Date: TC1853.11.13 (afternoon to night)
Location: Thornwall
The gates were barred from the inside.
Raven stood on the road fifty ters from the eastern entrance and studied them — heavy timber reinforced with iron bands, the kind of practical construction that border towns maintained against weather and the occasional territorial dispute, not against anything that could climb vertical stone. A Codex shrine sat to the right of the gate, small, weathered, the candles inside dark. Nobody had tended it in days.
Above the gate, on the wall’s parapet, a face appeared. Then another. Then a crossbow, aid at her chest with the shaking precision of soone who’d been scared for so long their hands couldn’t rember steady.
"Who’s there?" The voice cracked. Young. Male. The particular tone of a militia mber who’d been assigned wall duty and prayed every night that nothing would test the assignnt.
"My na is Raven. I’m the leader of the Luminous Dawn Sect on Seven Peaks." She kept her hands visible. Open. No weapons. No fire. Just a woman on a road, alone, smaller than the crisis she’d co to fight. "Your constable sent a ssage. I’m here to help."
Silence. The crossbow didn’t lower.
A second voice — older, rougher, carrying the weight of soone who’d been making decisions nobody should have to make. "Let see her."
Footsteps on stone. The crossbow holder shuffled aside, and a man appeared at the parapet. Mid-forties, weathered, the sa face Raven had seen in the formation crystal recording. Thinner now. Harder. Three days of stubble and eyes that had forgotten what sleep looked like.
Corwin Harlan, constable of Thornwall, looked down at her.
"You ca alone," he said.
"I did."
"We asked for help. For an army. For the garrison command to send soldiers, or the regional governor to send cultivators, or anyone with the power to fight what’s out there." His voice was flat. Not angry — past angry, into the territory where emotions had been burned away and only function remained. "And they sent one person."
"They didn’t send anyone," Raven said. "I ca because I heard you. Now open the gate before the sun gets any lower, because I need to see what you’re dealing with before dark."
A pause. Corwin studied her from the wall — this slight woman in formation-reinforced combat robes, no sword, no army, no visible reason to believe she could do anything the two hundred Imperial soldiers hadn’t managed.
Then he turned and gave the order.
The gate opened.
***
Thornwall was dying.
Not dramatically — not the burning wreckage of a town under siege, not the scattered bodies of a massacre. Slower than that. Quieter. The particular death of a place where people had stopped believing tomorrow would be better than today and were simply enduring until it wasn’t.
The streets were empty despite the afternoon sun. Every door shut. Every window shuttered. The well in the central square — she recognized it from her dreams, the wooden cover, the triple-nded rope — had a guard posted beside it. A teenage girl with a woodcutting axe and eyes that were twenty years older than her face.
"Water runs happen twice a day," Corwin said, walking beside Raven through the square. "Dawn and noon. Groups of ten, ard escort, two minutes maximum at the well. Anyone caught outside alone after those windows—" He stopped. Shrugged. "We stopped enforcing the rule. People enforce it themselves now."
Raven looked at the buildings. Listened. Behind the closed doors — breathing. Whispered conversations. A child crying, muffled quickly. The sounds of twenty-eight hundred people packed into a space designed for comrce and daily life, now converted into a cage they’d locked themselves inside.
"How many have you lost?" she asked.
"Nineteen confird. Another twelve... unaccounted for." Corwin’s jaw tightened. "Farms outside the walls mostly. People who went to check livestock, or tried to reach the next town, or thought daylight ant safe." He paused. "Daylight ans safer. Not safe. The things don’t co out in full sun, but in shadow — tree cover, buildings, the walls themselves, when the sun’s at the wrong angle — they’re there. Waiting."
"Show the eastern wall."
He led her through streets that should have been alive with the noise of a market town in harvest season. Instead — silence. Footsteps echoing off the stone. The occasional face at a shutter crack, watching the stranger with the particular hope of people who had nothing else left.
The eastern wall faced the hills. The dead forest. And there, arranged on the road outside the gate with the geotric precision she’d seen in the crystal recording, was the garrison.
Two hundred sets of armor.
Up close, it was worse than the footage. Each piece had been cleaned. Polished. Positioned on wooden stakes that sothing had fashioned from the forest’s dead trees — sharpened with a precision that suggested tools, not claws. The breastplates faced the gate. The helts sat atop the stakes like heads on pikes, eye slits dark and empty.
No blood. No remains. No indication of what had happened to the people who’d worn them except their absence.
"They arranged the first set the night after the garrison went into the forest," Corwin said. He stood beside Raven but wouldn’t look at the display. Not anymore. "One set per night for a week. Then they did the rest all at once. We woke up, and there were two hundred empty suits of armor staring at us."
Raven walked along the display. Studied the arrangent. The spacing was even — exactly two ters between each stake. The orientation was uniform — every breastplate facing the gate at the sa angle. The polish was ticulous, the iron catching afternoon light with a gleam that mocked the n who’d died wearing it.
This wasn’t predation. It was communication.
We took your warriors. We cleaned their shells. We showed you what’s left. And we did it with the kind of care that proves we understand exactly what this ans to you.
Skulkers didn’t do this. Skulkers were reconnaissance units — fast, efficient, focused on mapping territory and identifying targets. This level of psychological warfare suggested sothing else was coordinating. Sothing with intelligence. Sothing that understood human fear well enough to weaponize it.
A Warden, maybe. Or worse.
"Take to the wall," Raven said. "I need to see the terrain."
***
From the eastern parapet, the situation was clear, and it was bad.
The dead forest began two hundred ters from the wall. What had been a living hillside of mixed hardwood — oak, ash, beech, the kind of established woodland that took centuries to grow — was now a graveyard of standing trunks. Gray bark. No leaves. Branches like bone fingers against the sky. The ground between the trees was bare earth, stripped of grass and undergrowth, and the forest floor detritus that sustained a healthy ecosystem.
The ley line corruption was visible to her cultivator’s senses. The spiritual energy that should have flowed through this terrain like blood through veins was simply absent. Not depleted — consud. The ley lines were hollow tubes, drained dry, the spiritual equivalent of a corpse’s arteries.
And at the center of the dead zone, maybe three kiloters into the hills, she could feel the nexus point. The ancient energy node that had been marked "inactive" on her map. It wasn’t inactive anymore. It pulsed with a signature that made her skin crawl — void energy, concentrated, the particular frequency of Necrotic Essence that had been gathered and compressed and shaped into sothing functional.
A nest. They’d built their nest on the nexus point, tapping whatever residual energy remained in the ancient node to sustain and expand their numbers.
"How many do you see at night?" Raven asked.
Corwin stood beside her, his militia’s crossbows lined along the wall — twelve weapons, manned by volunteers who’d never trained for anything worse than target practice. "Hard to say. They move fast. Sotis it looks like dozens. Sotis hundreds. The sounds—" He stopped. Swallowed. "The sounds suggest more than we can see."
"Dozens to hundreds visible," Raven murmured. "Plus whatever’s staying in the forest." She calculated. A nest this size, feeding for three weeks on a ley line nexus, with unlimited biomass from the forest and livestock... "Skulkers mostly. The fast ones — six limbs, no eyes, click when they move. You’ve seen those?"
"Yes." Corwin’s voice was very controlled.
"Anything bigger? Slower? Heavier build, more armored, maybe four limbs instead of six?"
"One. Maybe two. We saw them once, the second week. Bigger than the others. Moved differently — not fast, but... deliberate. Like they were inspecting." He paused. "They stood at the tree line and looked at the wall for an hour. Then they left."
Corwin turned to face her fully. Sothing had shifted in his expression — the flat exhaustion cracking open just enough to let a different emotion through. Not hope. Not yet. But the raw, desperate relief of a man who’d spent three weeks screaming into silence and finally heard soone answer.
"You know what they are," he said. "You’re asking about types. Sizes. Behavior patterns. The Empire sent two hundred soldiers who didn’t know what they were walking into, and they’re decorating stakes outside my gate." His voice shook. Just once. "Who are you? How do you know this?"
"I know enough to help," Raven said. "And right now that matters more than how."
He stared at her for a long mont. Then sothing in his shoulders loosened — not relaxing, not exactly, but the particular release of a man who’d been carrying a weight alone and just realized soone else could see it.
"Yeah," he said quietly. "Yeah, it does."
Breakers. At least one, possibly two. Assessnt units — heavier, stronger, designed for fortification assault. If they’d been inspecting the walls, they were calculating when and how to attack.
Which ant this wasn’t a nest that had settled into passive feeding. This was a nest that was preparing for active assault.
"How long until dark?" she asked.
Corwin checked the sky. "Three hours. Maybe less."
Three hours. To prepare a town of twenty-eight hundred people — untrained, terrified, locked behind walls that would crumble under a Breaker’s assault — for the first night in three weeks where sothing might actually fight back.
Raven turned to face the town. The rooftops. The streets. The well with its teenage guard. Twenty-eight hundred people who’d sent a crystal to a mountain because nobody else was listening.
"I need every lamp, torch, and light source you have," she said. "Every barrel of oil. Every reflective surface — mirrors, polished tal, glass. Anything that catches or creates light. I need them on the walls, and I need them by sundown."
"Light?"
"They retreat from sunlight. Sustained light sources won’t kill them, but it narrows their approach vectors. Forces them to concentrate where the shadows are thickest instead of coming from everywhere at once." She was already calculating lines of fire, choke points, and coverage gaps. "I also need your people off the streets and behind solid walls. Not shutters — walls. Interior rooms with no windows. Pack them tight. Nobody goes outside once the sun drops below the hills. Nobody."
"What about you?"
Raven looked east. At the dead forest. At the hills where sothing was waiting with the patience of a predator that had never t resistance.
"I’ll be on the wall."
***
The sun touched the western horizon at the fifteenth hour.
The town had moved with the desperate efficiency of people given clear instructions by soone who spoke with authority. Every lantern in Thornwall burned on the walls — oil lamps, tallow candles, formation lights stripped from the three buildings that had them, even a handful of luminescent moss jars that a local herbalist had contributed. The light wasn’t uniform — it flickered and guttered and left gaps where shadows pooled — but it was sothing. A periter. A declaration that said we’re still here.
Polished tal sheets hung at intervals along the parapet, angled to catch the lamplight and throw it outward. Not bright enough to mimic daylight. Bright enough to create a zone of illumination that would force approaching creatures to cross visible ground.
The streets behind the walls were empty. Twenty-eight hundred people cramd into interior rooms — the town’s three stone-built cellars, the Codex shrine’s basent, the constable’s reinforced station house. Families packed together. Children held close. The particular silence of prey animals waiting for the predator to pass.
Raven stood alone on the eastern wall.
She’d sent the militia inside. Corwin had argued — briefly, with the tired conviction of a man who knew he was outmatched but couldn’t stomach standing down. She’d looked at his crossbow, at the twelve volunteers behind him, and said: "Your courage is real. It matters. And if you stand on this wall tonight, every one of you becos a target that I have to protect instead of fight. You serve your town better alive and inside than brave and drained on this parapet."
He’d gone. They all had. With the reluctant obedience of people who’d been given a reason that made sense, even though they hated it.
The sun dropped below the hills.
The light changed. Golden to amber to the particular gray-blue of twilight that said in between. The dead forest darkened. The shadows between the standing trunks deepened, connected, beca continuous — a blanket of dark that crept down the hillside like sothing alive.
Raven breathed. Settled her stance. Felt her cultivation — CC Level 5, Resonant Anchor, spiritual energy running through ridians that had been rebuilt at the molecular level by forces older than human civilization. She was the strongest cultivator on this continent. Possibly the strongest on Ascara.1
And she was about to find out if that was enough.
The clicking started.
Not from one direction. From the entire eastern tree line — a wave of sound that built from nothing to everywhere in the space of three heartbeats. Clicks. Scrapes. The wet articulation of limbs with too many joints. Dozens of sources. Hundreds. More than she’d estimated. More than the nest should have produced in three weeks of feeding.
They’ve been here longer than you thought, said the part of her mind that calculated while the rest of her prepared to fight. The reports started three weeks ago. They arrived before that. Weeks before. Feeding quietly, building numbers, establishing territory before anyone noticed.
The first Skulker ca over the tree line.
Fast. Faster than the ones she rembered from other worlds — six limbs covering ground in a scuttling rush that ate distance like fire ate paper. Matte-black body, eyeless head, the vertical slit of a mouth opening and closing with each breath. It hit the open ground between the forest and the wall and paused. Tested the lamplight with one extended limb. Pulled back. Circled toward a shadow gap where two lanterns’ coverage didn’t quite overlap.
Smart. Learning in real ti.
A second followed. A third. Five. Ten. Twenty Skulkers erging from the dead forest in a spreading arc, each one finding the shadow paths between the lights, each one moving toward the wall with the coordinated purpose of a pack that had hunted together long enough to communicate without sound.
Raven didn’t wait for them to reach the wall.
She jumped.
Not off the wall — from it. Launched herself twenty ters in a burst of spiritual energy that carried her to the center of the open ground between the wall and the tree line, landing in a crouch that cracked the packed earth beneath her feet.
Every Skulker stopped.
Thirty of them. Frozen in mid-stride, eyeless faces turning toward the point of impact where sothing had just landed that burned with more spiritual energy than everything they’d consud in three weeks combined. She could feel their attention lock on — not sight, not sound, but a void-sense that registered living energy the way a shark’s lateral line registered vibration.
For one heartbeat, nothing moved.
Then they ca.
All of them. At once. The coordinated patience dissolved into a feeding frenzy — thirty Skulkers converging on a single point from every direction, six-limbed bodies covering the ground in bursts of impossible speed, mouths opening, the clicking becoming a roar.
Raven let the dragon fire co.
Golden-white flas erupted from her hands, her arms, her entire body — not the controlled, precise fire she used in demonstrations or training, but the full, unrestrained blaze of sothing older than cultivation. Older than the Cataclysm. The fire didn’t just burn. It sang — a frequency that carried the dragon’s creative authority, the signature of a being that existed to build foundations and forge strength from raw material.
The first wave of Skulkers hit the fire and dissolved.
Not burned — unmade. The void-infused Necrotic Essence that held their bodies together ca apart at contact with dragon fire, the way darkness ca apart at contact with light. No ash. No remains. One mont, they were six-limbed horrors moving at killing speed; the next, they were nothing. Void energy dispersing into the air that shuddered at its passage.
Six gone in the first second. Eight in the second. The fire swept outward in an arc that turned the killing ground into a furnace of golden-white light, and the Skulkers that hadn’t committed to the charge scattered — pulling back, regrouping, circling to the edges where the fire’s reach fell short.
Raven advanced. Toward the forest. Toward the nest.
Three Skulkers ca from her left. She pivoted, sent a lance of concentrated fire through the first — it dissolved mid-leap — and caught the second with a sweeping wave that took its legs. It crashed, writhing, the stumps where its limbs had been smoking with golden light. She crushed its head with a stomp reinforced by spiritual energy before it could regenerate.
The third one reached her.
Its limbs wrapped around her arm — fast, so fast, the points digging through her formation-reinforced robes into skin. Cold. The void-cold she rembered from other worlds, the sensation of sothing trying to drain her spiritual energy through direct contact.
It couldn’t. Not at CC Level 5. Not with ridians reinforced by dragon bone and phoenix muscle. The drain was a trickle against a dam — noticeable, irritating, nothing more. She grabbed the thing by its featureless head, channeled fire directly into its core, and felt it co apart in her hands.
But there were more.
More than thirty. More than fifty. They poured from the tree line in waves — each wave learning from the last, adjusting approach angles, testing the radius of her fire, probing for the limits of her reach and reaction ti. When she burned left, they struck right. When she advanced, they circled behind. Not mindless. Not the simple swarm tactics of creatures running on instinct.
Coordinated. Directed. Commanded.
Raven burned six more. Twelve. Twenty. The ground around her was scorched black, the air thick with the acrid nothing-sll of void energy dissipating, and still they ca. She was killing them — killing them efficiently, killing them permanently — and it didn’t matter because there were always more erging from the dead forest, always more clicking in the dark beyond the fire’s light, always more testing, probing, learning.
They’re buying ti, she realized. The Skulkers aren’t trying to overwhelm . They’re studying . Finding my patterns. Reporting back to—
The ground shook.
Not an earthquake. Footsteps. Heavy. Deliberate. The particular rhythm of sothing massive moving through the forest with the unhurried confidence of a creature that had never t anything it couldn’t break.
The Skulkers pulled back. All of them. Simultaneously. One mont, the killing ground was full of six-limbed horrors; the next, they’d lted into the shadows at the tree line’s edge, clicking softly, waiting.
The Breaker erged from the forest.
Twice Raven’s height. Four limbs — two legs like columns of void-hardened chitin, two arms that ended in flat, wedge-shaped structures designed for one purpose: breaking things that other things couldn’t break. Walls. Fortifications. Barriers. The body was dense, armored, a walking siege engine wrapped in matte-black carapace that absorbed her firelight without reflection. No eyes. A head like a battering ram, ridged and sloped to deflect impacts from above.
It stopped at the tree line. Studied the burning ground. Studied her.
Then it charged.
Not fast — not Skulker-fast — but with a montum that made speed irrelevant. Three thousand kilograms of void-construct moving in a straight line, each footfall cracking earth, arms spread wide, the wedge-hands sweeping forward to catch anything in its path and break it against anything behind.
Raven braced. Channeled everything she had into a concentrated blast — not a wave, not an arc, but a spear of dragon fire aid directly at the Breaker’s center mass.
The fire hit.
The Breaker didn’t dissolve.
It staggered. Slowed. The carapace where the spear struck glowed cherry-red, cracking, void energy leaking from the wound like black smoke. But it kept coming. Slower, damaged, the charge broken into a grinding advance — but still coming, still closing the distance with the chanical persistence of a thing that had been built to absorb exactly this kind of punishnt.
Raven hit it again. Another spear, sa point. The cracked carapace shattered, revealing the interior — not flesh, not organs, just compressed Necrotic Essence in a vaguely structural arrangent, dense and dark and wrong. The fire burned into it. The Breaker made a sound — low, grinding, the vocal equivalent of tal bending — and swung.
She dodged. Barely. The wedge-hand passed close enough to clip her shoulder, and even that glancing contact sent her skidding three ters sideways, boots cutting furrows in the scorched earth. The impact reverberated through her reinforced skeleton — dragon bone flexing, absorbing force that would have pulverized a normal human structure.
It hurt. Actually hurt. The first ti in months that anything on Ascara had caused her genuine pain.
The Breaker turned. Slow. Grinding. One arm hung lower than the other — the fire damage was working, the Necrotic Essence losing cohesion where she’d burned through the carapace. But it was still standing. Still functional. Still coming.
Behind it, in the forest, the Skulkers clicked.
Raven tasted blood. Wiped her mouth. Set her stance.
And attacked.
Not fire this ti — not only fire. She closed the distance in a burst of speed that cracked the sound barrier, spiritual energy compressed into raw velocity, and drove her fist into the Breaker’s damaged chest. Dragon fire channeled through flesh and bone, concentrated into a point rather than a blast, burning directly into the wound she’d already opened.
The Breaker scread. That grinding, tal-tearing sound, amplified, vibrating through the dead forest and the walls of Thornwall and the bones of twenty-eight hundred people huddled in darkness behind them.
Raven didn’t stop. She hit it again. Again. Each blow driving fire deeper into the thing’s core, each impact cracking more carapace, each second reducing the Necrotic Essence that held it together. The Breaker swung — she ducked, pivoted, drove a fire-wrapped elbow into its knee joint. The leg buckled. It dropped to one side, still swinging, the wedge-hands carving gouges in the earth.
She jumped. Landed on its shoulder ridge. Pressed both hands against the top of its head and poured fire into it until her ridians ached and her vision blurred and the dragon’s roar in her blood was so loud it drowned out everything else.
The Breaker dissolved.
Not cleanly — not the instant unmaking of the Skulkers. A slow collapse, section by section, the Necrotic Essence losing structure and falling apart like a sandcastle under rising tide. First, the arms. Then the legs. Then the torso crumbling inward, the head tilting, the void energy dispersing in a rush of cold air that slled like nothing at all.
Raven landed on the ground where it had stood. Breathing hard. Hands shaking — not from fear, from exertion. That had cost more fire than she’d expected. More energy. More ti.
One Breaker. One.
The Skulkers in the tree line had gone silent. Watching. Processing. Whatever was coordinating them had just received a data point — the light-bearer can kill Breakers, but it takes ti and effort and leaves her winded.
They’d adapt. They always adapted.
Raven straightened. Scanned the tree line. Fifty? A hundred? Hard to count shapes that absorbed light. They weren’t advancing. Not now. The fire display and the Breaker’s death had created a pause — a recalculation — and that pause was the closest thing to a victory she’d get tonight.
She walked back to the wall. Slowly. Deliberately. Not running, not hurrying, projecting the calm authority of soone who’d done what she ca to do and could do it again.
Behind her, the dead forest clicked. Softly. Patiently.
On the wall, she sat. Leaned against the parapet. Listened to the town’s terrified silence and the creatures’ asured sounds and the particular frequency of a night that wasn’t over yet.
Dawn was seven hours away.
She didn’t close her eyes.
It’s not Raven’s cultivation that makes her the strongest, it’s the spiritual essence she has, as well as the spells and experience.
User Comments
0 comments from readers