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Rise of the Horde Chapter 627 - 626

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 627 - 626 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

The second Gate was found on the thirty-first day of the investigation, in ice so old that the stone arch at its center had been gripped and polished by glacial movent until the original inscription work blazed with a clarity that the Tekarr arch's centuries of open-air weathering had long since eroded. The Gate of the northern ice fields was the most perfectly preserved of the known secondary sites, which was either the result of its isolation or a sign that whoever had built it had selected the location with the intention of ensuring that the passage of ti alone would not be sufficient to compromise what it contained.

Veiled-Eleven's information had been accurate in every particular that could be verified. Theron's reluctant corroboration had placed the site within a hundred miles of the coordinates she provided, and the expedition's own instrunts had detected the dinsional energy signature at eight miles, which ant the site was closer to the narrower end of the hundred-mile window than the broader one. The expedition had been four days' faster reaching the site than projected because of Ur'sali's knowledge of the highland terrain, and the four days had been the margin that allowed them to arrive three days before the Covenant team.

The Gate itself rose from the center of a frozen lake, its arch visible from the lake's southern shore as a structure that the eye insisted was wrong, not wrong in the way that ancient buildings could be wrong through the distortion of perspective, but wrong in a more fundantal sense: it occupied space in a way that suggested it had not been built into the landscape but had arrived in it, its presence changing the physics of the imdiate area the way a very dense object changes the physics of the space around it. The inscriptions on its surface were the most complete Aliyah had seen in the research docunts Marius had produced, the ancient text preserved by the cold with a fidelity that a museum curator would have wept over.

Darak had approached the lake's edge with the careful attention of a practitioner who understood that excitent was the enemy of analysis and that analysis was the only thing standing between the expedition and a mistake whose consequences would be permanent. She was a 4th Circle mage who had spent twelve years studying dinsional energy before the crisis made dinsional energy a subject with imdiate practical stakes rather than theoretical ones. She was the kind of scholar who beca sharper under pressure rather than diffuse, who found that the stakes focused her rather than unsettled her, and who had co to the Tekarr garrison because the Warden of the Gates had offered her the only research position in the kingdom that would put her in direct contact with the phenona she had spent twelve years studying from the theoretical outside.

She deployed her monitoring instrunts along the lake's southern shore with the systematic precision of soone conducting a baseline survey before any intervention. Energy output. Dinsional resonance frequency. Keystone configuration. Inscription integrity. Each asurent confird what the instrunts at the Tekarr arch had predicted from Veiled-Eleven's description: a fully intact secondary Gate maintaining its seal without modification or disruption, operating exactly as its builders had intended for as long as anyone could determine.

"It's clean," she reported to the Tekarr arch through the communication crystal. "All seven Keystones in proper configuration. No modification to the inscription patterns. Seal integrity is assessed as complete. The site is in better condition than the Tekarr arch itself."

Aliyah received this report with the qualified relief of a commander who understood that good news at a secured site was not the sa as the problem being solved. "Establish periter surveillance and begin the assessnt for a permanent watch station. I want a garrison plan within seventy-two hours."

"Understood. There is one additional item." Darak hesitated in the way that practitioners hesitated when the additional item was sothing they were uncertain how to categorize. "The energy signature from the Gate is strong enough at this distance to affect the modification in Veiled-Eleven's physiology. She reported increased clarity in the Abyssal frequency channels. She described it as hearing a voice she had not realized was muffled."

"That is either useful information or an explanation for subsequent behavior that I will wish I had paid more attention to."

"Yes. That is my assessnt as well."

The Covenant team arrived on the thirty-fourth day of the expedition's presence at the site, erging from the eastern approach to the lake across terrain that Ur'sali had been watching through a network of observation markers deployed during the first week of the garrison's establishnt. The markers were not sophisticated by elite standards but they were invisible to people who did not know the thod, and the Covenant practitioners who led the team from the eastern approach did not know the thod.

There were seven of them. Three practitioners whose Covenant mbership had been established through chains the Threian investigation had not reached. Three guards whose combat capability placed them at the upper 3rd Realm and who moved with the professional awareness of people who understood their function was to protect the practitioners long enough for the practitioners to do what they had co to do. And a mage who walked at the group's center with the quality of focused awareness that Darak recognized, through her instrunts at half a mile, as soone operating at or above the 5th Circle of magical capability.

The mage's discipline was fire, not frost. The instrunt signature was different in its architecture from the dinsional manipulation that the Keystones used, but the underlying magnitude was unmistakable: this was a practitioner who had reached a level of magical attainnt that placed her in a category where the differences between magical disciplines mattered less than the commonality of operating at a scale that most practitioners never approached.

Her na, they would learn later, was Essara. She was forty-three years old and she had believed in the Covenant's purpose for twenty-two years, which was the sa length of ti that Theron had believed in it and that Veiled-Eleven had served it, a number that suggested the Covenant recruited effectively at approximately the sa stage of a practitioner's developnt, when theoretical understanding had advanced far enough to make the Abyss comprehensible and commitnt had not yet been tested by the proximity of what comprehensibility actually ant.

The standoff developed over two hours before violence was attempted. Darak's garrison held the lake's southern and western approaches, the rangers controlled the northern shore, and Ur'sali's observation markers had given the garrison enough warning to establish positions before the Covenant team arrived at the lake's edge. The Covenant mage assessed the situation with the experienced eye of soone who had conducted operations under opposition before, and attempted a probe of the garrison's eastern defensive position with a focused fire working that was intended to establish the strength of the wards rather than breach them.

Darak countered with dinsional layering, building her ward structure from the sa inscription principles that the Gate itself employed, which had the advantage of operating at frequencies that fire magic was very poorly calibrated to overco and the disadvantage that Darak was drawing on reserves that the probe had forced her to reveal as limited. The probe lasted forty minutes. The garrison held it. The Covenant mage withdrew to consult with her practitioners, which Ur'sali observed and reported with the characteristically precise and unhurried delivery of a professional who found excitent an unsuitable substitute for accuracy.

The garrison's rangers anwhile had moved two teams around the lake's northern edge to positions that did not threaten the Covenant team directly but that were visible enough to communicate the ssage that the Covenant team's available routes were fewer than they had been when they arrived. The communication was received. The Covenant team's guards deployed into a tighter protective formation around the practitioners, which was the tactical equivalent of acknowledging a reality without explicitly conceding it.

The night ca down with the complete authority of northern winter darkness, temperature dropping to levels that the garrison's cold-weather equipnt was designed for and that the Covenant team's equipnt was clearly not. Darak noted the Covenant team's preparation levels and concluded that they had planned for a swift operation rather than a sustained one, which ant that every hour of the standoff made the garrison's position relatively stronger and the Covenant team's relatively worse.

She allowed the standoff to continue until the team's fire mage produced a warming sphere that was visible across the lake as a gesture of environntal necessity rather than operational confidence.

Then she walked to the lake's edge with a white flag and a request for parley.

The parley was granted. The fire mage, Essara, walked to the lake's edge alone while her guards watched with their hands on their weapons and her practitioners maintained the warming sphere from a position Darak assessed as defensive rather than offensive.

They stood on the ice four paces apart, two won who had reached the upper levels of magical attainnt through different traditions and had arrived at the sa frozen lake from opposite directions and for opposing purposes.

"The Gate is sealed," Darak said. "The Thessara Gate is sealed. Every Covenant network in Threia is dismantled. The Archbishop is in custody. You have traveled to a site that you cannot modify, from an organization that no longer has the operational infrastructure to support what you intended, to complete an operation that has already been definitively prevented at the primary site."

"I am aware of all of that," Essara said. Her voice was level and carried the particular quality of soone who had processed difficult information and was now operating in the territory that lay on the other side of it. "I ca because the alternative was accepting that twenty-two years of devotion was simply over and I was ant to simply accept that and go ho."

"That is a reason," Darak said. "It is not a justification for what you intended."

"No." Essara was quiet for a mont, her breath visible in the freezing air. "I know the difference between those two things. I have known it for longer than I would like to admit. The certainty that sustained the Covenant's work was less total than it was perford to be. The performance, maintained for long enough, becos indistinguishable from the real thing. Until sothing breaks it." She looked past Darak toward the Gate, its Keystones pulsing their ancient steady light across the frozen lake. "What broke it was watching Thessara fail. Seeing the thing I had devoted my life to serving be sealed by a single practitioner who understood the chanism better than anyone who had been working on it for twenty-two years."

"The Warden of the Gates."

"Yes. I read the reports." Essara finally looked away from the Gate. "A frost mage and a dark-arts lord. An alliance that the Covenant's entire theoretical frawork predicted was impossible, because the Covenant believed that purpose was determined by origin and that origin was determined by the tradition of practice. A frost mage and a dark-arts lord could not work together because their disciplines were incompatible. Except they did. Which ant the frawork was wrong, and if the frawork was wrong, then the certainty that the frawork produced was also wrong, and if the certainty was wrong..."

"Then everything constructed on the certainty requires re-examination," Darak finished.

"Yes."

They stood on the ice while the northern darkness pressed down around them and the Gate pulsed its containnt frequency into the cold air.

"Surrender," Darak said. "Your practitioners and your guards. Full disclosure of every Covenant operational location, communication channel, and personnel you have knowledge of. In exchange, I will ensure you are transported to the capital with all appropriate physical provisions and that your testimony is received by the Warden of the Gates personally."

Essara looked at her, calculating the terms against whatever internal accounting she was performing.

"She will want everything I know."

"Yes."

"And what I know is considerable."

"I assu that is why you were chosen for this operation."

A pause. Then: "Will she listen?"

"The Warden of the Gates walked into a dissolution zone with the man who built the conspiracy that nearly destroyed her army," Darak said. "She listened to him. I have no reason to believe she will apply a different standard to you."

The Covenant team surrendered before midnight. Their equipnt was inventoried and secured. Their weapons were collected. The practitioners were warded against magical use with instrunts that Darak had brought specifically for this contingency, because bringing containnt equipnt was the kind of preparation that the Warden of the Gates's thodology required of all her teams. They were given hot food from the garrison's provisions, which they received with the mixture of gratitude and suspicion that characterized the response of people who have been treated as enemies receiving consideration they had not expected.

The rangers escorted the prisoners south through the highland terrain that Ur'sali navigated with the sa unhurried competence that she had brought to every elent of the operation. The journey took eleven days. The prisoners were not mistreated. The garrison made the fundantal decision, which was not actually a decision but the natural output of the culture the Warden of the Gates was establishing, that people who surrender deserve the physical dignity of non-combatants regardless of what they were doing when they surrendered.

Darak's full report reached the Tekarr arch on the sa day that Marius's restoration attempt for Halveth was scheduled. Aliyah read it in the early morning, before the attempt was due to begin. The second Gate was secure. The Covenant team was in custody. Essara was cooperating.

The third known secondary Gate, the one beneath the ocean floor, remained out of reach.

But the one beneath the northern ice fields was sealed and watched and would not be unguarded again.

She filed the report, noted the outstanding problem, and went to the arch chamber to sit with the barrier for a while before the day's other concerns required her elsewhere. The pressure of the Sealed One was constant. Impersonal. Patient in the way that only things without mortality could be patient.

She pressed back with the frost energy from her fully recovered scepter, a gentle, exploratory contact rather than an attempt at anything, and felt the barrier's response: solid, complete, sustained by seven stones that had been set in their configuration by builders who had understood what they were doing and had done it well enough that their work had outlasted everything else about them.

The vigil continued.

The prisoners from the ice fields operation were transported to the capital over eleven days of controlled march through highland terrain that the rangers and Ur'sali navigated with the collaborative efficiency of people who had established a working language for the terrain between them without requiring much explicit negotiation. They moved. The discussion was in the movent, in the adjustnts made in response to what the terrain produced rather than what the map predicted. The lieutenant had found this either irritating or illuminating depending on which part of his personality was dominant at any given mont, which was itself a kind of navigation.

Essara cooperated fully from the first day of transport, which surprised the rangers in a way that Darak had privately predicted and had chosen not to announce in advance because announcing the prediction would have produced caution that made testing it impossible. The fire mage provided information about Covenant operational networks outside Threia with the systematic thoroughness of soone who had made a complete decision rather than a partial one. She nad practitioners. She nad locations. She nad the thods of communication and the channels of funding and the specific rituals through which Covenant mbers identified and recruited candidates, which were more nuanced and less dramatic than operational accounts suggested, involving sustained observation and indirect introduction to forbidden materials rather than the dramatic initiation ceremonies that folklore attributed to dark organizations.

The practitioners interrogated by Lord Blackwood's team in the capital over the following weeks were in several cases people who had been shaped toward the Covenant's purpose from their early twenties by processes they did not recognize as processes until Essara's testimony gave them the frawork to see their own histories from outside. The recognition produced a range of responses that Sorrel, brought in to assist with the interrogations on account of her developing expertise in Covenant psychology, docunted with the sa careful attention she brought to her clinical work. So responded with the anger of people discovering that their most important choices had been preceded by deliberate cultivation of conditions that made those choices feel inevitable. Others responded with a flattened acceptance that was either sophistication about human agency or the collapse of sothing they needed in order to resist.

Darak remained at the ice fields Gate for sixty days after the prisoners were transported, establishing the permanent watch station with the systematic thoroughness that the Warden's specifications required. The station was built in the sa spirit as the Tekarr garrison: not a military post in the traditional sense but an Order installation, staffed by practitioners and soldiers whose combined purpose was the maintenance and protection of the seal rather than the defense of territory or the projection of force. The cold was extre and constant and required the kind of physical adaptation that took ti and adequate equipnt and the gradual accretion of respect for an environnt that would kill the unprepared without drama or particular interest in the fact.

Ur'sali stayed for the first forty days of the station's establishnt. She had not been asked to do this. She had simply not left when the prisoners departed, and her continued presence in the camp beca a settled fact rather than a discussed decision, the way genuinely useful things often beca settled facts in operational contexts where paperwork and formal authorization were slower than necessity. She taught the garrison rangers the ice fields navigation in the way that her ancestors taught everything: by moving and letting the learning happen in the body before it was understood by the mind. Several rangers found this deeply uncomfortable in the way that genuine learning was always uncomfortable. Several others found it the most efficient pedagogy they had encountered in twenty years of service. Ur'sali's assessnt of both groups was identical: they were learning, which was the thing. How they felt about learning was the thing they would sort out for themselves.

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