Rise of the Horde - Chapter 590 - 589

The Archbishop of the Church of Light knelt alone in the Cathedral of the Eternal Flame, his robes pooling around him on the cold marble floor like spilled ink. Above him, the great stained-glass windows depicted scenes of divine salvation …saints casting out darkness, holy warriors smiting abominations, the Goddess of Light extending her radiant hands over a grateful world.
They were beautiful windows. They told beautiful lies.
Archbishop Theron Vayle had served the Church for forty-seven years. He had been ordained at nineteen, risen to Bishop by thirty-five, and assumed the Archbishopric at fifty-two after his predecessor’s sudden death from what the court physicians called “a failure of the heart.” The diagnosis was accurate in a way the physicians could never have understood. The previous Archbishop’s heart had indeed failed …failed to accommodate the thing that Theron had planted inside it, a seed of corruption so subtle that it ate the organ from within while the old man slept, leaving no trace that any mortal healer could identify.
Theron had been patient. He had always been patient. Patience was the first lesson of the Abyss, and he had learned it well.
Now, in the hollow silence of the cathedral, with the candles guttering and the last of the evening worshippers departed, he reached beneath his robes and withdrew a small object that would have horrified every soul who had ever knelt in this sacred space. It was a medallion, roughly the size of a gold crown, fashioned from a metal that was neither iron nor silver nor any alloy that human smiths could name. Its surface was smooth and black, like polished obsidian, but it was not stone. It was warm to the touch, always warm, as if it retained the heat of some distant furnace that burned with fires that had nothing to do with combustion.
On its face was carved a symbol: a circle, bisected by a vertical line, with seven smaller circles arranged around its circumference. To the uninitiated, it might have passed for an abstract geometric design. To those who had been taught its meaning, it was a map. A map of the seven gates through which the Abyss could touch the mortal world.
Theron pressed his thumb against the medallion’s center, and the metal responded. The warmth intensified, spreading up through his hand, into his arm, through his chest, until it reached the place behind his eyes where something that was not entirely Theron resided. Something that had been there for a very long time. Something that watched through his eyes, thought alongside his thoughts, and occasionally …when circumstances required …thought for him entirely.
The connection opened.
It was not like the dark arts practiced by families like the Arass …those crude manipulations of energy that amounted to children playing with matches compared to the inferno that the Abyss represented. The Arass practitioners bound souls and wove shadows. What Theron channeled was something fundamentally different. It was not a manipulation of existing reality but a window into a reality that existed alongside, beneath, and within the mortal world …a dimension of such concentrated malice that even the briefest contact could shatter an unprepared mind like glass struck by a hammer.
The Abyss was not merely a place of evil, though evil flourished there as naturally as fungi in darkness. It was a place of hunger. Absolute, all-consuming hunger. The entities that dwelled within it did not hate the mortal world …hatred implied a relationship, an engagement, a recognition of the other’s right to exist. What they felt was something far more terrible. They regarded the mortal world the way a fire regards fuel. Not with malice, not with passion, but with the simple, implacable certainty that it existed to be consumed.
And they were patient.
They had been patient for longer than the mountains had stood.
Through the connection, Theron felt the familiar presence settle into his awareness like a cold hand resting on the back of his neck. He did not hear words …the Abyss did not communicate in language. Instead, he received impressions, intentions, directives that translated into thought through the filter of his human consciousness.
The stone. The Keystone. Where is it?
Theron’s mind, trained by decades of practice, formed the response with the precision of a scribe: “The expedition reached the ruins. They retrieved the fragment from the arch. The survivors departed the mountains weeks ago and have crossed into the kingdom’s borders. Four survived. My agents have confirmed their passage.”
Four. So few. The arch’s guardians were effective.
“The serpent-wraiths and the sentinels performed as expected. But the amulet I provided to the expedition’s captain offered sufficient protection for a small group to escape with the fragment.”
The amulet. A concession. Necessary, but wasteful.
“Without it, no one would have survived to carry the fragment out. The arch’s defenses cannot be overcome by brute force …only circumvented through the resonance the amulet creates with the rune-wards.”
The presence absorbed this without comment. Then: The fragment must be recovered. The arch cannot be restored without all seven pieces. Bring it to the Gate at Thessara before the winter solstice. The alignment will not recur for another sixty-three years.
“There is a complication,” Theron said, and even through the flat delivery of mental communication, a note of tension crept into his thought. “The survivors have not reported to the crown. They were expected at the capital weeks ago. My agents along the main roads have seen no sign of them.”
Silence from the connection. Not the absence of communication, but the focused silence of something very large and very dangerous paying very close attention.
Explain.
“They may have been killed on the return journey. The r0ads can become hostile territory …orcish raiders, predators, natural hazards. Four men traveling through that terrain without supplies or proper equipment…”
Or they may have been intercepted.
The implication was clear. Theron had considered this possibility himself, and it disturbed him more than any orcish raid ever could. If someone had intercepted Baldred’s party and taken the Keystone fragment, the consequences would cascade through every plan that had been carefully laid over the past two decades.
“I have agents investigating,” Theron said. “Discreet inquiries along all likely routes. The survivors’ identities are known …Captain Baldred, Lieutenants Kael and Gerber, and a worker named Halveth in the records. If they are alive and within the kingdom’s borders, my people will find them.”
Find them quickly. The solstice approaches. Each day that passes narrows the window.
“I understand. But there is another matter that requires your awareness. The king.”
The puppet. What of him?
Theron chose his next words carefully. Even after decades of service to the Abyss, even with the entity’s presence woven into the fabric of his consciousness, he understood that the beings he served were not allies. They were masters. And masters did not appreciate servants who failed.
“The binding holds. Aldric obeys without awareness. His conscious mind believes he makes his own decisions, while the implanted directives guide him toward our desired outcomes. However, the recent council session regarding the eastern armies has introduced… variables.”
Explain.
“Minor houses have begun to show suspicion regarding the handling of the military situation. Lords Fairfax, Remington, Blackwood, and Harring were burdened with recruitment costs by a council vote that was steered by another faction …one not aligned with our interests.”
Another faction?
“House Arass. Remnants of the family that was purged thirty years ago. They have been operating in the shadows, manipulating the court for their own purposes. They appear to be using the orcish war as a tool to destroy the Winters and Snowe families …old enemies from the purge.”
This was clearly new information to the presence. Theron felt the cold hand on his consciousness tighten, not painfully but with unmistakable intensity.
The Arass practitioners. Their dark arts are primitive. But they have survived. And they are interfering with operations we require.
“They are also inadvertently providing cover for our activities. The king’s behavior, the message manipulations, the supply disruptions …the Arass conspiracy absorbs the attention of anyone who suspects wrongdoing at court. If the four burdened houses discover the manipulation, they will blame the Arass family. Not us.”
Convenient. But insufficient. The fragment is the priority. If the Arass family has intercepted the survivors…
The thought trailed off, but the implication was devastating. If the Arass family, with their crude understanding of the dark arts, had somehow acquired the Keystone fragment and attempted to study it, they might accidentally trigger responses that could alert other entities …entities that the Abyss’s servants had spent millennia keeping dormant.
“I will escalate the investigation immediately,” Theron said. “And I will use the king to assist. A royal inquiry into the missing expedition, framed as concern for the welfare of soldiers who served the crown. It will provide legitimate cover for a search that might otherwise raise questions.”
The puppet may be useful for this. But be careful. Too many simultaneous manipulations strain the binding. If the host mind suspects it is being controlled, the binding can fracture. And a fractured binding is worse than no binding at all.
“I understand. I will use the lightest touch possible.”
See that you do. And Theron?
“Yes?”
The solstice. Sixty-three years. Do not fail.
The connection closed with the abruptness of a door slamming shut, leaving Theron alone in the cathedral with the taste of cold iron in his mouth and the phantom sensation of something vast withdrawing its attention from the tiny speck of existence that was the mortal world.
He replaced the medallion beneath his robes, steadied his breathing, and rose from his knees with the practiced grace of a man who had spent decades performing precisely this kind of transition …from the terrible intimacy of communion with the Abyss to the mundane reality of a religious leader going about his evening duties.
*****
The cathedral’s private chambers were located behind the main altar, accessible through a heavy oak door that bore the Church’s seal. Beyond it, a corridor led to offices, meeting rooms, and the Archbishop’s personal quarters …comfortable but not lavish, befitting a man who publicly valued humility.
In his study, Theron removed his ceremonial robes and replaced them with simpler garments. Then he opened a locked drawer in his desk and withdrew a second ledger …not the one he used for Church business, but a smaller, leather-bound volume whose pages were made from a material that felt like parchment but possessed a faintly oily texture that normal paper did not.
The entries within were written not in ink but in a substance that glowed faintly when the book was opened, fading to invisibility when the covers were closed. It was a chronicle of operations spanning twenty-two years …the length of Theron’s service as an active agent of the Abyss within the Threian court.
He turned to the most recent entries and began writing.
The Keystone fragment remains unaccounted for. The Tekarr expedition survivors …Baldred, Kael, Gerber, and one other …have not reported to the capital as expected. Possible explanations: death in transit (unlikely given their survival to the kingdom’s borders), interception by hostile parties (concerning), or deliberate deviation from the planned route (most concerning, as it suggests awareness of threats they should not know about).
Priority: locate the survivors and the fragment. Deploy the Veiled …they have the skills for this work. The Veiled are to search every route between the Tekarr foothills and the capital. If the survivors are alive, find them. If they are dead, find whoever killed them. If the fragment has changed hands, track it to its current location.
Secondary priority: assess the Arass interference. Their conspiracy complicates our operations but may also serve as useful misdirection. If their activities are exposed before ours, the resulting upheaval will focus attention away from our true purposes. However, if they have somehow acquired the fragment…
He paused, his quill hovering over the page.
The Arass family practicing dark arts on the Keystone fragment was a nightmare scenario. Their techniques, while crude by Abyss standards, were sufficient to activate the fragment’s surface properties. They would feel the power within it. They would probe it. They would try to understand it.
And in doing so, they might awaken something that had been deliberately kept dormant for millennia. Something that the arch in the Tekarr ruins had been built to contain. Something that the seven Keystones, when assembled, could either seal permanently or release irrevocably, depending on the intention of whoever performed the ritual.
The Abyss wanted the Keystones assembled at the Gate of Thessara. Not to seal the entity beneath the mountains, but to open the way. To create a bridge between the mortal world and the dimension of endless hunger that lay beneath it. A bridge that, once opened, could never be closed.
And Theron had spent twenty-two years ensuring that this bridge would be built.
He had manipulated the king …first through subtle influence during private audiences, then through the amulet he had gifted Aldric twelve years ago, a seemingly innocent protective charm that had, over time, established a resonance between the king’s consciousness and the Abyss’s will. By now, the binding was deep enough that Aldric’s thoughts were guided without his knowledge, his decisions shaped by imperatives he believed were his own.
He had arranged the expedition to the Tekarr Mountains …planting the idea in the king’s mind over the course of months, nurturing it with carefully selected intelligence reports about orcish activity near the ruins, framing the expedition as a military necessity rather than an arcane treasure hunt. The king had ordered it with full conviction that it was his own initiative, never suspecting that every document he reviewed, every briefing he received, had been prepared by Theron’s agents.
He had provided the amulet that protected Baldred’s party from the arch’s guardians …the serpent-wraiths and armored sentinels that the arch’s original builders had placed to prevent precisely this kind of intrusion. The amulet’s resonance frequency matched the wards’ calibration, creating a temporary safe passage that would allow a small group to reach the fragment and remove it.
Everything had been calculated. Everything had been planned.
Except the fragment’s disappearance.
Theron closed the ledger and locked it away. Then he crossed to a cabinet that stood against the far wall of his study, opened it with a key he wore around his neck alongside the medallion, and withdrew a communication device that bore no resemblance to anything the Church of Light would sanction.
It was a bowl, shallow and wide, made from the same unnamed black metal as the medallion. Its interior surface was perfectly smooth, without reflection, like looking into a pool of liquid darkness. Theron placed it on his desk, then drew a small vial from the cabinet …a vial containing a liquid that was not water, not oil, not blood, but something that partook of all three. He poured it into the bowl, where it settled into a still, mirror-dark surface.
He pressed the medallion to the bowl’s rim and whispered a word that was not in any human language. The liquid stirred, rippled, and then cleared to reveal a face.
The face belonged to a woman. She might have been thirty or sixty …her features had the ageless quality of someone whose body had been altered by long exposure to energies that did not belong in the mortal world. Her skin was pale, almost translucent, with a faint webwork of dark lines visible beneath the surface, like veins carrying something that was not blood. Her eyes were the color of tarnished silver, and they held no warmth at all.
“Castellaine,” Theron said. “We have a situation.”
The woman called Castellaine …a title, not a name, for she had abandoned her birth name decades ago …inclined her head slightly. “I felt the communion. The Master is displeased.”
“The Master is concerned. The Keystone fragment from the Tekarr arch has not reached us as planned. The expedition’s survivors are missing.”
Castellaine’s silver eyes narrowed. “Missing. Not dead?”
“Unknown. Our agents confirmed they crossed into the kingdom’s borders alive. After that, the trail goes cold.”
“How long ago?”
“Six weeks. Perhaps seven.”
“Then they are either dead, imprisoned, or in hiding. If they were simply delayed, they would have reached the capital by now.”
“Agreed. I need the Veiled deployed. Full search protocols. Every route between the Tekarr foothills and the capital. Someone knows what happened to those four men.”
Castellaine considered this for a moment, her expression as readable as a stone wall. “The Veiled are currently positioned along the northern coast, monitoring the dwarven trade routes as instructed.”
“Recall them. This takes priority.”
“All of them?”
“All of them. Leave minimal coverage on the northern routes …the dwarves can wait. The fragment cannot.”
Castellaine nodded, the decision made without further discussion. “I will have them moving within two days. They will begin at the kingdom’s eastern border and work westward. If the survivors left any trace …blood, camp remnants, witness accounts …the Veiled will find it.”
“There’s something else,” Theron added. “The Arass family.”
Castellaine’s expression shifted by the barest fraction …a tightening around the eyes that, from someone so controlled, was equivalent to a gasp of surprise. “Arass? The dark-arts family that was purged?”
“They survived. Not all of them, but enough. They’ve been operating within the court for thirty years, building influence, manipulating correspondence, pursuing a revenge agenda against the houses that supported their purge. I’ve been aware of their existence for some time …they’re useful as a distraction, and their activities help mask our own operations.”
“But?”
“But they’ve become more aggressive recently. They’ve been intercepting military communications, sabotaging supply chains, and manipulating council votes. It’s possible …I stress possible …that their agents may have encountered the Tekarr expedition’s survivors.”
The silence that followed was heavy with implications that both understood without articulating.
“If the Arass family has the fragment,” Castellaine said slowly, “and if they attempt to channel their dark arts through it…”
“Then they may trigger a resonance cascade that could alert what was sealed beneath the mountains. An uncontrolled awakening before the Gate at Thessara is prepared. Which would result in…”
“Catastrophe,” Castellaine finished. “An abyssal entity emerging without a containment framework. It would go on a rampage. It would destroy everything. An uncontrolled emergence serves no one.”
“Exactly. The fragment must be recovered, and it must be recovered before anyone who doesn’t understand its nature attempts to use it.”
Castellaine’s pale face had grown even paler, the dark veins beneath her skin standing out more prominently. “I will deploy the Veiled personally. This is too important for standard protocols.”
“Agreed. And Castellaine? The four burdened houses …Fairfax, Remington, Blackwood, Harring …they are investigating the Arass conspiracy. Their investigation may inadvertently uncover traces of our operations as well. They need to be monitored.”
“Monitored or eliminated?”
Theron considered this with the cold calculation that had become second nature after two decades of serving the Abyss. “Monitored. For now. Their conflict with the Arass family is useful …it consumes resources and attention on both sides. But if they begin to see past the Arass conspiracy toward what lies beneath… if they start asking questions about the king’s behavior, about the expedition, about the Church’s involvement…”
“Then they become loose threads.”
“And loose threads are cut.”
Castellaine’s image in the bowl rippled as the connection weakened. “I will have the Veiled moving by dawn. Expect reports through the standard channels within the week.”
“One more thing. The solstice. We have limited time. Everything else …the armies, the orcs, the court politics …all of it is secondary. The fragment reaches the Gate at Thessara, or sixty-three years of preparation are wasted.”
“Understood. By the Master’s will.”
“By the Master’s will.”
The image dissolved, and the liquid in the bowl went still and dark. Theron emptied it back into the vial, cleaned the bowl, and returned both to the cabinet. Then he sat at his desk in the candlelight, alone with the weight of what he served and the enormity of what was at stake.
The Abyss was patient. It had been patient for longer than human civilization had existed. But patience had its limits, and the alignment of stars that would allow the Gate at Thessara to function came only once every sixty-three years. Miss this window, and another generation would pass before the opportunity arose again.
Theron would not miss it.
He had sacrificed too much. Done too many terrible things. Allowed too many people to die. The weight of his choices was a mountain on his soul, and the only thing that made it bearable was the certainty that it was all for a purpose. A purpose that transcended morality, transcended loyalty, transcended the very concept of good and evil that the Church he led pretended to embody.
The Abyss would consume this world. That was inevitable. The question was not whether, but when and how. Theron had chosen to be on the winning side of that equation …to ensure that when the walls between dimensions crumbled, he and those who served the same masters would be the ones who shaped what came after.
If there was an “after.”
He pushed that thought away, as he always did, and began drafting orders for the next phase of operations.
The stone had to be found.
Everything depended on it.
And somewhere in the kingdom of Threia, in a basement chamber lit by purple candlelight, Lord Marius Arass studied a palm-sized fragment of ancient stone and had no idea …no idea at all …that the small, dark rock resting on his desk was the key to the destruction of the world.


