Mile marker fourteen was a stone post on the northern road’s eastern shoulder, weathered to the point of illegibility except for the carved number that soone had cut deep enough to survive a century of northern winters.
They reached it at seven in the morning.
The remote unit was already waiting.
Not a raised human this ti — a construct, roughly humanoid, assembled from materials Kael didn’t imdiately identify and held together by the particular quality of a Necromancer’s will operating at long range. Level 44 expressed through craftsmanship rather than power — precise, efficient, built for function rather than impression.
It carried a satchel.
It held the satchel out when Kael approached and then stood completely still, the remote operation apparently limited to delivery rather than conversation.
He took the satchel.
The construct sat down at the road’s edge, the animation leaving it between one mont and the next, and beca a collection of assembled materials that the morning light revealed as primarily bone and river clay and sothing that had once been leather.
Kael looked at it for a mont.
Then he opened the satchel.
Eleven years of research looked like this.
Fourteen handwritten volus, each one dense with the particular handwriting of soone who had been doing nothing but thinking for a long ti and had developed an economy of notation that squeezed maximum information into minimum space. Diagrams. Cross-references. Dead ends docunted as carefully as conclusions because Calder had apparently decided that knowing what didn’t work was as important as knowing what did.
Sera took one look at the volus and sat down at the road’s edge and started reading.
She read for forty minutes without speaking.
Kael read over her shoulder for the first twenty and then let her process and walked the road’s edge with Maren, talking through what they’d both absorbed.
"The preparation thod," Maren said. "Calder calls it Spirit Tempering. The concept — "
"Is the sa as physical tempering," Kael said. "Stress the material repeatedly below the breaking point. It becos harder."
"Yes. Applied to Spirit reserves specifically." Maren had one of the volus open — it had been reading simultaneously, the Level 35 Intelligence processing faster than either of them. "Calder developed a sequence of controlled Spirit depletion and recovery cycles. Each cycle pushes the reserves closer to zero than the previous one." A pause. "The theory is that a Spirit reserve that has been to near-zero twelve tis develops a — resistance. A mory of the boundary."
"How long per cycle?"
"Forty minutes depletion. Forty minutes recovery. Twelve cycles." Maren looked at him. "Twenty hours."
"We have three days."
"We have three days and Calder’s notes suggest the tempering is most effective if the final cycle completes within six hours of the Warden encounter." Maren closed the volu. "Which ans we do the tempering on day three. The final approach to Crestfall on day three evening."
"What do we do days one and two?"
Maren looked at the remaining volus. "Read," it said. "Everything Calder docunted about the Warden’s behavior. Its consumption thod. The precise mont during anchor destruction when it becos active." It paused. "He was inside the twelve-anchor Shroud for approximately nine minutes before the Warden consud him. He docunted everything he observed in those nine minutes from mory afterward."
"Nine minutes of observation," Sera said from the road’s edge without looking up. "Written from mory. Fourteen volus of supporting research." She turned a page. "He is extrely thorough for soone who spent eleven years alone in a tower."
"Isolation produces either deterioration or focus," Maren said. "Apparently Calder chose focus."
Kael looked at the satchel. At fourteen volus of a man’s eleven-year attempt to finish sothing that had broken him.
He thought about Maren on a dungeon throne for seventeen years.
About Asha in her chair for three hundred.
About Vael on the moor.
About every ancient thing that had chosen to remain and wait and accumulate rather than accept that the ending was already written.
"Start from volu one," he said. "We walk and read. Everything by tonight."
They read and walked.
The northern road was straight enough through the farming country that reading while moving was manageable — Sera with two volus, Maren with three, Kael with the one Calder had labeled Primary — Read First in handwriting that suggested he’d written it specifically for whoever was standing here.
The first fifty pages were context.
Calder’s background — not personal history, technical background. Twenty years as a Grave Sovereign before the first Shroud attempt. His Class’s specific architecture, its differences from Death’s Chosen, the reasons he’d believed his Level 67 would be sufficient.
The next thirty pages were the first attempt.
Four anchors destroyed over three nights. The Shroud collapsing. The Pale Warden waking. The nine seconds between the Warden’s awakening and Calder’s escape — nine seconds during which it had apparently reached toward him and found his Class and assessed it and decided it was insufficient to warrant consumption.
Insufficient, Calder had written. I believe it found uninteresting. Too small. Whatever it is looking for — a Grave Sovereign at Level 67 was beneath its appetite threshold.
Then the Church had rebuilt.
Twelve anchors. The Warden directed rather than free. The second attempt — the one that had cost him thirty-six levels in four seconds.
Calder had written the account of those four seconds in extraordinary detail.
The reach. The consumption. The specific sensation of ability after ability simply ceasing to exist — not painfully, not dramatically, the way you might expect a theft to feel. Quietly. The way a word disappears from a language when enough people stop using it.
I had a skill called Bone Weaving, Calder had written. I had used it every day for twenty years. In the third second I reached for it and it was not there and I could not rember what it had felt like to have it. Not the absence of the skill. The absence of the mory of having it. As if it had never existed.
Kael read that paragraph three tis.
He thought about what it would an to reach for Death’s Grasp and find not its absence but the absence of ever having known it existed.
He thought about the Awakening ceremony and the grey light and x1000 written in fire in his vision and what it would be to have that simply — taken.
The cold anger that had been burning since the morning of three copper coins found a new fuel and burned hotter.
Good.
Volu seven was the Pale Warden itself.
Calder had compiled everything — pre-System texts, Church-intercepted research docunts that he didn’t explain how he’d obtained, cross-referenced observations from the nine minutes of the second attempt and six minutes of the first.
The Warden was not alive in the biological sense.
It was not dead in the System sense.
It was — between. The sa space Kael occupied, but from the other direction. Where Death’s Chosen was the space between living and dead approached from the living side, the Pale Warden was that sa space approached from the other direction.
It is what Death’s Chosen would be, Calder had written, if the Class had no anchor in humanity. Pure consumption without the human foundation that directs it. The appetite without the person.
Kael read that sentence four tis.
"Maren," he said.
"I read it," Maren said from three paces back.
"The human foundation that directs it," Kael said.
"Yes."
"That’s the difference. Not Source designation. Not theoretical immunity." He looked at the road ahead. "The Warden consus because consumption is all it is. I consu — claim, raise, harvest — because of what I’m pointed at." He paused. "Voss. My mother’s hands. The boy with the x1 multiplier." He looked at the volu. "The foundation."
Maren was quiet for a mont.
"Calder didn’t have that," it said carefully. "His attempt was technically excellent. His Level was sufficient. His preparation was thorough." A pause. "But he went in pointed at the Shroud’s destruction as an end in itself. Not at what the destruction was for."
"Yes," Kael said.
"And you — "
"I know what I’m pointed at," Kael said.
Maren said nothing.
Sera said nothing.
They walked.
Day two.
They covered thirty kiloters and finished all fourteen volus and camped at a river crossing where the northern road bridged a tributary that Sera’s maps nad the Ashwater — a coincidence that nobody ntioned but that Kael noted privately and found either aningful or simply a coincidence, and had learned enough to know the difference didn’t always matter.
Around the fire Maren talked through the absorption thod.
Not the Spirit Tempering — that was tomorrow. The actual absorption, the mont of contact with the Warden, the specific sequence Calder had theorized based on eleven years of research into sothing he’d never successfully attempted.
"Three stages," Maren said. "First — presence assertion. You establish the Class fully, the sa way you did for the bound dead and for Vael. The source present and total." It looked at the fire. "The Warden will reach at this point. It will find the source and — according to Calder’s theory — be unable to consu it. But the reach will happen. You will feel it."
"What does it feel like?" Sera asked.
"Calder describes it as — " Maren paused. "Cold recognition. The sensation of being correctly identified by sothing that has been looking for you for a long ti."
"Not threatening," Kael said.
"No. Identifying." Maren looked at him. "Which is the window. While it is identifying rather than consuming — second stage. You reach back. Through the System’s architecture, the sa instinct as the anchor unraveling but deeper. Finding not the threads of a binding but the Warden’s connection to the System itself."
"And third stage?" Kael said.
"You offer it a direction," Maren said quietly. "The Warden has no foundation. It has never had a human anchor. It has been appetite without direction for however long it existed before the Church found it and however long it was dormant before that." A pause. "Calder believes — and I believe he is correct — that it can be redirected rather than destroyed. Given a foundation. Absorbed into a bond network that already has a direction."
"Made into a minion," Sera said.
"Made into sothing considerably more significant than a minion," Maren said. "A Sovereign bond. Like mine." It looked at Kael. "But the Pale Warden at Sovereign bond level — "
"What does that look like?" Kael said.
Maren was quiet for a long mont.
"I don’t know," it said. "Calder doesn’t know. Asha’s texts don’t cover it because no Death’s Chosen has ever successfully absorbed a Pale Warden." It t his eyes. "We would be finding out together."
The fire crackled.
Sera was writing.
Kael looked at the Ashwater river moving under the bridge in the dark — cold, northern, carrying snowlt from mountains he’d never seen toward a sea he’d never seen, indifferent and purposeful simultaneously.
He thought about tomorrow. The Spirit Tempering. Twenty hours of controlled depletion and recovery. Then the final approach to Crestfall.
Then the Warden.
"The foundation," he said. "When it reaches and identifies and I reach back — what do I show it? What direction do I offer?"
Maren looked at him.
"The sa thing you’ve always been pointed at," it said.
He looked at the fire.
His mother’s hands. The three copper coins. The boy with the x1 multiplier. Eight hundred and forty-seven amber eyes going dark and peaceful. Asha in her chair saying don’t waste it. Maren saying thank you in a voice that had been waiting fourteen years to say it. Sera writing a history because soone had to.
The sa thing he’d always been pointed at.
Not revenge.
Not power.
Sothing that didn’t have a clean na but felt, when he was honest about it, like the opposite of a ceiling.
"Yes," he said. "I know what to show it."
His System pulsed.
[DAY 2 — COMPLETE][CURRENT LEVEL: 54][PASSIVE SOUL HARVEST — 2 DAY TOTAL: 2,400,000 EXP][CRESTFALL: 1 DAY AWAY][SPIRIT TEMPERING: TOMORROW][THE PALE WARDEN IS ASLEEP INSIDE ITS CAGE.][IT WILL NOT BE ASLEEP WHEN YOU ARRIVE.][IT HAS BEEN WAITING.][NOT FOR DEATH’S CHOSEN.][FOR SOTHING TO SHOW IT A DIRECTION.][REST.]
He read the last lines twice.
Not for Death’s Chosen. For sothing to show it a direction.
He looked at Maren.
Maren looked back with seventeen years of patience and the particular expression of sothing that had been accumulating toward this mont for a long ti and recognized the weight of it.
"Rest," Maren said. "Tomorrow is long."
He lay down.
Above him the northern sky was different from Valdenmoor’s — darker, more stars, the absence of the city’s ambient light revealing things that had always been there and been invisible.
He looked at them for a while.
Then he slept.
A/N:
Level 54. Spirit Tempering tomorrow. The Pale Warden is waiting — not for a fight, but for a direction. Drop a Power Stone — Chapter 25 is the Tempering and the gates of Crestfall! 🔥
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