The land quieted after the titan fell. Dust drifted in lazy spirals, and the cracked sky stitched itself into a dull, bleeding red. The spire at the center of the field still pulsed, faint but steady, like a heart refusing the last beat.
Lucian walked to it without hurry. His boots scraped embered grit; his cloak tugged in the sour wind. Lucy rose behind him, breath evening out, the glow of her flas drawing back into her skin.
"Core’s beneath," he said.
She nodded once. "You’ll tear it?"
"I’ll make it ours."
He knelt at the edge of the spire’s base. Between the stone plates, he saw it—a shard the size of a skull, red-blue and fractured, wrapped in veins of bone. Energy bled from it in tiny vapor trails, each hiss a thread sewing this wound to the world beyond.
Karl’s voice returned to him, dry and amused. One way. Push, not pull. To go in, break the wound wider and drag it your way.
"Guard ," Lucian said.
Lucy stepped in front of him, stance loose and ready. The ground still muttered; lesser beasts nosed from cracks, sniffed the heat, then fled the scent of their dead.
Lucian set his palm on the spire. Cold needles raced up his arm. He exhaled and let the world narrow to lines and pressure. Space flexed. Ti thinned. Construction woke like a blueprint unfurling in his mind.
"Eternal Scaffold."
Blacksteel ribs printed themselves from nothing and sank into the stone around the core, forming a collar. Runes clicked into place along the rim. The collar tightened, choking the wild leakage into a steady stream. The spire shuddered but held.
"Adaptive Blueprint."
The collar split into petals and turned inward. Delicate fras, finer than hair, grew from each petal and wove into a lattice over the shard. He shaped a cage, then a cradle, then a grip.
"Chrono Lock."
Golden threads spiraled from his fingers and wrapped the lattice. The shard’s pulse slowed from a frantic flutter to a asured drum. The hiss quieted. The air steadied.
Lucy glanced back at him. "How long?"
"As long as I need."
He sunk his fingers between the fras and touched the shard itself. Ice burned his skin. He spoke again, a word that wasn’t human—just force given sound.
"Relent."
The shard resisted. Space around it buckled. The red-blue light flared, trying to push outward the way it had been born. Lucian didn’t argue. He changed direction.
"Fold."
He bent the little world inside the lattice, not outward but down, tugging on the pulse itself, turning the push into a draw. The shard’s glow faltered, then leaned toward his hand as a river leans toward a fall.
The ground groaned. Fissures spidered from the spire, coughing ash. Lucy lifted a palm; black fire rolled from her fingers and burned crawling shapes that dared the edge.
The shard fought harder. It spat images into his mind—bone cities, banners in stormlight, a throne of teeth beside a sea that climbed the sky. Lucian ignored them. He pulled again.
"Manifest Armant."
A tool grew around his forearm, a gauntlet of articulated plates with teeth like a key. He slid it into the lattice and bit the shard. The teeth turned. The key turned. The shard scread.
Lucy set her shoulder. "Lucian."
"I have it."
He saw the pathway then—the invisible conduit the core used to moor this field to the tide. Anchors on the far end glimred like iron hooks sunk into black water. He gripped them with nothing but will and dragged. The conduit strained. The world wavered.
"Break," he whispered.
The hooks tore free.
Everything lurched.
The sky sagged, the spire split, and the air rushed inward like breath after drowning. The field didn’t collapse; it inverted. The outward pressure beca a draw, a throat pulling. The core’s light turned, not red to blue, but out to in, a star swallowing itself.
Lucy backed to him, shoulder brushing his. "We’re not bringing this down on our heads?"
"No," he said, calm as winter. "We’re turning the spear."
The lattice blood, unfurling into a ring of blacksteel that rose from the spire like a crown. The ring rotated until its face aid not at their world but along the line of the freed conduit. Dark light gathered, deep and dense, without heat. A surface ford—thin, mirror-flat, rippling with slow gravity.
A new gate.
Not their gates. Not the monster tide’s tear. This was his—dragged, reversed, held by his fra and his locks and his stubbornness.
A faint tremor raced the ground. More beasts nosed near the ridges, drawn by the change. Lucy lifted both hands. Hellfire draped from her wrists like chains, quiet but ready.
Lucian rose. He left the gauntlet in the fra, the ring humming around his wrist. The shard, now the ring’s heart, beat to his rhythm.
Lucy looked at the mirror. A shadow moved within it—tall structures, knife-straight roads, a sky of iron clouds. She slled cold tal and old blood. "That’s deeper."
He nodded. "Past the tide."
"You sure?"
"Yes."
She held his gaze for a breath. The lines at the corners of her eyes softened. "Then I’m with you."
He glanced at the field one last ti. The titan’s ruin smoked in low pits. The minor rifts along the ridges flickered like dying lamps. The ring purred, stable, hungry.
He reached for Lucy’s hand. She gripped it, warm through the gauntlet.
"On three," he said.
She almost smiled. "You never count."
"Then now’s special."
"One," she said.
"Two."
They didn’t say three.
They stepped.
Cold climbed their boots to their knees, then to their ribs. The mirror swallowed the sound of the wasteland, the sll of ash, the bone-blue glare. For an instant, there was only pressure—weightless and crushing at once—then the world flipped like a coin.
They landed on stone.
The air was different here. It was cleaner, but harder, like breath had edges. Towers rose on both sides, stacked with narrow windows like watching slits. Roads ran straight as blades. Far ahead, sothing vast moved behind fog, and its footfalls ca like slow drums.
Lucy squeezed his hand once, then let go. "Welco committee?"
"Likely."
Footsteps clicked on the left. Lucian’s head tilted a fraction, listening to a language that crackled like embers under ice. The words crawled along the walls, searching for them.
He drew in a breath and spoke back, low and precise, letting the shapes roll over his tongue.
"We’re expected."
Lucy rolled her shoulders, fire ghosting her fingers. "Good."
Lucian looked up at the sky. No stars. Only a bruise of iron clouds held in place by lines he could almost see.
Karl had called it a storm.
Lucian smiled without warmth.
"Let’s walk."
They did, side by side, leaving the ring behind them humming like a tether pulled tight through a wound. It would hold. It had to.
The monster realm waited.
Behind them, the inverted gate steadied, thread by thread, locking into the fra he’d built. In Citadel Zero, readings would spike, alarms would blush, and Reia would know. A line had been cast into the dark. And they were already pulling hard.
Reviews
All reviews (0)