Rise of the Horde - Chapter 612 - 611

The king’s emergency council convened within the hour.
It was not the Royal Council …that body remained suspended, its chambers closed, its membership under investigation. This was a war council, assembled by King Aldric from the only people he trusted: the four lords of the oversight committee, Sir Willem, Father Aldwin, Sister Veressa, and the three Academy scholars who had examined the amulet. They gathered in the king’s private chambers because the council chamber’s wards had failed along with everything else, and the privacy enchantments that normally ensured the confidentiality of state discussions were no longer functional.
The room felt exposed. Vulnerable. As if the walls themselves had lost their substance and the world outside was pressing in.
“Report,” the king commanded, and the word carried the authority of a man who had spent three days making decisions that were genuinely his own and had rediscovered the taste of sovereignty.
Sister Veressa spoke first. “The Eternal Flame is extinguished, Your Majesty. This has never happened in the four-hundred-year history of the Cathedral. The Flame was the anchor point for the kingdom’s entire defensive ward network. Without it, every magical protection maintained by the Church …palace wards, government building shields, military installation enchantments, even the basic protections on grain stores and water supplies …is failing.”
“Can it be relit?”
“Not by conventional means. The Flame was sustained by a continuous feed of divine energy channeled through the Cathedral’s foundational enchantments. Those enchantments are connected to the same network that the Flame itself anchored. It’s a self-reinforcing system …the Flame powers the network, and the network sustains the Flame. Without either one functioning, restarting the system requires an external energy source of considerable power.”
“How much power?”
Veressa hesitated. “More than any single practitioner in the kingdom possesses, Your Majesty. Relighting the Eternal Flame would require a coordinated effort by multiple high-circle mages working in concert. We would need practitioners of the 5th Circle at minimum, ideally the 6th or 7th. And we would need them to work together using the original ignition protocols, which are…” She glanced at Father Aldwin. “Which are stored in the Cathedral’s restricted archives, under the Archbishop’s personal seal.”
“The Archbishop is in a cell,” Lord Fairfax pointed out.
“And his personal seal is a dark-arts construct that responds only to his specific energy signature,” Veressa replied. “We cannot open the restricted archives without either his cooperation or a practitioner capable of bypassing Abyssal-frequency wards.”
The room went silent at the word “Abyssal.” It was the first time anyone had used it in the king’s presence, and it landed with the weight of a revelation that everyone had been circling but no one had been willing to name.
“Abyssal,” King Aldric repeated slowly. “You’re telling me that the Archbishop of the Church of Light protected his personal archives with wards derived from the same energy source that powered my amulet. The same energy that erupted at the Arass manor. The same energy that is connected to whatever is happening in the east.”
“Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Then the Archbishop was not merely a corrupt official. He was a practitioner of arts that are fundamentally opposed to everything the Church claims to represent.”
“That appears to be the case, Your Majesty.”
Aldric’s jaw tightened. The cracks in the binding that had controlled him for twelve years had become fissures, and through those fissures, the real Aldric …the decisive, intelligent ruler he had been before Theron’s manipulation …was emerging with increasing clarity and increasing rage.
“Cole Mercer reported seeing a massive energy event in the eastern wild lands,” the king said, steering the discussion toward what he sensed was the most urgent issue. “A light beneath the mountains. Church trail markers leading toward the same location. And now the Eternal Flame …the kingdom’s primary magical defense …has been extinguished at the same time.”
He looked at Lord Blackwood, whose quiet intelligence had been the investigation’s sharpest instrument. “Lord Blackwood, your assessment.”
Blackwood stood, his lean frame casting a long shadow in the candlelight that now served where magical illumination had failed. “Your Majesty, I believe the events are connected. The Archbishop was operating a covert network in the eastern wild lands …the trail markers Master Mercer found confirm this. The stolen Keystone fragment from the Tekarr expedition was tracked to the east by the Arass family before the arrests disrupted their operations. And the energy event that Master Mercer observed is consistent with an extremely large-scale magical operation …something drawing on power sources far beyond anything available in the kingdom’s normal magical infrastructure.”
He paused, choosing his next words with characteristic care. “I believe the Archbishop, or the faction he represents, used the Keystone fragment to activate some kind of structure in the eastern wild lands. The Eternal Flame’s extinction is a consequence …the activation is drawing on, or disrupting, the same energy networks that sustained the Flame. And the entities that may be emerging from whatever that structure is…”
“Entities?” Harring interrupted. “What entities?”
“Master Mercer’s report described the sky above the eastern mountains as ‘wrong.’ Sister Veressa’s analysis of the Arass manor eruption identified a ‘foreign energy component’ with dissolution properties. If something similar is occurring at a vastly larger scale in the east…”
He let the implication hang.
“We need to see it,” the king said. “We need eyes on whatever is happening out there. Not secondhand reports. Not interpretations. Direct observation by people qualified to assess a supernatural threat of this magnitude.”
“The Griffon Knights,” Sir Willem suggested. “Countess Winters and General Snowe’s forces are three days from the capital. Their griffons could reach the eastern wild lands in…”
“One day,” Lord Harring calculated. “If they fly direct. A griffon at full speed can cover four hundred miles in a day.”
“Send them,” the king ordered. “The Baron of Frost, if he’s available. He’s our most capable aerial mage. And send him with practitioners from the Academy who can analyze whatever they find.”
“Your Majesty,” Fairfax said carefully, “the Baron is a 6th Circle mage. If whatever is happening in the east involves forces of the magnitude we’re discussing, sending him into it may be sending him to his death.”
“Then we send him with everything we can spare. Practitioners, supplies, communication equipment. And we send a ground force behind them …soldiers who can establish a perimeter and hold it if the aerial team finds something that needs to be contained.”
“A ground force,” Duke Remington said. “Your Majesty, our military is compromised. A third of our weapons are substandard. Our supply chains are disrupted. Our garrison forces are stretched thin covering for the eastern expeditionary armies. Where do we find a ground force?”
“The recruitment camps,” Harring said immediately. “The ten thousand soldiers we’ve been raising for the eastern reinforcement. Most of them are only partially trained, but they’re equipped …with the replacement weapons I’ve been sourcing through our own suppliers, not through Severus’s compromised procurement system. They’re not veterans, but they’re bodies with functional weapons, and right now, that may be the best we can field.”
“How many are ready?”
“Four thousand, Your Majesty. The rest need another week or two of training to be useful.”
“Four thousand will do. Lord Harring, you have command of the ground force. Assemble your best-trained units and march east immediately. The Baron of Frost will provide aerial reconnaissance. Lord Blackwood will coordinate intelligence. The objective is to assess and, if possible, contain whatever is happening in the eastern wild lands.”
He stood, and the room stood with him.
“Gentlemen, three days ago we dismantled a conspiracy that had been eating this kingdom from within for thirty years. We exposed traitors, we arrested conspirators, we began the work of rebuilding what they had damaged. I told you then that the truth would set us free.”
His expression was grim, but his eyes burned with the fire of a man who had been sleeping and was now, painfully, gloriously awake.
“The truth is larger than we knew. The conspiracy was not the disease …it was a symptom. The real threat is in the east, and it’s growing. We cannot wait for the armies to arrive from the border. We cannot wait for the political situation to stabilize. We cannot wait for perfect information or ideal conditions.”
He looked at each person in the room.
“We go now. With what we have. And we face whatever is coming. Because that is what Threia does. That is what Threia has always done.”
The room emptied as orders were carried out. Griffons were prepared. Soldiers were assembled. Supplies were loaded. The machinery of the kingdom, battered and compromised and missing half its parts, ground into motion with the desperate energy of people who understood that the stakes had just escalated beyond anything they had imagined.
*****
In his cell, Theron felt the activity through the palace’s stone walls …the vibration of boots, the shouts of officers, the tremor of griffon launches from the palace roof. Something had changed. The king was mobilizing.
He reached through the medallion. *Castellaine. The kingdom is responding. Forces are being sent east. Griffon riders, possibly ground troops. They may reach the valley within days.*
No response.
Castellaine. Respond.
Silence.
The resonance channel that had connected him to his field commander for years was empty. Not blocked …empty. As if the other end of the connection had simply ceased to exist.
Theron’s composure, which had survived arrest, imprisonment, and the prospect of execution, cracked for the first time.
Castellaine?
Nothing.
He pressed harder against the medallion, pouring his Abyssal energy into the connection, searching for any trace of the resonance that should have been there. For decades, the network had functioned flawlessly …the Abyssal frequency was not dependent on distance or physical barriers. It operated through dimensional substrate itself, immune to mundane interference.
If the connection was gone, it meant one of two things. Either Castellaine had been killed or incapacitated…
Or the dimensional substrate near Thessara had been so thoroughly disrupted by the Gate’s breach that the Abyssal resonance could no longer propagate through it.
The second possibility was, paradoxically, both the best and worst outcome. If the breach was severe enough to disrupt dimensional communication, it meant the Gate’s conversion was complete or nearly so. The barrier was down. The Abyss was pouring through.
Success.
The kind of success that consumed everything, including the means of confirming it.
Theron sat in his cell, the medallion cold against his chest, the connection dead, and wondered …for the first time in twenty-two years of absolute conviction …whether he had made a mistake.
Not a tactical mistake. Not a strategic miscalculation.
A moral one.
The thought was brief. He crushed it before it could fully form, the way he had crushed every doubt, every hesitation, every human impulse that had threatened his dedication to the cause.
But it had been there.
And doubts, once thought, could not be unthought.
Even by the most devoted servant of the void.
*****
While the capital mobilized, the combined Winters-Snowe army, still three days’ march from the city, received a rider bearing the king’s urgent dispatch.
General Snowe read it aloud to Countess Winters in the command tent of their marching camp. The dispatch was brief, written in the king’s own hand with the kind of urgency that stripped away all diplomatic padding:
“To Countess Winters and General Snowe …the Eternal Flame is extinguished. The kingdom’s ward network has failed. An unknown energy event of massive scale is occurring in the eastern wild lands, believed to be connected to the Archbishop’s covert operations and the stolen Tekarr expedition artifact. Forces are being dispatched to investigate. Your immediate return to the capital is imperative. The kingdom needs its most powerful mages. …Aldric III.”
Aliyah set down the dispatch and looked at Snowe. Her scepter, resting against her chair, pulsed faintly with the residual frost energy that had been slowly replenishing during the days of marching. She was not yet at full strength …her 7th Circle reserves had been devastated by the weeks of constant magical expenditure during the retreat …but she was functional. Perhaps at sixty percent capacity. Enough to be formidable. Enough, she hoped, to face whatever the king’s dispatch described.
“The Eternal Flame,” she said quietly. “That anchor has sustained the kingdom’s magical defenses since before either of our families held titles. Its extinction is not just a symbolic loss …it’s a structural collapse of every protective enchantment the Church has maintained for centuries.”
“And the energy event in the east,” Snowe added. “The king says it’s connected to the Archbishop. To the stolen artifact. To whatever the Church’s hidden faction was doing in the wild lands.”
“The Keystone fragment,” Aliyah murmured, her mind working through the implications with the analytical precision that had made her one of the kingdom’s most respected magical theorists, not just its most powerful combat mage. “The stone that Baldred recovered from the Tekarr ruins. It was part of an arch …a dimensional structure. If it’s been used to activate another such structure…”
She trailed off, her frost-touched senses reaching eastward, probing the distant magical landscape with the sensitivity that her 7th Circle attainment allowed. What she felt made her go very still.
“Aliyah?” Snowe asked, using her first name for the first time in their acquaintance without thinking about the significance.
“I can feel it,” she whispered. “Even from here. Seven hundred miles away. I can feel it.” Her hands trembled …not with fear, but with the physical reaction to sensing an energy source so vast that her magical perception was struggling to process it. “It’s… immense. Cold. Empty. Like looking into a void that has no bottom and no walls and no end.”
“How dangerous?”
She looked at him, and in her eyes …eyes that had watched orcish hordes charge her positions without flinching, that had faced down a 6th Realm warrior at close range without blinking …there was something that Snowe had never seen there before.
Awe.
“I don’t know if ‘dangerous’ is a sufficient word,” she said. “What I’m sensing is not a threat in the way that an army or a storm or even a plague is a threat. Those things can be fought, or survived, or endured. What I’m sensing feels like… the end of fighting. The end of surviving. The end of everything.”
Snowe absorbed this with the steady composure that had defined his military career, but his hand went unconsciously to the hilt of his sword …a warrior’s reflex, seeking the comfort of a weapon even when the threat was beyond any weapon’s reach.
“Can you counter it?” he asked. “Your frost magic …it operates on cold, on absence, on the crystallization of energy. If this… void… operates on similar principles, could you interact with it?”
Aliyah considered the question with the seriousness it deserved. Her 7th Circle frost magic was among the most powerful offensive magical capabilities in the kingdom. She could freeze rivers, shatter fortifications, create barriers that could stop armies. Her understanding of cold …not just physical cold, but the metaphysical principles of stasis, preservation, and the cessation of energy …was deep enough that she could theoretically interact with any energy system that involved the manipulation of thermal or kinetic states.
But what she was sensing from the east was not cold in any conventional sense. It was the absence of everything …not just heat, but matter, energy, meaning, existence itself. Her frost magic froze things, preserving them in states of suspended animation. The eastern phenomenon was not freezing anything. It was unmaking it.
“I don’t know,” she admitted. “My magic creates order from chaos …it takes disordered thermal energy and crystallizes it into structured patterns. What I’m sensing from the east is not chaos. It’s the end of both order and chaos. The end of the framework within which order and chaos exist.”
“But?”
“But I am a 7th Circle mage. There are fewer than a dozen practitioners in the known world that I know who have achieved that level. If anyone in this kingdom has the raw power and the magical understanding to at least investigate what’s happening …to analyze the phenomenon, to determine if it can be countered, to find a weakness if one exists …it’s me.”
“Then you need to go east.”
“Yes. Quickly. The army can continue its march to the capital under your command. I’ll take the Baron and the strongest griffon mounts and fly directly to the site. If the king is already sending forces, I’ll rendezvous with them.”
“Taking our strongest mage away from the army leaves us significantly weaker,” Snowe pointed out, though his tone suggested he already knew the argument wouldn’t change the decision.
“The army’s enemies are orcs and conspirators, General. You don’t need a 7th Circle mage for those. What’s happening in the east requires exactly that.”
Snowe nodded, the concession made with the pragmatism of a commander who understood resource allocation even when the resources in question were people he relied on. “Take the Baron. Take as many griffon mounts as can fly. And Aliyah…”
She paused at the tent flap.
“Come back alive. The kingdom needs you. And…” He hesitated, the words coming from a place that military protocol didn’t usually permit. “And I’d like the chance to fight alongside you again. Under better circumstances.”
The ghost of a smile crossed Aliyah’s face …the kind of warmth that her icy reputation rarely allowed the world to see. “Better circumstances would be nice, General. I’ll see what I can arrange.”
She departed, and within the hour, four griffons launched from the army’s march column, climbing into the morning sky and banking east. Aliyah rode the lead mount, her scepter across her lap, her 7th Circle senses extended toward the distant disturbance that was growing stronger with each passing hour.
Behind her, the Baron of Frost on his healed Stormclaw and two other griffon mages followed in formation, their enchanted armor gleaming in the sunlight, their faces set with the determination of people flying toward something they could feel but could not yet see.
Toward the east.
Toward Thessara.
Toward the end of the world, or the beginning of the fight to prevent it.
The sky stretched ahead of them, vast and blue and ordinary.
But in the east, where the mountains rose and the wild lands waited, that ordinary sky was thinning.
And through the thinning, something was pressing.
Patient.
Hungry.
And closer than anyone knew.


