It clawed at her to leave a al behind. Her entire body scread at her for it. That at was right there, taunting her, steaming with power, the perfect prey. Yet Vivienne knew when she was outmatched. The admission burned worse than fire in her throat. That one was too durable for her teeth, too fast for her claws, too laced with dawn aether. Always dawn aether—her curse since the very beginning. Every ti she lunged, it slipped through her reach. Every bite she imagined sank into nothing.
She forced the fury down, funneled it into her legs, into the singular need that eclipsed her hunger. Rava.
Her eyes snapped forward, narrowing. The battlefield stretched out before her, painted in smoke and blood and lightning. Ahead, the nexus arbiters sward, Praxus’s puppets of tal, clockwork and mindless devotion, converging like carrion birds upon her lover. Their blades and claws flashed as they piled onto her, heedless of their own broken bodies.
And beyond them—her gaze fixed, black eyes narrowing further—lood the true source. A portal, vast and seething, carved into the world like a festering wound. From its depths they spilled, two at a ti, in endless rhythm, each one stepping into the slaughter without hesitation.
At the threshold of that rift stood the priest. Calm. Composed. As though he presided over a sermon rather than a war. His gaze swept across the carnage with the serenity of soone assured of victory, watching his arbiters gnash themselves against Rava without the faintest flicker of concern.
Vivienne’s claws flexed. Her throat humd with the beginnings of a song.
Vivienne crashed into the throng around Rava like a falling star, her arms twisting mid-swing into colossal, toothy maws. tal shrieked as her jaws snapped shut, biting clean through two arbiters at once. Gears crunched, wires tore, and shards of gleaming brass spilled like sparks across the ground.
The dawn aether inside them burned her instantly, coursing through her veins like molten fire. The pain was sharp, searing, endless—yet she swallowed it down all the sa.
“Viv!” Rava roared, her voice carrying over the clash of steel and the hiss of ruptured hydraulics. Her fist punched straight through an arbiter’s chest cavity, ripping free with a spray of cogs and glowing filants, before she pivoted, boot crashing into another unit’s plated skull and crushing it in a single strike.
Vivienne’s throat thrumd. Her song began, low and resonant, a crystalline hum that distorted the air, yet her savagery never paused. She snapped another maw around the legs of a soldier, tearing it in half like scrap tal, and when one tried to spear her flank, her leg warped into a third mouth. It clamped down, devouring both steel and burning dawn-light in a shuddering crunch.
The holy energy seared through her, peeling away layers of her flesh and scales, but she answered it with hunger. She ate the pain, drank it in, made it part of her song.
The arbiters faltered only for a mont, clockwork lenses whirring as they recalibrated. Then they ca again, in perfect chanical rhythm, their blades flashing in unison.
Vivienne only sang louder.
Vivienne’s gaze cut toward the priest. His calm mask had finally cracked—just a flicker of concern, but it was enough. He stood sentinel before the yawning portal, hands folded, while every few seconds another pair of Nexus Arbiters marched through. The constructs clanged as they landed, lenses glowing with dawn-fire, blades already raised as if the battle itself were their natural state.
Her song deepened, and the ground around her quivered. From the cracks in the stone and the shadows themselves, crystalline beasts erupted by the hundreds. They surged forward in jagged waves, their bodies half-ford, all gleaming edges and prismatic eyes. They hurled themselves at the arbiters with savage abandon. The clash was thunderous—glass against steel, claws against blades. Most shattered on impact, but Vivienne saw the truth in their sacrifice: scratches, dents, fractures in the arbiters’ flawless shells. It was not much, but it was enough to pull her focus back to the ones nearest to her and Rava.
Her form rippled, swelled, stretched. Flesh and crystal warped as she expanded upward, the transformation breaking like a storm across her body. The hydra ca forth in a heartbeat, six heads uncoiling like serpents—then more, and more still. Dozens of new necks writhed free, sprouting in grotesque profusion until she resembled a monstrous, living tree. Heads of obsidian and crystal blood across her form, eyes glittering, maws snapping.
The air filled with the screech of teeth grinding against tal as her many mouths descended on the arbiters, tearing and rending. Each head was a predator, each throat a furnace of her song. Her silhouette was impossible to look at directly, a tangle of writhing limbs and gnashing maws, shadow and crystal and flesh interwoven.
Her song climbed higher, layered voices harmonizing with themselves in an impossible chorus, and her beasts fought harder in answer.
The priest’s concern deepened.
Vivienne’s eyes went back to Rava, who now carved her way through the clockwork tide with far less resistance. The sight brought a cruel grin curling across Vivienne’s many mouths. Good. Her lover thrived better when she was free to rage, not smothered. That left Vivienne with only one target that mattered.
She stomped forward, the ground cracking beneath her bulk. Every step shook loose a trail of shattered stone, a chorus of gnashing heads snapping at the constructs swarming her flanks. Claws tore through bronze plating, teeth ground gears into splinters, and she devoured them even as their dawn-forged blades slashed into her hide. Golden light scored deep across her scales, and for an instant she felt the restrictive weave of their design clawing at her essence, trying to bind her, to weaken her.
She hissed a laugh through a dozen throats at once. Too weak. Far too weak for now.
Her chorus rose, and with it, her pace quickened. The arbiters clung to her like ants trying to halt a wildfire. She ripped them free, bit them in half, crushed them into slag beneath her claws and tail. Their resistance was aningless.
Then—sothing shifted.
One of the freshly arrived arbiters halted mid-step. Its joints locked, its head tilted. Then its gaze fixed on her. Those glassy lenses burned with dawn light, but no movent followed. It simply stared.
Does it… fear ?
The thought amused her. These things were not ant to think. They were not ant to feel. Yet she could feel it in that pause, in that hesitation—hesitation that could only an terror.
The arbiter broke its stillness with sudden purpose. It turned, ignoring her entirely, and stalked toward its master. The priest barely had ti to blink before the construct seized him by the scruff like a disobedient pup.
Vivienne watched, delighted, as the priest thrashed in vain. The arbiter’s grip never faltered. With one smooth, chanical motion, it hurled him upward. His scream was cut short as the portal swallowed him whole, the rift swallowing his form like the surface of a pond.
The priest was gone.
Now that was infuriating.
Her quarry—her al—had been snatched from her. Ripped away by its own puppet, spirited through the portal before she could wrap her jaws around his soft little body. The thought of his flesh, of the terror in his eyes just before she could sink her teeth in, made her blood burn.
How dare he flee her? How dare that fragile morsel deny her the satisfaction of consuming him? Of feeling him break between her teeth, screaming until there was no air left to scream with?
Dozens of tongues lashed the air, clicking and hissing in discordant unison, a storm of wet, slapping sounds that drowned the din of battle for a heartbeat. Her many heads writhed restlessly, snapping at nothing, fury and hunger mingling until even her own song trembled with the force of it.
Her tails slamd the earth, crushing another pair of arbiters into twisted heaps of cogs and plating. Sparks burst like fireflies, but it wasn’t enough. Not nearly enough.
Her eyes swept back across the battlefield. Rava was holding her own, but surrounded. The portal still vomited forth those clockwork husks, tireless and mindless.
Vivienne bared all her teeth at once.
Fine.
If her al thought it could escape her, then she would turn her hunger elsewhere. She would gorge herself on everything in reach until there was nothing left to stand.
It was ti to clean up.
The clockwork automatons began to vanish beneath the tide of her crystalline beasts, their steel forms dragged down by claws and spines that shattered against them but bought her openings. They were little more than obstacles, but obstacles that slowed them enough for her jaws to descend. One after another, she tore through brass plating and whirring gears, snapping their tal bodies apart as though they were nothing more than brittle shells.
And she ate them. Every twisted gear, every fragnt of steel, every wire still sparking with energy dissolved between her teeth and sank into her, thick with aether. It was dawn-touched, yes—but not only that. Sothing else threaded through it, sharp and rigid, coiling through her veins as she swallowed it down. She felt it in her limbs, a stiffness, as if her body were fighting her own movents. Was this what order did to her? Was this why, in the past, it had locked her body in place and denied her transformations?
The thought scraped at her mind, but she shoved it aside. It was too late for chains now. The essence of thousands pulsed inside her, dark and heavy, a flood far too vast for such brittle stiffness to contain. If this was order’s grip, then she had already drowned it. Whatever they had tried to shackle her with had been swallowed whole, consud, and turned to fuel for the storm she was becoming.
When the last construct fell, no more replaced it. The flow stemd, the rift’s pull dwindled, and with the priest absent to guide it, the portal shuddered and sealed itself with a hollow snap. Silence settled over the battlefield, broken only by the hiss of cooling tal and the crack of crystal fracturing as her songbeasts dissolved back into light.
Vivienne stomped across the ruin, her claws sinking into stone and steel alike, seizing the shattered remnants of Rava’s kills. She tore them apart with casual cruelty, devouring them piece by piece, savoring the way their infused cores filled her veins with fresh power. Her insides still burned with each arbiter consud but the pain felt distant. Each body consud dulled the sting further, replacing it with raw, surging strength.
Every one of them was fuel. Every fragnt of order-laced aether that had sought to bind her only made her heavier, fuller, stronger. Her enemies’ power was not lost—it was hers now. That was the truth of her being: Vivienne did not just reduce her foes, she beca greater by their ruin.
When the last husk was gone, she exhaled, her body reshaping as the excess of stolen power warped her form. Her tail lashed as obsidian spines grew sharper, her horns glead darker, and the crystalline light in her eyes flared as she settled into her pri form.
She turned, her voice carrying like a soft, chiming lody through the haze of wreckage.
“My love.”
Rava t her gaze, blue eyes burning, her lips curling into a vicious grin, teeth bared with pride.
“My mate.”
Vivenne leapt into the giant lekine’s arms and Rava caught her, sweeping her off her feet.
“Well, that was a thing,” Vivienne giggled, her voice lilting, light in contrast to the ruin all around them.
Rava huffed, shoulders still heaving from exertion, but her grin didn’t fade. “It was many things.”
Vivienne tilted her head, still perched in her lover’s arms, tail curling lazily around Rava’s waist. “Shall we see if we can help your mother?”
“Mm.” Rava’s brow furrowed faintly, though the savage gleam in her eyes never left. “She is strong. Don’t know if she needs it.”
Vivienne smirked, brushing the back of a claw along Rava’s chest as though to soothe her. “Well, can’t hurt to check. I do like her.”
Rava snorted, then bent down, pressing a kiss between Vivienne’s horns—gentle, lingering for a mont before she set her mate back on her feet. Her large hands slid off her hips reluctantly, as if she didn’t want to let go. “As you wish.”
They dashed side by side toward the distant clash of steel and roaring aether, each step closing the gap on the storm ahead. The sound of it grew louder—tal striking like thunder, shockwaves rattling through the broken streets, the stench of burned stone and scorched air filling their lungs.
When Vivienne had first co to Serkoth and been introduced to Korriva, she hadn’t feared her. Fear, at least the kind she once might have felt, had long since been burned out of her. But if she still carried the softness of her old self, Korriva would have terrified her. She rembered that first press of the woman’s aether, the crushing certainty of it, like the weight of a mountain. Korriva was powerful, imasurably so.
So when they arrived and Vivienne laid eyes on her now, she was struck nearly speechless. Korriva—indomitable, unshakable Korriva—stood battered and broken, her right arm gone, the stump charred and crusted where so radiant burn had sealed it. Her body heaved with ragged breaths, every exhale hissing steam as though even her lungs had been scorched.
The other side of the battlefield was no less shocking. There wasn’t just one angel. There were two.
The first, the one Korriva had been dueling, was in ruin. His single remaining wing twitched, feathers torn and burned away. His once-pristine blade was nothing but a jagged stump, snapped in half. Dents and rents marred the clockwork plates of his body, golden ichor leaking from the seams.
But beside him lood another. Larger. aner. Its hulking fra carried a weight of brutality that made even Vivienne hesitate. The thing’s arms were like forged pillars, each hand gripping a massive greatsword that glowed white-hot with dawnlight. Three wings jutted from its back, asymtrical—two strong on the left, one on the right. The stumps of others remained, raw and ragged, as though ripped off mid-battle.
Both Vivienne and Rava hurled themselves into the fray without hesitation, their bodies blurs of violence against the battlefield’s fractured glow.
Vivienne’s right claw warped and split apart into a dripping, toothless maw. With a convulsive lurch, she spat a heavy surge of her black ichor, the thick fluid splattering against Zerathiel’s battered form. It wasn’t just blood—it was her essence, corrosive and alive, drowning over his broken plating and forcing its way into his wounds to fester.
At the sa mont, Rava slamd her heel into the back of the hulking angel. The impact was thunderous, and even that mountain of clockwork staggered forward, its massive blades dragging grooves into the dirt as it fought to steady itself.
And then it hit them.
A drag. A weight. A force that wasn’t physical but still sank its claws into their every motion. Their reflexes remained sharp, their intent as quick as ever, but their bodies betrayed them. Every slash, every twitch of muscle, every blink seed to crawl through syrup.
Vivienne’s five eyes narrowed, her tongue flicking against the air as she tasted it. Bitter. Heavy. Wrong. She knew that flavor. The sa one she had licked from the edges of Lyridia’s power. Narrative aether.
The realization made her spines bristle. It wasn’t simply that they were being slowed. No—here, in this warped pocket of space, the world itself had been rewritten. The rules were absolute. Speed beyond a certain point simply did not exist. The story of this place demanded that nothing moved faster than its chosen pace. Even her monstrous body, even her warped reflexes, had to obey.
Vivienne hissed under her breath, the sound sharp and discordant. It wasn’t fear that gripped her—it never was—but fury.
“Both of you, run! Get out of my way!” Korriva shouted, twisting and rolling under the downward arc of one of the hulking angel’s massive blades. Sparks flew where the tal scraped against stone.
“Ooh, new toys! I hope they’re as fun as you!” The hulking angel’s voice was high-pitched and gleeful, almost childlike, even as she brought her enormous blades down again.
Zerathiel whirled, swinging his broken blade at Vivienne. The strike was slower than she rembered, lacking the speed and precision he normally wielded. It bit deep, searing into her body with the heat of his dawn-infused aether. Pain flared, but she realized sothing almost imdiately: he was struggling too.
Before, he had been faster, near untouchable, a perfect weapon honed for the battlefield. Now, the air itself seed to restrain him, their movents oddly synchronized in sluggish defiance of their true capabilities.
“But—” Vivienne started, jaw tightening as she readied her next strike, but Korriva’s voice cut through.
“Leave. You are both in my way here!”
With a fluid motion, Korriva’s palm struck out. A lance of violet lightning shot from her hands, arcing straight through the hulking angel and forcing her to stagger back. Korriva leapt aside in a single motion, narrowly dodging another wild swing, landing on her feet as if she were weightless, every movent precise, controlled, lethal.
Vivienne’s eyes flicked between the two. Her mate was still in one piece, but the battle here had beco sothing else entirely. It wasn’t just strength anymore; it was who could adapt to the strange, oppressive rhythm that gripped the battlefield.
Reluctantly, Vivienne tore her attention from Zerathiel and lunged toward Rava. With a swift, powerful motion, she seized the mont and threw her lover across the battlefield. Rava sailed through the air like a streak of living lightning, landing with minimal impact in the distance
Vivienne followed imdiately, propelling herself after her with fluid, predatory grace. Her limbs elongated and shifted as she moved, every motion honed for speed and precision, leaving the ground below a blur of displaced dirt and stone.
Only when she felt that sluggish aura lose its hold on her did she turn around.
That was the mont Korriva let loose.
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