Date: TC1853.11.14
Location: Thornwall / Dead Forest / Nexus Point
Dawn ca like rcy.
The eastern sky lightened by degrees — gray, then gold, then the clean white light of a sun that didn’t know or care what had happened beneath it during the night. The clicking stopped first. Then the rustling. Then the particular subsonic hum that had pressed against the walls for seven hours, and the silence that replaced it was the silence of predators retreating rather than prey surviving.
Raven stood on the wall and watched the tree line. The dead forest was still in the morning light — gray trunks, bare branches, the scorched killing ground between wall and woods where she’d fought the night before. Black marks on the earth where Skulkers had dissolved. A larger depression where the Breaker had collapsed, the soil still faintly warm.
No remains. Shadowspawn didn’t leave remains. They ca from the void, and they returned to it, and the only evidence of their passing was absence — energy drained, life consud, the particular emptiness that said sothing was here, and now it isn’t.
She hadn’t slept. Seven hours on the wall, burning lamplight, and watchfulness against the dark, and her body was running on cultivation reserves rather than rest. CC Level 5 could sustain that for days. She’d done it before — on other worlds, in worse situations, with less power and more enemies.
But she’d had allies in those lives. Teams. People who could share the watch and cover the gaps. Here, alone, every hour of vigilance ca from the sa reserves she’d need to fight with.
And the Breaker had cost more than it should have.
Below, a door opened. Then another. Heads appeared at shutters. The particular, tentative ergence of people testing whether the world was still there after a night spent listening to sounds they couldn’t explain — thunder without clouds, sothing grinding and screaming, the roar of fire that wasn’t fire.
Corwin appeared at the wall’s base. He looked up at her with an expression she recognized. She’d seen it before, across lifetis, in the faces of people who’d spent the night in terror and found their defender still standing at dawn.
"You’re alive," he said.
"I am."
"What was that? The sounds — the fire, the..." He trailed off. Found the words. "People thought the walls were falling. We could feel the ground shake."
"The walls are fine. I killed approximately forty of the smaller creatures and one of the larger ones." She let that register. "Tonight there’ll be fewer. But there’ll still be enough unless I deal with the source."
"The source?"
"Their nest. Three kiloters into the hills, at an old energy nexus. That’s where they’re being made." She looked east. The dead forest waited — gray and still in the morning light, patient in the way that a trap was patient. "I’m going in. During daylight, they retreat underground. I have roughly ten hours before dusk."
Corwin stared at her. "Into the forest. Where two hundred soldiers—"
"Went in blind, without knowledge of what they were fighting, and were destroyed because of it." Raven’s voice wasn’t cruel. Just precise. "I know what I’m walking into. I know how to kill them. And I know that every day that nest exists, it’s drawing energy from the ley lines and producing more of them. This doesn’t get better with waiting."
He didn’t argue. He’d spent three weeks watching his town die by inches. The arithtic of doing nothing was clear.
"What do you need from us?"
"Sa as last night. Everyone inside by dusk. Every light on the walls. And—" She paused. "If I’m not back by dawn tomorrow, send another rider. Not to Seven Peaks. To every town west of here. Tell them what’s coming. Tell them to run."
The weight of that settled on Corwin’s shoulders like a physical thing. He nodded. Once.
Raven dropped from the wall.
***
The dead forest slled like nothing.
That was the worst part — not the sight of gray, lifeless trunks or the crunch of dead undergrowth beneath her boots or the absolute silence that pressed against her ears like cotton. The sll. Forests were supposed to carry scent: damp earth, decomposing leaves, the resinous tang of bark, the living chemistry of millions of organisms cycling through birth and death and renewal. This forest had been scrubbed. Every molecule of organic scent consud, leaving air that tasted flat and dead and wrong.
Raven moved east. Carefully. Not rushing — daylight gave her ti, but daylight didn’t an safety. The Skulkers retreated from direct sun, but in the shadows beneath the canopy — even a dead canopy with no leaves, the trunks themselves cast shadows — they could lurk. Dormant. Waiting.
She saw the first one thirty ters in.
It was pressed against the shaded side of an oak trunk — motionless, limbs folded tight against its body, the matte-black surface blending into the shadow with the near-perfect camouflage of a creature designed to be invisible in low light. In direct sun it would have been obvious. In the dappled shade of dead branches, it was a dark patch against a dark surface.
Raven didn’t slow down. She extended her hand as she passed and sent a lance of dragon fire through its center mass. The Skulker didn’t have ti to unfold — it dissolved where it clung, Necrotic Essence, dispersing with a soft hiss, and Raven walked on without breaking stride.
Two more in the next hundred ters. Both dormant. Both destroyed before they could react.
At five hundred ters, the forest thickened — not with life, but with death. The trees grew denser, their trunks closer together, and the shadows between them deeper despite the morning sun. The ley line corruption was intense here. Her cultivation senses registered it as pressure — a constant, grinding drain on the ambient spiritual energy that made her skin itch and her ridians ache.
She killed four more Skulkers. Each one dormant, each one tucked into shadow, each one dissolving under dragon fire with the particular ease of targets that couldn’t fight back. Too easy. The nest should have posted sentries. Should have had so kind of early warning.
Unless it did, and she was ant to reach it.
At one kiloter, she found the first evidence of the garrison.
Not armor — that had been arranged on the road as a ssage. This was... different. Boot prints in the dead earth, pressed deep by running feet. Furrows where sothing had been dragged. A sword, snapped at the hilt, the blade driven into the ground at an angle that suggested it had been dropped during a retreat, not placed. And scattered across a clearing between dead oaks — formation crystals. Standard military issue, the kind soldiers carried for communication and light. All drained. Dark. Cold.
Two hundred n had fought here. The clearing showed the signs — scorched earth where cultivation attacks had struck, gouges where defensive formations had been erected and broken, the particular chaos of a military unit that had tried to establish a periter and been overwheld from every direction simultaneously.
No bodies. No blood. Just equipnt and silence.
Raven stood in the clearing and let the information settle. They’d made it one kiloter before the Skulkers hit them from every side. The garrison had been trained for conventional combat — bandits, territorial disputes, the occasional spirit beast. Not void-constructs that fed on spiritual energy and moved in coordinated waves. The soldiers’ cultivation attacks had drawn the swarm like moths to fla. Their formation arrays had been drained before they could activate. And whatever the Skulkers hadn’t finished, the Breakers had.
She moved on.
***
At two kiloters, the shadows deepened enough that Raven switched from fire to lightning.
The crescent mark behind her shoulders flared — electric blue, bright enough to cast its own light, the ancient resonance of a Stormcaller who hadn’t walked Ascara in six centuries. Lightning crackled between her fingers, not the shaped spiritual energy that most cultivators produced when they mimicked elental attacks, but real lightning. Atmospheric charge pulled from the sky itself, channeled through the crescent mark’s connection to Ascara’s weather systems, carrying the planet’s own signature.
The difference mattered. Dragon fire unmade Skulkers through creative essence — the constructive frequency of a being that built rather than destroyed. Lightning unmade them through planetary authority — the raw statent of a world that said you do not belong here.
Both worked. Lightning was faster.
She walked through the deepening forest with electricity dancing along her arms and the crescent burning behind her shoulders, and the dormant Skulkers she passed didn’t just dissolve — they cracked. The void-hardened chitin that gave them structural integrity shattered under lightning’s touch like glass under a hamr, the Necrotic Essence inside flashing to nothing in a burst of blue-white light that left afterimages on the dead trees.
Seven. Twelve. Eighteen. She counted kills not out of pride but out of tactical necessity — every Skulker destroyed in daylight was one fewer she’d face at dusk.
At two and a half kiloters, the forest opened.
Not a natural clearing. A created one. The trees hadn’t been cut — they’d been consud. Trunks that had stood for centuries reduced to stumps that crumbled at a touch, the wood not rotted but drained, every fiber of organic material stripped of the energy that gave it structure. A circle of destruction roughly a hundred ters across, centered on a depression in the earth that glowed with a sickly, pulsing light.
The nexus point.
Raven stopped at the clearing’s edge. Took stock.
The nexus was old — pre-Cataclysm, like the map had said. Once it had been a natural convergence of ley lines, a place where the planet’s spiritual energy pooled and concentrated, the kind of location that ancient cultivators would have built temples on and modern surveyors marked as "inactive." Eight hundred years of post-Cataclysm energy depletion had drained it dry.
But the shadowspawn had found it. Tapped it. Forced it open like a wound and poured their own energy into the gap, creating a fusion of Ascaran ley line residue and Necrotic Essence that pulsed with a frequency Raven felt in her bones.
The nest wasn’t on the nexus point. The nest was the nexus point. The corruption had fused with the ancient energy node, repurposing its structure, turning what had once been a natural convergence into a manufacturing plant for void-constructs.
And at the center of the clearing, half-subrged in the corrupted earth, sothing was forming.
It wasn’t finished. That was the first thing she registered — the shape was incomplete, still growing, still drawing material from the corrupted ley lines to build itself layer by layer. But the outline was clear enough. Larger than a Breaker. Much larger. Four ters tall, maybe five, with a body structure that suggested neither the speed of Skulkers nor the brute force of Breakers but sothing else entirely. Sothing designed for a different purpose.
A Warden.
Raven’s breath caught.
Wardens weren’t fighters. They were controllers. The intelligence behind the swarm — the thing that coordinated Skulker waves, directed Breaker assaults, and arranged garrison armor on stakes as psychological warfare. A Warden could command a thousand Skulkers simultaneously, adapt tactics in real ti, learn from every engagent, and modify the swarm’s behavior to counter whatever it faced.
This one wasn’t fully ford. Another three days — maybe four, at the rate the corrupted nexus was feeding it — and it would be operational. A thinking, strategic, adaptive intelligence directing an army of void-constructs against a border that had no defense.
Not just Thornwall. The Warden would see Thornwall as a food source, not a target. Once operational, it would expand — east, west, north, south — consuming everything in its path, growing its forces, establishing new nests at every ley line node it could corrupt, until the entire eastern borderland was a dead zone and the swarm was large enough to threaten cities.
Raven had to destroy it. Now. Before it finished forming.
She stepped into the clearing.
The ground was wrong underfoot — spongy, yielding, the earth itself corrupted by Necrotic Essence until it felt less like soil and more like flesh. The glow from the nexus intensified as she approached, the pulse quickening, responding to her presence the way a living thing might respond to a threat.
The dormant Skulkers she’d killed on the way in hadn’t been sentries. They’d been sacrifices. Placed along the approach to drain spiritual energy from anyone who destroyed them — each kill, bleeding a tiny fraction of the attacker’s power into the nexus through the Necrotic Essence dispersal.
She’d killed eighteen on the way in. Eighteen small drains on her reserves. Not enough to matter individually. Cumulatively—
Clever, she thought. They’re already learning from the fight on the wall.
Lightning crackled along her arms. The crescent mark blazed. She gathered everything she had — dragon fire in her right hand, planetary lightning in her left, the concentrated power of a CC Level 5 cultivator who’d been rebuilt by forces older than civilization — and aid it at the half-ford Warden.
The clearing erupted.
Dragon fire hit the Warden’s incomplete body from the right — golden-white, singing with creative authority, burning into the Necrotic Essence with the particular hunger of a force designed to destroy void-constructs. Lightning hit from the left — electric blue, carrying Ascara’s atmospheric signature, cracking the half-ford carapace with a sound like thunder trapped in a bottle.
The Warden scread.
Not the grinding tal-tear of a Breaker. Sothing higher. Sothing that carried aning — a signal, broadcast through the nexus point’s corrupted energy network, received by every shadowspawn within kiloters.
The ground beneath Raven’s feet moved.
Not earthquake. Not shifting soil. The earth itself opened — splits, cracks, fissures radiating from the nexus point like veins from a heart — and from those cracks, things poured upward.
Not Skulkers.
Void Skitters — smaller, faster, hundreds of them boiling from the corrupted earth like spiders from a disturbed nest. Dog-sized, obsidian carapace, eight blade-tipped legs, no eyes. They sward over the clearing’s floor in a black tide that covered the ground in seconds.
And behind them, rising from the largest fissure with the grinding inevitability of a mountain forming in fast-forward: the second Breaker.
Bigger than the first. Wider. The void-hardened carapace thicker, the wedge-hands larger, the battering-ram head ridged with extra plating that said evolved. The swarm had learned from last night’s engagent. The Skulkers had reported what killed their Breaker. And this one had been built to counter it.
Raven was surrounded.
Skitters covering the ground in every direction. A Breaker advancing from the north. The half-ford Warden behind her, still screaming its signal into the network, still drawing power from the corrupted nexus, still growing despite the damage she’d inflicted.
Ten hours of daylight. She’d used three getting here.
Seven hours until dark. And if dusk caught her in this clearing, with the nest active and the Warden broadcasting and the swarm converging from every direction—
She wouldn’t see dawn.
Raven made a decision.
Not retreat — she couldn’t leave the Warden to finish forming. Not a sustained fight — the numbers were wrong, and every minute she spent killing Skitters was a minute the Warden used to repair. Not fire alone — the Breaker was built to resist it.
Lightning.
She reached up. Not taphorically — physically, hands raised toward the sky visible through the dead canopy, the crescent mark behind her shoulders blazing like a second sun. She reached for the atmosphere the way a Stormcaller was designed to reach, through the connection that linked her to Ascara’s weather systems, through the resonance that hadn’t been heard on this world in six centuries.
And Ascara answered.
The sky darkened. Not clouds — the atmosphere itself responding to a Stormcaller’s call, moisture condensing, charge building, the planet’s own electromagnetic systems redirecting at the request of soone who carried the crescent authority. It happened fast — faster than natural weather, because this wasn’t natural weather. This was a conversation between a cultivator and a planet, and the planet rembered what Stormcallers were, even if the world had forgotten.
Thunder. Real thunder. The kind that made the ground shake and the dead trees vibrate and the Skitters on the clearing floor freeze in their advance because sothing older than their creation was speaking.
Lightning struck.
Not a bolt — a column. A sustained discharge that connected sky to earth through the nexus point’s center, pouring Ascara’s atmospheric energy directly into the corrupted node with a force that transcended anything cultivation could produce. The planet’s signature, raw and unfiltered, channeled through Raven’s crescent mark and aid with the precision of soone who’d learned to partner with storms rather than command them.
The nexus point cracked.
The corrupted earth split. The sickly glow that had pulsed from the node stuttered, flickered, dimd. The Necrotic Essence that had fused with the ancient ley lines shuddered as planetary energy flooded through it — not burning it away, but displacing it, the way floodwater displaced sewage. Ascara’s own energy reclaiming territory that had been stolen.
The half-ford Warden shrieked. Its incomplete body convulsed — the lightning was tearing through it, disrupting the Necrotic Essence that held its structure together, and without the nexus feeding it, it couldn’t regenerate fast enough. Pieces fell away. Limbs that hadn’t finished forming dissolved. The torso cracked.
But it wasn’t dead.
And the Breaker was still coming.
The lightning column faded. Raven dropped her hands — arms shaking, ridians burning, the crescent mark dimming from blazing to flickering. That call had cost her. More than the Breaker fight. More than the entire night on the wall. Stormcaller abilities drew on her spiritual reserves and on her physical body as a conduit, and channeling a sustained planetary discharge through human ridians wasn’t free.
The Skitters recovered. The freezing broke. Hundreds of them, surging forward, blade-tipped legs covering the shattered ground.
The Breaker charged.
Raven set her stance. Dragon fire in her right hand, the dregs of lightning crackling in her left, blood running from her nose — the first sign of genuine overexertion, the ridian stress that happened when you channeled more energy than your body was designed to contain.
Seven hours until dark.
The Warden was damaged. The nexus was cracked. But neither was destroyed, and she was surrounded, and the part of her mind that had survived a hundred deaths calculated odds that it didn’t like.
She fought anyway.
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