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The first wave didn’t co at like n. They ca like a singular, multi-limbed organism, their movents shorn of the hesitation that usually defines a human assault.

There was no shouting, no clatter of shields as they tested my resolve; there was only the sound of a hundred pairs of boots hitting the frozen mud in perfect, terrifying unison.

I stopped counting after the first hundred. They poured from the alleyways and the shattered remains of the garrison, their faces locked in that sa agonizing glitch. Behind every pair of eyes, that violet fla flickered with a cold, predatory light.

I understood then, with a clarity that tasted like copper, that they weren’t choosing this. The n I had trained, the n who had sworn their lives to the obsidian throne, were being driven like cattle by sothing reaching into the very root of their souls.

My decision was made in the heartbeat between the drawing of a breath and the release of it. I would not kill them.

To end a life is a simple arithtic of force and placent. To stop a life without extinguishing it, to neutralize a hundred soldiers who are trying to tear you limb from limb, requires a discipline that borders on the impossible. It ant I couldn’t use the edge of my blade. It ant I had to be perfect.

The first ten reached at once. I didn’t et them with a static defense; I moved through them, a ghost in the machinery of their violence. I used the flat of my blade to shatter collarbones and the heavy silver poml to find the soft temples of their helts. I used pressure points that Vetra had shown when I was nine years old, practicing on unwilling subjects in the palace dungeons. The irony was a bitter weight: I was using the techniques of a monster to save the victims of her final, lingering spell.

Fighting to subdue is infinitely harder than fighting to kill. A dead man stops moving. An unconscious one takes seconds to drop, and in those seconds, his sagging weight becos an obstacle, a shield for the next man coming at your throat.

I was in continuous motion. I couldn’t hold a position; a stationary target against these numbers was a dead one. I redirected a man twice my width, a bear of a Northman, into the two charging behind him, solving three problems with a single rotation of my hips. I stepped inside the guard of a swordsman, my elbow finding the nerve cluster above his jaw before his blade could even begin its descent.

And still, they kept coming.

While my body handled the chanics of the brawl, my mind was clawing at the magic. I needed to understand the architecture of the working.

My first theory was a standard compulsion, a psychic layer pressed over their consciousness like a second skin, muzzling the original self. To break a compulsion, you find the anchor point where the spell is grafted to the mind and you snap it.

I reached out with my own magic, threading a needle of frost into the mind of the nearest soldier even as I parried his spear. I searched for the graft, the oily residue of a ntal command.

I found nothing. The mind was there, screaming and subrged, but the spell wasn’t attached to it. It was lower.

Second theory, I thought, ducking a swinging mace. It’s not a ntal compulsion. It’s a blood-curse. Sothing older, sothing that bypassed the mind entirely to work on the body’s primal instinct systems.

I shifted my reach, diving into the physical rather than the ntal, looking for a corruption in the humors, a stain on the lineage of the blood. I felt a flicker of sothing, a dark, vibrating resonance, but as soon as I tried to pin it, the spell slid away. It was evasive, a living thing that knew it was being hunted.

I almost missed the crucial detail in the chaos. A soldier fell, his head bouncing off a stone trough after a well-placed strike from my gauntlet. As he spiraled toward unconsciousness, I saw the violet glitch in his eyes fade. For one crystalline second, his own expression returned, a mask of pure, unadulterated terror. He looked like a man waking up mid-fall, with no mory of the last three days. Then, he was out.

The realization hit harder than any blade. Unconsciousness broke the connection. The spell wasn’t self-sustaining; it required a conscious, awake mind to act as a host. If the mind went dark, the spell had nowhere to sit.

That ant the source wasn’t inside them. It was being fed to them. It required a caster, soone nearby, soone maintaining these hundreds of threads in real-ti. To manage a web this complex, they had to be in proximity.

I needed a mont of silence. I needed the world to stop trying to end so I could find the spider at the center of the web.

I stopped moving. I planted my feet in the slush and reached deep into the ice beneath the city. I didn’t reach for the air; I reached for the bones of the earth. The magic rose through the soles of my boots, a surging, frigid tide that I directed outward in a perfect, expanding radius.

The ice didn’t kill. It didn’t even harm. It simply rose up around every body within fifty yards, locking them mid-movent.

The silence that followed was deafening. A hundred soldiers were caught in a tableau of violence, mid-swing, mid-step, mid-scream. I stood in the center of the frozen square, breathing hard, the steam of my breath the only thing moving. I looked at their eyes. The violet fla was still there, burning behind the ice, but it was static.

I extended my sixth sense, following the magical residue the way a hound follows a scent in still air. A working this massive leaves a trail; you cannot move that much power without scorching the edges of the world.

I found three sources. Not one. A triangle spread deliberately around the central square, redundant by design. If I broke one, the other two would sustain the network.

I moved for the nearest one first.

I found the first mage behind a collapsed stable. He was crouched in the dirt, his hands weaving a complex, rhythmic pattern in the air, his eyes squeezed shut in the agonizing concentration of a man holding a mountain on his back.

When his eyes snapped open and saw , he didn’t fight. He ran.

I didn’t chase him. I simply willed the ice to rise ten feet ahead of him, a jagged wall of blue glass erupting from the cobbles. He slamd into it with a sickening thud, and I was on him before he could regain his breath. I put him down with a clinical efficiency that left no room for error.

A third of the frozen soldiers in the square slumped instantly, the violet light in their eyes snuffed out. They stood blinking in the thawing ice, their faces sagging with a sudden, overwhelming confusion.

The second mage was in a bell tower, elevated for range. I didn’t use the stairs. I climbed the outside of the stone, the ice providing purchase for my fingers where none existed. He had a ward up, a decent piece of craftsmanship, but it shattered under the weight of my intent like cheap porcelain. I dealt with him as I had the first. Another third of my army was released from the nightmare.

The third mage was different.

I felt the weight of his magic before I even saw him. It was heavier, older, a working of soone who hadn’t just learned these spells from Vetra’s notes but had lived within them for a lifeti. He didn’t run when I approached. He released a reserve.

Hidden soldiers, fresh ones, their eyes burning a deeper, more stable violet, erupted from the surrounding buildings. I was surrounded again, the trap snapping shut while the mage began a tactical retreat toward the city gates.

"Of course," I muttered.

I did two things at once. First, I cast a binding trap aid specifically at the mage. It wasn’t ant to stop him, but to lock him inside his own spell, a parasitic working that forced him to either maintain the connection to the soldiers or suffer a catastrophic magical backlash. It divided his attention, slowing him to a crawl.

Second, I dealt with the new wave. I was less precise now, the exhaustion beginning to fray the edges of my control. I used more force, the flat of my blade cracking ribs and shattering shields. It took too long, but eventually, the path was clear.

I caught the third mage near the shattered North Gate. He turned, his face a map of ancient, etched lines, his magic coming at in a desperate, searing blast of violet energy.

I didn’t answer with magic. I had been relying on the frost too much since the capital, since Aenithra had whispered in my ear about releasing my humanity. The balance was wrong. I could feel the cold starting to numb parts of that weren’t ant to be quiet.

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