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Kael stood in the center of his war chamber, the fla-lit shadows stretching around him like silent conspirators. The Empire’s vast territories were etched across the obsidian war map, every province a piece on the board of dominance. But his golden eyes remained fixed on the North.

There, where the Silent Legion had stirred.

There, where the dead dared to march again.

His fingers hovered above the frosted edge of the map—hovering not over cities or armies, but over the absence between them. It was in the silence between movents, the shadows behind banners, that his war would be fought.

From across the chamber, Seraphina leaned against a marble pillar, arms crossed beneath her black-scaled cloak. Her crimson eyes caught the firelight as she spoke.

“Eryndor’s report confirms it,” she said. “The Silent Legion is not myth. They’ve moved with precision, not like mortals, but like... echoes of sothing buried. Sothing waiting.”

Kael’s fingers tapped twice. “Which ans they are not bound by mortal law.”

“No,” Seraphina said, voice low. “They move like old things. Like relics of forgotten wars. Like they rember a world before empires.”

Kael smirked. “Then they serve more than a man.”

She narrowed her eyes. “You believe they serve the Warlord of Bone?”

“I believe they serve mory,” Kael replied, “twisted by pain, by ti, and by vengeance.”

He straightened, pacing along the map’s edge. “If Reinhardt has made a pact with such a force… then this war is no longer political. It is ideological. And those are the most dangerous wars.”

“Dangerous,” Seraphina echoed, “and unpredictable.”

Kael stopped pacing, turning slowly to face her. “Predictability is a comfort of the weak. Even desperation follows patterns. All I must do… is break their rhythm.”

A knock echoed from the massive doors.

Eryndor, draped in black silk and snow-dusted leather, entered. His serpent eyes glead faintly, betraying no exhaustion from his travels.

“They’re moving,” he said, bowing his head slightly. “Westward, toward the Vale of Embers. Not just the Legion—Reinhardt’s banners have joined them.”

Kael raised a brow. “An alliance?”

“An allegiance,” Eryndor corrected. “Temporary. Desperate.”

Kael returned to the map and placed a dark stone on Velstrom, a northern trade city.

“Then we make that desperation cost them.”

Elsewhere in the Imperial Palace – Selene’s Private Balcony

Empress Selene stood still beneath a starlit sky, her long silver hair trailing in the wind. Below her, the imperial gardens were bathed in soft moonlight. Nightshade blood at the base of the marble walls—a flower that thrived in shadows.

Her thoughts were not of flowers.

They were of Kael.

Of his silence. His precision. His eyes that seed to see through even her carefully masked thoughts.

“You hesitate,” ca a voice—not from behind her, but from the wind itself.

Selene didn’t flinch. “You return again.”

A figure erged from the corner of her vision, dark as smoke. It stood just beyond the edge of reality, half-there, half-mory.

“You place too much faith in him,” it whispered.

“I place faith in no one,” she answered coldly. “Not even him.”

“But you follow,” the shadow said.

“I align,” she corrected. “As long as his path remains the clearest route to power.”

The shadow laughed—a cruel, lodic sound. “You still do not understand. He does not seek power. He seeks transcendence. And he will burn gods and empires alike to reach it.”

Selene turned fully now, eyes glowing faintly. “Then perhaps I will rise with him. Or die beside sothing worthy.”

The figure’s shape trembled, like a veil about to lift.

“You are brave, Empress. But so were the others. And they are dust now.”

The figure vanished into the air.

But the chill in Selene’s bones remained.

At Dawn – Velstrom

A city untouched by war—until now.

Velstrom had long declared neutrality, a trade city nestled between mountain passes and river routes. It was valuable not for its soldiers, but for its supply lines, its contracts, its coin.

And coin, Kael understood, was often worth more than steel.

Da Sariah, clad in ceremonial armor woven with midnight-blue silk, rode at the front of the battalion. Her banner bore no crest—only the imperial sun fractured into three parts, Kael’s hidden sigil of division.

They entered under the guise of an “imperial inspection.”

By midday, Velstrom’s harbor was locked down. Its council silenced. Its rcenary contracts seized.

By sunset, its defenses had turned inward—against itself.

Kael received the report with a faint smile.

Seraphina, reading over his shoulder, arched a brow. “You did all this without raising a single blade.”

“There’s more than one way to conquer,” Kael said. “And the north bleeds from its throat, not its sword arm.”

Eryndor chuckled. “You’ve cut off the Legion’s reinforcents before they even set foot in the pass.”

Kael nodded once. “Now Reinhardt must either fight with ghosts alone—or crawl to soone more dangerous for help.”

“And who would that be?” Seraphina asked.

Kael’s golden eyes glead. “The gods.”

anwhile – The Abyssal Wastes

Beyond the empire’s reach, beyond even ti’s rcy, the Abyssal Wastes churned with unnatural winds.

In a ravine where light dared not linger, a cloaked figure knelt before a jagged altar of blackened bone.

Above it, a voice drifted—low, cold, ancient.

“He moves, as you foretold.”

The voice ca from everywhere and nowhere, more felt than heard.

The kneeling figure did not raise their head. “He rembers.”

The Abyss responded with silence. Then—

“Good.”

A pulse of power rippled through the land, stirring buried things from beneath the stone.

“What would you have do?” the figure asked.

“Watch.”

“And if he reaches too far?”

The voice trembled with layered tones—so human, so not.

“Then he will touch us. And we will see if he remains Kael... or becos sothing else.”

Later That Night – Imperial War Chamber

The candlelight in the war chamber flickered.

Kael stood before the map, but his gaze was not on the north.

It was on the edges of the world—the places without nas. The Abyss. The Ruin Seas. The Devouring Hills. Places that whispered truths older than the Empire.

Seraphina approached. “Velstrom is secured. Reinhardt will react soon.”

“He must,” Kael said. “And every move he makes will cost him another part of his soul.”

“You’ve already started the war,” she murmured. “And no one even realizes.”

Kael turned to her, his voice like the edge of a blade.

“That was always the point.”

To be continued...

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