The water in the kettle had just begun to whistle when the floorboards in the hallway gave a sharp, definitive crack.
Maren did not reach for a wand. He hadn’t carried one in three years, not since the treaty was signed and the trenches at Oakhaven were filled with salt and left to rot. Instead, he reached for a heavy wooden rolling pin, his fingers automatically finding the smooth, worn notches where his palms had pressed into the ash wood every morning for thirty months.
The kitchen of The Leavened Heart smelled of scorched sugar and wild yeast. It was four in the morning. The coastal fog of Oakhaven was still thick against the leaded windowpanes, turning the streetlamps outside into blurry, sulfur-colored smudges.
"The door is locked," Maren said, his voice flat, raspy from years of shouting over the roar of localized firestorms. "The bread won’t be out of the ovens until six. Come back then."
A shadow stretched across the threshold of the kitchen door. It wasn't the shape of a hungry fisherman or a local baker's boy delivering lard. It was wide, high-shouldered, and completely rigid.
Maren lowered the rolling pin an inch. The tension didn't leave his shoulders, but it shifted from the explosive readiness of a soldier to the dull, heavy ache of a man who realized an old debt had finally come due.
"Kaelen," Maren said.
The man stepped into the warm, golden light of the tallow candles. He wore a long grey coat that had been stained by travel, the hem stiff with dried salt-mud from the low roads. He looked exactly as he had during the winter blockade—sharp-nosed, eyes like flint, and a thin, silvery scar that cut through his left eyebrow and ended at the cheekbone. But there was something wrong with his right hand. It was tucked deep into his pocket, holding the fabric taut in a way that suggested weight.
"You’re hard to find," Kaelen said, looking around the kitchen. His eyes lingered on the floating loaf of moon-grass sourdough, which was currently drifting three feet off the table, bobbing gently in the heat rising from the ovens. Kaelen’s mouth twitched. "Still letting the residual bleed into the dough, I see."
"It keeps the crust light," Maren said. He turned his back on the man—a deliberate, dangerous show of indifference—and lifted the whistling kettle off the iron stove. He poured the boiling water into a heavy clay teapot filled with dried mint. "What do you want, Kaelen? The war is over. The King signed the parchment. We got our pensions."
"The King is dead," Kaelen said.
The stream of hot water missed the teapot by a fraction of an inch, sizzling loudly against the hot iron of the stove. Maren didn't look up. He carefully set the kettle down, took a clean rag, and wiped away the spill.
"Not from a puncture wound to the throat while sitting in a locked solar surrounded by twelve personal wards," Kaelen replied. He finally pulled his right hand out of his pocket. He wasn't holding a dagger. He was holding a small, heavy silver cylinder, sealed at both ends with purple wax—the personal seal of the High Inquisitor. "The wards weren't broken from the outside, Maren. They were dissolved. From the inside. Someone used a vinegar-base solvent mixed with powdered ash-root."
Maren closed his eyes. The smell of the mint tea suddenly felt sickeningly sweet. "Only four people in the entire regiment knew that formula. Two of them died at the Red River."
"The lock was copper-plated, Maren," a voice murmured from the dark. "You used to use cold iron. You’ve grown soft in the humidity."
"He was seventy," Maren said quietly. "People die at seventy."
"Leaving you," Kaelen said, setting the silver cylinder down on the flour-dusted table, right beside a bowl of rising dough. "And me."
continue
Maren did not look at the silver cylinder. Instead, he took a wooden paddle and slid the floating loaf of moon-grass sourdough into the mouth of the brick oven. The heavy iron door shut with a dull, metallic clang that seemed to echo too long in the small kitchen.
"I haven't touched ash-root since the day we crossed the border," Maren said. He kept his back to Kaelen, wiping his flour-stained hands on his apron. "I don’t even keep it in the shop. It ruins the yeast."
"The Inquisitor doesn't care about your yeast, Maren," Kaelen said. He stepped closer, his heavy leather boots leaving dark, damp prints on the clean wooden floor. "The carriage from the capital is already three days down the coastal road. They aren't coming to ask questions. They're coming with cold-iron chains and an executioner's warrant."
Maren turned around slowly. He looked down at Kaelen’s boots, then up to the man’s exhausted, hollow eyes. "And you rode ahead to warn me? Out of the goodness of your heart?"
Kaelen let out a short, bitter laugh that sounded like dry leaves scraping across stone. "I rode ahead because if they hang you, they’ll look for me next to finish the set. If the King was killed with our regiment’s specific magic, then the Crown will simply erase every surviving mage who ever wore the grey coat. It’s cleaner that way."
Both men froze. Maren’s hand instinctively dropped back toward the heavy wooden rolling pin on the counter. Kaelen’s fingers twitched, a faint, dangerous orange spark sputtering at the tips of his fingers before he forced them back into his pockets.
The kitchen clock ticked loudly. It was only four-fifteen in the morning.
"Maren?" a voice called out from the front shop. It was a woman's voice, thin and breathless, carrying the sharp, frantic edge of someone who had been running through the coastal fog. "Maren, please tell me you're awake."
Maren recognized the voice instantly. It belonged to Elena, the daughter of the local harbor master. She usually came in at seven for the day's leftover rye, always quiet, always polite. She shouldn't be here now.
The air in the retail room was cold. The display cases were still empty, save for a few trays of yesterday's hard biscuits. Elena stood by the counter, her woolen shawl pulled tight around her shoulders, her hair damp with sea spray. Her face was entirely drained of color.
"Elena," Maren said, keeping his voice gentle, dropping into the easy, reassuring tone of the town baker. "You're early. The ovens are just getting hot."
"No," Elena said, her eyes wide with a terror that looked entirely too familiar to a man who had survived the trenches. "The sails are set. The lanterns are still burning. But the decks are covered in a grey, powdery dust. The harbor master went aboard to check the logbook. He touched the dust, Maren. His hand... it just turned to ash."
The bell above the bakery front door jingled.
Maren threw a warning glance at Kaelen, gesturing sharply for him to stay in the shadows of the pantry. Then, he pushed through the swinging wooden door into the front of the shop.
"The harbor," she whispered, her chest heaving as she gripped the edge of the wooden counter. "The morning tide just brought in the mail-boat from the northern point. The crew... Maren, there's no one on board."
Maren frowned, stepping closer. "A drift-away?"
Behind Maren, the kitchen door creaked open an inch. The smell of burning mint tea drifted through the gap, accompanied by the cold, heavy silence of Kaelen listening from the dark.
continue
"Stay here," Maren said, his voice dropping into the quiet, absolute authority he hadn't used since the winter lines at Oakhaven. "Lock the door behind me. Do not let anyone in, Elena. Not even your father if he comes back from the docks."
Elena blinked, her knuckles white against the counter. "Maren, the watchmen are already calling for the town physician, but—"
"The physician can't fix ash-root," Maren said bluntly.
He didn't wait for her to argue. He strode back into the kitchen, pulling his heavy oilskin coat off the peg by the door. Kaelen was already waiting by the back exit, his grey coat buttoned tight to the throat. The silver cylinder was gone from the table, tucked securely back into his pocket.
"Ash-root doesn't turn flesh to dust on contact," Kaelen muttered, his voice a low hiss as Maren unbolted the back door. "It’s a solvent for magical wards. It eats energy, not skin."
"Unless someone altered the formulation," Maren replied, stepping out into the alley.
The coastal fog hit them like a wet sheet. It smelled of rotting kelp, salt, and something sharp and chemical that didn't belong to the sea. The cobblestones were slick underfoot as they hurried down the narrow, sloping lane that led toward the docks. The town of Oakhaven was still largely asleep, but down by the water, lanterns were flickering like angry fireflies through the mist.
As they reached the edge of the pier, the crowd became visible—a dozen fishermen and dockworkers standing in a wide, terrified semi-circle. They stayed at least twenty paces back from the slip where the northern mail-boat was moored.
The ship rocked gently against the wooden pilings. Its main sail was half-furled, flapping idly in the damp breeze. Even from the top of the stone stairs, Maren could see the grey powder. It lay thick across the deck planks, looking exactly like a heavy frost, except it didn't melt under the yellow glow of the ship's lanterns.
Near the gangplank, a man was kneeling on the wet wood, groaning in a low, rhythmic cadence. It was the harbor master.
Maren pushed through the crowd, ignoring the startled mutters of the townspeople. Kaelen followed close behind, his hood pulled down low to obscure his scarred face.
"Get back, baker!" one of the watchmen shouted, raising a wooden pike. "It's a plague. The boat's cursed."
Maren ignored him. He dropped to his knees beside the harbor master. The man’s right arm was extended, trembling violently. From the fingertips up to the mid-forearm, the skin wasn't bleeding or blistered; it was simply gone, replaced by a porous, crumbling grey substance that looked like charcoal left too long in a furnace. Even as Maren watched, a tiny flake of the grey crust broke away from the man's wrist and drifted down to the pier, dissolving into a fine soot before it hit the ground.
The corruption was crawling upward, moving toward the elbow at the speed of a slow leak.
"It’s eating his residual life force," Kaelen whispered, leaning over Maren’s shoulder. His flint-grey eyes were fixed on the line where the ash met living flesh. "He doesn't have enough natural magic to fight it off. In ten minutes, it'll hit his heart."
"Hold him," Maren said.
"Maren, we don't have the tools—"
"Hold him, Kaelen."
Maren reached into his coat pocket and pulled out the small leather pouch he used for transporting delicate baking spices. Inside wasn't salt or cinnamon. He dipped his fingers into a fine, sparkling blue powder—residual moon-grass extract, the same stuff currently making his sourdough float back at the shop.
He didn't have a wand, but he had two hands that knew exactly how much pressure it took to keep a volatile mixture from blowing up in his face. He pressed his blue-dusted fingers directly against the harbor master's healthy skin, just above the creeping grey line.
Should Maren attempt to burn out the corruption using the raw moon-grass, or should Kaelen use his own dark spark to cauterize the wound before it spreads?
Maren did not wait for Kaelen to decide. He pressed his fingers into the harbor master’s upper arm, right above the creeping grey border.
The blue moon-grass extract flared instantly upon contact with living skin. It didn't burn with heat, but with a sudden, violent cold. The harbor master gasped, his back arching as the bright blue light sank into his flesh like spilled ink, creating a glowing ring around his biceps.
"Kaelen, now," Maren grunted, his teeth gritted as the feedback from the spell vibrated up his own arms. "Pin the line. It's fighting back."
The grey ash wasn't just passive rot. As the moon-grass barrier blocked its path, the corruption on the forearm began to writhe under the skin, forming dark, pulsing veins that thrashed against the glowing blue ring. It wanted to feed, and the harbor master’s meager life force was running out.
Kaelen dropped to one knee. He grabbed the man’s wrist with his left hand, while his right hand—the one hidden in his pocket until now—came free. The tips of Kaelen's fingers ignited with a sharp, sputtering orange spark. It smelled of sulfur and old brass.
He didn't touch the skin. He traced a line in the air an inch above the harbor master's wrist, drawing a counter-curse in sharp, jagged strokes.
"It’s a siphon," Kaelen hissed, his forehead beaded with sweat as the orange sparks fought the grey dust. "The ship wasn't attacked by a weapon, Maren. The ship is the weapon. It’s a travelling battery. Whoever loaded this dust onto the mail-boat used the crew’s lives to charge the spell."
"Can you sever it?" Maren demanded. The blue light under his fingers was beginning to flicker, turning a dangerous, pale violet as the grey corruption ate through the moon-grass defenses.
"If I sever it, his arm goes with it," Kaelen said.
"Do it."
Kaelen closed his eyes. The orange spark at his fingertips turned into a solid, blinding white needle of light. He drove his fingers down into the harbor master's elbow, right through the meat of the joint.
The forearm didn't bleed. The moment Kaelen’s white light severed the energetic connection, the entire lower half of the arm—from the elbow down—turned completely to grey soot. It collapsed into a neat, heavy pile of ash on the wet wooden planks of the dock.
The harbor master slumped forward, completely unconscious but breathing, the stump of his arm perfectly sealed and cauterized by Kaelen's fire.
The crowd of onlookers gasped, falling back another five paces. Someone in the back shouted for the town guard, while others began to pray to the saints of the sea.
Maren stood up slowly, wiping his hands on his trousers.The moon-grass was gone, leaving his fingertips slightly numb. He looked down at the pile of ash on the deck, then up at the empty mail-boat rocking gently in the fog."The magic didn't dissipate," Maren whispered, looking at the grey frost covering the ship's timbers. "Kaelen, look at the deck.
at the pile of ash on the deck, then up at the empty mail-boat rocking gently in the fog."The magic didn't dissipate," Maren whispered, looking at the grey frost covering the ship's timbers. "Kaelen, look at the deck."The ash that had fallen from the harbor master's arm wasn't lying still. It was slowly, deliberately sliding across the wet wood of the pier, moving against the wind, crawling back toward the hull of the ghost ship like iron filings drawn to a massive magnet."It’s returning to the source," Kaelen said, his face grim as he watched the soot climb up the ship's side. "The battery is fully charged now. Which means whoever sent it is about to call it home."From the dark, fog-choked waters of the bay, a low, rhythmic thumping sound began to echo. It wasn't the sound of waves. It was the heavy, mechanized beat of an iron-hulled engine, coming from a vessel hidden deep in the mist
"Get the logbook," Maren said, his voice dropping into a low command that left no room for argument. "I’ll clear the path."Before Kaelen could answer, Maren vaulted over the low wooden railing of the pier and landed heavily on the deck of the mail-boat. The impact sent a cloud of grey soot billowing into the damp air. Maren held his breath, pulling the collar of his oilskin coat up over his mouth and nose as he kicked open the hatch leading down into the captain’s quarters.The air inside the lower cabin was thick, smelling of old paper, stale grog, and the unmistakable, burnt-copper tang of high-level sorcery.Kaelen dropped down the ladder behind him, his boots clicking sharply against the iron-reinforced rungs. He didn't waste time. He lunged across the small cabin toward the captain’s desk, where a heavy leather-bound journal sat open. The pages were fluttering slightly, not from a draft, but from the low, rhythmic vibration hummed by the iron engine out in the bay."The pages are clear," Kaelen muttered, flicking through the parchment with his left hand while keeping his scarred right hand hovering over the paper like a sensor. "The last entry was twelve hours ago, off the northern reef. They picked up a stranded skiff. No names recorded. Just 'one passenger with heavy cargo.'""The cargo was the ash," Maren said. He was looking at the floorboards.A thick, dark line of grey soot was actively pouring through the seams of the overhead deck, dripping down into the cabin like dry rain. It wasn't scattering. It was pooling in the center of the room, drawing itself into a tight, spinning vortex that grew larger with every thump of the engine outside.A sudden, violent jolt rocked the entire vessel. The wood groaned as the mail-boat was yanked backward out of the slip, the mooring lines snapping with the sound of pistol shots. Through the small cabin porthole, the lanterns of the Oakhaven docks vanished into the thick grey fog in a matter of seconds. They were moving fast, dragged into the open sea by an unseen cable of pure kinetic force.Something had landed on the ship.Kaelen slammed the logbook shut and shoved it into his grey coat. "That’s not the engine, Maren. That's the passenger."Maren reached down to his boot and pulled out his heavy bread knife—twelve inches of forged steel, balanced perfectly for cutting through thick ryes, but heavy enough to split a man's collarbone. He didn't have his rolling pin, and he didn't have his moon-grass powder left. He only had the iron in his hand and the residual heat left in his lungs."The solvent formula," Maren whispered as they crawled back up the ladder toward the deck hatch. "If they used ash-root, the counter is always vinegar or salt. What do we have?""There’s a barrel of salt pork in the galley," Kaelen said, his eyes scanning the fog as his head broke the plane of the deck. "But we aren't going to make it to the galley."Standing at the bow of the mail-boat, completely unbothered by the high-speed wind and the rushing spray, was a figure draped in the heavy, formal robes of the Royal Inquisitorial Court. The fabric was dyed a deep, imperial purple, but the edges were tattered, blackened by the same grey rot that had eaten the harbor master's arm.The figure turned around slowly. Where a face should have been, there was only a hollow mask of hardened grey soot, molded roughly into the shape of a human skull."Maren," the entity spoke, the voice echoing not from its mouth, but directly inside the two mages' heads, vibrating behind their eyes. "Kaelen. The King sends his regards from the ash."The purple-robed figure raised both hands, and the grey dust coating the entire deck rose into the air like a cloud of angry hornets, forming a wall of sharp, abrasive needles between the mages and the sea.
ontinueMaren didn't have salt, and he didn't have a wand. But he knew how heat moved through an enclosed space.He dropped his weight, digging his boots into the slick deck planks. "Kaelen, drop!" he yelled.Instead of rushing the entity, Maren slammed his heavy bread knife into the brass casing of the ship’s main deck lantern mounted near the hatch. The glass shattered, and a spray of burning whale oil leaked across the wood. Maren didn't look at the fire; he focused entirely on the air above it. He took a deep, burning breath, pulled the residual heat from the lantern's flame straight into his lungs, and blew it outward in a targeted, explosive burst of pressurized air.It wasn't a military-grade fireball. It was an oven-vent blast—a wall of sheer, superheated kinetic force used to clear baker's flues.The blast hit the swirling wall of grey needles, scattering the soot into the wind before it could pierce their skin. The sudden disruption broke the entity's balance.Kaelen didn't miss the opening. He lunged through the gap Maren had cleared, his boots skidding across the oil-slicked deck. His right hand was fully unmasked now, glowing with that blinding, white-hot needle of light. He didn't aim for the soot-skull mask. He aimed low, driving his white-hot fingers straight into the center of the entity's purple robes, right where the physical spine should be.The moment Kaelen’s hand made contact, the white light didn't burn. It hissed loudly, like cold iron dropped into water.The purple robes collapsed instantly. There was no body inside them. The fabric fell flat against the deck planks, empty, while the grey soot that had formed the skull mask exploded outward in a harmless cloud of dull, unmoving powder.The sudden cessation of the magic cut the kinetic cable holding the ship. The mail-boat lurched violently to the left, its hull groaning as it slammed into a heavy rolling wave, completely free of the pulling force.The low, mechanical thumping of the iron engine out in the bay stopped completely. The silence of the open sea rushed back in, broken only by the lapping of water against the hull and the heavy, ragged breathing of the two mages."It was a puppet," Kaelen said, his voice strained as he knelt to pick up the key. "A remote focus. Whoever is on that iron-hulled ship wasn't on board with us. They were just testing us."Maren walked over to the side of the boat, looking out into the dense, featureless fog. The chemical smell was fading, replaced once more by the clean, sharp salt of the sea. They were a mile off the coast now, completely adrift."They weren't testing us, Kaelen," Maren said, holding up his right hand. The skin of his index finger was faintly grey, a tiny speck of the ash-root solvent having bypassed his breath-mask during the blast. It wasn't spreading—the heat blast had cauterized his own skin—but the message was clear. "They wanted to see if we still remembered how to fight."Kaelen looked down at the black iron key in his hand, then at the leather-bound logbook tucked under his arm. "This key fits the High Inquisitor’s vault in the capital. I know the markings on the head."Should they return to the bakery to gather Elena and their supplies, or should they abandon the town immediately and use the mail-boat to head straight up the coast toward the capital?Kaelen stood over the empty robes, his glowing hand slowly dimming back to dull flesh. He kicked the fabric with his boot. A small, black iron key rolled out of the sleeve, glinting against the wet wood."Then we aren't staying in Oakhaven," Maren said, turning back toward the ship’s tiller to head them back to shore. "Get the sails up. We have a bakery to empty before the real Inquisitors arrive with the
continue"We go back for Elena," Maren said, his hand gripping the wooden tiller with white-knuckled force. "We left her in the shop with a locked door and a town full of panicked fishermen. If the Inquisitors find her there alone, they’ll break her mind just to find out which direction we ran."Kaelen didn't argue. He moved to the mainmast, hauling on the halyard to raise the damp canvas sail. The wood groaned as the mail-boat caught the offshore breeze, turning its nose back toward the faint, sulfurous glow of the Oakhaven streetlamps bleeding through the fog.Twenty minutes later, the hull scraped hard against the stone pilings of the deserted lower slip. The crowd of dockworkers had vanished, having fled into the upper town to seek shelter from what they believed was a demonic plague. The harbor master was gone too, likely carried to the apothecary's cellar. Only the dark, grease-slicked pile of ash remained on the pier, a grim marker of their escape.Maren and Kaelen sprinted up the narrow, sloping cobblestone lanes. The town was eerily quiet, the windows of the timber-framed houses dark and shuttered.When they reached the back alley of The Leavened Heart, Maren found the kitchen door exactly as he had left it—unlocked and slightly ajar. A heavy, suffocating scent met them at the threshold. It wasn't the smell of woodsmoke or rising yeast.It was the smell of burnt sugar and scorched lavender.Maren pushed inside, his bread knife drawn. The kitchen was empty. The fire under the brick oven had died down to a dull, orange eye of coals, but the air was unnervingly warm. On the central table, the silver cylinder Kaelen had brought lay crushed flat, as if a heavy iron boot had stepped directly onto the metal."Elena!" Maren called out, his voice sharp and low.A small sound came from the front retail room—a wet, choked sob.Maren threw the swinging door open. Elena was sitting on the floor behind the wooden counter, her knees pulled tight to her chest. Her woolen shawl was torn at the shoulder, and her fingers were clawing frantically at her own throat. She wasn't injured, but her eyes were wide, fixed on the front window of the shop.The glass pane had been completely frosted over from the inside. Traced into the thick white ice were three neat, elegant letters written in a precise, courtly hand:R. A. G."The Royal Arcane Guard," Kaelen whispered, stepping into the room behind Maren. He touched the frosted glass with a bare finger; it didn't melt, remaining solid and cold as iron. "They aren't three days down the road, Maren. They’re already in the district. They used a fast-transit portal."Elena shook her head violently, her teeth chattering so hard she could barely form the words. "A man... a man in a grey coat. He didn't use the door. He just appeared in the middle of the room. He looked at the window, wrote those letters with his breath, and then... then he looked at me and said, 'Tell the baker his sourdough is over-proofed.' Then he vanished. Like smoke.""If Vane is here, the executioner's carriage is less than an hour behind him," Kaelen said, his voice dropping all pretense of calm as he grabbed a heavy burlap sack from the pantry and began throwing in loaves of hard rye and tins of grease. "He’s tracking our residual trail. Every time we use a spark, the signal lights up for him like a beacon."Maren stood up, his eyes sweeping over the small bakery he had spent three years building. The floating moon-grass loaf had finally lost its magic, sitting flat and ordinary on the cooling rack. There was no time to pack the copper pots or the fine flour.Elena looked at the frozen window, then at the heavy knife in Maren's hand. She wiped her face with the back of her sleeve and nodded once, her expression hardening with the survival instinct of a coast-bred girl. "The marshes are full of watchmen. I’m coming with you.""Good," Maren said, reaching into the hidden drawer beneath the till and pulling out a heavy leather pouch of silver coins. He threw it to Kaelen. "Get to the stables behind the livery. Don't use magic to clear the locks—use the iron key we took from the puppet. If Vane is watching the air, we go by horse, under the tree canopy where the fog is thickest."Maren looked down at the crushed silver cylinder on the kitchen table. "To the capital. If the King was killed with our regiment's poison, the antidote isn't down here in the mud. It's sitting in the High Inquisitor's private study."Should they take the high mountain pass to avoid the main roads, or should they disguise themselves as salt-merchants and try to pass through the lower valley checkpoints?Maren knelt beside Elena, placing his large, flour-dusted hand gently on her shaking shoulder. "Did they touch you? Did they ask questions?"Maren’s jaw tightened. "Vane," he muttered. "The bastard always did have an awful sense of humor.""Elena, listen to me," Maren said, pulling her up by the hands. "You can't stay here. If they find you, they’ll use your memories to map our faces. You come with us, or you hide in the salt marshes until the grey coats leave. Choose now.""And where are we heading?" Kaelen asked, checking the flint of his short-dagger.
Chapter 5: The High PassThe small mountain trail was less of a road and more of a scar cut into the limestone of the Oakhaven crags. It was too narrow for a carriage, which was exactly why Maren chose it.The horses they had taken from the livery were sturdy, short-legged mountain beasts, used to the wet shale and the thin, biting air of the upper peaks. Maren rode in the lead, his heavy oilskin coat deflecting the freezing drizzle that had replaced the low coastal fog. Elena rode behind him, wrapped in three layers of coarse wool, her eyes fixed on the rhythmic bobbing of her horse's ears. Kaelen brought up the rear, his head constantly turning, his uninjured hand resting flat against the leather pommel of his saddle."We aren't near the city yet," Maren replied, not turning around. "That’s the ironworks at the base of the valley. If we can see the smoke, we’re visible from the watchtowers."He pulled his horse to a halt at a sharp bend in the path. Below them, the world opened up into a massive, dark basin. The lower valley road—the one they had avoided—was a thin grey ribbon winding through the black pine forests. Even from this height, the movement was unmistakable. A column of dark, armored riders was moving along the valley floor, their lanterns glowing like a line of slow-moving coals."They're moving at a trot," Kaelen muttered, pulling up beside Maren. He leaned forward, his flint-grey eyes narrowing as he scanned the line. "That's not a standard patrol. Those are the King's Iron-Heads. They don't leave the palace unless the Regent signs the high-treason mandates.""Look at the center of the line," Elena said, her voice shaking slightly as she pointed with a mittened hand.Between the armored riders was a single, massive carriage. It wasn't made of wood; its frame was constructed from interlocking plates of dull black iron, insulated with heavy lead sealings along the windows. It had no horses. It was being propelled forward by four low, bronze rollers that ground directly against the dirt road, powered by an internal pressure engine that sent thick, oily soot puffing into the rain."An extraction cell," Maren said, his voice dropping an octave. "They aren't hunting for us anymore. They’re transporting someone.""Or something," Kaelen added. He pulled the leather-bound logbook out of his coat, the pages snapping loudly in the mountain wind. "The last entry in the mail-boat log didn't just mention the passenger with the ash-root. It mentioned a destination. 'The Third Vault, via the valley rail.' The Third Vault isn't in the capital, Maren. It’s the old royal bunker under the ironworks."The black iron carriage below suddenly stopped.The steam from its exhaust vents hissed loudly, clouding the road in white vapor. One of the armored riders turned his horse back toward the rear of the column, raising a long, silver-tipped pike into the air. A sudden, sharp vibration rumbled through the limestone path beneath Maren's horse. The animal snorted, shifting its weight uneasily against the loose gravel."They know we're up here," Kaelen said, his right hand instantly beginning to pulse with that dangerous, white-hot spark. "The iron carriage acts as a dowsing rod for residual magic. Every step these horses take is leaving an energetic footprint in the shale."Should Maren use his knowledge of heat expansion to trigger a localized rockslide down onto the climbing threat, or should Kaelen drive his spark directly into the mountain path to mask their energetic trail while they run for the peak?"The wind is turning," Kaelen called out over the whistle of the gale through the pines. "It smells of iron. The capital is burning coal already."From the forest directly beneath their mountain path, a flock of black crows erupted from the pine canopy, screaming in unison as they scattered into the grey sky. Something heavy was moving up the steep, wooded incline toward their trail—fast, and without the sound of breaking branches
No comments:
Post a Comment