The world ended sideways.
Not with a clean snap or a single decisive roar, but with a staggered failure—like an old bridge finally admitting it had been rotten for years. The ceiling cracked first, a hairline fracture racing along the sigil ring like frost across glass. The sound was high and sharp, setting my teeth on edge. Then the walls bowed inward, stone groaning under pressure that had been building since before I was born.
The black water scread.
It wasn’t sound the way voices were sound. It was vibration—rage and hunger thrumming through bone and stone alike. The obedient arc behind Veyra lost its shape, sloughing downward as if gravity had finally rembered it existed.
Veyra shouted a word of command, harsh and slicing. The water surged toward her—and then hesitated.
For the first ti, her smile faltered.
I hit the ground hard as the floor split beneath us. Stone sheared away and I slid with it, slamming shoulder-first into the tunnel wall. Light burst behind my eyes. Cold flooded my boots, then my legs, then my gut, dragging at with a weight that felt personal, like hands that knew exactly where to grab.
I rolled, coughing, and drove my knife into a widening crack in the stone. The blade bit deep. I wrapped my fist around the hilt and held on as the surge tore past, ripping loose chunks of masonry and old bones alike.
Veyra wasn’t so lucky.
She staggered as the half-built gate above us spasd, sigils tearing free from the ceiling and shattering into green-lit fragnts. The black water wrapped her legs, her waist, climbing fast. She fought it—hands carving signs in the air, voice raised in a snarl that was almost fear.
"You think this ends it?" she scread over the roar. "You think she doesn’t plan for this?"
The water surged higher, tugging her off balance.
"I think," I coughed, swallowing filthy water, "you talk too much."
I kicked off the wall and slamd into her, shoulder first. We went down together, tumbling through water and debris. She struck stone with a wet crack that I felt in my bones. The impact drove the breath out of her in a thin, shocked wheeze.
The water, suddenly free of direction, went feral.
It tore at us both, spinning, clawing, trying to pull us apart and under. Veyra clawed at , nails raking my cheek, drawing hot lines of pain. Her eyes were wide now, glassy, reflecting the dying green fire still flickering in the broken sigils above.
"She will burn you," she hissed, spitting water and blood. "All of you."
"Maybe," I said, and shoved her under.
The black water swallowed her scream.
For a heartbeat, her hand thrashed above the surface, fingers splayed, reaching for anything solid. Then the current took her, dragging her down and away, folding her into itself like ink poured into deeper ink.
The tunnel gave way completely a mont later.
Stone collapsed in a grinding avalanche, sealing the overflow channel in a tomb of rubble and mud. The surge slamd into the wall again, hard enough to rattle my skull, then ripped past—draining away through fractures it had torn for itself, forced downward and outward, anywhere but into the city.
When it was over, the silence rang louder than the collapse.
I lay there for a long mont, half-subrged, chest heaving, counting breaths just to be sure I still could. My shoulder burned like it had been set alight. My ribs protested every inhale with sharp, petulant pain. Sowhere above, the gate sputtered, flared weakly, and went dark.
I laughed once—short, cracked, on the edge of hysterical.
"Clock’s stopped," I told the stone. "For now."
Getting out was worse than the fight.
The main tunnel was gone, sealed under tons of stone. I dragged myself through a side passage that hadn’t fully caved, squeezing through gaps barely wide enough for my shoulders, climbing over rubble that shifted and threatened to bury if I moved wrong. My hands bled. My legs shook so badly I had to stop and press my forehead to the stone just to steady myself.
Ti stretched. The air thinned.
When I finally broke into open night, the moon was high and cold, washing the hills in silver. Below , the city sprawled like a wounded animal—fires still burning, but contained. Smoke drifted instead of boiling. No black tide poured through the lower wards. No screams from the cisterns.
Horns still sounded, but the calls were steadier now. Organized. Human.
I collapsed against a standing stone, slid down until I was sitting in the grass, and fumbled for my last flare. My fingers shook too badly to strike it on the first try. The second ti, green fire blood, bright and defiant against the night.
I held it aloft until my arm gave out.
Far out on the dark water, sothing answered—a distant flash, then another. White sails turned, catching moonlight. Silver Wake was already moving.
Relief hit harder than the collapse had. My vision swam. I let myself lie back, staring up at the stars, each one sharp and impossibly calm.
Boots crunched nearby.
I forced my eyes open, hand scrabbling for my knife.
Sarah knelt beside , armor scratched and dented, longsword dark with old blood. Her face crumpled with relief she didn’t bother hiding. She grabbed my collar, as if checking I was real.
"You’re late," she said, voice rough.
"Traffic," I managed.
She laughed once, breath hitching, and pulled into her arms. I let myself lean into it—just for a second—grounding myself in the solid, undeniable fact of her being there.
Sophia crouched on my other side, staff planted firmly in the earth. The wards around her shimred faintly, responding to my blood and pain. She examined my shoulder with practiced calm. "You collapsed the overflow channel. The water receded across the lower wards within minutes. The palace gates are still sealed."
Mona hovered a few steps back, arms crossed, eyes scanning the hills even now. "Half the city’s screaming about tremors and flooding that never ca," she said. "Which ans the Empress didn’t get what she wanted. Always nice to spoil a tyrant’s evening."
I closed my eyes, the tension finally bleeding out of . "She’s not done."
"No," Sophia said quietly. "She’s adapting."
Sarah tightened her grip on , just a little. "So will we."
Above us, the moon sailed on, indifferent. Below, the capital breathed—hurt, shaken, but alive.
For tonight, that was enough.
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