Kaelen had been very busy—even during the long march to Serkoth, where lesser n might have focused solely on logistics or morale, he had remained deep in his sches. Most didn’t know how often he slipped away under cover of night, vanishing for hours or even days at a ti. His trips back to the capital had grown increasingly frequent, each ti to ensure that his deeper preparations, his truer ambitions, were growing as intended. And they were.
He had seen the fruits of his labors bloom under careful, thodical guidance. Obedient minds, rewoven with faith and falsehood. Weapons shaped not of steel but of story. Armies waiting behind thin veils of narrative aether, tethered to his will like hounds in a pit.
Losing Akhenna’s Beast had been an unfortunate turn of events. A regrettable loss, yes, but not a fatal one. The creature had proven... difficult. Faster than anticipated, smarter, and saturated with volatile energy. The Sovereignty had sent hunters after it, all of them well-trained, well-ard. So of them returned broken or not at all. Even Kaelen’s own attempt at recapture, alongside Zeratheil, had ended in disaster. He still rembered the chaos in Drakthar, the blood on the stone, the pile of clergyn reduced to twitching limbs and split torsos. That thing—whatever it had beco—was a monster birthed by the hand of a goddess he loathed more than any other.
Still... it had served its purpose.
A sentient aetherbeast. A creature born not of natural law or divine grace, but of madness. Chaos incarnate. Proof that the enemy—the true enemy, the goddess of rot and lies—was once again moving her pieces.
He had taken all the data he needed before it fled. Its anatomy. Its power structure. Its mind. What little he could capture, he had already woven into prayer and plan alike.
And now? Now his auxiliary army was prepared. Should Serkoth prove more stubborn than anticipated—should the city’s defenders rally harder than they had any right to—he could simply flex his narrative aether, split open the veil of the world, and let them pour through. Their story had already been written. It simply waited to be told.
He almost missed Entheris.
The automaton had been a brilliant narrative exomancer. In many ways, far more adept than Kaelen himself. Where Kaelen wielded story like a sword, Entheris wielded it like a scalpel. Every phrase, every thread of fate woven with unbearable precision. But Praxus had declared him heretic. Dead to the cause. And that, unfortunately, was that.
They never found his body.
A pity. Kaelen had always liked him, in a way. But such sentint was beneath him now.
He would hold off on releasing the auxiliaries for now. It wasn’t yet necessary. Serkoth may have gathered powerful figures beneath its banners but Kaelen had tenfold their number and faith to spare.
And besides...
Zeratheil would arrive by tomorrow, if all went as it should.
Korriva Serkoth was powerful. Even Kaelen’s god had warned him of that. She was old, beaten in age only by the champion of Nirathys. Steeped in blood and tradition, carved from stone and will. Not one to be underestimated.
But Zeratheil was sothing else entirely.
Zeratheil was a declaration.
Not just to the world, but to the heavens themselves. To every god still watching from their thrones of silence. A ssage carved in light and blood and inevitability.
Akhenna had broken the Accord first. She was the one who moved her pieces across the board in defiance of divine law, sending her monstrous creation to walk among mortals like a plague of flesh and teeth. She had stirred the ga from stasis, shattered the ancient stillness.
So it was only fair that the Most Glorious Father answer in kind.
And He had.
Zeratheil was that answer.
Not a counterasure, not a response. A correction. A divine edict in mortal form. While Akhenna’s beast had been chaos given shape, Zeratheil was purpose, crafted with the precision of a scalpel and the wrath of a falling star. He wasn’t simply powerful; he was perfect.
Kaelen had witnessed it with his own eyes.
He rembered how the creature had expanded, covering half the city, destroying all in its wake, a blur of limbs and hate and swirling chaos. It had killed hundreds without effort. But when it t Zeratheil?
It was over in monts.
Zeratheil hadn’t moved with violence. He had moved with grace. Each step was part of a larger sentence being written across the battlefield. Each strike a punctuation mark on a truth that could not be denied. The beast had scread, twisted, fought—but it was undone with ease. Unmade like a poorly told lie under the scrutiny of absolute truth.
Not even a corpse remained when Zeratheil was finished. Only steam, silence, and awe.
Kaelen rembered the mont well. The way the air had seed cleaner after. The way the other soldiers fell to their knees, not because they were ordered to—but because they understood.
Zeratheil was not a man. Not a weapon. Not even a general.
Zeratheil was revelation.
And soon, Serkoth would see it too.
“Your worship, may I enter?” called a voice from beyond the heavy flap of Kaelen’s tent.
“You may,” Kaelen replied smoothly, not lifting his gaze from the map sprawled across the war table before him. His fingers rested lightly on a silver figurine shaped like a tower—Serkoth’s eastern wall.
The tent flap parted, and one of his High Captains stepped inside. His armor was polished, his cloak crisp with the Aegis blue trimd in silver, though dust still clung to his boots from the march. The man dropped instantly to one knee, head bowed low, hands clasped at the base of his helt.
Kaelen spared him only a brief glance. Good. He rembers the order of things.
Obedience was the first language of faith.
“You may rise, High Captain Gerrod. Share your ssage.”
Gerrod stood, face grim and calm, and gave a slight bow of the head. “Your Worship, I have received word from the other High Captains. The camps are fully established. All fifteen legions have finished their march and begun fortification efforts. Barricades are in place, siege engines assembled and positioned. Munitions caravans arrived as expected. Morale is high.”
Kaelen nodded once, pleased.
“And the eastern camp?”
“Lightly manned, as you instructed. Just enough to maintain the illusion of equal pressure across all walls.”
“Good.” Kaelen let the figurine of Serkoth’s eastern gate rest in his palm, turning it once between his fingers. “Serkoth has fangs, but they can’t bite everywhere at once. We press where the teeth are dull.”
Gerrod said nothing, rely standing at attention with military stillness.
Kaelen looked up at him then. “And the n?”
“They await your command. All eyes are on your will.”
“Then they won’t have to wait much longer,” Kaelen murmured. He placed the figurine back down and stepped around the table with slow precision, robes brushing over the earth like trailing smoke. “The mont approaches. Soon, the eastern gates will crack. Then the heart. Then the fangs. We pull it apart, one piece at a ti.”
His hand ca to rest on Gerrod’s shoulder.
“Ready your captains. We move at dawn.”
Gerrod bowed his head again. “As you command, Your Worship.”
A funny little coincidence.
Just a nudge. A twitch. A passing thought dressed in familiar voice.
A little push here. A suggestion there. Threaded so finely between the folds of thought that even the thinker couldn’t trace its roots. The whisper beca a murmur beca an idea beca his idea. Kaelen smiled, believing in his own brilliance.
How clever I am, he thought.
How very clever indeed.
That’s always the trick, isn’t it?
Feed the ego, and the ego will pave your roads for you. Lay out gold and glory and tell them it was their invention. Make them believe they carved the path themselves. That they were the first to think it.
And never—not once—will they think to ask:
Where did that thought co from?
They’ll kiss the mirror and call it worship.
The Monster of Monsters lounged on her throne of shattered unreality, a jagged, throbbing thing made of broken laws and unspoken nas. Gravity wept sideways here. Light refused to be still. Every breath of her realm made the concept of shape reconsider itself.
She sat, wrapped in fractals and hunger, cradled in the paradox that birthed her.
Before her, a million faceted screens shimred, blinking in and out of arrangent. They showed everything. Each pane a splinter of so reality. So were burning. So were birthing gods. So showed people kissing. One showed a child drawing a horse, terribly. Another showed a city frozen in the mont just before its own forgetting.
She licked her lips. Lips made of silk and silence and wire.
Her fingers danced along the rim of a non-cup, sipping a non-liquid that tasted like secrets you’re not ready to hear. Her focus shifted. The screens rearranged like a lover slipping beneath bedsheets, and there—ah, there—was her favorite show.
Her favorite story.
Her favorite soul.
For now.
Ti didn’t an much here, not in her palace stitched between what-could-be and what-should-not. The curtains were made of afterthought. The windows showed yesterday’s maybe. Her throne room echoed with the footsteps of futures that never happened.
And there it was again. Once.
A singularity of unlikelihood. A unique happening. So improbable, so exquisitely wrong that it dared disturb the humming elegance of her perfect system. Just once had it happened. A soul with no power. No prophecy. No right to be noticed.
And yet...
The wrong eyes had seen it.
The right eyes had turned.
The worst-best-worst of them all had noticed. And in that noticing, everything tilted. A single soul, drifting across reincarnation like dandelion fluff on solar winds, had landed in her lap.
Of course she loved it.
Ahh, how she adored this little creature who had done what a trillion others had done before. Who died and died and died again. Who failed and rose and whimpered and burned. The soul that scread into the abyss and made it laugh.
She giggled now, legs swinging over the edge of nothing.
“I know how this story ends,” she cooed.
The screens pulsed.
“I’ve seen the ending. And that is, of course—”
She tapped her forehead, her black tongue curling like a question mark.
“Oops. No spoilers.”
The mory unraveled, unwritten, unrembered. A little self-surgery. A slice of omniscience removed like an overripe fruit.
Because omniscience, well…
Dreadfully boring.
She smiled, wide and monstrous and childlike.
Better to be surprised.
Even if she had to surprise herself.
The Monster of Monsters twirled a single thread of thought between her fingers, stretching it taut until it humd. Her eyes—when she chose to have them—tracked the movent of stories blooming and collapsing across her vision.
She chuckled softly.
Sowhere, a man forgot why he entered a room. Sowhere else, a god rembered a na that was never spoken aloud. And far beyond both, sothing watched.
Perhaps it was her. Perhaps not.
“I do love a good audience,” she murmured, half to herself, half to… nothing. “Even if they never realize they’re part of it.”
The thread snapped. She sighed contentedly.
And then, more quietly: “It’s always so lovely when they think they’re just watching.”
A beat. No one replied.
Because of course, who would she be talking to?
She leaned back on her throne of unraveling paradox, resting her chin in her hand as she resud her viewing.
Eyes dancing.
Lips closed in a secret smile.
“Could I make this more interesting, though?” she mused aloud, her voice a slow ripple across the skin of reality. It wasn’t a question, not really. Not when the answer was always yes.
Her gaze—if such a concept still applied—slid sideways. She shifted through the fras of ti the way a child flips through the pages of a half-rembered book. Threads blurred past her—snapshots of suns dying, cities screaming, love blooming, bones breaking.
Monts. Iterations. Universes. All malleable. All hers to skim and skip and stir.
She slid back, forward, sideways—abc, 𝔸ℬℂ, абц—until sothing snagged her attention.
“Ah...” Her lips curled, just a little. “A forgotten thread. Lost to all but one.”
There it was. Coiled in the quiet between worlds. Not sleeping. Waiting. Sothing primal, sharpened by hunger and ti. A wound that had learned to wear skin. Watching. Always watching.
“rely waiting, hungry and violent,” she whispered, almost fondly. “So easy to forget the old ones. So quiet, so patient.”
She giggled, a dissonant sound, like silverware tumbling through a dream.
“Speaking of ideas…” she murmured, drumming her claws gently on the arm of her throne. Each tap echoed like a thought soone else almost had.
“…perhaps this one just needs a little nudge. A reminder. That the ti for waiting is nearly done. That a feast, most wonderful awaits, if only it takes a step. Makes a sound. Opens its mouth.”
She smiled to herself.
“Yes… that will do fine.”
The thread twitched. A ripple passed through the dream of a soldier on the eastern wall. Sowhere, a na long-forgotten pressed against the inside of soone’s teeth.
But nothing happened.
Not yet.
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