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Chapter 281: Chapter 276: Investigation

Location:Hall of Rembrance

Intel quarters, Zhū’kethara

Date/Ti:Mid Sparkfall, 9939 AZI

Realm:Demon Realm

Ninety-three nas on the left wall. Forty-one living bloodlines on the right.

Ren stood in the Hall’s eastern annex — a chamber Vaelith had commandeered three weeks ago for the bloodline investigation, converting it from a storage space into sothing that looked increasingly like a war room. Crystal arrays lined both walls, each one a node of light connected by thin threads of essence to the central clan tree. The left wall held the crystals of demons recorded as dead. The right wall held the crystals of living mixed-blood descendants whose bloodlines traced back to those dead.

Except the dead weren’t dead.

"It started with one." Vaelith’s voice was steady. Clinical. The healer’s mask she wore when the information was too large for grief. Her vivid green-gold eyes moved across the evidence she’d assembled with the sa thodical precision she brought to healing— no wasted attention, no emotion until the work was done. Ink stained her fingers from weeks of cross-referencing records. Her midnight black hair fell loose around her shoulders, streaked with gold that caught the crystal-light.

"One anomaly. A mixed-blood woman from the 800K whose demon-blooded maternal line traced to a healer nad Suravhi. Recorded as killed in the Healing Tent Massacre during the Third Zartonesh War." Vaelith touched the crystal on the left wall. It pulsed — dormant, reading as dead, the sa way Thalvren d’Ghal’s had. "Suravhi’s crystal has been dark for millennia. Mourned. Her na spoken at every rembrance ceremony since the war."

She touched the crystal on the right wall. Living. Bright.

"But the blood says she had children. After her recorded death."

Ren said nothing. He’d learned over the past weeks that Vaelith’s presentations had their own architecture — interrupting before she reached the keystone ant missing the shape of the whole.

"I thought it was an error." Vaelith moved along the left wall. Her fingers didn’t touch the crystals, but essence trailed from her hands, illuminating connections. "Corruption in the data. A misread lineage marker. So I ran the verification protocol three tis. Then I started looking for other anomalies."

She stopped at the centre of the wall.

"Ninety-three nas, my king. All female. All healers. All recorded as killed in the Healing Tent Massacre. All with living descendants who entered the Hall through the 800K." Her voice held. Barely. "Of those, forty-one have been fully verified. The remaining fifty-two are pending — but the partial traces follow the sa pattern."

Brannick stood by the door, arms folded across his broad chest. His dark eyes moved between the walls — the dead on the left, the living on the right — with the expression of soone seeing a confirmation rather than a revelation. His enormous forge-scarred hands gripped his own forearms. The white bone-braided beard was still. He said nothing. He’d known pieces of this for eight thousand years.

"One anomaly is an error," Ren said. "Ninety-three is an operation."

"Yes."

"The Healing Tent Massacre." He looked at the left wall. Nas carved into rembrance stones across the demon realm. Nas spoken at ceremonies he’d attended. Nas woven into the Common Path’s grief — eight million souls carrying the weight of that loss for millennia. "An attack during the Third Zartonesh War. Major healing tent overrun. Approximately one hundred female demon healers killed. Blad on the Zartonesh. Mourned as martyrs."

"Mourned as martyrs," Vaelith repeated. "Because no one questions the dead."

***

The elder’s na was Gharvek. Inferno primary, Terracore secondary. His hair had been crimson once — now faded to a dull rust, thinning at the temples. His molten-red eyes had dimd to ember-orange, the slow deterioration of a Shan’kara warrior who had outlived his purpose by several thousand years. He moved carefully, the way very old demons did when their essence couldn’t sustain the body it rembered being.

He’d fought in the Third Zartonesh War. He’d been stationed three leagues from the healing tent.

"I heard the explosion," Gharvek said. His voice was rough — not with age but with the particular strain of a throat that had spent millennia swallowing things it should have scread. "Dawn. The tent was positioned behind the eastern ridge — standard placent, protected from direct assault. We’d pushed the Zartonesh back the previous day. The healers were treating wounded from the counteroffensive."

He sat in the chair Vaelith had placed for him, hands on his knees. The hands were scarred in patterns that told stories older than most civilizations.

"The blast was — wrong." Gharvek’s dimd eyes focused on sothing none of them could see. "I knew it then. I’ve known it for millennia. I told myself I was imagining it because the alternative was—" He stopped. Started again. "The Zartonesh were brutal. Disorganised. They hit hard, and they hit everywhere. They didn’t execute surgical strikes on dical positions behind fortified lines. They couldn’t. Their tactics were wave assaults. Overwhelming force. They broke through by numbers, not precision."

"But the healing tent was hit precisely," Ren said.

"One strike. Clean. The protective formations around the tent were bypassed — not overwheld, bypassed. As if soone knew the exact ward configuration." Gharvek’s hands tightened on his knees. The knuckles whitened. "We arrived within minutes. The tent was — gone. Burned. But the fire was wrong too. Zartonesh fire is chaotic, black-edged, and stinks of Death Gate residue. This burned clean. Hot and fast and total. I rember standing at the periter thinking: this isn’t their fire. And then the grief hit, and I stopped thinking."

He’d carried that thought for millennia. Ren could see it — the way it had worn a groove in the old warrior, a doubt smoothed by repetition into sothing almost comfortable. Easier to live with than the alternative.

"Designed to destroy evidence," Brannick said from the doorway.

Gharvek looked at the mastersmith. Sothing passed between them — the recognition of n who had both been carrying truths too heavy to speak.

"No bodies," Gharvek said. "We found no bodies. The official record says the fire consud them entirely. That was the explanation. Zartonesh fire burns hot. Everyone accepted it because—"

"Because you were at war," Vaelith said gently. "Because a hundred dead healers is a tragedy that demands grief, not investigation. And grief is easier than questions."

Gharvek’s faded ember eyes moved to the left wall. The ninety-three nas. He read them slowly, and Ren watched sothing shift in the old warrior’s face — not surprise, not exactly. The collapse of a structure that had been cracking for millennia, finally giving way under the weight of evidence he’d always sensed but never allowed himself to assemble.

"Suravhi." His voice broke on the na. "She bound my arm after the Second Ridge engagent. Told

I was being dramatic about a flesh wound. She was — she was twenty-three hundred years old, and she could still make warriors twice her age feel like children complaining about scraped knees."

He looked at the right wall. The living bloodlines.

"She survived."

"Her descendants are here," Vaelith said. "In Zhū’kethara. Part of the 800K."

Gharvek was silent for a long ti. When he spoke, the roughness was gone. What replaced it was clean. Precise. The voice of a warrior who had just been given a target after millennia of mourning the wrong enemy.

"I spoke their nas at the rembrance. Every year. For millennia." Each word asured. Each word deliberate. "I carried their loss in my chest like a stone. I taught younger warriors to honor their sacrifice. I told their story as a warning about the cost of war."

His hands unclenched. Flattened against his knees.

"And it was a lie."

***

Ren dismissed Gharvek with instructions to rest and say nothing until the investigation was complete. The elder left with the rigid posture of soone holding himself together by force of habit — a warrior’s discipline applied to the act of not breaking.

Vaelith, Brannick, and Ren remained.

"The thodology is consistent with the pocket dinsion program," Brannick said. He’d moved from the doorway to the evidence wall, his enormous hands tracing connections between crystals with a craftsman’s precision. "Symkyn’s operation required subjects with specific profiles. Female demons. Active Shan’keth. Strong bloodlines. Healer abilities were a particular priority — the breeding program had catastrophic failure rates. Miscarriages, stillbirths, infant mortality. Having healers among the captive population would have been—" He paused. Chose the word. "—Efficient."

"One hundred healers," Ren said. "Taken in a single operation. Under the cover of a Zartonesh assault that may itself have been manufactured or manipulated."

"The timing suggests coordination," Vaelith said. "The Third Zartonesh War was chaotic. Casualties were enormous. In that environnt, a hundred missing healers from a single destroyed tent wouldn’t trigger the kind of investigation it should have. The grief was too large. The war was too pressing. And the records—"

"Were sealed," Brannick finished. "Standard warti protocol. Sensitive military losses were sealed for the duration of hostilities and reviewed afterward. Except the afterward never ca. The war ended. The records stayed sealed. Nobody reopened them because why would you? The won were dead. Everyone knew they were dead."

Ren looked at the two walls. Dead on the left. Living on the right.

One hundred won. Healers. The most compassionate mbers of the demon race — those whose gifts bent toward nding, toward life, toward easing the pain of others. Taken from a healing tent where they’d been doing exactly that. Mourned as war dead while they were dragged into pocket dinsions to serve as breeding stock for a program designed to weaponize their bloodlines.

The elegance of it was the worst part. Not the cruelty — cruelty was common enough. The elegance. The way the cri had been folded into the grief so perfectly that mourning itself beca the lock on the door. Every rembrance ceremony. Every na carved into stone. Every young warrior taught to honor the sacrifice. All of it — not morial but concealnt. Not honour but silence.

And soone — Symkyn, certainly. Salroch’s involvent, increasingly likely — had staged it. Used war as cover. Let grief beco a monunt. Let the mourning itself seal the cri.

"The program continued after Symkyn’s death," Ren said.

Brannick nodded. "The mixed-blood lines from the healing tent won span generations. Children born well after Symkyn’s era. Grandchildren. Great-grandchildren. Soone inherited the operation. Soone maintained the pocket dinsions. Soone continued the breeding."

The question sat in the chamber like sothing with weight.

Who?

Ren could feel the shape of an answer forming — a na that kept surfacing in every thread they pulled, every pattern they traced. But suspicion was not evidence, and a king who acted on suspicion instead of proof was a tyrant, not a leader.

"I want every na," Ren said. His voice was quiet. The kind of quiet that made Vaelith’s hands still and Brannick’s posture straighten. "Every healer recorded as dead in that tent. Cross-reference against living bloodlines — not just the 800K, but every mixed-blood community Theron’s network can reach. If these won had descendants, I want to know where, when, and through whom."

"That will take months," Vaelith said. Not objecting. asuring.

"Then it takes months. I also want every warrior who fought in the Third Zartonesh War contacted. Every one who was stationed near the eastern ridge. Every one who rembers the healing tent. I want their tactical assessnts — not their grief, their analysis. What they saw. What didn’t match. What they told themselves didn’t matter because the dead were already dead."

"And the sealed records?" Brannick asked.

"Opened. Every record from that era pertaining to healer deploynts, ward configurations, and casualty reporting. If soone bypassed those wards, they knew the configuration. That ans insider knowledge. That ans a trail."

Ren turned to the left wall one final ti. Ninety-three nas. Won who had been mourned as martyrs for millennia. Whose nas decorated rembrance stones in every demon settlent. Whose sacrifice had been taught to generations of young demons as the price of war.

And none of it was true.

The Healing Tent Massacre was not a tragedy. It was a theft. A cri so precise, so deeply buried, so perfectly disguised by the machinery of grief itself, that it had survived unquestioned for longer than most civilizations existed.

"My king." Vaelith’s voice, gentle. Careful. "The Common Path will carry this. When the realm learns—"

"The realm will learn when the evidence is complete, and the investigation is thorough." Ren didn’t raise his voice. He never raised his voice when the anger went this deep. "Not before. Grief built this monunt. Grief will not be what tears it down. Facts will."

Vaelith inclined her head. Brannick’s dark eyes held steady — the expression of a man who had waited eight thousand years for soone to start asking the right questions.

They left.

***

The Hall was quiet.

Not silent — the crystals humd with their constant low frequency, the sound of stored lives resonating in the architecture of mory. The clan tree pulsed at the chamber’s centre, its roots spreading beneath the floor in patterns that connected the living to the dead to the not-yet-born.

Ren stood between the two walls.

On his left: the nas. Suravhi. Kaethira. Miravyn. Thal’sei. Yrenne. Ninety-three won who had spent their lives healing others, who had gone to war not to fight but to nd, and who had been stolen from the space where they were doing the most good. Mourned by a realm that didn’t know it was mourning a lie.

On his right: the bloodlines. Living threads spreading outward from each na — children, grandchildren, descendants born in captivity across millennia. Each one proof that the won had survived. Each one was evidence of a cri so vast and so patient that it had outlived the man who started it.

The fury was not volcanic. It did not burn. It settled into his bones the way cold settles into stone — deep, structural, permanent. The kind of anger that didn’t fade because it wasn’t emotional. It was architectural. Built into the foundations of what he was.

A king whose people had been stolen.

A king whose people’s grief had been weaponized.

A king who would find every na, trace every line, open every sealed record, and build a case so thorough and so undeniable that when the truth finally reached the Common Path, it would carry not rage but certainty. Not vengeance but justice. Not grief but the cold, precise fury of a people who had been lied to for millennia and would never be lied to again.

The crystals humd. The nas glowed.

Sowhere in a pocket dinsion that ti had forgotten, the healers might still be alive. Preserved. Waiting. The way Brannick’s people had waited — in darkness, in chains, with nothing but the mory of what they’d been and the hope that soone would co.

Ren placed his hand on the wall between the two sets of nas. Dead on one side. Living on the other. The gap between them was a cri scene over ten thousand years old, and he was going to take it apart stone by stone until nothing remained hidden.

The investigation had begun.

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