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The three hours of rest passed like a bated breath. The fossilized reefs acted as a natural dampener, swallowing the sound of the wind and the restless shifting of the horses. Aden didn’t sleep; he remained in a state of hyper-vigilance, his internal clock ticking down the seconds until the optimal window for departure.

At the exact mont the moon dipped behind the jagged spine of the Iron-Ridge, Aden opened his eyes. The sapphire mist in his irises was cold and clear.

"Wake them," Aden said.

The camp ca to life with a practiced, funereal quiet. There were no shouts, no clatter of armor—only the soft rustle of canvas and the low, rhythmic thrum of Eren maintaining his synchronization with the stone. The rcenaries moved like shadows, their faces etched with the kind of exhaustion that had long since turned into a dull, chanical compliance.

As the wagons rolled out from the horseshoe crevice, the landscape began to change. The white, skeletal reefs gave way to a terrain of jagged, tallic rock that glinted with a dull, bruised hematite sheen. The air grew thinner, carrying a tallic tang that tasted of rusted iron and dry lightning.

This was the Iron-Ridge.

It was a vertical wall of tectonic upheaval, a natural barrier that separated the Church’s controlled territories from the lawless sprawl of the Outer Wastes. The only way through was the "Weeping Pass," a narrow fissure that leaked mineral-rich water and was ho to things that had never seen the sun.

"Master," Lorelei whispered, her violet form drifting closer to the lead wagon. "The Ridge is active. The magnetic variance is spiking. My senses are... blurred."

"The iron in the stone interferes with Resonance," Aden replied, his hands firm on the reins. "It’s a blind spot for the Church, but it’s a graveyard for those who can’t navigate without their eyes. Eren, stay focused. If you lose the rhythm now, the stone will reject you."

Eren sat on the edge of the wagon, his hand resting on the iron-reinforced railing. His face was a mask of concentration, his red irises pulsing in ti with the deep, magnetic groan of the mountain. "I can feel the Ridge," he muttered. "It’s... heavy. It’s trying to pull my core into the earth."

"Resist the pull, but don’t fight the weight," Aden commanded. "Flow with the magnetic lines."

As they entered the mouth of the Weeping Pass, the temperature plumted. The walls of the fissure rose hundreds of feet above them, narrowing until the sky was nothing more than a thin, purple thread. Water dripped from the ceiling, hitting the wagons with a rhythmic *plink-plink* that sounded like falling coins.

Halfway through the pass, the lead horse whinnied and reared, its eyes rolling in terror.

Aden pulled the reins hard, his eyes narrowing. In the shadows ahead, the water on the floor wasn’t just dripping; it was rippling. Sothing was moving beneath the shallow pools—sothing large, segnted, and utterly silent.

"Contact," Aden whispered.

He didn’t draw his blade. He raised his hand, the sapphire frost already beginning to coat his fingertips.

From the dark crevices of the iron walls, a swarm of Rust-Stalkers erged. They weren’t creatures of flesh and bone, but of living tal and crystallized Resonance—entities born from the mountain’s own mineral veins. They moved with a jerky, clicking cadence, their limbs looking like jagged shears.

The rcenaries leveled their spears, but their weapons were useless. The Rust-Stalkers didn’t hunt for at; they hunted for Resonance. They were drawn to the heat of the Attuned cores like moths to a fla.

"Don’t release your energy!" Aden barked. "If you flare, you’re just a dinner bell."

Eren gripped his short-sword, the tal vibrating in his hand. "They’re coming for the boys."

The Stalkers ignored the horses and the rcenaries, their eyeless heads turning toward the middle wagon where Armin and Reiner were hidden. The Resonance of the children, though unrefined, was pure and concentrated.

Aden stepped off the wagon, his boots hitting the wet iron floor with a dull ring. He didn’t use a blast of power. He used the frequency of the Ridge itself.

*Harmonic Law: Magnetic Anchor.*

He drove his intent into the ground, creating a localized magnetic field that pinned the Rust-Stalkers to the floor. The tal creatures screeched, their limbs grinding against the stone as they fought to lift their heavy bodies.

"Eren, now!" Aden shouted. "Strike the joints! Use the vibration of the Ridge, not your own heat!"

Eren lunged. He didn’t use the carmine flare of his breakthrough. He channeled the cold, heavy thrum of the iron stone through his blade. He struck a Stalker’s knee, the dark steel vibrating at a frequency that shattered the crystalline joint like glass.

The boy was a blur of calculated movent, a shadow within a shadow. He wasn’t fighting the mountain; he was becoming its voice. One by one, the Stalkers were dismantled, their tallic bodies collapsing into piles of inert ore.

As the last Stalker fell, the silence of the pass returned, heavier than before. Aden stood in the center of the wreckage, his sapphire eyes tracing the lines of the Weeping Pass.

"We’re almost through," Aden said, his voice echoing off the iron walls. "But the Ridge has one more master."

At the exit of the pass, standing in the silver light of the pre-dawn, was a figure clad in armor made of the sa hematite stone. He held a massive, double-headed axe that humd with a low, tectonic frequency.

The Ridge-Warden.

"You have the scent of the Church on you," the Warden said, his voice like grinding tectonic plates. "And the taint of the Abyss in your shadow. To pass the Iron-Ridge, a toll must be paid."

Aden walked forward, his dark steel blade finally clearing its scabbard.

"I’ve already paid in blood," Aden said, the sapphire mist in his eyes turning into a raging storm. "And I don’t give refunds."

The Warden raised his axe, and the mountain itself seed to groan in response. The final barrier to the Outer Wastes was no longer a road—it was a duel.

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