Location:Eastern Forest — Near Stonecroft Settlent
Date/Ti:TC1854.01.04-05 — Dusk to Dawn
The tracks were wrong.
Taron crouched at the edge of the eastern tree line, two kiloters from Stonecroft, and studied the marks in the frost-hardened earth. Not animal prints — nothing on Ascara left tracks like these. Three parallel grooves, spaced unevenly, as if sothing with too many joints had dragged itself across the ground without caring whether the ground survived the contact. The soil where the grooves passed was dry. Not frozen-dry. Drained-dry. The particular desiccation that happened when Necrotic Essence touched organic material and consud the life from it.
Three sets of tracks. Heading southeast. Parallel, five ters apart. Coordinated.
Scouting, not feeding. Learning the terrain around a settlent full of people who didn’t know what was hunting them.
"Three confird," he said, low enough that only the team heard. "Moving together. Disciplined spacing."
Eleven faces in the dark behind him. Jace, green eyes already sharp with that particular alertness that combat brought out of him — not fear, but the focused attention of soone whose body processed danger faster than his mind. Thorne at the rear, Voidstrike unsheathed, watching the flanks with the particular paranoia of a man who’d spent sixteen years guarding people and lost the ability to stop. Nine combat disciples, hand-picked from the three hundred who’d trained on Taron’s anti-void protocols since the briefing six weeks ago.
The best nine. Not the strongest cultivators — the best team fighters. The ones who’d drilled pairs rotation until it was reflex, who could switch partners mid-engagent without verbal coordination, who understood that fighting shadowspawn wasn’t about power but about patterns.
Every one of them carried a lightning talisman — Silas’s design, Bjorn’s forge work. Formation-etched discs the size of a palm, charged with real atmospheric lightning captured during the post-wave storms. Not cultivation-generated lightning, which was just shaped spiritual energy and about as useful against Skulkers as throwing water at a fire. Real lightning. Planetary authority compressed into a single-use burst.
Six talismans each. Once they were spent, they were fighting with steel and spiritual energy alone.
"Formation Bravo," Taron said. "Pairs. Standard rotation. Nobody engages alone. Nobody plays hero."
Jace grinned. The Moonveil Blossom on his shoulder — a delicate thing, pale petals luminescent in the dark, settled into the hollow between his collar and his neck like it had grown there — curled tighter against him. It always did that when danger approached, as if the flower could sense what was coming before anyone else.
"Hero is your departnt, Commander," Jace said. "I’m just here for the exercise."
"Shut up and move."
They moved.
***
The eastern forest was different at night.
Post-wave growth had thickened the canopy — ferns chest-high, new undergrowth tangled between the old-growth trunks, the occasional luminescent fungus casting blue-green light on bark that hadn’t glowed a month ago. The spiritual energy in the air was dense enough to taste — clean, vibrant, alive in ways that made the drained-dry tracks they were following feel obscene by comparison.
They moved in silence. Pairs, three ters apart, each person tracking their partner’s position through peripheral vision and the faint pulse of suppressed spiritual signatures. Taron at the front, reading the tracks. The grooves were getting fresher — the Necrotic desiccation hadn’t had ti to spread more than a finger’s width from each mark. Minutes old, not hours.
Close.
The sll reached them before the visual. Not a sll exactly — an absence. The forest air, thick with post-wave life and loamy earth and the green-sap tang of aggressive growth, simply stopped. As if sothing ahead was consuming the scent itself, drinking the organic richness out of the atmosphere and leaving behind a flat, scrubbed nothing that made the back of the throat ache.
Two kiloters in. The tracks converged.
Not three Skulkers. Five.
Taron held up a fist. The team stopped. Twelve people, breathing controlled, spiritual pressure dampened to baseline — the first thing he’d taught them. Skulkers hunted by sensing spiritual energy the way sharks sensed blood. A cultivator running hot in the dark was a beacon.
The clearing ahead was small — fifteen ters across, ringed by old-growth oaks whose roots had twisted into shapes that suggested even the trees were uncomfortable with what had walked through here. The frost on the ground was black. Not white frost turning dark in shadow. Black frost. Necrotic Essence crystallized on the soil’s surface, a thin crust of void-cold that killed everything beneath it.
Five shapes occupied the clearing.
They didn’t look like anything. That was the worst part. Not the claws or the joints or the absence of eyes — the fact that looking at them directly made the brain stutter, as if the visual cortex couldn’t decide whether it was seeing sothing or seeing the absence of sothing. Negative space with carapaces. Void given enough form to move.
Folded against the trees. Crouching. Motionless except for the faint clicking that carried through the still air like dry bones settling.
Waiting.
"Five," Thorne murmured through the formation relay. "Clustered. Standard dormant posture."
"Not dormant." Taron had watched enough of Raven’s recording crystal to know the difference. "Dormant Skulkers fold flat. These are crouching. Alert. Listening."
"Ambush position?"
"Or a eting." Both possibilities were bad. Skulkers didn’t gather in fives unless sothing was coordinating them. But there were no Wardens on Ascara — Raven had confird the barriers sealed before anything that large crossed. These were stranded individuals. They shouldn’t be acting in concert.
Shouldn’t be. Were.
"Bravo formation. Lightning on my signal." Taron drew Stormheart. The blade humd — a low, sustained note that vibrated through his grip and up his arm. The sword spirit inside it was awake. Ready. It had been forged for this. "Pairs engage from three vectors. Drive them into the center. Don’t let them scatter."
Five pairs. Taron and Kade from the north. Jace and his partner — Lira, a forr herbalist who’d turned out to have a gift for violence that surprised everyone, including herself — from the east. Thorne and his pair from the west. Two reserve pairs at the south, blocking retreat.
Taron raised his fist. Counted down. Three. Two.
One.
***
Lightning is not subtle.
Twelve talismans fired simultaneously — six pairs, two per target area. The clearing erupted in white-blue light that turned the black frost to steam and the darkness to noon. The atmospheric discharge hit the Skulkers from three sides, planetary authority compressed into palm-sized bursts that cracked against void-carapace with the sound of ice breaking on a deep lake.
Two Skulkers shattered instantly. The lightning unmade them — not killed, not damaged, unmade. Void-constructs held together by Necrotic Essence, eting the one force that bypassed their adaptive carapace entirely. They ca apart in fragnts that dissolved before hitting the ground.
The other three moved.
Fast. Faster than the recording crystal had prepared them for — the crystal showed Skulkers at range, moving through Thornwall’s streets. Up close, in real ti, with the sensory impact of Necrotic Essence hitting cultivators who’d never experienced it before, the speed was sothing else entirely.
One disciple — Haren, nineteen, a farr’s son from the Fourth Ring who’d been cultivating for eight months — froze.
Not hesitation. Not cowardice. The Necrotic Essence hit his spiritual senses like a wall of cold nausea, and every instinct in his body scread wrong so loudly that his muscles locked. His talisman hand dropped. His formation-enhanced blade dipped. The Skulker that was lunging toward him covered three ters in the ti it took his brain to process what his eyes were seeing.
His partner — Della, twenty-two, who’d been a seamstress before she’d been a cultivator — didn’t freeze. She stepped into the gap between Haren and the Skulker, drove her blade upward through the joint where the creature’s forelimb t its torso, and discharged her second lightning talisman directly into the wound.
The Skulker shrieked — a sound that had no business coming from sothing without a mouth, a frequency that scraped across spiritual senses like broken glass. It convulsed. Della twisted her blade. The talisman’s charge tore through the void-carapace from the inside, and the Skulker ca apart in her hands.
Her first kill. She stood in the dissolving remains with shaking arms and wide eyes and blood that wasn’t blood on her blade, and she looked at Haren, who was staring at her with the expression of a man who’d just watched soone save his life.
"You froze," she said. Her voice shook.
"I froze," he said. "I’m sorry."
"Don’t be sorry. Be faster next ti."
Three ters away, Jace was dancing.
There was no other word for it. The twin daggers — Flashstrike and Tempestfang — moved in arcs so fast they left afterimages, spiritual energy trailing from the blades in lines of silver-blue light. He fought the way he moved — instinctive, fluid, with a speed that made Foundation Anchoring Level Seven look like it should be illegal. The Skulker he’d engaged was adapting — learning his patterns, shifting its approach angles — and Jace adapted faster. Changed rhythm mid-strike. Reversed a dagger grip without breaking the arc. Punished the Skulker’s correction with a cross-slash that opened its carapace from shoulder to hip.
Lightning talisman into the wound. The Skulker dissolved.
But it was the Moonveil Blossom that made everyone stop.
During the fight, the flower had done sothing nobody expected. It hadn’t retreated — hadn’t folded itself small and hidden against Jace’s neck the way a sensible organism would when its host was fighting void-constructs in the dark. It had curled tight, yes. But not in fear. The petals had compressed against Jace’s shoulder and pulsed — a soft, warm light that spread through his collar and down his arm. Where the Necrotic Essence should have drained his energy on contact — the void-cold that had staggered Haren, that made spiritual senses scream — Jace felt nothing. The flower’s warmth ate the cold. Dissolved it. Converted the Necrotic drain into sothing that felt like standing in sunlight.
He hadn’t even noticed until the fight was over.
Taron finished the fifth Skulker himself. Stormheart channeled lightning through its blade — not talisman-lightning, but the sword spirit’s own resonance amplifying the atmospheric charge Taron fed into it. The effect was devastating. The Skulker tried to adapt — shifted its carapace density, angled its approach to minimize contact — and the lightning followed. Stormheart didn’t care about angles. It cracked the void-construct from crown to base, and the pieces hissed into nothing on the black frost.
Silence.
Five Skulkers dead. Zero friendly casualties. The clearing stead where lightning had vaporized the Necrotic frost, and the air slled of ozone and sothing older — the particular scent of void-matter being unmade by planetary authority.
Taron counted his people. Twelve standing. Two injured — Haren, who’d taken a glancing contact during his freeze that left his right arm temporarily numb from void-cold drain, and a third-pair disciple nad Soren who’d caught a carapace fragnt across the forearm. Neither life-threatening. Both shaken.
Everyone was shaken. The difference between training and combat was the difference between reading about fire and being burned. They’d drilled pair rotation for weeks. They’d watched the recording crystal until the Skulker shapes were familiar enough to sketch from mory. They’d practiced talisman discharge timing until Taron was satisfied with their rhythm.
None of it had prepared them for the way Necrotic Essence felt against living spiritual senses. The cold that wasn’t temperature but absence — the sensation of being near sothing that existed specifically to unmake life. Three disciples were sitting on the ground because their legs had stopped cooperating. Two others were dry-heaving into the undergrowth, their bodies rejecting the lingering void-taint through the only chanism available.
Della was still standing. Still holding her blade. The shaking in her arms had spread to her shoulders and her jaw, a fine tremor that ca from adrenaline and shock and the particular aftereffect of having killed sothing that shouldn’t have existed. She was staring at the spot where the Skulker had dissolved.
"Hey." Haren touched her elbow with his functioning hand. "You saved my life."
"I know." Her voice was flat. Processing. "I killed sothing."
"Sothing that was going to kill ."
She looked at him. The flatness cracked, and what ca through was relief so sharp it looked like it hurt. "Don’t freeze again. I an it. I can’t do that twice."
"I won’t." A pause. "I promise."
"Report," Taron said.
"Five confird kills," Thorne answered. "Talisman expenditure: fourteen of seventy-two. Acceptable rate."
"The flower," Jace said. He was looking at the Moonveil Blossom on his shoulder. The petals had unfurled — relaxed, as if the fight had been a mild inconvenience rather than a life-or-death engagent with void-constructs. Its glow was steady. Warm. And where it touched Jace’s skin, there was no trace of the Necrotic chill that every other team mber was still shaking off. "It did sothing. During the fight. The void-cold didn’t touch ."
Taron looked at him. At the flower. At the other disciples, who were rubbing their arms and stomping circulation back into fingers that had gone numb from ambient Necrotic Essence.
"Explain."
"I can’t. It just — the cold hit and the flower got warm, and the cold went away." Jace touched a petal. It leaned into his finger like a cat being stroked. "It ate it. The void energy. Converted it into warmth."
Thorne’s expression shifted from skeptical to calculating. "If Moonveil Blossoms counteract Necrotic Essence..."
"Then Mother Doha’s gift," Taron said slowly, "just beca the most valuable botanical resource on the continent."
The Blossom preened. Or did sothing that, on a flower, looked remarkably like preening.
"Don’t let it go to your head," Jace told it. "You’re still a flower."
It glowed brighter. Definitely preening.
***
Dawn found them at the Stonecroft settlent periter, debriefing in the supply building that served as the satellite’s command post. The twelve of them, seated on crates and floor space, running through the engagent with the thodical precision Taron demanded of every after-action report.
What worked: pair rotation, lightning talismans, three-vector engagent. Formation-enhanced blades effective for follow-up strikes once talismans cracked the carapace.
What didn’t: Necrotic Essence sensory impact was worse than training simulated. One freeze in five engagents was too high. Need better acclimatization protocols.
What surprised them: Skulkers acting in coordinated clusters without a Warden. Five individuals, maintaining spacing, choosing a defensible position, waiting. That implied learning. Adaptation. Communication between stranded individuals developing into sothing that looked uncomfortably like tactics.
And the flower.
"I want Lin Yue on this today," Taron said. "If Moonveil Blossoms are anti-void, we need to know the chanism. Can we extract it? Concentrate it? Apply it to talismans, salves, armor treatnts?" He looked at Jace. "Your flower just beca a research subject."
"She won’t like being poked at."
"She’ll manage."
Taron stood. Stormheart humd at his hip — satisfied, if a sword spirit could be said to feel satisfaction. They’d killed five creatures that had never been fought by anyone on Ascara except Raven. They’d done it without her. The training worked. The talismans worked. The disciples held.
"Recomndation for command," he said. "Rotating strike teams. Three teams, twelve each, weekly rotation. Daily patrols within a ten-kiloter radius of all satellite settlents. Standing shadowspawn bounty — confird kill earns rit points." He paused. "And a forward operating base here at Stonecroft. Permanent. Supplied. We’re not guests in this forest anymore."
He looked at the eleven faces in the supply building. Tired. So scared. All of them alive.
"The army she built," he said quietly, "can actually fight."
Nobody argued.
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