Date: TC1853.11.13
Location: Eastern Empire — Seven Peaks to Thornwall (312km)
The sky was empty, and the wind was sharp, and the world below her was very, very small.
Raven flew east on a blade of compressed spiritual energy, two hundred ters above the farmland that stretched between the mountain ranges like a green-gold quilt stitched with rivers and roads. Sky-surfing at CC Level 5 was effortless — the blade responded to thought rather than effort, adjusting pitch and speed with the fluid precision of an extension of her own body. At this altitude, the Empire’s eastern territories unrolled below like a map made real. Villages. Towns. The dark thread of the Imperial Highway running north-south. Logging camps. Irrigation channels catching morning light.
People. Millions of them, going about their lives in the comfortable assumption that the worst thing that could happen was a bad harvest or a tax increase. Not knowing that three hundred kiloters ahead of her, sothing was climbing their walls at night and taking their neighbors one by one.
She pushed the blade faster.
The first hour was nothing but distance. The terrain shifted gradually — the mountainous terrain around Seven Peaks flattening into rolling foothills, then the broad agricultural plains of the Fifth and Sixth Districts. She passed over a town large enough to have formation-powered street lights and a tram station. People moved through their morning routines below. Carts on roads. Children walking to school.
Normal. Safe. The particular comfort of a civilization that hadn’t yet learned what was coming.
Raven didn’t let herself think about whether they’d be safe by winter’s end.
***
The mories ca uninvited.
They always did when she was alone. The noise of other people — their needs, their questions, their endless, beautiful, exhausting humanity — kept the past in its box. Alone, the box opened. The lid lifted on a hundred lifetis of accumulated experience, and the relevant fragnts floated to the surface like wreckage after a shipwreck.
She’d fought shadowspawn twice before. Two worlds, two lives, two sets of mories that lived in her bones like old scars.
The first ti — a world of endless plains and fortified cities connected by underground rail. She’d been a soldier there. Different na, different face, different body that was taller and broader and scarred in places this one wasn’t. The shadowspawn had co through a rift that opened in the planet’s northern ice shelf, and by the ti anyone understood what they were, three cities had gone dark.
She rembered the sound. That was the thing about shadowspawn — you heard them before you saw them. The clicking. The wet articulation of joints that bent in ways biology didn’t allow. The subsonic hum that your body understood as threat, even when your mind was still processing.
She rembered the cold. Not temperature — the cold that ca from standing near sothing that consud. Shadowspawn didn’t radiate malice or hunger the way a predator did. They radiated absence. The feeling of standing next to a hole in reality where warmth and life and aning drained away like water through broken stone.
She rembered what worked and what didn’t. Standard weapons — useless. Spiritual cultivation — worse than useless, because it drew them the way blood drew sharks. Fire — effective, but only certain kinds. The fire had to co from sothing real, sothing rooted in creation rather than destruction. Dragon fire worked because it carried the essence of a creature that existed to build — bones, strength, foundation. That creative signature burned void-constructs the way sunlight burned shadow.
Lightning worked for similar reasons — the raw, unfiltered discharge of a planet’s atmospheric energy, carrying the planet’s own signature. Not cultivator-generated lightning, which was just spiritual energy shaped to look like lightning. Real lightning. The kind that cracked mountains and split oceans and reminded everything within earshot that the world itself had teeth.
And life energy — concentrated, channeled, directed — could unmake them entirely. Because shadowspawn were built from Necrotic Essence, the anti-matter of living systems. Enough concentrated life energy, and they didn’t just die. They dissolved. Ceased to exist. Returned to the void that had birthed them.
The second ti had been worse.
A world of islands and bridges and a civilization that had achieved sothing close to harmony between technology and nature. She’d been younger in that life — barely an adult, still learning what she was and what the strange resonances in her soul ant. The shadowspawn had co from the sea. Not a rift this ti — they’d been summoned. A faction within the planet’s governing body had made a deal with sothing on the other side of the dinsional barrier, trading access for power, not understanding that what they’d invited in wasn’t interested in deals. Only in feeding.
That life hadn’t ended well.
Most of them didn’t.
Raven pushed the mories down. Not away — she’d learned decades ago that pushing mories away only made them louder. Down, into the place where they were useful rather than overwhelming. Strategic assets rather than open wounds.
Two encounters, she told herself. Different worlds, different circumstances, different scale. This is a scouting force. Skulkers, maybe Breakers. Not a full incursion. Not yet.
The word yet sat in her chest like a stone.
***
Two hours in, the landscape changed.
It was subtle at first. The kind of thing you’d miss if you weren’t looking for it — if you didn’t know what a world looked like when sothing was feeding on its ley lines.
The farmland below was still green. Still cultivated. But the color was... off. Not dramatically — not the withered deadness she’d seen in the later stages, when shadowspawn had been nesting for months and the local spiritual ecosystem had collapsed entirely. Just a fading. The greens a shade too pale. The rivers running a fraction slower than they should. The trees at field edges holding their leaves a little too loosely for the season, as if autumn had arrived weeks early in a localized, inexplicable pocket.
She descended. Dropped from two hundred ters to fifty, close enough to see details that distance had hidden.
A flock of birds moved below her — heading west. Not the orderly V-formation of migratory flight, but the ragged, scattered dispersal of animals fleeing sothing they couldn’t na. She watched them pass and counted. Three separate flocks in ten minutes, all heading the sa direction.
Away from the east.
She dropped lower. Forty ters. Thirty. Close enough now to see the individual farms, the fences, the livestock in their pens.
A farmstead below her — well-maintained, the kind of solid smallholding that represented three or four generations of a family’s accumulated labor. The house was intact. The fences were intact. The garden was tended.
The livestock pen was empty.
Not abandoned — the gate was closed, the water trough full, hay in the feeder. But no animals. No cattle, no pigs, no chickens scratching in the yard. The pen was ready for livestock that no longer existed.
She flew over the next farm. Sa thing. Animals gone, infrastructure intact. And the next. And the next.
A village appeared below — maybe two hundred people, a cluster of buildings around a crossroads with a well and a common green. Mid-morning, and the village should have been active. Farrs in fields, rchants at stalls, children playing.
Nobody was outside.
The doors were closed. Every one of them. Shutters drawn despite the clear sky. A thin trail of chimney smoke from a handful of houses — people inside, awake, choosing not to co out. In the village square, a cart sat abandoned, half-loaded with produce that had begun to wilt. Soone had been loading it and stopped. Just... stopped.
Raven pulled up. Climbed back to a hundred ters, where the details blurred, and the wrongness was easier to manage.
Forty kiloters from Thornwall. The corruption was spreading faster than she’d calculated. The five towns Naida had identified weren’t the boundary — they were just the towns that had reported. Below her, in the farms and villages between those markers, people were already living with the fear. Already locking their doors. Already watching their livestock disappear and their neighbors go quiet.
They just hadn’t told anyone yet. Because who would they tell? The Empire that had stopped answering? The regional command that filed their reports under seasonal predator activity?
She pushed the blade faster. The wind cut against her face like a blade of its own.
***
At fifty kiloters from Thornwall, her sky-surfing blade stuttered.
Not dramatically. A hiccup — a montary loss of the smooth, effortless glide that CC Level 5 cultivation provided, replaced for half a second by the wobble of a blade losing its connection to the spiritual energy that sustained it.
Raven steadied. Compensated. The blade smoothed out.
Ten seconds later, it happened again. Longer this ti. The spiritual energy in the local atmosphere was... thin. Not absent — she could still draw on it — but reduced, as if sothing had been siphoning the ambient power the way you’d drain a well one bucket at a ti.
She could feel it now. Not just see it in the faded colors and empty farmyards — feel it through her cultivation, through the ridians that connected her to the world’s spiritual ecosystem. The ley lines below were sluggish. Flowing, but weakly, like veins carrying blood that had been diluted with water. The spiritual pressure that should have been dense enough to support comfortable sky-surfing at this altitude was thinning with every kiloter east.
Thirty kiloters out, the blade stuttered a third ti. Raven descended to fifty ters, where the denser air provided marginal stability. The farms below had stopped looking maintained. Fences broken. Fields untended. A farmhouse with its door hanging open, the interior dark at midmorning.
No bodies. No signs of violence. Just... absence. People who had left, or people who hadn’t.
Twenty kiloters. The blade was fighting her now — not refusing, but requiring active concentration rather than passive guidance. The spiritual energy in the atmosphere had dropped to levels she’d normally associate with the wastelands beyond the Empire’s borders, the dead zones where Cataclysm damage had scoured the ley lines clean eight centuries ago.
But this wasn’t Cataclysm damage. This was feeding.
She could feel it — the texture of the corruption, the particular signature of spiritual energy that had been consud rather than dispersed. Natural decay left a certain residue, like ash after a fire. This left nothing. A void. The spiritual equivalent of a room where every piece of furniture had been removed, and the walls scraped bare.
At fifteen kiloters, Raven landed.
The blade dissolved as she stepped onto a road — packed earth, wide enough for two carts, running east through farmland that had gone silent. No birdsong. No insect hum. No rustle of small animals in the hedgerows. The particular, absolute silence of a landscape where everything with survival instincts had already fled.
She stood on the road and listened to nothing.
The sun was high. Clear sky, warm for the season, the kind of day that should have filled these fields with workers and these roads with traffic. Instead — stillness. The wind moved through unharvested grain with a dry whisper, and the crops swayed, and nothing else happened.
To the east, maybe ten kiloters now, the forested hills rose dark against the horizon. Sowhere in there — or at their base — Thornwall waited. And in those hills, around the ancient nexus point that her map had shown, the things that clicked in the dark had built their nest.
Raven walked.
Not because she couldn’t fly — she could force the blade to hold, burning her own reserves to compensate for the depleted atmosphere. But walking gave her what flying didn’t: ground-level intelligence. The sll of the air. The feel of the road. The specific, granular details that told you exactly how bad a situation was.
The air slled wrong. Not the copper-and-ozone tang from her dreams — that was closer to the source, where the corruption was densest. Here, at the edge of the affected zone, it was subtler. A flatness. Air that should have carried the complex chemistry of autumn — decomposing leaves, damp earth, the faint sweetness of late-season flowers — and instead carried nothing. Scrubbed clean of scent, the way the ley lines had been scrubbed clean of energy.
She passed a farmhouse. Door open. Kitchen visible through the entrance — table set for three, food still on plates, covered in a fine layer of dust that said days, not hours. A child’s toy on the floor. A coat on a hook by the door.
They’d left in a hurry. Or they hadn’t left at all.
Raven didn’t check the bedrooms.
***
The road curved south around a low hill, and when it straightened, she saw Thornwall.
Five kiloters distant. Clear in the afternoon light — stone walls, low and old, exactly as she’d seen them in three nights of dreams. The river running south, catching sunlight. The forested hills rising behind, dark and close, pressing against the town’s eastern boundary with the particular nace of terrain that had gone wrong.
From this distance, it looked peaceful. A small town in a rural district, unremarkable, the kind of place that existed because people needed to live sowhere, and this sowhere had water and farmland and walls against winter.
But there was no smoke from the chimneys. No movent on the walls. No sound of livestock or children or the daily machinery of twenty-eight hundred lives turning against each other in the productive friction that made civilization work.
Just walls. And silence. And the hills behind them, dark with trees that should have been shedding their leaves but weren’t — because the trees were dead, she realized. Not bare. Dead. Standing trunks stripped of life, the bark gray and flaking, an entire hillside of forest killed so gradually that from a distance they still looked like trees, and only up close did you see the hollow shells they’d beco.
The shadowspawn hadn’t just been feeding on livestock and people.
They’d been feeding on everything.
Raven stood on the road and looked at Thornwall and felt the wrongness pressing against her like a physical weight — the void-signature of creatures that had been feeding for weeks, saturating the land with an absence that her cultivation registered as pain.
The sun was directly overhead. Hours of daylight left. The creatures retreated from sunlight — that was consistent across every world she’d encountered them on. She had until dusk.
She started walking.
Five kiloters to Thornwall. Five kiloters to find out how many of the twenty-eight hundred were still alive. Five kiloters to look into the face of sothing she’d hoped never to see on Ascara, the world that was supposed to have three years before the darkness arrived.
The road was empty. The fields were silent. The dead forest watched her approach with a thousand hollow eyes.
And sowhere in those hills, sothing that had no right to exist felt her coming and began to click.
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