Hi SunPhoenix, Wish granted!
BTW are you a Suns BB fan?
First beware: I am not an editor, nor a teacher, nor anything other than someone who reads a great deal and writes for her own pleasure. So--for heaven's sake follow your own heart and your own vision, okay?
First drafts are a blast, aren't they? I'm a firm believer is "getting it down". You learn a lot as you let your work ramble and your characters find their voice, your style starts to settle and the story starts to take form. It's a very exciting time. It's like a first date, lots of excitement, lots of fun, but ultimately you are testing the person out. You need to decide if you want to work with them. You are really going to need to understand that character in and out AND make a committment to work together for a long time.
When I let somone read my early work (very few BTW) what I'm really saying is, "Are you 'hearing' what I'm saying?" I find it helpful to know if the reason for the chapter is getting delivered clearly and with interesting aspects.
So I'll start with what I 'heard'. We've got two frustrated & angry x-gods who've been dumped on an Earth-like planet's desert without their powers. Azuel must have been the instigater and Ezkrell participated. Azuel had a power to be in connection with the others; Ezkrell has at least a rudimentary knowledge of the planet and a softer affinity for the animals located there-which gave a nice insight into his character. At this point we don't know who sentenced them, nor why, nor how it happened. The chapter has the "feel" of a set up for the next chapter's flashback to what put them where they are at present. it has the sense of Adam and Eve conceptually---or perhaps a twist on Aries grounded in Xena, with more three diminsional characters.
The rough diamond of this first draft chapter is the voice of Azuel. I like the dialog she has and what you have done to use that dialog to further her character development.
Now that I've been working harder at developing my own craft, I now realize that a ton of the work is done before I ever get around to writing that first chapter. Things that need to be seriously considered as you progress (and the sooner the better) are critical issues such as point of view (POV), sentence sellers, and the outline. If you don't like outlines---at least a written synopsis that explains where you are going and how you are going to get there. Some critical questions from your chapter that haven't been answered:
Great: edited because it posted on it's own.... So above hasn't even been edited by re-reading.
1. Who is your main character going to be? Or will you continue with two characters as primary?
2. What is your POV? Beginning writers sometimes find 1st person POV easiest.
3. What will the ultimate theme going to be? survival? super beings adapted to normal life?
4. What will the sub themes be? How will they be introduced?
5. What ultimately do you want your work to say? ---about life? about death? about power abuse? about what power can do to better society?
You might find it fun to start with the blowout that put them on the planet in the first place. It would be exciting, show the characters at a point of strife, give background to why they ended up where they are at present. You may still wish to start with this desert scene, but at the moment I don't sense that background is firm in your character's minds.
I enjoyed reviewing your work and in the future it might be best to discuss via PMs---saves space....
Finally---if you haven't found Jim Butcher's fantastic gift to writers, his journal, do so-- if not go back to home page and click on his life journal. It has so much great stuff in there to help your work. And WITH MORE KNOWLEDGE THAN I COULD EVER SHARE!!!
Go for it, have fun, learn, enjoy the ride. Let your dialog lead you. At this point, I'd say it was your strong point! PS. Sentence Sellers... single sentence that tells what your story is all about. Someone explained them to me as you have less than a minute in an elevator with a publisher or an agent---what sentence will describe your book, make it interesting, make that individual want to hear more. They really help you ground your work as well...