Rise of the Horde - Chapter 595 - 594

Marius Arass had not slept in two days.
The manor’s sub-basement had been sealed. Every ward had been recalibrated, every entry point reinforced, every agent in the capital recalled for a full security review. The household operated under a lockdown so severe that even the servants …those few who were trusted enough to remain .moved through the corridors in fearful silence, sensing without being told that something catastrophic had occurred.
In his private study, Marius sat surrounded by the debris of frantic investigation. Notes covered every surface. Maps were pinned to the walls. The communication bowl that connected him to the network’s outer agents glowed with the residue of a dozen urgent transmissions sent and received over the past forty-eight hours.
The stone was gone.
This single fact consumed him like a fever, not because the stone had been the centerpiece of his conspiracy …it hadn’t, it had been an incidental acquisition, a curiosity seized along with the expedition’s survivors …but because of what its theft revealed about the world he operated in.
Someone had bypassed wards designed by the best dark-arts practitioners the Arass family had produced in three decades. Someone had entered a vault that only three people in the world knew the location of. Someone had taken a specific item and left everything else untouched, with a precision that spoke not of opportunity but of purpose.
And they had done it without leaving any trace that Elena’s dark-arts senses could identify.
The energetic residue they had left behind …that cold, empty signature that felt like the absence of existence itself …was unlike anything in the Arass family’s considerable catalogue of supernatural phenomena. It was not dark arts. It was not the frost magic of the Winters mages. It was not the divine energy that the Church of Light claimed to wield.
It was something else entirely.
“We are not the only ones in the shadows,” Marius said to Elena, who sat across from him looking nearly as exhausted as he felt. Adrian Arass, the academy master, occupied a third chair, his scholar’s mind racing through hypothetical frameworks that might explain what they had encountered. Lady Corvina, the eldest, had been briefed by messenger …at her age, the physical journey to the manor would have been unwise.
“The question is who,” Elena said. “And what they want with the stone.”
“The stone was part of an arch in the Tekarr Mountains,” Adrian offered, adjusting his spectacles with ink-stained fingers. “An arch of immense age, covered in inscriptions that Baldred’s initial debriefing described as unlike any known script. The crown sent a thousand soldiers to recover a fragment of this arch.” He paused, letting the significance of that investment sink in. “A thousand soldiers. For a palm-sized rock. The crown knew what it was. They knew it was important. And now someone else has taken it from us.”
“Could it be a crown operation?” Elena asked. “The king’s agents, acting on intelligence about where the stone ended up?”
Marius shook his head. “The crown’s operational capability is limited. Severus would have heard if a royal recovery operation was being planned …it would require funding, logistics, authorization. None of that passed through the Treasury. And the king…” He trailed off, considering. “The king recently authorized the Archbishop to investigate the missing expedition. Church investigators have been deployed across the kingdom.”
“The Church,” Adrian said, and the word hung in the air like the tolling of a bell.
“The Church of Light doesn’t practice dark arts,” Elena pointed out. “Their power comes from divine sources. They couldn’t bypass our wards …their energy signature would have triggered every alarm we have.”
“Unless they have capabilities we don’t know about,” Marius replied. “The Church has existed for over five hundred years. It’s the oldest institution in the kingdom. In all that time, with all those resources, with access to every library, every ruin, every repository of knowledge in the realm… is it truly impossible that they’ve developed capabilities beyond what they publicly acknowledge?”
The silence that followed was answer enough.
“We need to find the stone,” Marius said. “Whatever it is, whoever took it, wherever it’s going …we need to recover it. Not because of our conspiracy, but because whoever possesses that stone possesses a weapon of unknown power. And in the hands of an enemy we can’t even identify, that’s unacceptable.”
“We also need to protect ourselves,” Elena added. “If whoever took the stone can bypass our wards, they can bypass them again. For any purpose. They could return for the prisoners. They could target our communications. They could…”
“They could destroy us,” Marius finished. “Yes. I’ve considered that. Which is why I’m implementing Protocol Omega.”
Adrian and Elena both straightened. Protocol Omega was the Arass family’s emergency dispersal plan …a contingency designed for exactly this scenario, when the network’s security was comprehensively compromised and continued centralized operations became untenable. Under Protocol Omega, agents scattered to pre-designated safe houses across the kingdom, operating independently until the threat was assessed and a regrouping could be safely organized.
“The conspiracy continues,” Marius clarified. “The supply disruptions. The court manipulation. Severus and Castellan maintain their positions. But the manor is no longer safe as an operational center. We relocate the prisoners, secure the sensitive materials, and operate from dispersed locations until we understand what we’re dealing with.”
“And the stone?” Adrian pressed.
“I’m deploying every asset we have to track it. Elena, your counter-surveillance teams …redirect them. Forget the four houses for now. Find whoever entered this vault and follow them. They left that cold signature. It may be traceable.”
Elena nodded, already calculating the deployment. “The signature was unlike anything we’ve catalogued. But our practitioners can attempt to track it. If it’s an energy type, it has properties. Frequency. Decay rate. Resonance patterns. Given enough time…”
“We don’t have time,” Marius interrupted. “The stone is moving. Whoever took it didn’t steal it to study …they stole it to use. Or to take it somewhere specific.” He stood, moving to the map pinned to his wall. “Think. If you had the stone and wanted to use its power, where would you go?”
Adrian leaned forward. “The arch. The stone came from the arch in the Tekarr Mountains. If it’s a fragment of a larger structure, its power might only be fully accessible at the structure itself. Or…”
“Or at another location connected to the same source,” Marius finished. “Are there other arches? Other ruins?”
“The Tekarr Mountains are full of ruins. The eastern territories are dotted with sites that the Church has declared forbidden …places where the earth feels wrong, where animals won’t go, where compasses spin. I catalogued seven such sites during my research years.”
“Give me the locations. All of them.” Marius began marking the map as Adrian recited coordinates from memory. Seven points, scattered across the kingdom’s eastern frontier, forming a pattern that was not immediately obvious but that nagged at Marius’s spatial memory.
He stepped back and looked at the map.
The seven sites formed a rough circle. And at the center of that circle, unmarked on any map, was a location in the foothills south of the Lag’ranna Mountains.
“There,” Marius said, pointing. “If the sites are connected, the center point is the nexus. Whatever the stone is being taken to, it’s there.”
“That’s wild territory,” Elena said. “Beyond the kingdom’s effective control. Near the orcish lands.”
“Then we send our best. Not agents. Practitioners. People who can detect the stone’s signature and who can defend themselves if they encounter whoever took it.” He turned from the map, his gaunt face set with the cold determination that had sustained the Arass cause through three decades of hiding. “We’ve been outmaneuvered. Robbed in our own house. Made to feel small by an enemy we didn’t know existed. That ends now.”
He looked at each of them in turn.
“We are the Arass family. We survived the purge. We survived thirty years of exile. We built a conspiracy capable of toppling the kingdom’s greatest houses. Whatever this new enemy is, whatever power they possess, we will find them. We will understand them. And we will take back what is ours.”
The candles flickered, their purple flames casting dancing shadows across the walls of a study that had seen decades of scheming and was now witnessing something new: the Arass family, for the first time in their long conspiracy, facing an enemy they genuinely feared.
And in that fear, finding something stronger than fear.
Purpose.
*****
While the Arass family scrambled to respond, the Veiled courier team carrying the Keystone fragment had already covered forty miles.
They traveled the eastern trade road in a formation designed to look like a small merchant caravan …two wagons, six riders, moving at a pace that was brisk but not remarkable. The fragment rested in its null-cloth case in the lead wagon, its cold signature dampened to near-invisibility by the containment materials.
Veiled-Three rode in the wagon beside the case, her enhanced senses tuned to the fragment’s residual vibrations. Even through the null-cloth, she could feel it …a pulse of ancient power that beat in rhythm with something vast and distant, like hearing the heartbeat of a mountain.
The route to Thessara would take them through the kingdom’s eastern provinces, then south through the border territories, and finally into the wild lands where the Gate awaited. Ten days of hard travel, through terrain that grew increasingly hostile the further east they went.
They passed through the first checkpoint …a provincial tollgate manned by bored officials …without incident. The wagon’s cargo manifest listed “religious artifacts for the eastern missions,” a cover story supported by Church documentation that Theron had prepared. The officials stamped the papers, collected the toll, and waved them through with the indifferent efficiency of bureaucrats who had long since stopped caring about what actually moved through their gates.
By nightfall, they had made camp in a clearing beside the road, their horses hobbled and their fire burning low. The Veiled did not truly need rest …their altered physiology allowed them to function at full capacity for days without sleep …but maintaining the appearance of a normal caravan required observing normal patterns. They cooked food they didn’t need to eat. They posted sentries in the ordinary fashion. They lay in bedrolls and pretended to sleep while their enhanced senses scanned the darkness for threats.
None came. The night was quiet.
But Three, lying awake with the fragment’s case beside her, felt something that the others did not. The fragment was responding to their movement. Not visibly, not in any way that mundane senses could detect. But its pulse was changing. Growing slightly faster. Slightly stronger. As if the stone could feel itself moving toward something, and the approach was stirring it from whatever torpor its long separation from the arch had imposed.
It was excited.
The thought was absurd …stones did not feel excitement …but Three could find no other word for the sensation that leaked through the null-cloth and pressed against her consciousness like a hand against glass.
Excited. Eager. Hungry.
She suppressed a shiver and checked the null-cloth wrapping for the third time that night.
Everything was secure.
Everything was fine.
The fragment pulsed in the darkness, and the darkness pulsed back.
*****
Back in the capital, the Arass network’s emergency dispersal proceeded with the controlled urgency of an organization that had spent decades preparing for exactly this kind of crisis.
Severus, informed of the theft through the coded messaging system, maintained his public persona with impressive composure. He attended his Treasury meetings, reviewed financial reports, and signed authorizations with the same jovial efficiency that had characterized his tenure as Master of Coin. No observer would have detected anything unusual about his behavior …the practiced duality of a man who had lived two lives for decades served him well in this moment of crisis.
But behind the mask, his mind churned with the same questions that consumed Marius. Who? How? Why?
The theft of the stone was not merely an operational setback. It was a strategic revelation. It demonstrated that an unknown entity possessed capabilities that exceeded the Arass family’s own considerable resources. An entity that could bypass wards designed by master practitioners, penetrate a secured facility without detection, and extract a specific target with surgical precision.
Severus began a discrete audit of the Treasury’s records, searching for any financial anomaly that might point toward the unknown enemy’s infrastructure. If they had agents in the capital …and they must, to have pulled off such an operation …those agents needed funding, logistics, communication networks. Somewhere in the vast ocean of the kingdom’s financial transactions, there might be a trace.
He found nothing. Which told him something equally valuable: whoever they were, they operated outside the kingdom’s financial system entirely. They had their own resources, their own infrastructure, their own supply chains. They were not parasites feeding on the kingdom’s body, like the Arass family was. They were something independent. Self-sustaining. Older, perhaps, than the kingdom itself.
Lord Castellan, similarly informed, reacted with the terrified compliance of a man who understood that the gambling debts that bound him to the Arass cause also bound him to whatever consequences that cause attracted. He increased security around his own estate, doubled the guard on his family, and spent his evenings drinking more heavily than usual, his heavy frame sinking deeper into his chair as the weight of his compromised position pressed down on him.
Lady Corvina, the eldest Arass, received the news from her protected residence with the cold fury of a woman who had survived one purge and would not be driven underground again. She dispatched her own network of informants …older agents, embedded deeper in the kingdom’s social fabric than the younger generation’s operatives …to gather intelligence on any power in the kingdom that might possess the capabilities they had witnessed.
Her inquiries, conducted through decades-old channels that even Marius didn’t fully know about, produced a single, chilling result.
“The Church of Light,” she reported to Marius through a coded message delivered by a servant who had been with the family since before the purge. “During the purge, thirty years ago, the Church’s investigators displayed abilities that went beyond what divine magic should have allowed. I remember it clearly …I was there. The investigators who found our hidden laboratories didn’t detect them through normal means. They walked directly to concealed doors, opened wards they shouldn’t have been able to perceive, and neutralized protections that our best practitioners had spent years creating.”
“You’re saying the Church has dark-arts capabilities?” Marius replied through the same channel.
“I’m saying the Church has capabilities they don’t publicly acknowledge. Whether those capabilities are dark arts, divine magic, or something else entirely, I cannot say. But the energy signature Elena described …cold, empty, fundamentally different from anything in our experience …is consistent with what I felt during the purge, when the investigators came for us.”
Marius read this report three times. If Lady Corvina was right …if the Church of Light harbored a secret capability that predated the purge, that existed alongside its public mission of faith and charity, that operated with resources and methods beyond anything the Arass family could match …then the conspiracy that Marius had spent thirty years building was not the most ambitious power play in the kingdom.
It was not even the second most ambitious.
The thought was humbling. And terrifying. And, in a way that Marius was only beginning to understand, clarifying.
Because if a greater enemy existed …an enemy that could threaten even the Arass family’s carefully constructed position …then the game was bigger than revenge, bigger than politics, bigger than the destruction of rival houses.
And the rules were about to change.


