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A Calamity is not a rank. It is a decision the world makes about a thing that shouldn’t exist.

The ridge above Duskline Pass split open. Stone peeled back like damp paper, fell sideways, and settled into coils that weren’t coils. A head rose from the tear, crowned in jagged horn-knives. It blinked once, and the color drained from the sky.

Basilisk.

Not the cave kind in old hunting stories. This one was fortress-tall, its plates grown from ore and night, each seam leaking slow curtains of miasma. Wherever the haze touched, rock bruised. tal dulled. The fence’s Aetherite crystals spidered with hairline fractures that healed and cracked again.

Every drone above the ridge lost sync and dived. The ward lights flickered and steadied only because the choir on the floor below forced them to. Thirty elder won with dragon rings tightened their hands on the pews and sang the low, warm note the lattice needed to rember what it was.

Marcus Viserion stepped onto the road.

His draconic blood woke cleanly, without roar or flare. Horn ridges pressed through his hairline like dark gold, scales rose along his cheekbone and throat, and a tail-shadow hung at the edge of sight, more presence than limb. Low Radiant gathered around him in a quiet weight. He gripped a long spear whose haft looked grown, not carved—black wood veined with gold—its tip a narrow leaf of tempered sky. Spear Unity sat in his hands like a settled oath.

"Anchors," he said.

Warders hamred Aetherite spikes into the sockets of the inner road. The fence brightened from within and pushed back the first pressure wave rolling off the Basilisk. It held for a breath. Two.

Prince Ian rose above Marcus on a gold drake, visor down, breath tight. His own dragon blood answered with youth’s heat—short curved horns flaring from his temples, pupils narrowed to slits, canines lengthening. When he inhaled, faint steam curled from his lips. He lifted his hand and the air buckled: his Domain unfolded around the flight like a clear shell.

Stormcrest Domain.

Wind pressed smooth under his wingbeats. Fire twined through it like bright threads. In that space, drift vanished, blades turned truer, and the world’s noise dimd. He was peak Immortal and close to more, but not yet past the seam. The Domain shone anyway.

"Silver high left. Bronze low. Keep the wall between you and that stare," Ian said. "If it looks at you, look at the road."

The Basilisk moved, and the movent wrote new rules. Its gaze passed across the west tower. Stone paled to ash. Iron ties inside turned sandy. A Storm-Griffon rider sliced through the beam and his wing mbrane frosted white in a crawling pattern. He ripped free and spiraled, barely catching air. The mbrane held enough; he lived because soone had taught him to fall well.

The Basilisk opened its mouth. What ca out wasn’t breath. It was a wave of gray-green that rolled over the fence and turned paint to powder. The choir’s steady note shook and then fird as the conductor slamd her palm into the rail in ti.

"Miasma density at demigod scale," the Minister of Wards said, voice flat so it wouldn’t shake. "Counter-lody holding at sixty percent. Dropping."

"Hold," Marcus said into the inner net, and sohow made the word bigger than a command.

The Basilisk’s tail slid across the cliff and the road groaned. Fence posts sang like bowed blades. Ian dove and flared, shock-lance biting into horn. The bite ant nothing. The horn smoothed itself in the space between heartbeats.

He didn’t cut the sa point again. He drove Valdris steel into the seam between plates where even demigod things have to bend. The wound opened a hand’s width—dark, wrong—and sealed as he passed, haze knitting it like bad skin. His Domain narrowed, fewer frills, more spine.

"Hit and break," he called. "Don’t stick."

He slled ozone and rot. He tasted copper. He smiled, bare and humorless, and went again.

Sothing walked out of the Basilisk’s shadow: a man in ribbed lacquer, helm shaped like a snake’s skull. He carried a long spear with a double-edged leaf head and a hook flare under it. Miasma clung to him as if it knew his na.

Xaldris Dreadfang.

Cult Leader. Low Radiant. His stride had the loose patience of a man who liked his work. He stopped where the shadow fell thickest and lowered his head toward the Basilisk. When he rose, his eyes behind the skull mask shone the color of old poison.

"King of the South," he said without raising his voice, and sohow it carried through the clash. "Stand again. I would see you without your dragon to hide behind."

Marcus didn’t answer. He leveled his spear and set his back foot.

Xaldris turned his skull mask toward the sky. "Prince. The heir who breathes like a furnace and thinks it makes him a sun. Co down. Learn how quick blood cools."

Ian’s Domain flexed harder. He wasn’t fool enough to drop into a duel when the ridge was cracking open. He skimd low instead and sheared the nearest null-priest’s drum free. The man’s song died unfinished. That bought heartbeats. The choir needed all of them.

Xaldris flicked his spear. Three thin blades of bad air cut off the tip and flew like quiet thoughts. Ian rolled. One kissed his boot. Leather hissed, hardened, and then flaked. He flexed, the material cracked, and he kept moving.

Marcus t Xaldris in the Basilisk’s spray. Miasma turned to steam where it touched their auras. Spear t spear and didn’t clatter; the sound was closer to a deep chi. Marcus cut simple lines into the road—right angle, straight edge, asured pace—and the ground beca those lines under Xaldris’s feet. The Cult Leader smiled with his mouth and nothing else. He let his spear bend like a living thing and skated over a gap that hadn’t been there a mont before.

Weapon Unity against Weapon Unity.

Marcus’s Spear Unity made thrusts that arrived before the shoulder moved and cuts that could choose where the world ended. Xaldris’s unity—Fang-Spear, built for coil and snap—stole half-steps and turned them into full ones. He bled miasma from the hook under the blade into threads that wanted to be ropes.

"You hold," Xaldris said, pleased. "Let’s see if you hold when the sky says you shouldn’t."

The Basilisk exhaled again. The fence bowed like a drawn bow. Anchors groaned. The warders’ hands went white. The choir’s note cracked and then steadied because the woman on the left caught her neighbor by the waist and didn’t let her fall from her stool.

Ian made an ugly choice and cut too close for pride. The Basilisk’s gaze brushed his visor. He didn’t look into it. That didn’t matter. His teeth rang. A patch of his drake’s left wing went the color of bone in a crawling creep.

"Ground," he said, voice flat on purpose. The drake trusted him. They dropped hard onto a shelf, sliding sparks. Ian jamd a vial into the whitened mbrane. The Aetherite sealant spread and ate the wrong color until life rembered itself. He climbed back up before the shelf knew it had been a mistake to hold him.

Lyralei’s voice snapped across Ironveil’s channel. "Ignore ground smiles. Hard left, then through." Bikes lifted across a dune like a moving thought. Viper sappers drove coils into sand and made it honest. Storm-Griffons at Blue Sluice flew spirals that turned violent in a blink and cracked hymn cannons open like shells.

None of it mattered to the thing on the ridge.

The Basilisk drew itself taller. Ropes of miasma hung from its armor and writhed. They fell toward Marcus like hungry tongues.

The first rope didn’t reach him. Marcus’s spear wrote a neat circle in the air and sohow the rope respected the edge and slid off.

The second rope did. It struck his side and hissed. Scales blackened. He turned the pain into footing and stepped into a thrust that should have punched a hole in Xaldris’s chest. The Cult Leader bent like a reed, the spearhead skimming his ribs without finding purchase. He laughed again, a low amused sound Marcus didn’t hate more because he didn’t have ti.

Ian judged distance wrong by a thumb’s width and paid. The Basilisk’s gaze licked across him again. He jerked his head away in ti to save his eyes. His visor flashed white, cracked, and spidered. He ripped it off and tossed it without looking.

He pushed his Domain to its edge, and it pushed back. The shell tightened. The wind under his wings sharpened. The fire inside it narrowed to a line that ran along his bones. The world stopped being everywhere at once and beca one clean slice where he needed it.

He cut.

The cut landed, mattered, and healed under his eyes.

This was the part where n broke.

He tasted copper, spat, and went again.

The Basilisk moved its head a fraction. The fence lights died and ca back so hard the caras washed out. The choir swayed on their stools and didn’t fall because they were holding each other upright and singing like mothers steadying frightened children.

Xaldris’s spear slid in low under Marcus’s guard and nicked his cheekbone. The line of blood smoked. He didn’t wipe it. He didn’t gift it aning. He answered with a step that turned into a wall where no wall had existed, and Xaldris bounced off it with a pleased grunt.

"Good," Xaldris said. "Stay good while the world tips."

Above them, the Basilisk chose to lean.

The fence bowed. The anchors scread. The road fractured in a spiderweb. Ian’s Domain shivered, shrank, and held against a weight it had never been asked to carry.

For one stretched heartbeat, all of it—fence, choir, flights, bikes, lungs—balanced on the edge of a blade.

Then sothing small and quiet started falling through the air.

Grey plum petals.

They spun without breeze, flat as cut paper, each one the color of refusal. They touched miasma ropes and those ropes forgot to be ropes. They touched the wrong color in the wing mbrane and it blushed back to life. They touched the edge of Xaldris’s spear and the steel recognized it was a thing that could be set down.

Xaldris stopped smiling.

The petals drew a rough circle around him—not a trap, a decision. He lifted his spear and felt weight. Not muscle weight. Story weight. The next step he wanted wasn’t there.

Sowhere between one breath and the next, a line appeared.

It ran from the thought of Xaldris’s throat to the thought of his hip and made both true. His body understood what it was and obeyed, neatly. The snake-skull helm split cleanly. The spear slid from hands that were already not hands.

His halves stayed upright for the span of a blink and then chose the ground.

Marcus didn’t waste a word on it. He didn’t have one to spare. He lifted his spear and told the fence it still had a job. The fence agreed.

Ian looked up, breath held without aning to.

Space a few paces in front of Marcus folded like a page and unfolded on the road. No crack, no light. Just an edit everyone accepted.

Arthur Nightingale stepped through as if the pass had been waiting for him.

Black hair lifted in the pressure of a power the world had learned to recognize. Azure eyes swept Basilisk, fence, king, prince, corpses, and cataloged the living before they drifted to the dead. Above his brow, a muted crown of Grey spun—a ring that wasn’t light so much as intent. Armor flowed over him in a second skin—Valeria, ancient and eager—plates that knew the shape of his joints and a blade that grew from her grip into his.

Behind him, a tall figure in bone and robe stepped out of a shadow that belonged to nothing nearby. Erebus, Lich King, let a whisper of his Necropolis lean into the world and leaned it back. Cold that didn’t freeze ran across the road and then behaved itself.

At Arthur’s shoulder, Luna took form in her grown shape—athyst hair, golden eyes—Purelight already bright around her palms as she scanned the wounded along the wall.

From Arthur’s back, two Grey wings unfolded. Not feathers. Pages. Flat, perfect planes that bent adjacency and made two places decide they touched.

He looked up at the Basilisk.

He smiled.

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