War.
The word looked harmless enough on a page. Three little letters. Compact. Efficient. The kind of word that wouldn't even be noticed in a governnt mo until it had already ruined your week.
But war, in practice, was not efficient. It was spectacularly ssy. It broke buildings, broke people, and occasionally broke the laws of physics when mages and miasma users got too enthusiastic.
War was to be avoided, like poorly cooked pufferfish or blind dates with nobles.
And yet, here we were. Not avoiding it.
Because when it ca to miasma species—the vampires, the Red Chalice cultists, the shadowy things with too many teeth and not enough manners—"avoidance" was never really an option. They hated humans. Not in the vague, philosophical way people hated taxes, but in the loud, genocidal, stab-you-through-the-ribs kind of way.
So the evacuation plane finally lifted off from the Southern Sea Sun Palace, rising above the chaos below. I looked down through the viewport, watching the battle unfold like a particularly violent painting. The Eastern continent elites were holding the line, their power lighting up the island like an angry aurora as they fought off cultists and vampires in tight formation.
The kind of formation that said, "This is probably our last stand, but we're going to make it morable."
Below us, Commander Jin and his loyal Ascendant-rankers had ford a periter around the evacuation zone, their weapons flashing with practiced precision as they cut down wave after wave of enemies. They weren't retreating with us. They had chosen to stay, to buy us ti with their lives. The realization sat in my stomach like a cold stone.
I sank into my seat as the warp engines began to hum, then roar. The ship lurched forward with the kind of acceleration that made your stomach think your lungs had moved in without asking. The Palace—our battlefield, our near-tomb—shrank to a glittering speck below us, then vanished behind cloud cover.
Deia sat across from , fists clenched on her skirt, her face twisted like she was trying not to scream or cry or both. And failing. A few tears slipped out anyway, tracking silver lines down her cheeks.
Hard to bla her. She'd just learned her father was a traitor. Not the corporate-embezzlent kind either. The helped-vampires-slaughter-people kind. Real end-of-the-world résumé material. Everything she had been raised to believe in—her ho, her heritage, her destiny as princess of the Southern Sea—had been revealed as an elaborate lie constructed around a cult of blood-drinking monsters.
Lucifer reached over and patted her back. It was awkward. Gentle. The kind of pat that said, "I have absolutely no idea how to deal with this, but I'm trying." For Lucifer, the ever-composed Windward heir, even that much emotional outreach was practically a declaration of undying loyalty.
The plane's interior was quiet, but not silent. It was the kind of quiet where nobody wanted to speak, because words might make things real. We were all huddled in that pressurized tube like survivors from a story that had taken a dark turn three chapters too early.
Lucifer. Rachel. Seraphina. Rose. Cecilia. Seol-ah. Deia. .
The ones who had been there when it all started falling apart.
I studied their faces in the dim ergency lighting. Rachel, her healer's hands now stained with blood—both enemy and ally. Cecilia, for once not making sarcastic comnts, her crimson eyes fixed on sothing only she could see. Rose, thodically checking and rechecking her equipnt, as if proper inventory could sohow restore order to a world coming undone. Lucifer, still as a statue except for the hand comforting Deia, his face a mask of controlled fury.
"Attention students," the plane's AI announced with its usual artificial cheerfulness, as if it hadn't just watched half a continent explode, "Starcrest Academy and Hwaeryun City have both fallen. We are now en route to Mount Hua Sect."
Seol-ah stiffened. Her expression blanked out in that way people do when they've just had a part of their past pulled out from under them like a tablecloth under fine china. You could practically hear sothing inside her crack.
No one knew what to say to that. What could you say?
I looked at her, my chest tight. I already knew. The vampire city beneath Hwaeryun—it had always been a ticking ti bomb in the original novel. Now that they'd made their move, there was nothing left of the surface but ash and regret.
Seraphina shifted in her seat, moving to sit beside Seol-ah. No words, just presence. After a mont, she placed her hand over the other girl's—a gesture I'd never seen from the normally reserved Mount Hua princess. They weren't close, as far as I knew, but so bonds transcended friendship. They were both scions of great families now facing extinction. They understood each other's burden in a way none of the rest of us could.
We didn't speak for a long ti after that.
The plane jolted as we hit turbulence, ergency lights flickering. Through the viewport, the sky had darkened to an unnatural crimson—not sunset, but sothing else. Sothing wrong.
Eventually, the crimson sky gave way to more natural darkness as we flew beyond the ritual's imdiate influence. The clouds outside parted to reveal sharp mountain peaks as the plane began its descent. Ancient structures ca into view—Mount Hua Sect. A relic of a bygone era, now fitted with futuristic barrier generators, railgun turrets, and enough mana conductors to make the sky hum.
Even from altitude, I could see the sect was on war footing. Disciples moved in formation across courtyards, spiritual energy flaring as they reinforced defensive positions. Supply vessels were being loaded or unloaded at various landing pads. The Five Peaks—Heart, Sword, Shield, Spirit, and Heaven—each glowed with activated formation arrays, their ancient power awakened after centuries of dormancy.
Seraphina straightened, her eyes fixed on her ancestral ho. Sothing in her deanor shifted—the student receding, the princess erging. Her hand moved from Seol-ah's to rest on the hilt of her sword, no longer seeking comfort but preparing for command.
"We're being diverted from the main landing area," she noted, scanning the communication display. "Ergency protocols are active. Mount Hua is in full defensive configuration."
The ship banked sharply, heading for a smaller landing pad nestled between two of the lesser peaks. It touched down with a soft thump, hydraulics hissing like a sigh of relief. Or maybe that was just us.
As the bay doors opened, the chill mountain air rushed in, carrying with it the scent of pine and snow and ozone—the latter from the active defensive arrays. Despite the technological upgrades, Mount Hua still had an air of tilessness. Disciples moved like ghosts between stone paths. The mountains lood around us, watching. Waiting.
A delegation approached as we disembarked—led by a stern-faced man whose bearing spoke of both power and authority. He was dressed not in the traditional white robes of Mount Hua, but in battle-worn armor that had clearly seen recent use. His resemblance to Seraphina was striking—the sa ice blue eyes but black hair instead of silver.
"Father," Seraphina greeted with a formal bow, one warrior to another rather than daughter to parent.
"Daughter," he returned with equal formality before his expression softened fractionally. "You are unhard?"
"I am," she confird.
His attention shifted to the rest of us, assessing, calculating. "These are the survivors from the Southern Sea?"
"So of them," Seraphina replied. "There are more vessels behind us."
The man nodded, then addressed us directly. "I am Mo Zenith, Patriarch of Mount Hua and Seraphina's father. I returned as soon as I received word of what transpired in the Southern Sea." His voice carried the weariness of soone who had traveled far and fast, likely abandoning another battlefield to be here. "Mount Hua offers sanctuary to all who fought against the darkness. You will be provided accommodations and dical attention as needed."
His words were cordial, but his eyes remained hard—not with hostility toward us, but with the knowledge of what we represented. Refugees. The first trickle of what would soon beco a flood, if the Eastern continent continued to fall.
"We have wounded on three of the evacuation vessels," Rachel spoke up, her healer's instincts overriding protocol. "They need imdiate attention."
"Our dical teams are standing by," Master Li assured her, gesturing to robed figures already moving toward the other landing pads. "Now, please follow . The Council is gathering, and they will want to hear firsthand accounts of what transpired at the Southern Sea Sun Palace."
As we walked the ancient stone paths of Mount Hua, I noticed changes since my last visit—subtle reinforcents to buildings, new defensive arrays carved into strategic locations, disciples practicing combat formations rather than ditative forms.
We reached a massive structure carved directly into the largest peak—Heaven Peak. Ancient doors inscribed with formations so complex they made my eyes water swung open silently, revealing a circular chamber where figures were already gathered around a tactical display.
They all turned as we entered, faces grim, eyes evaluating. Not just looking at us—looking through us, assessing our potential usefulness in what was to co.
Mo Zenith led us to the center of the chamber, where the tactical display showed a map of the Eastern continent. Nearly a third of it was marked in various shades of red—territories already fallen or under attack. Starcrest Academy pulsed with a particularly ominous marker, the epicenter of whatever ritual the vampires had initiated.
"The survivors from the Southern Sea Sun Palace," Mo Zenith announced to the assembly. "They witnessed the beginning."
An older man with battle-scarred hands stepped forward. "Then perhaps they can tell us what we face, while we wait for word from Master Li."
All eyes turned to us—eight battered students who had sohow escaped the jaws of annihilation.
I took a deep breath, stepping forward to speak for our group. As I did, a communication array at the center of the room flared to life, projecting the image of a harried-looking military officer.
"Mount Hua! Do you read? This is the Eastern Defense Force! Starcrest has fallen completely! The ritual continues to strengthen! Vampires have breached the Jade Wall! Hwaeryun is lost! The Namgung Family Stronghold is under siege! We need imdiate reinforcent!"
The projection sputtered, static cutting through the officer's desperate plea. "They're everywhere! They're—" The transmission cut off abruptly, leaving only a hissing silence.
The assembled leaders exchanged grim looks. The older man turned to Mo Zenith.
"It appears we have our answer," he said quietly. "The second Vampire War has begun."
Mo Zenith nodded once, then turned to address the chamber. "Activate the Continental Defense Protocol. Alert all allied sects and families. Master Li is already engaged with the enemy at the northeastern front, but we must secure our other borders as well. As of this mont, Mount Hua Sect formally declares a state of war against the vampire forces and their Red Chalice allies."
The war had begun. And judging by that map, we were already losing.
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