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Rise of the Horde Chapter 852 - 851

Novel: Rise of the Horde Author: Draejon Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 852 - 851 from Rise of the Horde, a Action novel by Draejon.

The ssage arrived through the Verakh relay network on a morning in the early cold season when the training grounds were running drills in light frost and the forge district’s smoke rose straight up into a windless grey sky.

Rakh’ash’tha received it at the healing chambers, where the healer was reviewing the second printing of the Healer’s Codex. The first printing had been worked through so thoroughly that so copies had pages gone soft from handling, the edges worn, margins annotated by the healers-in-training who had used them. The second printing had heavier paper.

The ssage was from Darak, written in the researcher’s compressed precise hand, the words packed together the way urgent writing was when the writer was conscious of using a relay network and did not want to pay for more parchnt than the ssage required.

It said: The third Keystone reading has deviated fourteen percent from baseline over the past six weeks. Deviation is consistent and not accelerating but this does not comfort . Aliyah does not believe the Keystone is failing. Aliyah believes sothing on the other side is applying pressure to the binding. Testing implies awareness. I am requesting Rakh’ash’tha’s earliest possible visit. Bring the spectrotric tools from the alchemical supply. This cannot be conveyed accurately through a letter.

Rakh’ash’tha read the ssage twice, set it down on the Codex’s open page, and went to find Khao’khen.

The chieftain was in the administrative hall reviewing the water system’s second-phase expansion plans with Droktagar and the Verakh infrastructure coordinator, the three of them gathered around a map of the city’s southern districts with the focused energy of people trying to fit more things into a space than the space naturally accommodated. He read the ssage without sitting down.

His face did not change.

"How quickly can you reach the Arch?" he asked.

"Six days at standard pace. Four if we push."

"Four." He looked at Droktagar. "The southern district plan: start the eastern section first, the residential areas need the distribution capacity before the cold deepens. I want the main line extension complete by midwinter." He looked at the Verakh coordinator. "Get Maghazz’s second unit. They know the mountain approach routes and the Arch’s current security contingent knows their signals."

Rakh’ash’tha departed the following morning with Maghazz’s eight-warrior unit, traveling at the pace Khao’khen had specified: a pace that was not quite enough to exhaust the wargs on successive days, one relay swap at the halfway point, arrival on the fourth evening.

Aliyah Winters t them at the Arch’s outer periter in the late afternoon light. She was wearing the Order of the Seal’s working clothes rather than formal attire, which ant she had either not had ti to change or had decided the eting did not call for formality. Darak stood behind her holding a scroll of asurent charts with the expression of a researcher who had been looking at sothing disturbing for an extended period and was ready to transfer so of the disturbance to another person.

"I want you to see the readings before I tell you my interpretation," Aliyah said.

This was the approach that healers also used. Evidence first. Rakh’ash’tha approved of it.

The Arch’s research chamber held the familiar ozone scent of dinsional energy proximity, sharper than the healer rembered from the frawork visit three months before. The seven Keystones pulsed in their sockets at the rhythm that the briefing docunts had described: steady, tronomic, the cadence that indicated integrity.

The third Keystone’s pulse was slightly off.

It was not dramatically off. Not visibly wrong to eyes that were not specifically looking for deviation. But Rakh’ash’tha had spent a career detecting small deviations in systems that appeared normal from the outside, and the deviation was there, a fractional irregularity in the timing that the Keystone’s pulse returned to after each cycle.

Darak laid the asurent charts across the research table. Six weeks of daily readings, baseline established over the two preceding years, deviation beginning on a specific date and growing gradually to fourteen percent before flattening into a plateau twelve days prior and holding there.

"The deviation began consistently," Rakh’ash’tha said, tracing the line of numbers. "No sudden jump. A gradual increase over three weeks, then stabilization."

"Stabilization is what concerns more than the increase," Aliyah said. "Random dinsional pressure fluctuates. This doesn’t fluctuate. It holds. It has been holding at fourteen percent for twelve days without variation." She stood beside the third Keystone and looked at it. The stone itself appeared normal: the dinsional energy pulsing through it, the Seal’s binding intact. "Sothing found this Keystone and has been maintaining a steady pressure against its binding since it found it."

"Testing," Rakh’ash’tha said, using Darak’s word from the ssage.

"Testing whether the binding holds. Whether the seal has weaknesses. Whether maintained pressure produces different results from variable pressure." Aliyah’s hands were still at her sides. "The pressure is not enough to threaten the binding. The binding has a significant safety margin above fourteen percent deviation. What I don’t know is whether this is probing that will stay at fourteen percent, or probing that will increase once the first phase establishes what we can and cannot detect."

Rakh’ash’tha unpacked the spectrotric tools from the travel case. The instrunts were alchemical hybrids of the healer’s own design, adapted from the pulse-reading tools that dical practice used for assessing circulatory systems to read the energy signatures that dinsional research required. Aliyah had contributed calibration data for the adaptation during the frawork discussions; the result was a tool that neither tradition had developed independently.

The analysis took an hour and a half.

The healer worked thodically, cross-referencing each reading against Darak’s baseline charts, building a composite picture. The chemical language that Rakh’ash’tha used to describe physical systems translated into the dinsional context with reasonable accuracy: binding force equivalents, resonance stability coefficients, the thing that the healer read as pressure direction, which was the most important finding.

"The pressure is directional," Rakh’ash’tha said, when the readings were complete. "It’s not ambient dinsional fluctuation distributed across the Keystone’s surface. It is coming from a specific point and pushing against a specific area of the binding." The healer set the instrunts down. "Sothing knows where this Keystone is. Sothing has found its exact position and is pressing on it with awareness of what it is."

Aliyah had been very still since this reading was shared.

"If the pressure increases," she said, "what is the tiline before the binding is at risk?"

"At fourteen percent maintained: the current safety margin suggests months, not days or weeks. If the pressure doubles, the margin reduces proportionally. The critical question is the rate of increase if the pressure begins to rise again." Rakh’ash’tha looked at the third Keystone. "What I don’t know, and cannot determine from these readings, is whether this entity has the capability to increase pressure significantly or whether fourteen percent is at or near its current capacity."

"It could be testing whether fourteen percent is our detection limit," Darak said from the corner where the researcher had been docunting every reading as it was taken. "If it believes fourteen percent is below our response threshold, it maintains fourteen percent until it’s ready to move."

The room was quiet.

"What do you recomnd?" Aliyah asked.

"Continue monitoring. Docunt every deviation. Increase the asurent frequency to twice daily rather than once. If the plateau breaks, signal through the Verakh network imdiately and don’t wait for the next scheduled relay." Rakh’ash’tha began packing the instrunts. "And prepare the response. Whatever course of action addresses a binding under active attack should be decided and ready before the attack escalates, not developed in the mont the escalation begins."

Aliyah nodded slowly. "I’ll draft the response protocol and send it through the network for Khao’khen’s review."

"Send it to both of us simultaneously," Rakh’ash’tha said. "I will be at Yohan within four days of any ergency signal. But Khao’khen’s response may need to move before I arrive, and he should know what options exist." The healer paused at the door, looking back at the seven Keystones and their pulses. Six steady. One slightly off. "Whatever is pressing on that stone has been aware of this Arch for longer than we’ve been monitoring it. That is the most important thing the readings tell us. It knew the Arch was here before we started watching. It has been patient."

"Yes," Aliyah said quietly.

"So have we," Rakh’ash’tha said. "Make sure the protocol assus patience on both sides."

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