Lunareth
Lunareth Vaeloria wiped the bile from his lips with the edge of his sleeve, breath ragged and shivering. His stomach still lurched, but the wave of nausea had passed. He straightened slowly, joints aching, as his eyes settled once more on the tiny black gemstone glinting near the fallen ghoul.
He crouched and picked it up, rolling it between his fingers.
For a moment, his stomach churned again—but not from pain. From recognition.
Onyx…? he thought, heart skipping. But no—it was close, yet not quite. His training in the House of the Moon had included many long nights studying the relics and symbols of the enemy. Onyx, deep and pure, had a sinister gleam to it—polished to a luster that reflected light like liquid midnight.
But this was not that.
Obsidian. Similar at a glance, but duller. Where onyx shimmered with shadowed depths, obsidian seemed brittle, almost glasslike—more fragile, more chaotic. A natural volcanic glass, not a true gemstone. Its shine was harsher, colder, and it bore tiny imperfections along its edges—flaws.
Luna furrowed his brow. This isn’t Shar’s sacred gemstone, he thought. But perhaps… a lesser echo?
Could it be that obsidian, lacking the depth and power of onyx, still held some residual affinity to necromantic forces? Could it be a cheaper substitute—a flawed anchor for a lesser undead spirit?
Luna turned the dark shard between his fingers again, the weight of his realization settling on him like a winter cloak.
If someone has found a way to substitute obsidian for onyx in necromantic rituals, Luna thought, a chill creeping into his bones,
then they’ve discovered a means to create undead more easily… and at a fraction of the cost.
Onyx required specific conditions to form—true gemstones born of both time and pressure, rare enough to be valuable even outside their unholy associations. But obsidian could be found in any land that had once known volcanic fire. Shattered and scattered by the earth’s fury, it was crude, plentiful… and cheaper.