Chapter 91: 91. The Border
The Ironmane border was marked by standing stones.
Not a wall, not a fence, not the kind of infrastructure that said keep out in the blunt language of physical barriers. Just stones, each one twice the height of a person, carved with the Ironmane clan’s mark and spaced precisely enough that their line was continuous without being impenetrable.
The gaps between them were exactly wide enough to walk through, and there was no gate, no checkpoint, nothing that functioned as an official crossing. Just the stones and the aning behind them.
"Historically," Leah said, standing at the line, "crossing into Ironmane territory without their invitation was a declaration of hostile intent. Under the inter-clan agreents, it required formal challenge and response."
She looked at the gaps between the stones.
"Marak has not formally declared the crossing closed. Which ans the ancient protocol still technically applies."
"Technically," Owen said.
"Technically. In practice, he’s been shooting first and discussing protocol afterward." Her tail moved. "We should assu the sa."
Owen looked at the territory beyond the stones. The landscape changed imdiately on the other side — the Ashplain’s grass giving way to harder ground, rockier, with a different quality of vegetation. Drier. More structured in its dryness, as though the land here had been managed for longer and in a specific way.
Farther east, barely visible at this distance, sothing that might have been structures. The settlent Sael’s scouts had reported.
His Mana Sense swept the imdiate area beyond the border stones. Clear, for approximately two kiloters. Then — a cluster of signatures. Not the suppressed, organized quality of the Ashplain ambushes.
These were open, unguarded, the energy patterns of a place where people lived and worked.
And underneath those, sothing else. Sothing that lived below the readable mana frequencies, in the register that Owen had been tracking as a secondary sense since Vashari. The wrongness that Sael’s scouts had described as familiar-but-wrong.
Miasma. Not concentrated, not weaponized. Ambient. Diffused through the area the way pollution diffused through water — present everywhere, visible nowhere.
"This territory is contaminated," he said quietly.
The group understood what that ant.
Yuki’s hand had moved to her katana grips without her looking at them. Alfred had straightened slightly, the posture of soone moving from calm and ungaurded to combat readiness.
"The Ironmane warriors we’ve been engaging," Odessa said. Her voice was careful. "Could they be affected by ambient miasma? Would they even know?"
"Low-level ambient exposure," Owen said, thinking through what he knew of the Shadowgrave’s effects, "i don’t think it would produce the hollow-man transformation we saw in the cultists. But it would—" He paused.
"It would affect judgnt. Heighten aggression. Make instructions from an authority figure easier to follow without questioning. Make the idea of an inter-clan incident feel less consequential than it should."
"It makes them easier to command," Leah said flatly.
"Yes."
"Holy shit, Marak didn’t just accept demon support," she said. "He may not be fully in control of what he agreed to."
"Or he is, and the miasma makes his warriors easier for him to use than they would otherwise choose to be." Owen looked at the border stones.
"Either way, the Ironmane warriors we fight from here forward — they’re not fully responsible for what they’re doing."
"Which makes it harder to be angry at them," Yuki said.
"And more important not to kill any of them," Owen said. "They’re victims of this as much as anyone else."
He stepped through the gap in the border stones.
The miasma hit his system imdiately — not painfully, his sovereignty providing the sa automatic resistance it had since the dungeon. But he felt it more clearly now that he was inside the periter. It had a quality. Not the raw, chaotic wrongness of the Outer-Divinity concentrations he had encountered in the Shadowgrave. This was older. More settled. As though the miasma had been here long enough to develop a relationship with the territory.
Months, at minimum. Soone had been seeding this.
The group crossed the border.
Three kiloters in, the settlent beca visible. It was not what Owen had expected.
Not a military installation, not a fortified position. It looked, from a distance, like a functional community — structures of the sa pale stone that characterized Ashplain construction, walkways between them, what appeared to be a central hall of so significance based on its size relative to the others.
But the quality of it was wrong. It was too ordered. Too intentional in its organization.
Traditional beastfolk settlents, as he had observed in Vashari, had the quality of things that had grown according to use — buildings placed where their function demanded, paths worn where feet had chosen to go.
But This settlent had a different geotry. Planned. The kind of precision that ca from deliberate design rather than organic developnt.
And the people moving through it — Ironmane warriors, mostly, with the occasional figure that didn’t read as Ironmane — moved with a quality he had seen before. Not the fluid ease of Leah on her ho plain, or the comfortable efficiency of Vashari’s port workers. It was Purposeful in a specific way that excluded peripheral awareness. Eyes ahead. Movents directed.
"They’re all walking the sa way," Odessa said quietly.
"Must be a Miasma effect," Owen said. "I suspect that Sustained exposure produces—" He stopped.
"What?" Yuki said.
"At the center of the settlent," he said. "Large structure. The signal from it is not beastfolk. It’s—"
His Mana Sense was pressing against sothing it couldn’t fully read. A barrier. Not a physical one — a mana-frequency interference pattern, the kind of deliberate blocking that required significant magical investnt.
Sothing was inside that central structure that did not want to be sensed.
"We need to get closer," he said.
"Closer," Leah repeated. "To the settlent full of miasma-affected Ironmane warriors."
"I didn’t say it was a good idea," Owen said. "I just said we need to get closer."
Leah looked at the settlent. Then at the group. Then she exhaled slowly and started walking toward the settlent with the rest of the group.
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