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I took a breath that tasted like rust and smoke, held it for a fraction of a heartbeat, then let it hiss out through my teeth. The mist around us, already thick with decaying magic, seed to deepen in response—as though aware, on so primal level, that I had just committed myself to a course of action far beyond common sense. I wouldn't call it confidence, but I had long ago passed the point where second thoughts mattered. Either we pressed on, or the Tapestry would devour everything.

Asterion glanced at , perhaps seeking the flicker of hesitation any sane man would show. I offered him nothing but the sa cold resolve that guided my every footstep. That, at least, was honest. I'd co too far to indulge illusions of caution. Survival now hinged on forward montum.

The watchtower's battered walls lood behind us, a half-collapsed relic of so older age. It gave

no comfort. The illusions drifting in the corners of my vision made it clear that we had outstayed our welco here—if we had ever been welco at all. Only the swirl of that half-born dawn, a timid glow caught behind bruised clouds, provided the barest notion of ti passing. In this realm, the sky had long since lost its natural cycle, overshadowed by the Tapestry's ltdown.

I shifted my stance, letting my sword rest against my leg for just a mont, blade angled down, tip nearly touching the fragnted stones underfoot. That city—Kael'Thorne—lay beyond the ridges ahead, a patchwork labyrinth of illusions too thick to see through. I imagined the walls, the spires, the broken avenues that no longer aligned with reality. The robed figures we'd glimpsed in the ruins below had made it obvious: the Cult was always watching. Testing. Nudging illusions around us like a cat toying with cornered prey.

We'd shown them we were not helpless. We'd severed illusions with steel and will. But I knew it wouldn't be so simple once we stood inside Kael'Thorne's heart. They had ti on their side, illusions anchored by that open leyline. My ti, by contrast, was draining like water through cupped hands.

Asterion noticed my thousand-yard stare. "Still seeing them?" he asked, voice kept low, respectful of the hush that clung to this land.

I shook my head. "Not now. But they're out there." Always. I heard the half-whispers of illusions, the faint hiss of words that never quite ford into a coherent phrase. My na, perhaps, or a half-rembered voice from a life that no longer existed. They tried to lure

off my path, tried to make

question whether I was truly here. I didn't fall for it. "They want us to know we can't slip past unnoticed."

He gave a wry twist of his lips that might have been a grimace or the ghost of a smile. "I suppose it's too late for subtlety."

"Subtlety only matters if they can be surprised. They can't." I glanced at the tattered skyline, each battered spire pulsing with an otherworldly sheen. "Not while the leyline feeds them."

The idea that illusions flowed from the leyline as easily as water from a broken dam made my stomach tighten. The Tapestry's ltdown had grown beyond re tears or cosmic stress fractures. We were dealing with a realm re-sculpted by zealots who believed unmaking the world would grant them the power to reshape it. And at the back of it all, or perhaps behind so hidden corner, was Belisarius—a presence not yet manifested but undeniably looming. He was the reason the Tapestry insisted on warping fate. I'd severed him once. That hadn't been enough.

Asterion inclined his head toward the watchtower's base. "We can push on now, or wait until the sky brightens."

I let out a short, humorless laugh. "The sky might never brighten."

His gaze dipped to the horizon, where the clouds bunched together in roiling patterns of violet shot through with green. Even if a real sun existed behind them, it gave no warmth. "Point taken."

We stepped away from the tower, descending a short slope littered with shards of broken stone. Each shard glimred faintly, illusions embedded in their surfaces. At tis, I saw reflections that weren't ours—shadows of other travelers who might have co this way and succumbed. A false echo, or an on. I refused to dwell on which.

My body ached in places I barely rembered having. The fiasco in the Ashen Expanse had left

drained, my mana nearly scraped dry. What lingered inside

felt like a pilot fla in a furnace too large for its own good. The question was whether that tiny spark of arcane ability would be enough to claim the leyline once we reached it. Doubt tried to worm through the back of my mind, but I crushed it. Doubt was a hungry serpent in these lands, feeding illusions with every sliver of fear or hesitation.

We pressed forward without speaking. Around us, the hush shifted in texture. It wasn't absolute; there were soft sibilant noises, as though illusions slid across the ground in serpentine ribbons. A gust of sour wind occasionally drifted by, carrying the stench of rot and singed tal. Beneath it all was that steady hum, pulsing like a heartbeat. The further we went, the more I felt it resonate in my bones—a promise that Kael'Thorne waited, that the ltdown would soon confront us in full.

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Once we crested the next ridge, the path narrowed into what might have been a thoroughfare in less catastrophic tis—an ancient road, paved with large stones now warped and cracked. They ford uneven steps leading downward toward a deep ravine. The ravine itself boiled with illusions that ran like fog over the surface of water. Looking down, I caught glimpses of half-faces, half-limbs swirling in the vapor, illusions so lost they'd rged into a swirling soup of shapes. Asterion paused, scanning the ravine with caution. He pointed at a series of broken arches that lined an old aqueduct overhead. The aqueduct must have once carried water toward Kael'Thorne's heart, but now it stood in ruin, illusions clinging to it like thick vines.

"This might be faster," he murmured, voice soft. "If we cross there, we can cut hours off our approach. But if illusions have anchored the arches—"

"We risk falling." I finished the thought. He was right. One misstep on illusions would send us plunging into a ravine full of epheral horrors. Yet every mont spent skirting the long way around gave the Harbinger and his zealots more ti to prepare. More ti for illusions to coalesce. More ti for Belisarius, if he was near, to step fully into the realm.

I weighed the choice. Asterion eyed , probably hoping I'd choose caution, but I shook my head. "We don't have hours to spare. We cross here."

His lips thinned, but he said nothing. With a nod, he led the way toward a portion of the aqueduct's arches that still seed mostly intact. The illusions swirling around it flickered in pulses. We tested each stone carefully with our boots, ensuring solidity before shifting our weight. If illusions had replaced a critical piece of masonry, we'd know in an instant—right before we fell to a probable doom. Anxiety tried to gnaw at , but I forced it away with the sa frigid calm that had led

through countless battles. No illusions would break . Not now.

Halfway across, the illusions intensified. The swirling mists congealed in midair, forming epheral shapes that reached toward us. Every ti I swatted one aside, it felt like cutting through water. My blade passed with minimal resistance, and the illusions shattered, then reassembled a foot away. Asterion loosed a short, focused burst of arcane energy from his dagger—he had so minor control I hadn't seen him use before—and the illusions parted, letting us advance another few yards.

Then the ground beneath us—stones that had seed real—quivered. My left foot sank several inches into what should have been solid rock. I tensed, expecting to plumt. Instead, illusions around

shimred, as though offended that I'd noticed. I braced my sword in front of , but with a violent shrug, the illusions rippled and spat

back onto actual stone. I landed with a grunt, muscles protesting the sudden twist. Asterion shot

a concerned glance, but I waved it off, rising fluidly to my feet, ignoring the pain in my calf.

At last, we cleared the aqueduct. The illusions grudgingly receded, swirling back into the ravine below. Once I found stable ground, I exhaled, my knuckles white around my sword's grip. Asterion joined , sporting a sheen of sweat on his brow. He, too, said nothing, but the relief in his eyes was evident.

Pressing on, we found ourselves in a half-dead forest of twisted trees, their bark peeled back in spirals, dripping with sap that glowed faintly from illusions woven into their roots. Each trunk looked like it might house a lurking shape, and occasionally, I heard low growls or the scrape of sothing against wood. But whatever prowled in these shadows kept its distance, perhaps sensing we weren't easy prey.

The hush remained oppressive, though the sky had lightened a fraction more, enough to define the shapes of shattered columns and half-buried walls. A signpost lay in the dust: battered, unreadable, pointing nowhere relevant. Asterion rubbed the back of his neck, swallowing thickly as he glanced around. "You hear anything?"

I listened. The wind carried a faint moan, or perhaps a thousand moans woven together. "Only illusions. Murmurs."

He grimaced. "That's not comforting."

We continued in silence for another mile or so until the forest broke, revealing a wide plateau. Beyond it, Kael'Thorne rose in jarring lines of architecture against the horizon, spires angled as though about to collapse. Though the sun hovered sowhere beyond those cloudbanks, the city cast no comforting shadows—just a haze of roiling illusions that obscured entire districts.

Close to the city's outskirts stood a lone arch. Bent, contorted by the ltdown, it looked half-lted, stone swirling as if it had once been heated to a molten form. Near it crouched a single figure, huddled tight, face hidden beneath ragged cloth. Asterion tensed, scanning for robed cultists, but I saw no imdiate threat. I motioned for him to remain ready as I approached.

The man beneath the arch was trembling, wide eyes darting in every direction. He mumbled incoherently until I ca near, at which point he lifted his head. His eyes looked haunted, ringed by exhaustion and terror. His breath ca in shallow gasps, as though illusions had constricted his chest. "You… can't…" he rasped, voice rasping with dryness, "you can't go in. It's theirs now. The Harbinger… he sees everything."

I crouched to et his gaze. "Where is the leyline's core?"

He shuddered as though the question itself carried a curse. "The city center," he managed, eyes darting to the swirling illusions overhead. "Guarded. Watched. It devours anyone who steps wrong." A trembling hand rose to wipe sweat from his brow, leaving a trail of dust across his face. "I saw them… illusions turning stone to quicksand, twisting walls so the path loops back. You get lost until you starve… or worse."

I stood, turning to face Kael'Thorne's battered skyline again. My grip tightened around my sword's hilt, knuckles blanching. "Then we step carefully."

Asterion let out a humorless chuckle, half under his breath. "Or not at all."

His cynical humor didn't bother . If anything, it confird that he understood the stakes. The final stretch to Kael'Thorne had begun. And this ti, I was ready.

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