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Chapter 509: Curtains fall

Agrona Vritra

My voice projected out through the networks of psychically resonant antennas, crystalline receivers, and mental projection artifacts interspersed carefully across the continent. The projected images currently being fed into the system froze in place, seizing and distorting just as Khaernos, a hollow visage in my form, was taken through the opening into Epheotus.

"Listen to me now, and listen very, very carefully. The images currently being shown to you are a lie, a bitter fabrication intended to foment fear and uncertainty.”

I let only the smallest flame of my rage—a towering inferno with which I would ignite the skies—leak into the connection. Those who heard my voice would quake and sweat to hear it, but they would know my fury was not for them.

"Instigators within our own populace would have you believe that these images are proof of my defeat, but this is a fabrication. Those spreading these rumors seek only to weaken the foundations of our nation. These are the same betrayers who went to war against their own, who I in turn offered my forgiveness to. They have spurned my kindness, as they have spurned your desire for peace.”

I paused, letting the words be digested.

"I told you before, my people, that I would protect Alacrya—and all those who still call themselves loyal—from the dragons, and I have done so. The forces of Kezess Indrath have been forced back into hiding within Epheotus by the mere image of me. But I know you struggle. I know you are tested daily in your faith. These past weeks have not been easy for you, and you are right to question if I can uphold my vows. I will not hold this against you. Instead, I will show you, so that the proof of your eyes may reinforce the faith in your heart.”

Ji-ae’s consciousness inhabited the mental projection artifact with me, figuratively looking over my shoulder like a nervous wife. I smiled. We were just getting to the good parts.

"But I need something in return. In part, I have already taken some of what I need: the wind that swept across this continent, drawing on your mana and pulling it away. You bore this burden stoically, as I knew you would. I told you that I, your High Sovereign, would guide you through the dangers to come, and you will see this promise fulfilled. I have given everything of myself to make Alacrya the powerful and advanced civilization that it is, but for what is to come, I needed a small part of that power back. You, my people, are more than strong enough to share this burden, I promise you.”

‘We’re currently reaching approximately seventy percent of the continent's magical population,’ Ji-ae informed me as I paused, again letting my words sink in to those listening. ‘As expected, emotions are turbulent and difficult to assess. I’d recommend striking a stronger tone against the asuras.’

"Although I have forced the dragons back, they are still a constant and ever-burning danger to you, my people. Some of you may doubt, but this is only because you don’t understand the full danger that Kezess Indrath represents. Every day, you benefit from the work I’ve done within the Relictombs, the magic and technology left behind by an ancient civilization of mages. But you may not know that it was the dragons that ended that civilization. And why? For no other reason than being knowledgeable and powerful in a way that Kezess himself is not, and can never be. You, my people, pose that same threat to him.

"Which is why, today, we will strike a blow against Epheotus that they will never recover from.”

My words radiated out across the nation that I built and trembled into the bones of my people. My people, who were manifested out of my thoughts and born of my blood.

‘I’ve finished reversing the system’s polarity. It will be fully powered in the next few minutes.’ Ji-ae hesitated. With a thought, I pushed her to continue. ‘I have repeated the calculations for exactly how much power will be required and feel the need to repeat my earlier warnings: this will take almost everything you have. It leaves you in terrible danger

I will be fine, I assured her. Out loud, I continued, my voice still being projected across the continent. “You, though, must recuperate. Rest and rebuild your strength and your hope. I will need more from you soon, and will call upon every one of you to ensure Alacrya stands victorious over all enemies. Turn your eyes skyward, and do not be afraid. What you are about to see is a manifestation of your power.”

I let the connection linger within a few seconds of silence, then disconnected myself from the projection artifacts.

"Your reversal of the rebels’ insistence that you’d been defeated has been effective,” Ji-ae said, her voice audible within the cramped, equipment-filled chamber. “Coupled with today’s show of force, I calculate any further resistance among our own will be minimal. The results are too far reaching to be She trailed off.

I smiled into the air. “Do not be afraid, Ji-ae.”

If a disembodied mind could bite its lip nervously, Ji-ae was doing exactly that.

I shoved my chair away from the artifacts I’d been speaking into and stood tall. My nerves were jittery, and the seething rage I’d been suppressing clawed upward like flames up a dead tree. Momentarily enthused by the process of reaching out directly to my people and destroying Seris’s feeble attempts to win support, my entire mind turned instead toward Kezess and Epheotus.

I could feel the Harvester thrumming within the stones of Taegrin Caelum, urgent and inevitable. My own body harmonized with it, both being full of the mana drawn from Alacrya’s population.

Moving at a quick march, I left the transmission chamber and started toward the heart of my private wing. I stepped over the corpse of a talented young Instiller who’d perished when Taegrin Caelum went on lockdown. My rage was warranted. The destruction of the Legacy was a catastrophic blow to my plans, considering certain aspects of growth were now beyond my reach. But it was not the end, and I was not without a way to strike back at my enemies.

A change of direction was necessary, that was all. Why else have backup plans? I increased my pace. Afterall, an entire continent was now staring into the sky, waiting with baited breath for their lord to show them the future.

"I feel compelled to remind you that our success isn’t guaranteed,” Ji-ae interjected. “Even with you channeling all the mana absorbed to awaken you—and based on known parameters, which leave a large number of variables decided unknown—I can only quantify our chances for success at eighty-three percent.”

"Please, Ji-ae. This is the culmination of hundreds of years of research and development. It’s going to work.” My words smoldered with the same certainty that I’d felt when we finally had a vessel for the Legacy. That had never been a guarantee, either. I reminded Ji-ae of such.

I took the stairs down several at a time, letting myself fly as much as fall, urgency building within me.

"And yet failure there wouldn’t have been quite so catastrophic—or public,” she countered. “Forgive me, Agrona. I did not like the idea of you—or your facsimile—going yourself to find Arthur Leywin, and I regret not pushing harder to make my voice heard. So I am pushing now.”

A sour, squirming sensation wriggled into my anger and eagerness at the mention of Arthur Leywin. “Your inability to calculate the probability around that confrontation was a warning sign that I shouldn’t have ignored. We will both be more attentive to such signs in the future.”

I pursed my lips and blew a raspberry into the air. “Whether he knows it or not, the boy has only made things so, so much worse for his people. Now I clenched my fists, and the stone walls shattered, cracks spider-webbing outward like dark bolts of lightning. “Now, he will see that I was truly trying to be merciful.”

I felt Ji-ae retract. My anger made her uncomfortable, I knew. She was a scientist at heart, and although millenia within Relictombs had darkened her psyche, she did not express anger often. She buried the feelings she could no longer properly experience or understand behind logic and calculations. But, as long as the ends justified the means, she never balked at doing what needed to be done.

Still, Arthur Leywin stuck in my mind like a tick in flesh.

As I rushed through the fortress, I considered what Ji-ae had told me after I’d returned. This warning she’d received, and its mention of Fate, was disconcerting. I’d thought my research into Fate wasted with the loss of the Legacy, but it seemed as if Fate and I were still somehow connected. More discomforting, though, was the question this conjured in my thoughts.

How is Arthur Leywin connected to Fate?

Still, although I had gone far beyond the point where I could no longer consider Arthur Leywin a mere curiosity, neither would I bend to fear of him. When the walls came crashing down, Arthur and Kezess would both be standing under them.

I pushed these thoughts away and began receding into myself as I gathered the vast quantity of purified mana that had been fed into my body to reawaken my dormant mind.

The interface chamber was small and, by necessity, nondescript. Runic patterns were etched into a half-moon shaped table that dominated the hexagonal, domed room. Silver-inlaid lines were carved into the purple sandstone of the walls, drawing focus to carefully calculated points throughout the space. Light through the dome refracted in a way the eye struggled to make sense of. The entire chamber carried a sense of distraction and discomfort, urging anyone who stumbled upon it to turn away.

With the door closed behind me, it became invisible, the silver lines bordering it a part of the overall design.

I stood in front of the table for a long moment, taking in the dazzling array of symbols and shapes. I had designed the spells woven into it myself, a cunning fusion of basilisk ingenuity and djinn understanding of how magic knitted the world together.

The djinn civilization spanned the world and spread into the dimension where they’d housed their Relictombs. As I had learned over these centuries of pilfering knowledge from the Relictombs, the spellforms they covered themselves with gave them a control over mana and aether that even the asura could not easily understand. They knew how to construct and connect all kinds of portals, and they made varied and interesting use of that knowledge throughout the reign of their civilization. The most creative use was with the Relictombs itself.

Because of this, they also had to master a specific knowledge of how to expand, close, and even destabilize the portals they relied on so intensely.

Mana began to jump and spark around me as I connected myself to the interface. My hands rested on the table, carefully positioned over a series of connected runes and shapes. The interface absorbed my mana, and light flickered through the symbols in yellows, greens, reds, and blues. The artifact itself did nothing to guide the process; only I knew the specific sequences of mana that needed to be imbued into the specific runic arrays that would activate the targeting array.

"Everything seems to be working as expected,” Ji-ae said, her voice emanating out of the air.

I felt my eyes begin to lose focus and turned my gaze upward. Light was spilling across the dome and spraying around the room, painting the walls with jumping, distorted images that quickly melted away before resolving into anything that could be made sense of. However, with each second that passed, the light focused in on the very center point of the chamber, right where I was standing.

I began to blink rapidly. My eyes were rolling back in my head, and it felt as if I might stumble over backwards. Just at the peak of this sensation, I took my hands away from the controls.

My vision changed. I was looking out at the Basilisk Fang Mountains, as if I were standing atop Taegrin Caelum’s highest tower. The view was distorted slightly, foggy and uneven, like peering through stained glass. I felt Ji-ae beside me, despite neither of us having a physical form.

"I’ll help you navigate,” she said.

With a sensation like leaning forward, we began to move away from the fortress. Slow at first, then much faster. The jagged mountain peaks rushed past below, then were falling away as Vechor opened up before us. I slowed, veering left and south. I wanted to see Victorious City, to see all those faces gazing up at the sky in response to my earlier words. As I tried to go lower, however, my vision blurred sickeningly.

"We don’t have a good angle from Taegrin Caelum,” Ji-ae pointed out, tugging me back. “We should stay focused. Literally.”

"Was that a joke?” I asked as I lifted, again speeding toward the coastline.

"Yes. If it wasn’t funny, though, it’s because I got my sense of humor from you.”

I chuckled and felt my physical body move somewhere very far away. The world jolted, shifting rapidly in and out of focus.

"Don’t move,” she reminded me, as if I hadn’t built and designed this whole thing myself.

"Yes, dear.”

Soon the sea extended around us in every direction, the world nothing but a curved blue expanse as far as our projected vision could sense. The speed of it only increased with each passing moment, however, until land appeared in the distance. In almost an instant we were flying above land, the coast of Dicathen was behind us, and we were looking down at the Beast Glades. Our forward motion halted instantly, but there was no momentum behind it. Still, I felt my legs wobble slightly as I instinctively braced for the force.

"I’m matching up the recorded images with the display,” Ji-ae informed me. In my mind, her tongue stuck out ever so slightly between her teeth as she concentrated absolutely on her task. “There. That pattern perfectly matches the treeline from the recording. And there, the ground is completely blasted.”

I focused where she indicated, and our view shifted.

The Beast Glades around where Cecilia had held off the dragons was utter devastation and ruin. Chunks of metal and crystal were scattered for hundreds of feet, while the earth bore signs of all manner of magical attacks. I could still see the ring where our shield projection artifacts had formed the barrier.

My focus adjusted upwards. There was no sign of the opening into Epheotus, but I knew it was there. Kezess may have closed it again, but that didn’t seal it completely. Doing so would cut off Epheotus from the world and eventually kill it and everyone inside. The thought conjured a smirk on my face.

A spectral image of the rift as it had looked in Seris’s recording appeared in the sky.

"Lining everything up. The rift, when open, was exactly there,” Ji-ae said.

I locked in the targeting system, and the image sharpened, color becoming unnatural and the texture smoothing until it felt flat, like the reflection of a painting.

I squeezed my eyes shut hard, not opening them again until I began to see swirling colors and imagined images behind my lids.

I was back in the interface chamber. Slowly, I lowered my head to examine the table in front of me. “Only one thing left to do then.” With a flick of my mana, I activated the sequence.

"You’ll be needed in the Harvester’s core,” Ji-ae reminded me.

"Yes, yes. I am the living battery to make this great work of mine possible.”

Despite my flippant tone, I moved quickly. My feet left the ground, and I flew. The door into the interface chamber slammed open in front of me. A wall in the room beyond folded outward, crumbling as I passed through it to take a more direct route. In moments, I reached one of many shafts throughout the fortress that allowed vertical egress for flight. I plummeted into the dark at speed before flitting out into a cavernous space tangled with pulsing tubes and cables full of mana.

The core of my machine reached out with bright white tendrils of mana and tugged at me. I felt my heart race as the borrowed mana enriching me hummed in response, the resonance I’d felt earlier expanding several times over. Something sparked in my mind, and I was suddenly connected to every one of the millions of Alacryan mages whose mana I now carried with bright lines of golden thread.

My breath caught. It was like being back in the targeting apparatus, like looking down on the world from above as a true god, all my people laid about before me, their mana given to my like prayers as their faces turned up toward the sky, waiting to view my will made manifest.

"I see,” I breathed, the epiphany soothing my righteous anger. “This is always how it had to be.”

I stepped close to the core, a giant white sphere condensed from natural mana crystals and based on the design of an organic mana core. It pulled harder, eager to absorb the purified mana I held in my body. I knew I could withhold it—the core wasn’t strong enough to rip it from me—but this was my reason for being here. Although the image of the golden threads had vanished even more quickly than it had appeared, I could still see their echo in my mind’s eye, connecting me to all of my people. I knew this was to be the end result of the entire Alacryan experiment.

I pressed both hands against the rough exterior of the giant core. It was warm, and the mana contained within surged at my touch like a quickening heartbeat. “Go on then. Take it.” I released my hold over the mana.

Coiling loops of white energy connected me to the core as the Harvester did its work, reabsorbing all the energy it had fed into my body to awaken me. The sphere grew brighter and brighter until I was forced to close my eyes, then brighter still. Even through the lids, it was blinding. I began to sweat and shake. My teeth ached as I clenched them. The ground cracked beneath my feet.

"Slow down!” Ji-ae warned, her voice a silvery chime through the crackling of mana. “Several subsystems are starting to overload, andthere was a faint clink, like the cracking of glassthe core itself might rupture if you’re not careful.”

Trembling, I focused on simply breathing and maintaining consciousness. With grim amusement, I realised this must have been how my subjects felt when the Harvester drew this same mana out of their own cores. I extended my will, forcing and guiding the process of absorption in equal measure. As my body weakened, my will only grew more steeled in its determination. I’d lost my first opportunity with the Legacy, at least for now. I would not fail here. There was no path forward without this power.

Seconds dragged past like hours. The Harvester emptied me utterly, squeezing every last drop of gathered mana from my body. With each passing instant, I heard the quiet splintering of crystal. It was now or never.

Eighty-three percent, I thought wryly to myself.

The concentrated mana of millions of Alacryan mages was condensed upward through Taegrin Caelum’s tallest tower. Very distantly, I heard the rupturing of stone.

"The outer walls are collapsing. The tower can’t support this density of mana. The central structure remains intact. Transmission of mana at…one hundred percent.”

As Ji-ae’s voice sounded in my ears, I felt a tug from the Harvester. Its polarity had been reversed, causing it to gather all its collected mana into a single point. I had, of course, already locked in the target. “Show my people what their power has wrought,” I commanded.

Ji-ae pulled the trigger.

My consciousness was ripped from my body by the pure force of the released mana. I was above the fortress again—within the mana itself, a part of it, shining brighter than the sun above Taegrin Caelum—as a beam of pure, truly white light carved across the sky. A nearby mountain top exploded, the shrapnel of its destruction scattered as far as the plains of Vechor a hundred miles away.

Instantly, the beam charted the same path I had set within the targeting array. It crossed the ocean in a single second. My eyes snapped back open as I returned to myself at the point of impact. I was lying on my back, my horns clattering against the stone floor with each small movement.

"I must…see I said weakly, rolling over and struggling to stand. Much of my own mana had been ripped from me in that final second, when my consciousness was dragged along with the beam.

"Easy, Agrona. This has left you more depleted than we’d calculated

"I have to see it!” I barked, scrambling forward on all fours as I tried to stand. My feet slipped out from under me and my knees struck the ground, but I hardly felt it, only pushing more desperately.

At the shaft leading up, I had to pause and collect myself. I couldn’t fly on wings of desperation and desire alone.

"Oh, Agrona Ji-ae said. I felt her attention looking upward, to the sky. Like the rest of those loyal to Alacrya and to me.

I breathed deep and sought the well of my power. My feet left the ground. I wobbled slightly. My fists clenched. I stabilized.

I began to rise up the chute. Not as fast as I’d have liked, but it was enough. “Don’t tell me. Don’t say a word. I have to experience this for myself.”

The chute took me high enough that I could leave the fortress by a balcony window in my private wing. I half flew, half pulled myself up the outer wall to a lower, parapet-ringed rooftop. There, I finally had a clear view of the sky in the proper direction.

I stared in awe, and I wept.

"Let the curtains fall.”

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    Chapter 510: Wounded


    ARTHUR LEYWIN

    “A trick. Of course,” Morwenna said, her lips pursed, her stiff posture even
    more rigid than usual. “We should have known.”

    Rai Kothan was pale. Agrona’s capture had been a way to help heal the
    basilisks and their relationship with the rest of Epheotus. I could practically
    see the calculations being rapidly processed behind Rai’s eyes as he gauged
    the consequences of this mistake.

    I almost laughed. It seemed so unlikely, so preposterous. How had I missed
    it? I’d cut the literal threads of Fate, connecting him to—

    Connecting him to the real Agrona, I finished, something clicking into
    place. Dozens of thoughts splintered and branched out under the effects of
    King’s Gambit, my mind holding many different thought processes
    simultaneously.

    Each connected back to a single point. Fate. Somehow, this played into
    what it wanted.

    ‘So this whole time Agrona’s just been…what, exactly? Puppeteering this
    Vritra flesh suit from the depths of his creepy castle?’ Regis’s disgust
    intermingled with my own. ‘Huh. You think you know a guy.’

    Another branch of my conscious mind was already considering the
    ramifications of this discovery. We had to assume Agrona was still alive,
    which completely changed the context of the message Chul brought.

    I can’t second guess the decision to stay, yet another branch processed. The
    relationships I’m forging with these asura—especially the younger ones—
    will be even more important in the future now, because if Agrona is still in
    Alacrya, that makes Kezess even more dangerous.

    Kezess’s voice drew the thread focusing on the present to the forefront.
    “Khaernos Vritra.” Kezess practically spit the name. He sneered, and when
    his eyes skipped to me for an instant, they were a thunderous purple, almost
    black. “What is this?” He reached out and took hold of Khaernos by his flat
    chin. “How—”

    Suddenly Khaernos jerked, pulling his face away from Kezess. His horn,
    which curved down and out like an aurochs, caught Kezess across the
    temple. Kezess was reeling back, swelling with mana and aether alike, the
    air becoming thick around him, the entire castle seeming to constrict in
    around us.

    But the mana that bound Khaernos within the beam of light was sliding
    over his skin like water over the waxed feathers of a duck. He was moving,
    slipping free of the bounding white light that held him. One hand, an arm,
    then a shoulder were free before anyone had even blinked an eye. Black
    light was shining from within him, through his skin. The light seemed to eat
    away at the prison cell and Kezess’s building spell simultaneously.

    I started forward, aether shimmering in my hand, condensing, in the process
    of forming the violet blade of a sword, but the raw power emanating from
    Kezess was clamping down on the chamber like a vice, and I moved
    through it like I was running underwater.

    Khaernos Vritra snarled, an ugly, vindictive expression.
    Black light exploded out of him like he was the center of a bomb. I had a
    fraction of a second to recognize the sight of rending skin, then everything
    in front of me was dissolving.

    I threw up a thick barrier of aether. Beside me, Rai Kothan did the same
    with interlocking shards of blood iron. The black light crashed against both
    barriers, then receded almost as rapidly. For an instant, I had a view of
    Khaernos and Kezess: the former, hanging half out of the prison of light,
    black lightning-bolt cracks spreading across his flesh; the latter reeling,
    seething, his controlled demeanor fallen away as the same black cracks
    flickered and faded across his hands and face.

    Then, Khaernos exploded again.

    A cloud of razor-thin black blades of light sliced through the chamber.

    A few, then a dozen, then even more cut through the barrier, the strikes so
    fine they practically slipped between the particles of aether. I felt sharp tugs
    across my body, then the warmth of blood dripping. Around me, there were
    grunts and a sharp scream. Regis’s form, blazing with amethyst flames,
    stepped out of the uneven lines of my shadow in front of me.

    The energy flashed back into Khaernos. Another snapshot: this time, the
    cracks ran deep, issuing the black light, his body nearly in ruins; Kezess
    only a few steps away, a deep cut across the side of his neck; the mana and
    aether between them bending around and condensing, attempting to hold
    Khaernos’s spell inside.

    With a sword of concentrated aether in my fist, I activated God Step and
    waited.

    Khaernos erupted for the third time. The mana of Kezess’s binding began to
    break down as a void extended outward from the Vritra Sovereign,
    unraveling mana in the same Seris’s abilities could.

    I stepped into the aetheric pathways and appeared right next to Khaernos
    within the bubble of void space. His eyes were shot through with red,
    blending the irises into the sclera. Ashen gray patches of skin fell off and
    fluttered to the ground, revealing raw red flesh beneath. One of his horns
    had shattered from the force of his own spell.

    He was dying. I didn’t entirely understand the mechanics of the spell he’d
    cast, but his core was shattered. I could sense the pieces of it spreading out
    like shrapnel through his chest.

    Almost all of his mana was now concentrated in the single remaining horn.
    I didn’t wait to strike.

    The aetheric blade jerked as it met the tough, mana-dense tissue. It jerked—
    and then bit through.

    The horn tumbled to the floor, clattering, and all around us, the mana broke
    apart, the void blast dissolving into nothing.

    Behind me, I could feel the others’ mana releasing. For a brief, bright
    moment, they had held off the roaring void, and they were left stumbling
    with no opposing force pushing back.

    Then their power erupted throughout the prison cell.

    Radix flashed forward, his form wrapped in black diamonds, brushing past
    me to take Khaernos by the throat. Stone-like vines thrust up from the floor
    in a circle around Khaernos’s prison of light, and bright teal flowers
    sprouted like crystals from them before ejecting motes of bright white mana
    into the air. Orange phoenix fire pierced Khaernos through his wrists,
    elbows, knees, and clavicle. Thick chains of blood iron coiled up like a
    snake and began to wrap around him.

    “Enough.”

    Kezess stepped around the strange, stony vines. The white and gold of his
    clothing was bright and fresh, unstained by crimson blood, and he seemed
    outwardly composed. With each step, only the faintest hitch hinted at the
    injuries he hid—a fact only noticeable because of King’s Gambit.

    “I almost forgot,” he mused, stepping closer to the lolling, barely conscious
    basilisk. “Khaernos Vritra, such an expert in mana manipulation that you
    are nearly resistant to its use against you.”

    Radix grunted. “Not resistant to having his head smashed against the stones
    like a ripe sun fruit.”

    Morwenna let out a sharp exhale of approval.

    The blood iron chains constricted, pulling Khaernos fully back into the
    beam of light which, an instant later, darkened and oozed until it was a
    blood-red color.

    “Release him,” Kezess said. His voice lacked any emotion. He radiated cool
    detachment.

    The others withdrew, Radix releasing his physical hold, while Novis
    recalled several spinning, fiery hooked weapons. The chains remained
    though, a physical binding within the crimson prison of mana.

    Each individual was wounded, although not badly.

    Novis’s arms were a patchwork of thin cuts. Flames licked from them,
    slowly burning the wounds shut. Half of Radix’s face was pockmarked with
    what looked like shrapnel wounds, but crystalline scabs were already
    forming over them. Half of Rai’s right hand was missing bloodlessly, the
    open flesh black and smooth. Only Morwenna showed no obvious signs of
    injury, but she was wrapped in an aura of the pure mana that emanated from
    the crystalline flowers.

    My own wounds were largely healed already, the skin knitting back
    together rapidly. I disregarded them, focusing instead on Kezess and
    Khaernos.

    Kezess stared down at the Vritra Sovereign, who was no longer floating in
    the middle of the red beam but on his knees at its center, the black chains
    pinning him—needlessly, I thought. He looked as if he’d be dead any
    moment.

    “His power is devouring the fragments of his core,” Morwenna noted,
    stepping closer. She raised a hand delicately, and a swirl of mana flitted like
    fireflies around it. “I don’t think even my healing can save him now.”

    “Save him?” Radix grunted, scratching absently at the diamond scabs on his
    face. “It is my professional opinion that perhaps speeding him along would
    be the better option.”

    Rai Kothan looked down sadly on his fellow basilisk, the only one to show
    an emotion other than bitter disgust or seething anger. “Morwenna is right.

    This void technique…it isn’t meant to be something you recover from.” He
    kneeled in front of Khaernos. His fingers extended toward the severed horn
    but he didn’t touch it. He looked up at Kezess. “What’s left of the void will
    consume him from within.”

    I could just barely sense it, the hungry nodes of Decay-attribute mana
    moving like worms through his body, eating as they went.

    Power rolled off of Kezess, and the chamber seemed to buckle. The crimson
    light grew dark and took on a magenta hue. Within the cell of light, the
    mana froze, as did the falling skin that still flaked away from Khaernos’s
    body. He was no longer breathing, either—frozen in time. “We can buy
    more time if necessary. I can make your death take as long as needed,
    Khaernos. And it will be unpleasant. Every stretched second will feel like
    an age to you. An endless afterlife spent slowly degrading, with the relief of
    death just out of reach.” He paused. “Unless you feel like speaking of your
    own accord. Perhaps, Khaernos Vritra, you do not feel like defending your
    High Sovereign, Agrona, and his secrets—”

    Time snapped back into motion within the cell. Khaernos spit blood and
    black pus, which drooled down the bare bone of his chin. “You and Agrona,
    you deserve one another. I hope you rip each other to pieces.”

    “So this wasn’t something you signed up for then,” I asked, watching him
    carefully, King’s Gambit helping me to dissect his every movement. Even
    without the godrune, though, it was clear he had no need—or strength—to
    deceive us.

    His gaze turned to me, his expression empty of recognition. “Why does this
    lesser speak in my presence? I am Khaernos the Black Scourge, Sovereign
    of—”

    “You are a meat puppet,” I said dryly, cutting him off.

    Regis snorted from where he lingered behind the great lords.

    Kezess, who had stopped time in the cell again when I spoke, gave me a
    look. There was no humor in it, but his eyes briefly brightened to lavender
    before darkening again. “Did Agrona send you here to attempt to take my
    life?” He then released the movement of time.

    Khaernos scowled at me murderously. “No. But when I opened my eyes
    and your face was the first thing I saw, all I could think was how I wanted
    to carve it off.”

    The others stirred, but Kezess gestured for silence.

    “What is your reason for being here, then?” Kezess pressed. His tone was
    even, the earlier fury he’d openly expressed now masked.

    Khaernos shrugged, or tried to. He couldn’t quite manage it, but the
    sentiment was conveyed nonetheless. “You tell me.”

    “You don’t remember anything?” Rai asked, clearly not convinced.

    “All that time—decades, potentially—as Agrona?” I added, just as doubtful.
    His face melted into a furious grimace. “Decades? That traitorous bastard.”
    Radix chuckled, the noise resounding off the stone walls. “You weren’t a
    willing participant in his spell.”

    “Willing?” The word ripped from Khaernos’s throat, jagged and bloody.

    “He turned me into his…” He glowered at me. “His flesh puppet. No, I was
    not willing. The degradation!” His teeth gnashed, but the outburst seemed to
    drain him. His head lolled, and his eyes fluttered. “I have no…memory of
    it. I can tell you…only one thing: you were fools to let us live this long.”
    He froze in place, the last word barely off his bleeding lips. The dark worms
    of mana devouring him from within also stopped, suspended.

    I paced around Khaernos in a circle, taking in the Vritra. “Why doesn’t he
    remember? This sounds pretty similar to what Cecilia was doing to Tessia,
    and she was conscious for most of that time.”

    Rai stood, turning away from the grizzly sight. “Agrona Vritra specializes
    in subjugating the mind, twisting perception, and even rewriting the past
    through memory. His presence inside this sad excuse for a basilisk’s head
    would have been too much to overcome.”

    “So you don’t think he’s lying?” I asked, leaning up against the wall so I
    could see all of the lords. “That this isn’t yet another manipulation by
    Agrona? As assassination attempts go—”

    “It failed,” Kezess said simply, but there was a smoldering tension beneath
    the cool exterior, and his hand twitched toward his ribs.

    “What, then, does this mean about Agrona?” Morwenna asked. The healing
    motes of her vines had drifted to the others throughout the conversation.
    Now, she dismissed them. They retracted back through the floor, leaving no
    indication that they’d ever been present. “He must still be out there
    somewhere.”

    “He’s doing something in Alacrya. Seris sent me a letter. Chul brought it.” I
    took a sharp breath and pushed away from the wall. “I need to go back. If
    he’s lost his…factotum…then he might be desperate—and vulnerable.”

    Novis glanced at Khaernos, still suspended in the viscous maroon light and
    wrapped in heavy black chains, motionless. The others focused on Kezess.
    Kezess was thoughtful, his fingers tapping absently against his smooth jaw.
    His eyes seemed to lose focus as his mind turned elsewhere. Then he
    snapped back. “Indeed. We need to know what he’s up to—now that he’s
    been driven into a corner. You and your companions should head to Alacrya
    immediately, scout out the situation. Before we can—”

    Suddenly, the ground quaked. The entire castle lurched as if the mountain
    beneath it was collapsing. Outside, there was a strange sound, one that came
    from far, far away, something between the rush of hurricane wind and the
    ripping of strong fabric. Kezess spun, looking through the walls and floor to
    the magic that underpinned them and held his castle together.

    Morwenna, Rai, Novis, and Radix all wore the same dumbfounded
    expression. “What—”

    Light, not a flash, more like a reflection on distant water, then Myre was
    there. She was still wearing her younger form. A barely shrouded panic
    trembled just underneath her skin.

    “Great lords, quickly, the—”

    Space folded around us. We stopped standing in the cell and appeared
    before the front gates. The many-colored bridge that guarded the approach
    extended before us, but no one was looking down. As one, the asuras all
    stared up.

    “No…”

    A cold dread shook me, clinging to my heart and lungs.
    I heard my name in my mind and on the wind whipping around the
    cliffsides beneath Castle Indrath: Sylvie, questioning, afraid. I didn’t
    answer. I couldn’t.

    Standing just beside and behind Kezess and Myre Indrath, flanked by the
    other great lords, I looked into the sky and struggled to understand what I
    was seeing.

    It was as if the sky had simply been opened up, like a titanic blade had been
    drawn across its surface, opening a would in its flesh and revealing what lay
    underneath. An aurora writhed violently at its edges, red and purple, like
    raw skin around a forming bruise at the edges of folded space.

    Unlike the cut of a blade, though, the wound in the sky was not straight and
    clean, but jagged, like it had been torn open with claws and teeth, or blunt
    force. Around the aurora, the sky was gray and forlorn, and there was an
    impression of malformation, like the sky—like all of Epheotus—was being
    bent toward the wound.

    Like a black hole.

    But the hole itself was not the thing that made my blood run like ice water
    in my veins.

    The wound wasn’t simply an opening into the void, to the black-purple of
    the aetheric realm or the star-dampled emptiness of deep space. On the
    other side, there was a different sky, still cloud-filled and light blue, fading
    to purple and then black at the edges. And within that sky, a blue globe.
    Two landmasses broke up the blue with greens and browns. One, a simple
    square or diamond, carved in half by a rough slash of mountains. The other,
    jagged and broken, a shape roughly like a twisted, horned skull…

    And between them, a vast and empty sea.

    “Dicathen. Alacrya.”

    I stood as if in a dream, seeing a world that didn’t quite connect properly in
    front of me, like I’d stepped from one room in a house only to end up in the
    wrong adjoining room.

    The view through the wound was imperfect, cut across by purple wind and
    distortion of light, but I knew what I was looking at: the rift that connected
    from Dicathen into Epheotus had been ripped open. Even as I watched, the
    distorted edges of the wound were widening, exposing more and more of
    the world beyond it.

    I swallowed, my feet heavy, my mind moving with all the smooth motion of
    rusty gears.

    Epheotus had been pulled from our world and contained within a barrier or
    bubble, housed outside of real space within a separate dimension,
    something akin to the aetheric realm. They pushed up against one another,
    with the barrier around Epheotus relying on the aetheric realm to exist. I’d
    known since the last keystone that Epheotus couldn’t survive indefinitely,
    but…

    I didn’t know what to do. I’d expected the slow turning of the asuras to my
    cause, the evacuation of Epheotus and reintegration of the asuras back into
    the physical world, to be a work of decades, even hundreds of years. But
    now, while I stood helpless, I watched the world on which I’d been reborn
    come closer and closer with each passing second.

    There was a soft gasp from behind me, and I turned to find Sylvie, Ellie,
    and Mom stumbled to a halt as they saw the wound. Regis was sprinting
    along behind them, taking in everything.

    Sylvie’s expression hardened, but I watched Ellie and Mom both teeter on
    the edge of mental collapse. Ellie sprinted to my side, wrapping her arms
    around me. Mom was a little more controlled, but only a little.

    “What’s happening?” Ellie asked in a breathless whisper at the same time
    that Mom said, “What does this mean, Arthur?”

    Standing with my family, I wanted to give any other answer, but I couldn’t.
    “I don’t know.”

    AGRONA VRITRA

    I leaned against the parapet and watched the sky ripple and open. The path
    into Epheotus, like the mouth of a waterskin that was being held shut, was
    now tearing wide, a rend in the sky that stretched from the Beast Glades of
    Dicathen, across the sea, and over Alacrya’s Basilisk Fang Mountains. A
    violent red and purple aurora surged at its edges as reality itself gave way,
    the barrier holding Epheotus in its own realm collapsing from the
    connection point outwards.

    “I tried to do this the easy way,” I said, staring up into the wounded sky.

    “All I wanted was the power that you’ve spent countless ages hiding. You
    could have died, but this world—both worlds—could have continued on,
    back in step with the natural order of their existence. But you just. Won’t.
    Let. Go.”

    My words caught as the tear opened wider. Through it, I began to see light
    and color.

    Home.

    Or, what once might have been home. Not anymore.

    “Everything you’ve built, everything you’ve clutched onto from the very
    beginning, is going to crumble. And I will take what I need by sifting
    through the wreckage.”

    A/N: Hi everyone! Lots of exciting things are in the works, so my schedule
    has been busy. I usually go over my chapters a few times before I post it,
    but I haven't had the time to do so for this chapter yet. A revised one will be
    updated later today(it'll likely just be a few proofread changes). I wanted to
    thank everyone for their support. The 2-week hiatus for the novel will begin
    next week!
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  3. Offline
    + 00 -
    Будуть нові глави???
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  4. Offline
    + 20 -
    So did author give up on the book?
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    1. Offline
      + 00 -
      Схоже кінця кінцю не буде
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  5. Offline
    + 00 -
    Хтось взагалі ще переводить цей тайтл ?
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  6. Offline
    + 31 -
    Arthur getting message that there are weird mana explosion that literally one shot Scythes - gonna chill and hunt......... I hope Dicathen is destroyed too with Tessia cuz he deserves this.
    Only thing MC does is going along with flow - 0 IQ after having relived his life 21041 times in simulation, where he saw how Agrona f#ckin rekt him every time.....
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    1. Offline
      + 10 -
      yeah the whole hunt is some bs didnt go with the environment of the whole situation in the land of the lessers.
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    2. Online Offline
      + 10 -
      As a past king diplomacy is important. All the Asuras play mind games and he wants to get things right before he heads back especially with Kezzess feeling Agrona has been dealth with, he could come for the humans next
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