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The morning in Erdenhart was forged from lead and ash.

The sa sll every day: smoke, wet earth, sour milk. A ritual repeated until it lost all aning.

Amanda stood beside Elena, hanging laundry. Her movents were automatic, perfect, yet inside her chest rang a hollow silence.

Groundhog Day, her lips shaped without sound.

Endless waiting for an apocalypse that never quite arrives, until you realize you’ve been living inside its epicenter all along.

Then the sound ca.

Not the familiar rhythm of Kaelan’s hooves.

This was asured, iron, relentless.

A marching beat.

The thud of a coffin lid being carried toward the village.

Amanda froze. The wet cloth slipped from numb fingers.

It wasn’t her heart that trembled; her very essence did.

The mory of Yamada Light flared, dragging up chronicles of parades and wars.

From around the bend, kicking up a choking curtain of dust, rode a detachnt.

Not twenty villagers on ponies.

Twenty perfect instrunts of murder.

They wore no heavy plate.

Dark-crimson quilted robes, leather cuirasses, pointed helts, curved sabers.

Wind-burned faces with narrow, icy steppe eyes.

Sardar Khanate, Light’s voice whispered feverishly inside her skull, clawing fragnts from the Chronicles.

Vassals of the Arkanor Empire. Nomads broken but never tad. Their trade: squeezing blood from conquered lands.

Their leader sat astride a black stallion that looked spawned from night itself.

A head taller than his n, shoulders wide enough to break an ox.

A face carved with scars; the deepest split his brow and dragged to the corner of his mouth, twisting it into a permanent sneer.

Black hair braided in intricate warrior knots, pinned with silver.

Eyes like starless voids slid slowly across the village, appraising livestock.

Elder Orvin stumbled forward, face whiter than fresh linen.

“Great noyоn! Peace to your house! We did not ex—”

“Silence, old dog.”

The noyоn’s voice was gravel dragged across iron.

“Every year at this ti you pay tribute to the Lord of the Steppe. Has your rotting brain forgotten taxes? Cattle? Grain?”

He dismounted with lazy nace and spat at the elder’s feet.

“Hide nothing. My n will count every sheep.”

Amanda pressed herself against the rough wall of the hut.

Terror rolled through the village, thick enough to touch.

Won snatched children and vanished indoors.

n stood frozen, fists clenched, spines bowed beneath invisible yokes.

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There it is, flashed through her mind, cold and searing.

The system.

Not abstract politics from books.

This man, his saber, his spit.

The machine that ground lives to dust.

And it worked with horrifying precision.

Worst of all: in the Chronicles, the Sardar Khanate was a footnote. Background noise.

For Erdenhart, these crimson riders were the end of the world.

Her gaze snapped to Kaelan.

He stood in the doorway, knuckles white around the handle of a work knife, ready to splinter the wood.

In his warm eyes burned pure, uncontrollable hatred; the hatred of a cornered beast.

She understood instantly.

While she had waited for threats from outside the board, the real danger had always been part of the rules.

And her noble, idiot brother was about to do sothing heroic, stupid, and fatal.

Her own fear evaporated.

In its place rose a cold, surgical fury.

Not today.

“Tribute is good,” the noyоn drawled, voice rich with lazy cruelty.

His gaze, oily and possessive, crawled over the girls huddled at their doorways.

“But the Khan’s heart desires another gift. His harem requires… fresh blood.”

He nodded.

Hell broke loose.

With coarse laughter the riders swung down.

Calloused hands ripped daughters from mothers’ arms.

The village exploded into screams, sobs, roars.

“No! Please, no!”

Elena clung to Amanda, body shaking with sobs.

But Amanda did not flinch.

Her mind burned like a supernova, calculating angles, distances, outcos.

Twenty professionals. Resistance ant death for everyone. Dead end. She needed—

The noyоn’s eyes found her.

Those empty black voids suddenly flared with a hunter’s thrill.

Golden hair. Delicate features.

And ruby eyes that held no fear; only icy, inhuman contempt.

“Hold.”

His single word froze his n.

He walked toward her with the theatrical slowness of an executioner.

He shoved the elder aside like a fly.

Heavy boots thudded, counting down the final seconds of the old life.

He reached out with a scarred hand to seize her chin.

Ti crawled.

Amanda saw movent from the corner of her eye.

A dull flash of steel.

A wet, obscene shluck.

Sothing warm and sticky sprayed across her face, painting one ruby eye crimson.

The noyоn froze. His fingertips hovered a hair’s breadth from her skin.

He looked down in dumb confusion.

On the dusty ground lay his own right hand, still half-curled into a fist.

Silence.

Then blood fountained from the stump.

At first the noyоn made no sound; only a short, bewildered whimper, like a kicked pup.

Then reality crashed in.

He scread. Not rage; raw, animal terror and disbelief.

The great noyоn, master of life and death, crawled on hands and knees toward his horse, dragging a red sar behind him.

“KILL THEM!” he choked, clutching the stirrup with his remaining hand.

“KILL THEM ALL! BURN IT! TO THE VOID WITH THEM! EVERYONE!”

Amanda couldn’t move.

Warm blood cooled on her skin.

A severed hand lay at her feet.

Inhuman shrieks filled the air.

Her razor-sharp mind refused to process it.

This was no page of history.

This was flesh. Pain. Death.

Kaelan stood before her, chest heaving, a blood-drenched wood axe in his grip.

His face was a mask of primal fury, but when their eyes t she saw no pain; only the cold, iron resolve of a man already dead.

“Run,” his voice cracked.

One word containing all his love, all his despair, all his rage.

“RUN, AMANDA!”

The scream snapped her out of paralysis.

The village drowned in chaos.

Sabers flashed under the sun.

Dood n roared.

The first thatched roof burst into fla like a torch.

The massacre began.

And its first spark had been her beauty, and her brother’s fierce, suicidal love.

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