Rise of the Horde - Chapter 592 - 591

King Aldric III woke from a dream he could not remember and knew, with the absolute certainty of a man who had experienced this before, that the day ahead had been planned for him by someone other than himself.
He did not know this consciously. The binding that Archbishop Theron had woven into his psyche over twelve years of careful, incremental manipulation did not operate at the level of conscious awareness. It worked deeper, in the substrate of thought where desires formed before they became intentions, where decisions crystallized before they reached the surface of the mind. Aldric believed he woke with his own thoughts, his own priorities, his own agenda for the day’s governance. The fact that those thoughts, priorities, and agendas consistently aligned with the interests of entities he could not imagine was, to him, simply evidence that he was a wise and capable ruler.
The morning ritual was the same as every morning. He rose, washed, dressed with the assistance of his personal valet, and took breakfast in the small private dining room adjacent to the royal apartments. Toast with honey. Eggs from the palace chickens. A cup of tea brewed from herbs grown in the palace gardens. Simple tastes for a king who publicly valued modesty, though the simplicity was itself a performance …a carefully maintained image that concealed the fact that Aldric’s mind was as much a performance space as the palace’s grand theater.
The thought that surfaced during his second cup of tea felt, as they always did, completely natural.
The expedition. Baldred’s expedition. I should inquire about it. They’ve been gone too long.
Aldric set down his cup and frowned slightly, the expression of a ruler experiencing genuine concern for his subjects. And it was genuine …the binding did not suppress Aldric’s emotions or replace his personality. It simply ensured that certain thoughts arose at certain times, thoughts that the king would then act upon using his own judgment and decision-making processes. The manipulation was invisible precisely because it worked with Aldric’s nature rather than against it.
He cared about his soldiers. He genuinely did. So when the thought arose that perhaps the Tekarr expedition should have reported back by now, it felt natural. Appropriate. The kind of thing a responsible monarch would think about.
“Have we received any word from Captain Baldred’s expedition?” he asked his private secretary, a thin man named Errol who managed the king’s schedule with meticulous efficiency.
Errol consulted his notes …a thick leather journal that contained every piece of correspondence, every appointment, every note of significance that had crossed the king’s desk in the past month. “Nothing, Your Majesty. The last report was received approximately two months ago, confirming the expedition’s departure into the Tekarr range. No communications since.”
“Two months,” Aldric repeated, and the concern on his face deepened. Two months was a long time. Even accounting for the difficulty of the terrain and the challenges of communicating from deep within hostile mountains, they should have sent word. Unless something had gone badly wrong.
“I want inquiries made,” the king said, and the decision felt entirely his own. “Discreet inquiries. Captain Baldred was a capable officer leading a significant military asset. One thousand soldiers don’t simply vanish without trace. Send word to the border garrisons …anyone who might have information about the expedition’s progress or status.”
“At once, Your Majesty. Shall I channel the inquiries through the military command structure or through your private office?”
The answer to this question was critical, and the binding provided it seamlessly, wrapped in the logic of a king who valued thorough governance.
“Through the Archbishop’s office,” Aldric said. “The expedition was organized under the Church’s auspices …the sites they investigated were of religious and historical significance. It’s appropriate that the Church coordinate any follow-up inquiries. And the Archbishop’s network is broader than the military’s in the eastern territories.”
Errol noted this without comment, though a faint flicker of something …surprise? unease? …crossed his features before being suppressed. It was unusual for military inquiries to be routed through the Church. But the king had spoken, and the king’s word was not questioned by private secretaries who valued their positions.
“I will arrange a meeting with Archbishop Vayle at your earliest convenience,” Errol said. “This afternoon, perhaps?”
“This afternoon will be fine.”
*****
The meeting took place in the king’s private study, a wood-paneled room hung with maps and portraits of previous monarchs. Aldric sat behind his desk, Theron in the chair opposite, the picture of two powerful men consulting on a matter of mutual concern.
Theron had dressed carefully for the occasion …his Archbishop’s robes, freshly pressed, the heavy gold chain of his office resting against his chest, his expression one of appropriate gravity. He carried a leather portfolio containing documents that he had prepared specifically for this moment, each one designed to guide the king’s inquiries in directions that served the Covenant’s purposes.
“Archbishop, thank you for coming on such short notice,” Aldric began. “I’m concerned about the expedition we sent to the Tekarr Mountains some months ago.”
“As am I, Your Majesty,” Theron replied, his voice conveying exactly the right measure of pastoral concern. “The sites they investigated are of profound historical and spiritual significance. I’ve been monitoring the situation through my own channels, and I share your unease at the prolonged silence.”
“What do your channels tell you?”
Theron opened the portfolio and extracted a document …a fabricated intelligence summary that attributed its contents to Church missionaries in the eastern territories. “My missionaries report that the orcish situation in the Tekarr region has deteriorated significantly since the expedition’s departure. Large-scale tribal movements. Increased aggression. It’s possible that the expedition encountered hostile forces on their return journey.”
“They had a thousand soldiers,” Aldric said, frowning. “Even the orcs shouldn’t have been able to…”
“A thousand soldiers in the mountains, Your Majesty, facing terrain, weather, and potentially concentrated orcish resistance. The mountains are unforgiving. It’s possible they suffered losses significant enough to delay their return.”
“Or to prevent it entirely,” Aldric said grimly.
“We must consider that possibility,” Theron agreed. “Which is why I recommend a formal inquiry. Not a military operation …we don’t want to divert forces from the ongoing campaigns. But a focused investigation, using both Church resources and crown authority, to determine what happened to the expedition and its personnel.”
“And its cargo,” Aldric added, and the binding pulsed approvingly behind his eyes. “They were tasked with recovering specific items of historical significance. The parchment I provided to Captain Baldred indicated the location of artifacts that the Church considers important for our understanding of the kingdom’s ancient history.”
Theron nodded solemnly, internally satisfied that the king’s scripted concerns were tracking perfectly with the planned narrative. “Indeed. The artifacts in question are irreplaceable. If they were recovered by the expedition and subsequently lost to orcish raids or other misfortune, that would be a significant loss not just for the crown but for the Church and for scholarship.”
“Then let us make it a priority,” Aldric said, with the firm decisiveness of a king taking charge. “I authorize you to use whatever Church resources are necessary. Coordinate with the military border garrisons. I’ll issue a royal warrant giving your investigators authority to question anyone, access any records, and enter any territory within the kingdom in pursuit of information about the expedition.”
A royal warrant. Theron kept his expression appropriately grateful while internally cataloguing the enormous power such a document would provide. A warrant bearing the king’s seal could open any door, command any cooperation, override any local authority’s objections. It would give the Veiled …operating under Church cover …virtually unlimited investigative reach within the kingdom.
“Your Majesty is most generous,” Theron said. “I will begin immediately. With your permission, I’ll assign my most trusted investigators to the task.”
“Do so. And Archbishop? Keep me informed personally. I want regular updates. Captain Baldred served this crown faithfully for many years. If he’s out there, alive and in trouble, I want him found.”
The genuine emotion in Aldric’s voice was not manufactured by the binding. The king truly cared about his soldiers. This was one of his better qualities, and it was one that the binding exploited ruthlessly …using the king’s compassion as the engine that drove decisions which served the Abyss’s purposes.
“You have my word, Your Majesty,” Theron said, bowing as he departed with the signed warrant tucked securely in his portfolio.
*****
The warrant was in Castellaine’s hands by nightfall.
She examined it in the pocket-dimension chamber beneath the cathedral, her silver eyes tracing the royal seal, the king’s signature, the sweeping language of authority that granted its bearer powers approaching martial law within the specific scope of the investigation.
“This changes everything,” she said, and for someone as controlled as Castellaine, the words carried enormous weight.
With this warrant, the Veiled could operate openly. Not as the Veiled themselves …their true nature would remain concealed behind Church credentials …but as official investigators of the crown, empowered to enter any property, question any person, and demand any records. The warrant legitimized every door they needed to open, including doors that the Arass family believed were sealed behind their network of wards and protections.
“We don’t use this directly against the Arass estate,” Castellaine decided, thinking aloud as she formulated the operational plan. “That would alert them too soon. We use it to trace the survivors’ route. To question witnesses. To build a picture of where Baldred and his men went after leaving the Tekarr foothills.”
She spread a map across her work surface and began marking the information that Veiled-Six had provided. Redwater Crossing. The southern route. The marshlands. The farming country near the Arass estate’s territory.
“If the Arass family intercepted them on the southern road, they would have needed to transport four prisoners …one or more of them possibly wounded …to a secure location. The estate itself is the obvious choice, but it’s also risky. Moving prisoners through populated areas, even at night, leaves traces.”
She summoned two of her senior Veiled operatives through the chamber’s communication system …not the bowl that Theron used, but a subtler mechanism that operated through Abyssal resonance, transmitting thoughts directly between individuals who carried the same type of alteration within their bodies.
The operatives appeared within the hour, entering the chamber through pathways that did not entirely exist in normal space. They were a man and a woman, both of indeterminate age, both possessing the same pale, veined appearance that marked all who had been touched by the Abyss’s modification process.
“New parameters,” Castellaine told them. “The search pattern shifts. We’re no longer looking for four men traveling. We’re looking for four men being moved against their will. Different signatures. Different traces.”
She outlined what they were to search for: evidence of forced transport along the southern route from Redwater Crossing. Witness accounts of unusual activity …covered wagons moving at night, unfamiliar travelers in areas where strangers were noticed, unexplained disturbances. And above all, the energetic trace of the Keystone fragment, which the Veiled’s enhanced senses could detect at distances of up to several hundred yards if conditions were right.
“The fragment has a signature,” Castellaine explained. “Cold. Ancient. Like touching the memory of stone that has existed since before the mountains formed. If you get close enough, you’ll feel it. It’s unmistakable.”
“And if we find it?” the male operative asked.
“You report its location immediately. You do not attempt recovery alone. The Arass family practices dark arts …primitive, yes, but their wards and protections are sufficient to be dangerous. A recovery operation will require coordination and sufficient force to breach their defenses.”
“Force,” the female operative repeated. “You mean the kind that leaves evidence.”
“I mean the kind that achieves results,” Castellaine corrected. “Evidence can be managed afterward. The fragment reaching the Gate at Thessara by the solstice cannot be managed if it’s lost.”
The operatives departed, and Castellaine returned to her map, adding notes, drawing routes, calculating timelines. The solstice was approaching. Each day narrowed the window. The logistics of recovering the fragment, transporting it to Thessara, and performing the ritual within the alignment window were already tight. Any further delays could push them past the point of no return.
She thought of the arch beneath the Tekarr Mountains. Seven keystones, each a fragment of the structure that held the gateway between dimensions. Six remained embedded in the arch itself, maintaining the seal that kept the Sealed One in its millennial sleep. The seventh had been deliberately removed by the arch’s original builders and hidden separately …a failsafe that prevented the gate from being opened accidentally.
The Covenant had spent four hundred years locating that seventh fragment. They had found it ten years ago, buried within the ruins that Baldred’s expedition had been sent to excavate. The amulet that Theron provided to the captain had served dual purposes …protecting the expedition from the arch’s guardians and resonating with the fragment to make it detectable among the ruins’ debris.
Everything had worked. The fragment had been found. The expedition had recovered it.
And then the Arass family, pursuing their petty revenge against noble houses they blamed for their purge, had stumbled into the middle of a cosmic operation and stolen the most important object in the world without having the slightest idea what they held.
Castellaine’s hands clenched on the edge of her map table.
The Arass family’s dark arts were dangerous in the same way that a child with a loaded crossbow was dangerous …not because they understood the weapon, but precisely because they didn’t. Their probing of the fragment, their attempts to channel energy through it, their clumsy investigation of its properties… each attempt risked triggering responses in the stone that could cascade beyond anyone’s ability to control.
The entity was not a creature in any conventional sense. It was an aspect of the Abyss itself …a concentrated expression of the dimension’s fundamental nature, given form and purpose by processes that predated mortal consciousness. It did not think, exactly, but it responded. It did not want, exactly, but it sought. And what it sought was emergence. Release. The dissolution of the barrier between its existence and the world that it perceived as nothing more than an obstruction to its expansion.
If the fragment was mishandled …if the resonance that connected it to the other six keystones was disrupted …the entity would begin to wake. Not fully. Not immediately. But the process, once started, would be irreversible. The seal would weaken. The arch would crack. And through those cracks, the Abyss would begin to leak into the mortal world in ways that no army, no magic, no fortress could defend against.
Not darkness. Not monsters. Not the theatrical horrors that stories attributed to evil dimensions.
Just emptiness.
Expanding.
Consuming.
Patient.
The Abyss did not need to hurry. It had been waiting for longer than the stars had burned. It could wait a little longer.
But not sixty-three more years.
Not if the Covenant had anything to say about it.
*****
The Covenant of the Seventh Gate had existed within the Church of Light for four hundred and twelve years.
Its founding was recorded in no official history. No chronicle mentioned its creation. No archive contained its charter. It existed in the spaces between what was known and what was acknowledged, sustained by the same institutional momentum that allowed the Church itself to endure through centuries of political upheaval, war, and social transformation.
The first members had been scholars. Devout, brilliant, and cursed with the kind of curiosity that could not be satisfied by scripture alone. They had probed the boundaries of what the Church called divine and discovered that the boundaries were not walls but membranes …permeable, flexible, and terrifyingly thin.
What lay beyond those membranes was not divine.
But it was powerful. And to scholars who had spent their lives seeking power through knowledge, the distinction between divine and abyssal was less important than the recognition that power existed and could be accessed.
The first generation paid dearly for their discovery. Many went mad. Some died in ways that defied medical explanation …their bodies found in locked rooms, their expressions frozen in terror, their flesh marked by injuries that no weapon could have inflicted. The survivors learned caution. They learned protocol. They learned that the Abyss was not a resource to be exploited but a relationship to be managed, with all the danger and compromise that relationships with vastly superior powers implied.
Over the centuries, the Covenant refined its methods. Each generation added to the accumulated knowledge. Each generation produced practitioners more skilled, more careful, and more deeply embedded in the Church’s hierarchy. By the time Theron Vayle rose to the Archbishopric, the Covenant’s penetration of the institution was nearly complete …not in the sense that every Church official was compromised, but in the sense that the Covenant could control the flow of information, influence appointments, and direct policy through a relatively small number of strategically positioned members.
The king had been Theron’s personal project.
The binding of Aldric III had not been a sudden act of domination. It had been a process of gradual influence, conducted over twelve years of carefully cultivated proximity. Theron had first met Aldric when the king was forty-one …already on the throne, already established in his governance, already surrounded by advisors and courtiers whose influence Theron needed to circumvent.
He had begun with friendship. The Archbishop and the king, meeting privately for theological discussions that gradually expanded into conversations about governance, philosophy, morality, and the nature of power. Theron was charming, knowledgeable, and possessed the rare ability to make powerful people feel that they were being heard rather than managed.
The amulet came later. A gift, presented on the occasion of the king’s forty-fifth birthday, described as a protective charm blessed by the Church’s most sacred rituals. Aldric had worn it with the casual trust of a man who saw the Church as an ally and its Archbishop as a friend.
The amulet’s true function was not protection. It was calibration. Over months and years, it established a resonance between the king’s neural patterns and the Abyssal frequencies that the Covenant controlled. Not enough to override his will …that would have been detectable. Just enough to create pathways. Channels. Routes through which suggestions could flow from the Abyss into the king’s subconscious and emerge as ideas that felt entirely organic.
By the time the binding was mature, Aldric could not distinguish between his own thoughts and those that had been planted. The manipulation was seamless, invisible, and, from the king’s perspective, indistinguishable from the normal process of a thoughtful ruler considering his options and making decisions.
It was the most sophisticated form of control that the Covenant had ever achieved. And it had given them the ability to direct the Threian kingdom’s considerable resources toward their ultimate goal: the recovery of the seventh Keystone fragment and the opening of the Gate at Thessara.
The expedition to the Tekarr Mountains had been the culmination of years of preparation. Identifying the fragment’s location. Crafting the protective amulet that would allow the expedition to bypass the arch’s guardians. Planting the intelligence reports that convinced the king the expedition was a military necessity. Arranging the logistics of sending a thousand soldiers into some of the most dangerous terrain in the known world.
All of it directed by an Archbishop who knelt in the Cathedral of the Eternal Flame and prayed to gods he did not believe in, while serving masters whose existence would shatter the faith of every worshipper who entered those sacred doors.
The irony sustained him on dark nights when the weight of his choices pressed too heavily on whatever remained of his conscience.
Four hundred years of patience.
And now, finally, the endgame.
*****
The deployment of the royal warrant created ripples that Theron had anticipated and planned for, but that nonetheless required careful management.
The Church investigators who carried copies of the warrant were, for the most part, exactly what they appeared to be …devout, competent servants of the institution who believed they were searching for missing soldiers on behalf of a concerned king. They had no knowledge of the Covenant, the Veiled, or the true purpose of the investigation. Their sincerity was their greatest asset, because sincere people were convincing in a way that trained operatives could never fully replicate.
They spread across the kingdom like ripples from a stone dropped in still water. At border garrisons, they questioned soldiers about unusual travelers. At inns and way-stations, they showed sketches of the missing men and asked for information. At roadside shrines and Church outposts, they posted notices offering rewards for information leading to the recovery of “four soldiers of the crown, missing while in service to His Majesty.”
The legitimate investigation produced legitimate results. Witness accounts confirmed the survivors’ route. Travel records documented their passage through settlements. The evidence chain grew stronger with each new piece of information, building a picture that any competent investigator could follow from the Tekarr foothills to the point of ambush on the southern road.
But the legitimate investigation also created complications.
The four burdened houses …Fairfax, Remington, Blackwood, and Harring …noticed the sudden deployment of Church investigators across the kingdom. Lord Blackwood, whose intelligence network was the most sensitive to unusual government activity, flagged it within twenty-four hours of the first warrant being served.
“The Church is conducting a search operation,” Blackwood reported to the others through their coded communication system. “Royal warrant. Searching for missing soldiers from an expedition to the Tekarr Mountains. The scope is enormous …investigators in every major settlement between the capital and the eastern border.”
Fairfax read this with growing unease. The Tekarr expedition. The same operation that had produced the parchments and artifacts that Baldred’s party had been carrying when they returned to the kingdom. The same artifacts that, according to Fairfax’s developing understanding of the situation, the Arass family had likely seized when they intercepted the survivors.
“Why now?” Fairfax wrote back. “The expedition has been missing for weeks. Why does the Church suddenly mount a massive search operation at this particular moment?”
“Because someone prompted the king to ask about it,” Blackwood replied. “And the king delegated the inquiry to the Archbishop.”
“The Archbishop. Who voted with the Arass-aligned faction at the council session. Who supported Severus’s deployment proposal without question.”
“The same.”
The implications multiplied like branching cracks in stressed glass. If the Archbishop was involved with the Arass conspiracy, the scope of the infiltration was even greater than they had suspected. The Church’s involvement elevated the threat from a political conspiracy to something that touched the kingdom’s most powerful institution.
But Fairfax, for all his growing understanding of the Arass network’s reach, did not yet grasp the true nature of what he was looking at. He saw the Archbishop’s involvement and interpreted it as an extension of the Arass conspiracy …another puppet, another compromised official, another thread in the web that Marius Arass had spent thirty years weaving.
He did not suspect that the Archbishop served different masters entirely.
He did not suspect that the Church investigation, while appearing to search for the same targets as the Arass conspiracy and the four houses’ investigation, was actually pursuing an objective that dwarfed all others in its cosmic significance.
And he certainly did not suspect that the stone Baldred had carried …the palm-sized fragment of ancient rock that had cost a thousand soldiers their lives to recover …was a piece of a dimensional lock whose opening would result in the dissolution of reality itself.
Some truths were too large to see from the ground.
Fairfax was still on the ground. Still looking up. Still trying to map a landscape whose contours extended far beyond the horizon of his understanding.
But he was getting closer.
And getting closer, in this particular game, was either the path to salvation or the prelude to an encounter with something so vast that the very concept of salvation would become meaningless.
The game was larger than anyone playing it fully understood.
And it was accelerating.
*****
That same evening, as the Church investigators spread across the kingdom and the four houses digested the implications of the Archbishop’s involvement, Theron Vayle sat in his private study and contemplated the web of operations he was managing.
It was, by any measure, an extraordinary act of multi-dimensional coordination. He was simultaneously maintaining the king’s binding, directing the Veiled through Castellaine, managing the legitimate Church investigation, monitoring the Arass conspiracy’s activities, tracking the four burdened houses’ counter-investigation, and communicating with the Abyss’s intelligence through his medallion. Each thread required constant attention. Each decision carried consequences that rippled through all the others.
The king’s morning request had gone exactly as planned. Aldric’s genuine concern for the missing soldiers had been channeled into an authorization that gave the Covenant unprecedented investigative authority. The expanded warrant now permitted searches of private property …a tool that, if the Veiled’s covert recovery operation failed, could be used to justify an overt assault on the Arass estate under the guise of a royal investigation.
But Theron preferred subtlety. Overt action left traces. Traces invited scrutiny. And scrutiny, directed at the right places, could uncover things that four hundred years of careful concealment had kept hidden.
He reviewed the day’s intelligence summaries, each one delivered through a different channel. The Veiled’s progress …transmitted through Abyssal resonance, received in the depths of his altered consciousness. The legitimate investigators’ findings …presented as standard Church reports, delivered by courier to his office. The Arass network’s activities …observed by Covenant watchers who had been monitoring the family for years without their knowledge.
And the four houses. Fairfax, Remington, Blackwood, Harring. Their investigation was progressing with a speed and competence that exceeded Theron’s initial assessment. Blackwood’s intelligence network, in particular, was impressively sophisticated for a minor lord. The financial trails he had uncovered, the surveillance chain he had identified, the connections he had drawn between the raven tower handler and the Arass-linked properties …all of it demonstrated an analytical capability that the Covenant had not expected from that quarter.
“They will eventually find us,” Theron murmured to himself, turning the thought over with the same detached objectivity he applied to all strategic assessments. “Not immediately. Not soon. The Arass conspiracy provides layers of obfuscation that will occupy their attention for weeks, perhaps months. But if they are as thorough as they appear to be, they will eventually follow the threads past the Arass network and encounter something that doesn’t fit. Something that points to a deeper, older, more sophisticated manipulation.”
And when that happened, they would need to be dealt with.
Not yet. The timing was not right. The fragment had to reach Thessara first. The Gate had to be prepared. The ritual had to be completed. After that, it would not matter what the four houses discovered. After the Gate opened, discovery would be irrelevant. Everything would be irrelevant.
But in the interim …in the crucial weeks between now and the solstice …the four houses represented a threat that had to be managed. Not eliminated, not yet. Elimination would attract attention and potentially disrupt other operations. But managed. Contained. Directed away from truths that could not yet be revealed.
Theron made a note in his Abyssal journal: “Monitor the alliance of burdened houses. If they approach critical discovery thresholds regarding Covenant operations, implement Protocol Seven.”
Protocol Seven. A contingency plan developed two hundred years ago for exactly this scenario …the discovery of Covenant activities by legitimate investigators. It involved a combination of misdirection, witness elimination, and, if necessary, the deployment of Abyssal energies to erase specific memories from the minds of those who had learned too much.
It was a blunt instrument. Inelegant. But effective.
Theron closed the journal and extinguished his candle. Tomorrow would bring new developments, new decisions, new moves in a game that spanned centuries and dimensions.
He undressed and lay in his bed, the comfortable bed of a man whose public life was a model of religious devotion and civic responsibility. The sheets were clean. The room was warm. The sounds of the cathedral’s night offices drifted faintly through the stone walls …monks chanting prayers to a goddess whose existence Theron neither confirmed nor denied in the privacy of his own thoughts.
He closed his eyes and felt the familiar presence settle behind them …the Abyss, watching, waiting, patient as always.
Sleep came easily. It always did for Theron.
The conscience that might have kept him awake had been surrendered long ago, traded for certainty in a world of doubt, for purpose in a world of chaos, for the cold comfort of serving something larger than himself.
Even if that something wanted to destroy everything he had ever known.
Even if the destruction was the point.


