The plaza was a sepulcher.
The only sound in the sudden, vast silence was the wet, ragged,
gurgling
breath of Magister Kellan, his body a broken ruin, drowning in his own blood on the shattered cobblestones.
Lord Grak-thul stood over him, a mountain of black, victorious iron. His massive, crimson-runed axe was raised high, its runes pulsing with a hungry, red light, eager for the final, severing blow. The demon commander was a statue of triumph, his boot planted firmly on the back of the city’s greatest hero. He was
savoring
this. The silence. The terror. The absolute, crushing finality of his victory.
Elara’s silver wall still shimmered, a beautiful, impassive line of light dividing the battlefield, holding back the endless demon horde. On the other side of that barrier, Dain Ragnor, his face a mask of tears and raw, impotent fury, slammed his tower shield against the unyielding light with a muffled, heavy
thud
.
"NO! NO, YOU... YOU
BASTARD
! LET ME THROUGH!"
His voice was a raw, animalistic roar, his knuckles splitting against the solid, conceptual magic. He was a prisoner, forced to watch the execution of the man who had, just that morning, taught him what a
true
shield was.
Ilya Veyne was at his side, her hands pressed flat against the silver barrier, her own face pale as death. She wasn’t shouting. She was just watching, her silver eyes wide with the familiar, sickening trauma of seeing her last hero, her last pillar of strength, about to be extinguished. Her brilliant, analytical mind was racing,
desperately
searching for a flaw in the Scribe’s magic, a way to break the wall, a way to intervene. And the most terrifying part? There
was
no flaw. The barrier was perfect, absolute. They were as trapped as Kellan was.
"And so," Grak-thul purred, his voice a low whisper that every person in the plaza could hear, "the ’Flame’ goes out."
His magma-orange eyes, burning with a cold, victorious contempt, looked past the broken Magister, past the Scribe who had dared to defy him, and
up
. His gaze lifted, scanning the Academy walls, the last bastion.
And he
smiled
beneath his helmet.
"But the ’Flame’ is just the
start
," he mused, his voice casual again. He lowered his axe, just slightly. Why rush the kill? Why end the performance, when the
audience
was still so... captive?
His massive head turned. He was looking at the section of the Academy wall nearest the plaza.
He was looking at
them
.
The remnants of Squad 7 stood as the last, hopeless, pathetic line of defense.
They were a fractured, terrified, and heartbreakingly
young
defense. Dain and Ilya were trapped in the plaza, on the wrong side of the wall. On the battlements, their squad was broken.
Kaelan Brightblade, his face a gaunt, ghostly white, was there. He was recovered from the sewer, but far from
whole
. His right arm was gone, the sleeve of his Academy tunic pinned empty at his side. He clutched a simple, one-handed elementalist’s staff in his left hand, his knuckles white, his entire body shaking so violently he could barely stand. The phantom, agonizing
itch
of his missing arm was screaming, a counter-point to the primal terror that had seized his heart.
"No..." he whispered, his teeth chattering, his mind flashing back to the sewer, to the Stalker, to this same, hopeless, overwhelming fear. "No, not him, not again..."
Beside him, Lia stood, her healer’s staff clutched in her hands. She was not screaming. She was not frozen. Her trauma, her scar, was still there—the sound of the
clang
from Grak-thul’s axe on Kellan’s armor made her flinch violently—but her training, her duty, and the memory of Kaelan’s sacrifice held her upright. Her terror was a cold, sharp, focused thing. Her eyes were fixed on the demon commander, her hands glowing with a desperate, pulsing, and utterly insignificant green light, as if her small, healing aura could somehow challenge the titan in the plaza.
A handful of other students, dazed and battered, cowered behind them. Kaelan and Lia were all that was left.
Grak-thul’s helmet tilted, an expression of profound, almost
artistic
amusement.
"The cubs," he purred, his voice resonating with theatrical pity. "The ’White Flame’ dies on the ground, and the
next generation
..." He pointed at Kaelan with a single, massive, black-iron claw. "...is a
one-armed child, shaking in his boots
."
He let out a deep, rattling laugh that scraped across the stones. "This city is an
insult
. A joke. Allow me to provide the punchline."
He was done performing. He was bored.
Grak-thul turned his back on the dying Kellan—an act of ultimate, final contempt. He raised his free, clawed gauntlet, not his axe. He was not going to
fight
them. He was not going to honor them with a duel.
He was going to
erase
them.
A sphere of crackling, light-devouring void formed in his palm. It was not the fire-and-brimstone magic of the lesser demons. This was a sphere of anti-reality. It
hissed
, pulling in the dust, the light, the very
sound
around it. The air temperature plummeted. It grew, from a marble, to a fist, to a sphere the size of a carriage wheel, crackling with pure, black, destructive power.
"NO!" Kaelan screamed. He thrust his staff forward with his one, trembling, left hand. "GLACIES MURUS!"
A wall of ice, thin as paper, a pathetic, one-handed, lopsided effort, shimmered into existence on the battlement. It was a joke. A prayer.
"This," Grak-thul roared, his voice a final, victorious boom, "is how your world
ends
!"
He
hurled
it.
The sphere of crackling void screamed across the plaza, a miniature black hole, a comet of absolute annihilation. It wasn’t aimed at the Academy. It was aimed
personally
at Squad 7.
Lia didn’t move. She just raised her staff, her eyes squeezed shut, a single tear rolling down her cheek.
Kairen... I’m sorry...
Kaelan stood frozen, his pathetic ice wall already dissolving, the ice turning to steam, eaten by the void-sphere’s terrifying aura before it was even touched.
The sphere was ten feet from the wall. Five.
It was about to hit.
THWUUUUM.
The sound. The same sound from Elara’s book. The sound of a
concept
being enforced. But this time, it wasn’t a line. It was
everywhere
.
The sphere of crackling void...
stopped
.
It froze, a foot from the battlement, a foot from Kaelan’s terrified, pale face. The black, crackling energy churned in slow motion, its roar compressed into a low, angry
hum
.
Then,
reality
bent.
A
fold
in the air, like a seam in the world being unzipped, opened beside the sphere.
A
hand
—a simple, pale, slender hand, wreathed in silver, starlight-bright energy—emerged from the fold. It was cupped, as if catching a ball.
The sphere of void energy, a weapon that could shatter mountains,
shuddered
. It was being
compressed
.
A calm, female voice, amplified by its own impossible power, spoke from the empty air. Her voice was not a sound that traveled to the ear; it was a
concept
that bloomed in every mind in the plaza.
"You are a concept of ’Ending’," the voice stated, its tone cold, analytical, and utterly, terrifyingly, bored. "But I... am a concept of ’Closure’."
The hand
closed
.
The sphere of crackling void didn’t explode. It
imploded
. It folded in on itself, its light, its power, its very
existence
being
deleted
from the ’Essence Web’. It vanished into a single, microscopic point of non-light, and then was gone with a silent, final
pop
.
The hand, and the arm it was attached to, shimmered into full view.
From the fold in reality, a figure stepped, landing with the impossible lightness of a falling leaf on the stone battlements,
between
the stunned students and the plaza.
It was Elara Zephyrwind.
But it was not.
The grieving mother in the shawl was gone. The Scribe in the dark robes was gone.
This was something else.
She was encased in sleek, form-fitting battle robes of silver and midnight-blue. They were not cloth. They were woven from what looked like solidified, liquid
stars
. They shimmered, not with reflected light, but with their
own
light, a map of moving, shifting, unknown constellations. They were not
on
her; they were an
extension
of her.
Her dark hair was not whipped by the wind; it was
flowing
, as if she were underwater, each strand leaving a faint, silver trail of light, held back from her face by an unseen, internal,
cosmic
force.
Her Scribe’s book was open in her left hand, but it was not in her hand. It
floated
at her side, its pages—now filled with hundreds of lines of silver, glowing,
moving
runes—turning on their own, each flip of a page making a sound like a single, clear, crystal
chime
.
And her
eyes
.
They were no longer violet. They were
blazing
. They were two orbs of pure, white-hot, starlight-bright
power
. They were not human. They were deep, endless, and cold, like looking into the heart of a galaxy. This was not a woman. This was a
force
.
Down in the plaza, Grak-thul, who had been staring, his axe lowered, his body frozen in mid-admiration of his own handiwork...
stumbled back a step
.
He
roared
.
It was not a roar of triumph. It was not a roar of anger. It was a sound of pure, unadulterated, primal
fear
. This was not a soldier. This was not a mage. This, his demonic, ancient senses screamed at him, was a
predator
. He finally,
truly
understood. The Scribe hadn’t just been
defending
.
She had been
waiting
.
Elara’s glowing, cosmic gaze swept over the terrified, awestruck Squad 7, over Lia, over Kaelan. Her expression was cold, impassive, inhuman.
Then, her gaze drifted down, into the plaza. She saw the shattered, broken,
bleeding
form of Magister Kellan.
And for one, fleeting, heart-stopping instant, the inhuman cosmic light in her eyes
wavered
. A flicker of something mortal, something
furious
and
pained
, broke through the celestial calm.
Her voice, when she spoke, was calm. It was cold. It was clear as starlight, and it carried over the entire, silent city.
"I’m sorry, Kellan," she said. "I’m late."
She looked at the ruined gate, the shattered plaza, the demon army, and the body of her oldest friend.
"You’ve made a terrible mess of the courtyard."
Kellan. Broken. Bleeding. His body a ruin. His armor shattered. He had heard her. He had heard the voice. He forced his head to lift, his one good eye cracking open, his vision a blur of blood and smoke.
He saw her.
He saw the robes. He saw the power. He saw the
eyes
—the glowing, violet, cosmic-powered eyes he hadn’t seen in seventeen years. The eyes of the most brilliant, terrifying, and dangerous prodigy the Academy had ever produced. The Scribe who, in her youth, had been given a different, more fitting title. A name whispered in fear by her rivals and in awe by her instructors.
A look of profound shock, of impossible, pained
awe
, and a grim, bloody, agonizingly-earned humor crossed his face.
He coughed, a spray of blood landing on the cobblestones. A pained, terrible, beautiful,
relieved
grin spread across his lips.
"Gods be praised..." he whispered, his voice a broken, adoring, terrified rattle, as Elara Zephyrwind, the Scribe of the Seventh Seal, turned to face the demon commander.
"The ’Azure Devil’ is back."