beside him, the glow of her Luciferâs Veins faint even in rest.
Azrakel had heard that even his sister struggled to fully integrate the power of her Skill, which made him wonder if he could
ever
have learned something like that.
âYouâll hurt yourself if you keep doing it like that,â she said, setting the cloth in his lap. Inside were wraps and salve, the kind the healers kept for soldiers.
Azrakel didnât look at her. âBetter to hurt myself than stop.â
âYou work too hard.â She leaned back, folding her arms behind her head, staring at the Infernal moon. âYouâll catch up. You always do.â
Her words were soft, meant to comfort. To Azrakel, they burned hotter than the blisters in his palms. He watched her veins flicker in rhythm, perfect and obedient, and felt the ache inside his chest deepen.
âYou donât even care,â he said quietly.
Iskara tilted her head toward him, blinking. âWhat?â
âYou donât care. You donât need to. The veins bow to you without effort.â He tightened his grip on the broken crystal until shards dug into his skin. âI bleed for the smallest progress, sister, and you call it catching up.â
Iskara looked away, lips pressed thin. The silence stretched between them until the wind picked up, carrying the smell of ash from the city furnaces.
When she finally went, she forgot the bundle of cloth. Azrakel sat with it in his lap, staring at the shards in his hand, refusing to use it.
* * *
The next day, Aunt Veythra stood before them with a slate board, her chalk scratching sharp white lines.
âMana pathways are rivers. Force is nothing. Control is all.â She traced loops across the board: Rising Sun, Median Heart, Outer Containment.
Iskara closed her eyes and breathed. Her veins glowed faintly, and the chalk dust stirred on the board as though drawn to her.
Azrakel copied the loop. The Mana caught, flared, and seared his shoulder. His breath hitched. He bit the inside of his cheek until blood filled his mouth, but he didnât stop.
âStop,â Veythra commanded without looking at him. âYou will scar the branch.â
He obeyed, his hand trembling. He pressed it against his thigh to keep the tremor hidden.
Veythra wiped the slate clean. âSome Skills are meant only for those born to them,â she said, tone neutral but final.
Azrakel stared at the empty board. He saw nothing but closed doors.
* * *
The palace was silent, torches guttering low. Azrakel stood alone in the courtyard, hands raw from the warhammer, veins burning from overdrawn Mana. His breath steamed in the cold air.
He slammed his fist against the stone again and again until blood slicked the cracks. No light answered. No power came.
Above, a balcony door opened. Iskara, still in her silks, peered out with sleepy eyes. âBrother? Still training?â she called down. Her voice was warm, but careless, as if the words cost her nothing.
Azrakel looked up at her, his chest heaving. She smiled faintly, gave him a lazy wave, and slipped back inside. The door shut.
He lowered his head, tasting copper where heâd bitten his lip raw.
Hard work wins,
he told himself. But the words felt hollow now.
When he turned to leave, he noticed a man standing just beyond the gates. Cloaked, still, watching.
* * *
The salt wind cut sharp. Lanterns swayed over the Infernal harbor where blackâkeeled ships unloaded cargo under the watch of guards and diplomats. Azrakel stood among them, his arm still bound, the title of âhonorary overseerâ pressed on him by his mother to âmake him useful.â
He barely listened to the droning of the diplomats. Their words were names of treaties and tariffs heâd forget before morning. His eyes wandered across the sailors and merchants scurrying on the planks.
And then he noticed one man.
Among the bustle, the man was still. Cloaked, hood low, face hidden. He wasnât part of the delegation, and yet no guard moved him along. His gaze didnât leave Azrakel. Not once.
Azrakel felt it burn through the noise of crates and waves, a pull like recognition.
He scowled, but the man only tilted his head. As if measuring him. As if waiting. Then the man started limping away.
Then a diplomat tugged Azrakelâs sleeve, dragging him toward some meaningless inspection. When Azrakel looked back, the cloaked figure was gone.
He tried to shake it off. But the weight of those eyes followed him back to the palace.
* * *
Azrakel heard the door to the tower where he was used to trainingâfacing the dark sea below the capitalâopen.
âIskara, I told you not to disturb me whenââ
âIâm not Iskara.â
A deep voice made him turn and grab his sword from the side.
âWho are you?!â Azrakel asked nervously. He knew that since he was a prince he was a target. This could easily be an assassin.
The man had a slight limp as he approached.
The hooded figure stopped just short of the moonlight and tilted his head. âI watched you at the docks. You stood among nobles but wore chains heavier than theirs. You looked like a prince who was not allowed to be a person.â
âAnswer me. Who are you? Who sent you? Which house?â
âNames are chains. Houses are cages. Oaths are leashes.â His mouth curled beneath the shadow of the hood. âI broke mine. The one to mortals, at least.â
Azrakelâs grip tightened. âIf youâre here to kill me, then do it.â
The man chuckled once. âIf I wanted you dead, the guards would already be screaming. Iâm here to offer you breath.â
âI already breathe.â
âNo,â the man said, stepping forward. âYou pant in a collar. They call it training. They call it pride. They call it love. But itâs a leash. Look at your armsâburned from drills that were never meant for your veins. You bleed alone. Iâm here to offer you a new place, a new family. One that doesnât wish you were dead to replace you with your sister.â
Azrakel froze. The words cut too close. âYou know nothing of House Drazhal.â
âI know your sister carries Luciferâs Veins and the court bows before her. I know you split yourself against exercises your blood would never sustain. I know your mother forbids you to speak of pain. Your aunt tells you to stop before you ruin yourself. Your father counts stains on the floor and nothing more. I know you think hard work wins. And I know you are starting to doubt it.â
âGet out,â Azrakel growled.
âYou want out,â the man corrected. âYou want a world where power isnât decided by Crystals hoarded by your betters. You want to break the wheel that grinds you under your sisterâs glow.â
Azrakel didnât answer.
âYou have two paths,â the man continued, raising two fingers. âKeep bleeding in the marble halls until you die as their spare. Or burn the rules they worship.â
âSpare me riddles,â Azrakel spat.
âFine.â The manâs tone hardened. âWe do not kneel to Skill Crystals. We do not kneel to bloodlines. We do not kneel to academies that brand children with titles and call it destiny. We serve the God who breaks systems that pretend to be gods. We serve Asmodeus.â
The name hit him like a slap.
âAsmodeus?â Azrakelâs voice cracked with disbelief. His sword rose an inch higher. âYou dare step into House Drazhalâs tower and spit that name at me?â
The cloaked man did not flinch. Shadows writhed faintly at his fingertips, calm and steady. âYes. We speak his name. We serve him freely.â
âYouâre filth,â Azrakel snapped. Rage burned through his veins sharper than the pain of any failed drill. âParasites that worm through the cracks of our courts. I should cut you down where you stand.â
âThen do it,â the man said, spreading his arms. âStrike me down. Show me how strong your training has made you. Show me the glory of your bloodline.â
Azrakelâs jaw clenched. His arms shook with fury, but his blade stayed poised.
The manâs smile was thin. âYou cannot, because you know I speak truth. Your house starves you and feeds your sister. They praise her flame and call you failure. You think they will ever see you as heir?â
âShut your mouth.â
âThey already believe you halfâdead. Let them believe you gone. Step into the sea, and walk with us instead. You hate us now, but soon you will hate the System more.â
âI will never serve Asmodeus,â Azrakel snarled.
The manâs head tilted, eyes glinting under the hood. âYou already serve him, boy. Every time you bleed for a system that mocks you, every time you break yourself trying to catch a sister you will never surpass, you prove his point: that the System is tyranny. You may hate us, but you hate them more.â
Azrakel staggered back a step, his breathing ragged. The words struck too close, twisting the knife in wounds he had tried to hide.
âWhat do you want from me?â
âNothing you do not already crave. Freedom. A chance to fight without playing their rigged game.â
âIf I walk out with you, my family will hunt me,â Azrakel said. âTheyâll drag me back.â
âThey will not hunt a corpse.â
Azrakel stiffened. âWhat?â
* * *
That night, Iskara climbed the stairs with a small bundle of medicaments in her hands. She knew her brother would not ask for them, but sheâd seen the burns, the tremors, the way he hid the pain.
The wind howled through the open chamber when she entered. Azrakel stood at the window ledge, his back to her, the sea vast and dark below.
âBrother?â she called softly. âI broughtââ
He didnât turn. His hands tightened on the stone sill. For a moment, she thought heâd answer. Instead, he leaned forward, spreading his arms wide as if embracing the night.
âAzrakel!â she cried, rushing forward.
But he was already gone.
The scream echoed against the cliffs, swallowed by waves that showed no trace of him.
House Drazhal believed their firstborn was dead.
But in truth, the boy who bled for every inch walked a darker path. The man at the docks had been waiting. And Azrakel walked now into his shadow.