Kael’thos arrived at 10:04 AM.
The Tier 4 three-star prisoner was younger than Vrynn, more aggressive, less experienced with real failure. He ca at the wards not with probing but with direct assault, a Tier 4 prisoner using everything he had to break through Gorvax’s protection.
The wards held.
But the assault cracked one of the secondary barriers. Not enough to create an opening, but enough to register as vulnerable. Kael’thos saw the crack and pushed harder, pouring everything into that single point.
Owen felt the pressure spike.
He gathered his manifestations and moved them to the point of assault. Not as eight separate entities but as one being expressed across eight locations, all moving in concert. The Unfolding burned through bloodline energy at a catastrophic rate — he could feel the draconic core heating, could feel the danger approaching, could feel the threshold beyond which his body would simply give up trying to hold the form.
He had maybe three more minutes before the technique collapsed.
He used them efficiently.
Kael’thos broke through the ward gap just as the manifestations converged. The Tier 4 prisoner erged into the chamber already moving, already attacking, and he ran directly into eight versions of a dragon that had been waiting for exactly this mont.
This ti, Owen did not show restraint.
Kael’thos was dangerous, he had co here intending to kill. The manifestations treated him accordingly. They moved with the specific viciousness of a dragon protecting its lair, using the Burning technique, using physical strength that was not enhanced by any cosmic energy but was instead pure draconic biology.
Kael’thos lasted thirty seconds.
When the manifestations were done with him, he was not dead — Owen had managed to spare him that much — but he was not functional either. Broken arm. Broken ribs. Fractured leg. The manifestations simply dropped him and turned toward the entrance.
The third signature was arriving now. The unknown one that Yalira had flagged as moving faster than the leaderboard hunters. It was close now, very close, and Owen could finally begin to resolve what it actually was.
A Tier 4 one-star prisoner. Almost Human. Female. Moving with the kind of tactical precision that suggested Tribunal training.
And riding alongside her, descending from the sky in a controlled descent that had nothing to do with natural gravity:
An Ordained hunter. Not a Cantor like Wenrik. Sothing different. The CE signature registered as geotric, spatial, structured. An Architect.
But not the sa rank as Vasek. This one felt older. Worse. Peak Tier 3, which ant it was the absolute apex of what non-Tier 4 beings could achieve.
The Unfolding collapsed.
Owen’s eight manifestations snapped back into a single body, all at once, and the sensation was like being compressed in a vice. His bloodline core scread. His muscles locked. For a mont he could not breathe, could not move, could only stand there and feel the catastrophic exhaustion of pushing his body past every limit.
Gorvax caught him as he fell.
"The Ordained has arrived," the Sower said quietly. "And we are out of ti."
---
The Ordained hunter descended through the ward barrier like it was not there.
The wards that had held against Vrynn and Kael’thos simply parted for the Architect, geotry bending to accommodate another being that understood geotry on a level the wards could not oppose. Behind the Ordained ca the Tier 4 prisoner, moving with the specific obedience of soone who had been promised sothing and knew exactly what the price of failure was.
The Ordained’s form was more subtle than Vasek’s had been. It was almost human-shaped. Almost. The joints bent wrong. The proportions were off by degrees that made the eye want to look away. Its face was smooth and featureless except for two black coins of eyes. When it spoke, the voice ca from inside and outside simultaneously.
"False fist, I am Tertius of the Third Depth. I have co to terminate you on behalf of the Tribunal, or to extract you if you surrender. The Tribunal has authorized to use whatever ans necessary to achieve either outco."
Owen tried to stand. His legs did not respond properly. The Unfolding had cost him more than he had anticipated. His bloodline core was smoking. His CE was at maybe two thousand units, and most of that was already allocated to keeping his consciousness intact.
Gorvax stood instead.
"I am Gorvax. I have seen empires rise and fall. I have watched species beco extinct. And I am telling you now: you will not have him."
The Ordained tilted its head. The wrong-angled motion made Owen’s stomach turn.
"An old voice," Tertius observed. "But old is not the sa as strong. You are Tier 4 five-star, yes. But you are also tired. You are also weak from months of hiding. You are also not my concern."
The Ordained moved.
It did not walk. It unfolded itself through the space between Gorvax and Owen, and in that unfolding created a discontinuity that was ant to separate them. But Gorvax was ready. The Sower had ten thousand years of experience with spatial manipulation, and he t the Architect’s unfolding with a counter-unfolding of his own.
The two of them collided in the geotry itself, and the chamber’s wards began to fail.
Cracks spread across the stone. The bioluminescent moss flickered and died. The upward-spiraling water began to fall in chaotic directions. The old magic that Gorvax had spent weeks putting into place was burning away under the assault of two beings who understood space at a level most creatures could not touch.
Owen pushed himself up.
His muscles scread. His core was so overheated he could feel the damage accumulating. But he was a dragon, and a dragon did not stay down while its lair was being destroyed.
Then he transford.
Not gracefully. Not controlled. Forced, violent, the kind of transformation that was as much explosion as anything else. His humanoid form tore open and a dragon erged, smaller than the last transformation, more jagged, more furious, bleeding golden light from every seam.
The Tier 4 prisoner who had co with Tertius saw the dragon erge and ran.
Owen did not stop her. He focused on Tertius.
The Ordained hunter had Gorvax pressed against one wall now, the Sower’s blue skin bleeding grey ichor, his movents getting slower. Tertius was thodical, was working through the geotry systematically, was dismantling the old mage’s defenses piece by piece.
Owen roared and charged.
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