Location:Seven Peaks — Command Center, Eastern Periter
Date/Ti:TC1853.12.28-29 — Morning to Evening
The first courier arrived at dawn on the twenty-eighth, half-dead in the saddle.
He’d ridden four days from Cloudrest on a horse that had been spiritual energy-enhanced once and was now running on stubborn willpower and whatever the wave-touched grass along the road was doing to its stamina. The courier — a young disciple nad Darren, one of Naida’s people — slid from the saddle at the gatehouse, handed his satchel to the nearest guard, and said "Sera needs help" before his knees gave out.
Two more couriers arrived by midday. One from Fifth District. One who’d made it as far as the outskirts of Imperial City before turning back because the roads had beco too dangerous to travel alone.
Thorne ran the debrief in the command center. Three courier satchels on the table, each containing sealed reports, handwritten letters, and in Darren’s case, a formation crystal recording from Sera Voss that he’d carried against his chest for four days because it was too important to risk in a saddlebag.
Raven and Marcus sat opposite. The formation-etched planning table humd faintly beneath their hands — the only light source that hadn’t required adjustnt since the wave killed everything electrical.
"Cloudrest first," Thorne said. He activated Sera’s crystal.
***
Sera Voss appeared in miniature above the table — a tired woman in healer’s robes, dark circles visible even in the formation crystal’s imperfect resolution. She was standing in what looked like a corridor, patients visible behind her on bedrolls that stretched out of fra in both directions.
"Day sixteen since the wave," she said. Her voice was hoarse. Steady, but hoarse. "Patient volu is four hundred and twelve daily. Normal operating capacity was forty. We’re running eighteen-hour shifts. I haven’t sent anyone ho because there’s nowhere for them to go that’s better than here."
She rubbed her eyes.
"The governor attempted to commandeer the branch on day three. Cited ergency municipal authority. I refused. He sent guards to enforce the order. The guards’ weapons don’t work." A ghost of a smile. "Formation-powered dical equipnt does. He withdrew the order. Hasn’t tried since."
The crystal flickered. Sera glanced off-fra at sothing — a patient calling, a staff mber with a question — then turned back.
"The branch has beco a community center. People co for treatnt and stay because we have warmth, light, clean water, and information. We’re the only functioning institution in Cloudrest. The governor’s office has no power. The constabulary has no communications. The rchant guilds can’t move goods because the transport network is dead. We’re it."
She paused. When she spoke again, the steadiness cracked slightly.
"I need staff. I need supplies. I need alchemical ingredients — we’re burning through pill stocks faster than projected because malnutrition cases have tripled since the wave killed refrigeration. People are eating spoiled food because they have no way to preserve it. Children are the worst affected."
Another pause.
"I’m not leaving. My staff aren’t leaving. But we can’t sustain this without support. The charter says we serve patients, not politics. There are a lot of patients, Sect Leader. Please send help."
The crystal went dark.
Silence held in the command center.
"Next," Raven said quietly.
***
Fifth District was functioning. Barely.
The branch there had been established longer, with deeper local roots and a more experienced staff rotation. Patient loads were high but manageable — two hundred daily, within capacity if they ran double shifts. The real pressure was political. Three Ring Five rchant families had offered to fund a full branch expansion — new wing, additional staff housing, premium alchemical supplies — in exchange for priority access to healing services.
The branch had declined. Charter rules: sliding scale based on need, not paynt. No priority access purchasable. The rchant families had not taken the refusal well.
"They’ll co around," Thorne said. "Or they won’t. Either way, the branch holds to the charter."
The Imperial City report was the worst.
The courier — a woman nad Lian, one of Thorne’s security operatives — hadn’t entered the city. She’d gotten within ten kiloters and turned back because the refugee flow on the roads told her everything she needed to know.
"Rings One and Two are functioning," she reported, standing at the command center table with road dust still on her clothes and a look in her eyes that Raven recognized from her ti in the Forgotten Fringe. The look of soone who had seen ordinary people in extraordinary despair. "Formation-based infrastructure. Lights, water, heating, and communication within the inner rings. The Celestial families and the court are fine."
She paused.
"Ring Five outward is dark. No power. No water pumps — that’s the critical one, because the Fifth Ring’s aquifer system relies on electrical pumps to reach the surface. Millions of people without clean water. No hospitals functioning except a few that had backup formation arrays, and those are rationed for the wealthy. No refrigeration. No communication. No transport."
"The Emperor?"
"Retreated to the inner palace. Prince Kael is reportedly organizing relief efforts, but—" She shook her head. "He has no tools. The Imperial Guard’s conventional weapons don’t function. The logistics corps can’t move supplies without transport networks. Everything the Empire built on technology is dead, and everything they built on formations serves the people who never needed help in the first place."
The final detail: families were leaving. Not dozens — hundreds. Every day. Walking south. Walking west. Walking toward anywhere that had light, water, and soone willing to help. So of them were walking toward Seven Peaks. The courier had passed groups on the road — families with children on their shoulders, elderly being pulled in hand-carts, young couples carrying everything they owned in bundles that got lighter with every mile as they abandoned possessions to keep moving.
Lian had stopped to help one family. A man, his wife, and three children under ten. They’d been walking for six days from the Seventh Ring. The youngest child had a fever. The man asked Lian if the stories about the mountain were true — that they healed people there, that they didn’t ask about bloodlines, that the food was real.
"I told him yes," Lian said. "He cried. His wife picked up the child and started walking again before he’d finished."
"Refugee numbers," Raven said.
Thorne consulted his notes. "Twelve hundred and forty in territory as of yesterday’s census. Based on the road traffic the couriers observed, I’m projecting five thousand within two weeks. Ten thousand within a month." He set down his pen. "Possibly more. The curve isn’t flattening. If the outer rings continue to deteriorate — and there’s no reason to expect they won’t — we could see twenty thousand by spring."
***
But it was the dark spots that kept Raven awake that night.
Scattered through the courier reports like ink stains on a map — towns beyond the courier routes that had gone silent. Not silent, the way a town goes quiet when the power fails, and people hunker down. Silent the way a town goes quiet when the people are gone.
Darren had passed through a village called Fenwick on his return route. Population three hundred, according to the last census. He’d found doors hanging open. Food on tables — dried out, days old. A child’s doll in the middle of the main road, face down in the dirt. No bodies. No blood. No signs of violence. Just absence. The particular emptiness of a place where life had been removed so completely that even the echoes were gone.
He’d checked three houses. Sa pattern. als half-eaten. Beds unmade. A pair of shoes by one door, too small for anyone but a child, laced and waiting for feet that would never fill them again.
Lian had heard similar accounts from travelers on the Imperial roads. Livestock deaths in the eastern towns — the sa drained pattern Raven had investigated two months ago, except now there was no formation network to report it and no Imperial response to ignore it. Strange sounds at night. Clicking. Shapes at the edges of lamplight that moved when you weren’t looking and stopped when you were.
One traveler had described waking at an inn to find the room next door empty — door locked from the inside, window latched, belongings untouched. The occupant simply gone. The innkeeper had nailed the door shut and refused to speak about it.
"Stranded shadowspawn," Raven said. She was standing at the command center’s formation display, staring at the map of the continent. The towns she could reach were pinpoints of light. The spaces between them were vast and dark and full of things that had slipped through before the wave sealed the barriers. "Finite numbers — what crossed before the tears closed. But finite doesn’t an harmless. A single Skulker in a town with no cultivators, no salt, no iron, no one who knows what they’re facing..."
She didn’t finish. She didn’t need to.
"How many?" Thorne asked.
"Impossible to know. Dozens. Maybe hundreds. Scattered across the eastern territories, feeding on whatever they find." She traced the dark spots on the map with one finger. Each one a town. Each town full of people who had no idea what was hunting them in the dark. "Every town we can’t reach is a town that might already be gone."
The silence that followed was the particular kind that falls when the people in the room understand the mathematics of the situation and wish they didn’t. There weren’t enough disciples. Weren’t enough hours. Weren’t enough roads that were safe to travel.
"We can’t save them all," Thorne said. Not callously. With the controlled grief of a man who had spent sixteen years in the Imperial Guard, learning that triage ant choosing who lived, not preventing death.
"No," Raven said. "But we can arm the ones we can reach."
***
The orders went out that evening.
Three spiritual-to-electrical converters — Marcus’s design, each one capable of powering an ICU ward or a water pump station — packed in formation-reinforced cases and loaded onto a supply wagon. Escorted by six disciples, all Foundation Anchoring or above, ard with rune-forged weapons and carrying enough supplies to sustain a week’s travel.
Destination: three outer ring hospitals. The ones Lian’s report identified as most critical — the ones with the most patients and the least hope.
Alongside the converters: forty copies of the survival guide. Cultivation pamphlets with basic breathing exercises that any civilian could practice. Anti-shadowspawn protocols — salt barriers, iron filings, fire lines, patrol patterns. The sa information Raven had given Constable Corwin in Thornwall, printed, bound, and packed in waterproof cases.
"We didn’t build this to hoard it," Raven said, watching the supply wagon being loaded in the pre-dawn dark. Thorne stood beside her, his objections already raised and already overruled.
"Six disciples in unstable territory," he said. Not arguing — recording his concerns for the record, the way a good security chief did.
"The converter sitting on our shelf saves no one. The one in a Ring Seven hospital saves hundreds." She watched a disciple secure the last case with formation-etched straps. "And the survival guides might save thousands. If people know what they’re facing — salt, iron, fire, stay inside at night — they have a chance."
The wagon departed at first light. Six disciples and three devices that could change the equation for tens of thousands of people, rolling down a mountain road into a world that had lost its light.
Raven watched until they vanished around the first bend.
***
Evening found Raven and Kairos walking the eastern periter. The nesting site construction was underway — Bjorn’s team had been working since dawn on the twenty-seventh, shaping stone and formation-warding the enclosure to Serenyx’s specifications, relayed through Raven. Two more days until completion. Until then, the Aeralith remained in her clearing in the eastern hills.
Her silhouette was visible against the darkening sky — vast, silver-furred, crystalline wings folded, the faint glow of three eggs pulsing beneath her ribs like captured starlight.
Kairos stopped walking. His expression — usually so combination of analytical detachnt and faintly offended dignity — shifted into sothing quieter.
"An Aeralith Felis," he said. Not a question. The recognition was imdiate and carried the particular weight of soone who hadn’t rely read about a thing but had observed it across deep ti. "I watched her species for millennia. From the Observatory. They were considered among the most noble creatures in this entire sector. Storms followed them. Dawn broke where they flew."
He was quiet for a mont.
"I watched them disappear. One pride at a ti. The last sky-nest fell roughly fourteen centuries before I manifested here." He looked at the distant silhouette. "I assud they were gone."
"She’s the last," Raven said. "Three eggs. The final generation of her species."
Kairos didn’t speak for a long ti. The silver runes on his robes — dimr than they’d been six weeks ago, the residual cosmic energy slowly spending itself — pulsed faintly in the fading light.
"I observed their extinction from the Observatory. Catalogued it. Filed it. Moved to the next entry in my monitoring ledger." He paused. "One hundred and forty-seven species beca extinct during the Cataclysm and its aftermath. I recorded each one. Nas, habitats, final known populations. Columns in a ledger. Numbers in a report."
He looked at his hands. The long fingers that had once unmade Breakers with a gesture were chapped from the cold.
"I am beginning to understand that observation and understanding are not the sa thing. That knowing a species is dying and feeling it are separated by a distance I did not appreciate from the other side of dinsional boundaries."
He looked at Raven.
"I would like to observe her. From a respectful distance. Not to catalogue. Just... to see her."
"She’d probably let you. She’s a better judge of character than most people I know."
"That is either a complint or an indictnt of your acquaintances."
"Both."
The ghost of sothing that wasn’t quite a smile crossed his face. They stood together on the periter, watching the last Aeralith Felis settle her wings against the cold, three lights pulsing gently beneath silver fur.
Above them, the post-wave stars burned with a clarity that hadn’t existed in ten thousand years. Below, the supply wagon was sowhere on the road, carrying light into the dark.
It wasn’t enough. It was never enough. But it was what they had, and they sent it anyway.
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