The city did not fall.
It vanished.
There was no siege line drawn in the dust, no warning horns echoing from the walls, no last stand worthy of mory or song. One mont the Princedom city existed, layered stone and glass and habit stacked atop foundations so old that no one rembered why they had first been laid. Markets opened. Systems humd. People moved through routines worn smooth by repetition. The next mont, all of it was gone.
Streets collapsed inward as if the ground had simply decided it no longer needed to be solid. Towers slumped, folded, and vanished, not crashing, but sinking, pulled down into a silence that swallowed sound before it could finish becoming panic. Walls did not shatter. They forgot how to be walls.
Kalteth stood among them, unseen.
He did not hide in shadow or distance. He walked the streets in plain sight, moving through crowds and emptying avenues alike, disturbing thought itself so that eyes slid past him and minds edited him out. Humans glanced his way and rembered nothing. Faces blurred. Attention wandered. He had refined invisibility into habit rather than concealnt. The world itself cooperated, eager to smooth over the contradiction of his presence.
Akshar-Karuth had sent the Kin to learn how the world had changed since the last ti it had dared to wound them. Kalteth observed the patterns as the city died, watching failure ripple outward in familiar ways. Power grids failed first, light gutters vanishing block by block. Command structures froze next, signals looping endlessly as authority waited on authority that would never answer. People looked to symbols that no longer held aning and waited for orders that never ca.
The humans had learned to survive collapse by ritualizing it.
They had forgotten the Mother.
They had forgotten why fear had once mattered.
Kalteth moved through the dissolving streets and catalogued the signs without hurry. Chips embedded in spines. Fragnts grafted where devotion had once lived. Poor imitations of inheritance, installed power masquerading as communion. The humans believed strength could be slotted into flesh like a tool and removed just as easily. They believed power was sothing you owned rather than sothing that owned you.
They did not understand what they were touching.
Kalteth knelt beside the dead.
He did not linger. Whatever the humans had built into themselves no longer mattered. Bodies were irrelevant once the city itself had been marked. Flesh, steel, and mory were all equally temporary in the face of what was coming.
The dead were left where they lay, already becoming indistinguishable from the land that would soon forget them entirely.
War machines slept beneath the city, relics sealed in vaults and buried beneath myth. Kalteth rembered them. Walking mountains of steel and glass that had once scread defiance loud enough to scar the sky. Devil-killers, they had been called, forged from terror sharp enough to wound the Kin. Those engines had aning once. Now they were abandoned, their makers reduced to caretakers who no longer understood the language of their own creation, maintaining shells without knowing what they had been built to face.
The Emperor was gone, the true one, not the hollow titles the humans still clung to.
The last knot of human unity had been buried with him, and the world had fractured along fault lines that widened with every passing generation. Princedoms gnawed at one another. Houses traded loyalty for flesh, credits, and promises that dissolved as soon as they were spoken. Even now, they imagined the ones in the sky were different from the ones who walked the earth. Kalteth had seen this arrogance before.
It always ended the sa way.
He paused at the city’s heart as the final structures sank and the last echoes of habitation were smoothed flat. The air trembled once, a brief shudder of resistance, then stilled. No survivors erged with understanding. Those who lived would speak of disaster, of accident, of collapse.
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They would never speak of design.
It would be their undoing.
This was not a beginning.
It was continuation.
When the Mother called, her children would answer.
Kalteth and the others opened their third eye.
Reality folded.
The ground rembered an older truth and returned to it. Stone unlearned its shape. Soil forgot the weight of walls and towers that had pressed upon it. Roads dissolved into the suggestion of paths that had never been walked, never nad, never claid. History loosened its grip and slid away.
What had been a city was rewritten into absence.
The city was gone. It was as if it had once existed long ago and then been lost to ti, its place worn smooth by centuries of wind and forgetting.
It no longer rembered its own na. It was no longer a place for the living, nor a place for the dead.
It was simply not.
Talo, princeling of the Cloudspire, stepped forward into the throne room of his adoptive father.
The chamber had been cleared hours ago. Curtains were drawn, fires banked low, the great vaulted space reduced to shadow and the slow, uneven sound of a dying man breathing. The prince sat slumped upon the throne, already coming apart. Poison ward its way through him gradually, thodically, turning each breath into labor and every movent into a faint, uncontrollable tremor.
This was not Talo’s doing, but neither had he stopped it.
There had been a mont earlier, a narrow window in which intervention was possible. A clean antidote prepared by a loyal physician. A quiet word to the guards. A single command. Talo had seen all of it laid out clearly in front of him and had chosen otherwise.
In all but na, Talo had ruled the Cloudspire for years.
The court believed him a fool, a decorative heir adopted for convenience rather than rit. They whispered that he was dull, obedient, malleable, a harmless thing shaped to fill space rather than wield power. None of them understood that Shadowlight, the underground apparatus that had hollowed out the princedom from within, answered to him. Its tendrils had crept into ministries, guilds, trade houses, and even the palace itself, and every single one of them had been placed there by Talo’s hand.
The forr princeling had not died quietly.
His death had been a spectacle, deliberate and unavoidable. Shadowlight had ensured it was seen, discussed, and impossible to forget. It had unfolded publicly enough to stain the court and violently enough to draw attention far beyond the Cloudspire itself. Talo’s hand had been in it from the beginning to the end, precise in its cruelty, unmistakable in its intent.
At the ti, he had not yet been Talo’s brother. He had been an obstacle, nothing more. Afterward, the prince had adopted Talo, praising his cold clarity, declaring him the only one worthy of inheriting what would inevitably be left behind. The role of the man Talo had killed was given to him without pretense or apology. He had been knife-son before he was heir, and the court learned that titles followed power, not blood. Blood did not run cleanly through Talo, not as a son. He was a bastard’s bastard, closer in truth to a grandchild than an heir, a compromise made flesh.
But the blood of the Empire still ran in him, noble enough to satisfy the laws that mattered.
That spectacle had carried further than the court intended. It had reached the true ruler of Trelith, Prince Haroun, a man who did not care for lineage or sentint. Only power interested him. The power to take, and the power to hold what was taken. Talo’s ascent had not impressed Haroun because of the blood spilled, but because the throne had not fallen apart afterward.
It was enough.
His father lifted a trembling hand and beckoned him closer. The old man coughed into a rag already dark with red, his breath rattling in his chest. “Talo, my son,” he said, his voice frayed thin by pain and exhaustion. “I am dying, as you well know.”
Talo stopped at the foot of the throne, posture straight, expression unreadable.
“It may have been one of yours,” the prince continued, eyes unfocused but sharp enough to accuse. “It may not have been. An assassin found his way into my court and took my life. Yet I find myself… at peace with it.” He paused to draw a shallow breath. “I was never the one to nd this fractured realm. I ruled what remained. That was all.”
He swallowed, then looked at Talo fully. “The people have already chosen you to lead them. They look to you whether they admit it or not. Who am I to stand against the will of the people?”
His gaze sharpened just enough to matter. “Your goals and mine were never the sa. Still, I believe you will do what is best for the Cloudspire. Not what is kind. What is necessary.”
The prince’s hand trembled as he gestured weakly. “Give your blade. Take what is yours, my truest son. I am tired, and I wish no longer to remain in this world.”
Talo stepped forward without hesitation.
He conjured his blade, the familiar weight settling into his grasp, and drove it straight through his father’s heart. The motion was clean, precise, practiced. The prince gasped once, the sound thin and distant.
With his final breath, the dying man reached up and caught Talo by the face. His grip was weak but deliberate, fingers trembling against skin. Summoning what little strength remained, he lifted himself just enough to place a kiss upon Talo’s forehead.
“Make this world yours,” he whispered. “Where I failed, you must succeed, my dear child.”
The hand fell away.
Talo straightened, the blade dissolving into nothing as the throne room fell silent. The air itself seed to settle, as if the Cloudspire had been holding its breath.
Sowhere beyond the chamber walls, bells would ring. ssengers would run. Councils would convene and swear oaths they had already decided to keep.
The Cloudspires had a new ruler. No longer the Knife-Son, but the Blade Prince, Talo, had risen.
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