The General stood without weapon or armour. His cloak was black, frayed at the hem, and his eyes were the sa pale grey as the sky above the storm. Older than Leon rembered. Not weaker. Just worn in a way that felt deliberate, like a relic left untouched for the sake of mory.
"You ca," he said.
Leon didn’t move. "You expected I wouldn’t."
"I expected you’d hesitate."
"I did."
The General nodded. "And still you walked."
Leon’s hand rested near the cursed blade but didn’t draw. The weapon didn’t speak. It didn’t need to. The ground knew this was not yet the place for it.
"You were supposed to stay dead," the General said quietly, stepping toward the throne. "That would’ve been simpler."
Leon stepped forward too, slow and asured. "So would leaving you here to rot. But neither of us got what we wanted."
The air around them shifted. Not wind. Not pressure. Intent. The camp beyond still slept. The throne grounds were marked, warded by silence.
"You don’t carry your father’s eyes," the General said, gaze steady. "But you do carry his guilt."
Leon’s fingers twitched. "He’s gone. I’m what’s left."
"No," the General corrected. "You’re what’s built from the ruin he left behind."
He turned, slowly. Walked to the throne and sat. His hands rested on the armrests like they’d always belonged there.
"This place wasn’t made for kings," the General said. "It was made to keep kings out."
Leon didn’t reply.
"I watched you cross the Ashline. Watched you bleed for a world that would bury you if it could." His voice hardened. "So tell , Leon Thorne—what do you plan to do with this resistance of yours?"
Leon took another step. Close now. Close enough to see the lines in the General’s face, the cracks in the throne where blood had dried.
"Burn your war-ring," Leon said. "Break the sixth. And end what my family started."
The General laughed. Low. Rough. It echoed against the stone.
"You think you can break what’s already broken?"
"No," Leon said. "But I can make sure it doesn’t break anyone else."
Silence returned.
Then, the General stood.
And this ti—he drew.
Not a sword.
But a spear.
Long. Black. Forged from the sa twisted tal as the spire. It humd not with magic, but with mory.
"You want this to end," the General said. "Then earn it."
Leon’s own blade slid free.
And the silence shattered.
Not with battle cries.
But with the sound of old blood rembering how to spill. The clash was not sudden.
It was inevitable.
The mont the spear t the cursed blade, the ground beneath them cracked. Not from force. From recognition. As if the land itself had been waiting for this echo—one war answering another.
The General moved first. A twist of his wrist and the spear spun, low and sharp, aiming not for Leon’s heart, but his stance—testing him. The blow caught the edge of Leon’s coat, slicing fabric but missing flesh. Leon pivoted. The cursed blade followed his body, not his hand, cutting upward in a rising arc that forced the General back.
Their feet never danced. No flourishes. No show.
Only intent.
Only war.
"You’ve grown," the General said between strikes. "But you still hold back."
Leon didn’t answer. He pressed forward, each step an answer to the storm still raging above. The cursed blade hissed as it t the spear again—tal grinding against sothing older than steel. Sparks scattered, so falling, so rising. So hanging too long in the air.
The throne lood behind them, a silent witness to bloodlines undone.
"You think breaking the Sixth will bring peace?" the General asked, ducking under a wild arc and jabbing low. Leon barely avoided it.
"No," Leon replied. "But it’ll stop you."
"Fool. I am the Sixth."
Leon’s foot struck stone and skidded. The General pressed the mont, spinning the spear overhead and dropping it with both hands. Leon blocked, but the weight behind the strike drove him to a knee.
"You don’t even know what you carry," the General growled.
"Neither did you, once."
Leon surged up, shoulder-first, slamming into the older man’s chest. The General stumbled. Not far. Not enough. But it bought space. Enough to breathe. Enough to feel the pulse again—at his back.
The cursed blade shifted.
Not by will.
By hunger.
It lengthened slightly, edge rippling like ink in water.
Leon felt it hum—not with violence.
With mory.
The Final Door.
The price.
The promise.
The General hesitated.
"You bound yourself to it," he murmured. "You let it mark you."
Leon’s voice was quiet. "It didn’t mark . I marked myself."
The General’s spear dipped. Not from weakness.
From choice.
And then he stepped in again.
This ti, there was no hesitation.
Spear t blade.
Ash t shadow.
They moved faster than the eye could follow. Each strike carved the air into pieces. The stone beneath their feet began to splinter outward, a slow spiral of cracks forming around the throne as if it too were beginning to unseat itself.
And far above, in the clouds, the storm shifted.
A deep roll of thunder—no, not thunder.
A na.
The earth answered it.
Kairis, crouched beneath the outer wards, felt the break first. The ground pulsed once under her feet. Her magic shivered.
She turned, eyes narrowing.
"They’ve started," she whispered.
Mira felt it too—steel singing where it shouldn’t. She raised her blade. Tomas paused mid-motion, a crate half-burned behind him, and looked east.
Emily’s heart raced. She was still flanking the tent-line with two others, but when the pulse struck, she knew.
She turned back toward the spire, toward Leon.
The cursed blade was glowing now.
Not bright. Not beautiful. Just present.
The General forced Leon back again, the spear crackling now with each swing.
"You want to unmake ?" he spat. "Then unmake yourself. That’s the cost."
Leon wiped blood from his lip. Not his. Not yet.
"You made your choice."
"And you think you haven’t?" The General swung once—twice. Missed both tis.
Leon let him speak.
"You chose to beco their symbol. Their answer. But you are still his son, Leon. Still born of the sa house that lit the first pyre."
Leon’s blade lifted.
"And I’ll be the one to put it out."
The spire pulsed behind them.
Once.
Then again.
The Sixth Seal was listening.
And slowly, it began to unfasten.
The General felt it.
Not in the air. Not in the blade.
In the marrow.
The shifting.
The loosening.
The seal had been bound to him once. In another ti. Another life. A price willingly paid to hold back what ca before. But now—now it trembled like an old gate pushed too many tis.
"You don’t understand what you’re breaking," he said, voice no longer hard but hoarse.
Leon stepped in, not to answer, but to strike.
The cursed blade hissed against the spear, tearing sparks from its edge. Leon pushed forward, not fast—but deliberate. Each move weighty. Each cut carrying mory. The General parried low, twisted high, tried to catch Leon’s leg with a sweeping kick, but Leon vaulted it.
The blade ca down in a clean arc, grazing the shoulder of the General’s cloak. The fabric withered where it touched. Not burned. Not torn.
Withered.
As if ti itself recoiled from the cursed tal.
The General stepped back once more, spear held low. Not in retreat.
In warning.
"That weapon doesn’t answer you, Leon. It waits. It watches. One day, it’ll ask for sothing you won’t want to give."
Leon didn’t reply. He didn’t need to.
The sword thrumd at his side, and for a mont, it was like the throne itself breathed—stone groaning beneath their feet.
Far below the spire, at the edge of the war-ring, the silence had begun to fracture.
A scream rang out.
Then steel clashed.
Not from Leon’s duel—but from the outer periter.
Mira’s group had made contact.
Kairis rose from her crouch, her silvermarks glowing like veins of fire across her skin. She muttered a word and vanished into the rock beneath, leaving only a faint shimr where her feet had been.
Tomas drew his blade fully, no longer skulking through crates. He signaled his team—no formation, just movent. Disruption had begun.
Emily reached the ridge above the throne, saw the swirl of motion, the two figures locked in combat. Her breath caught in her chest.
She’d seen Leon fight.
She’d seen him bleed, falter, break.
But not like this.
Not when the world itself bent to hold its breath.
Below, the spire cracked again—just once. A hairline fissure opened along its base. And from that wound ca a sound no human throat could mimic.
A sob.
Or a prayer.
Or maybe both.
Leon stepped to the side, drawing the General with him. Their blades locked again, and this ti, the cursed weapon bit deeper—into the spear, into the man. The edge scraped along the General’s rib, drawing blood that hissed when it hit the stone.
"Still think you’re the Sixth?" Leon growled.
The General’s eyes burned. Not with fury.
With sorrow.
"I was. Until I beca the gate."
Leon faltered for half a breath.
And in that space, the General surged.
Spear reversed, shaft catching Leon in the ribs. He staggered back, breath stolen. The next blow swept his legs out from under him. He hit the ground hard.
The spear ca down.
Leon rolled.
The point struck stone inches from his head.
He ca up fast, slashing with the cursed blade. It t the shaft mid-air, splitting it slightly along its length.
Both n paused.
Both breathing.
The seal pulsed again.
The ground opened another inch.
And from it, sothing began to rise.
Not a beast.
Not a fla.
A figure.
Vague.
Shifting.
Bound in chains made from bone and silence.
The General’s expression twisted.
"You brought the blade too close," he whispered. "It’s waking what was ant to sleep."
Leon’s voice rasped out, low.
"Then I’ll put it down again."
The storm scread above them.
And the throne behind them cracked.
It had begun.
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