Chapter 53- News
Added 2025-11-10 03:25:37 +0000 UTCVanded looked between Vera and Serel, then moved his hand. Faint sigils shimmered in the air, rippling like a haze around the two of them.
Vera raised a brow. âThanks,â she said, glancing at her daughter.
She assumed it was a Mark that meant their words wouldnât reach Serel. This way, he didnât actually have to let Serel out of her sight, which was a small relief.
âSo, howâve things gone after the night?â she asked.
Vandedâs reply came as a low rumble, the cheer heâd shown moments ago noticeably dulled. âItâs a mess, Vera. A Gravesent mess.â
She looked at him.
It had surprised her, hearing him call her by her real name. She hadnât thought anyone whoâd known Veralyth Mournvale here would know that one, much less use it. Caldrin only ever called her âmy lady,â Serel called her âMommy,â and she hadnât met many others whoâd known her before. Apparently, this was another point where Veralyth and her overlapped more than she would have thought.
âDid a lot of people die?â
Vandedâs expression darkened. âNo. Not as many as couldâve, at least. Outside the central district and the Pale Hallâs surroundings, thereâs barely any real damage.â He met her eyes. âYou have our thanks for dragging your battle beyond the cityâs bounds.â
Vera felt a little off under the weight of that sincerity, so she looked away and folded her arms, copying his stance. âItâs what had to be done.â
A short silence followed. At the desk, Serel turned the Wick in her hands, the thing glowing in little pulses.
âFrom what weâve confirmed,â Vanded said, âmost of the city guards beyond those weâve got locked up are gone. Bonewright Guild members, Sigilists, and the labor guilds are missing some too. Weâre assuming theyâre among the Tetherborn that attacked.â
Vera frowned. ââŠHow many does that make?â
Sheâd dealt with a few hundred, after all.
âThe guard and Bonewrights alone put it past three hundred. The rest, weâll have to see.â
She watched him. âThat is a lot of people dead.â
He nodded seriously. âMaybe. But far fewer than if a Silent Lord had gotten its claws on the city. Gard reckons theyâd been creating those things for weeks, maybe months. You finding that chamber under the Marrowvault spooked them, made âem rush the rest yesterday.â
âYouâre saying we could have saved more if Iâd acted sooner?â
âProbably.â
Vera fell quiet, gaze turning ahead again.
âNothing to beat yourself up over,â Vanded said. âItâs one of those sorry turns life conjures up. Sometimes you miss a chance âcause you donât know betterâbut if you didnât, might notâve been much of a chance after all.â
ââŠRight.â
She didnât necessarily disagree. Sheâd never been one to gripe about missed opportunities. It was justâŠ
These were peopleâs lives they were talking about.
It shouldnât be up to her, of all people, whether someone lived or not.
âWhat about the Boneward Concord?â she asked after a while.
Vanded was quiet for a moment. âWeâre still sorting that out. Sancter Vehlâs alive, bound downstairs. Envoy Virehall and Trade Voice Brel Tannot are missing. All three were tied to that persona of Whitefingerâs. Virehall and Tannot are probably dead. The rest of the Concord⊠might be the same.â
Vera glanced at him. âThe High Warden as well?â
The corner of his mouth tightened. ââŠIâm holding out hope.â
Vera studied him. To her, it didnât sound likely that the High Warden would still be alive, but the man was Vandedâs friend. It made sense for him to be optimistic.
âWhat about Marrowfen itself?â she asked. âIf the Concordâs gone and the guardâs dead, someone has to keep order. It looked calm when we walked here, but that wonât last once people figure things out.â
âGardâs on it. Heâs called a meeting at the Tanning League with some of the local heads to figure out how to move forward. I think that butler of yours is helping. Theyâre also looking to figure out which guilds and families backed Whitefingerâs infiltration of the Concord. Weâll be busy for a while digging those snakes out.â
âOn that note, where is Whitefinger?â
âIn the vault below us.â Vandedâs voice dropped. âThe Bound Witness is watching him. Iâll get to him soon enough. Then Iâll find out how the bastard came back after we already killed him.â
âThe Bound Witness,â Vera said, recalling the fight. âThat specter that was with you yesterday?â
âYes.â
âWhat was it exactly? First time I saw it.â
It wasnât an NPC she recognized from the game, and she felt fairly certain Veralyth hadnât encountered it either. Still, sheâd sensed Hollow Resonance from it, and it had been strong. Probably somewhat on par with Vanded himself.
âI can introduce you later,â he said. âThat old fellowâs taken an interest in you as well.â
She eyed him for a moment, then nodded. âAlright.â
Another silence settled between them. They both kept observing Serel.
âYouâve been gone some time this round,â Vanded said eventually.
Vera didnât answer right away. ââŠYeah. I have.â
âWhatâve you been up to in these years? Didnât think weâd see youââ The man cut himself off, words thinning out. As Vera turned to him, she saw a shadow cross his face before he shook his head, a faint smile tugging at his mouth. âNah, doesnât matter, does it?â
She watched him carefully. Whatever that was, he didnât offer more. His expression steadied, some spirit returning. âYouâve grown stronger, though. Strong enough to bring down a Silent Lord like a green-lit Kindled. Howâd you do it?â
âItâs⊠complicated, Iâm pretty sure,â Vera said.
âYouâre pretty sure?â
âYeah. Pretty sure.â
That earned an amused look, which she returned with a small shrug.
âHonestly, I was surprised by how strong I was myself.â She tilted her head slightly. âOr maybe just by how everyone else stopped keeping up.â
The large man beside her let out a rough, sharp laugh. âThatâs the Mournvale I remember. Is that a challenge? Should I feel ashamed for failing to ascend past the Tenth Flamebinding?â
âIâm sure youâll get there eventually.â
He shook his head with a low chuckle. âNo. No, I donât think I will. The fate of the Cycle-Forgedâs one thatâs only carved out for a few, I suspect. You and the rest of the Marked were always a step apart from the rest of us.â
Veraâs lips pressed into a thin line. ââŠDo you know how strong they are now?â
Vanded raised his brows. âCompared to you?â
âYes.â
âHoh.â One hand rose to his beard as his gaze unfocused a little. âWish I could give you a proper measure. Afraid itâs like Eran the Tithe trying to weigh Myrrkhal the Chainedâs breath. If you pressed a blade to my throat for an answer⊠maybe.â
âMaybe?â
He lowered his head once. âMaybe.â
âHuh.â Vera considered that. âDo you know anything else about them? Seen any of them recently?â
She still wasnât sure which of her fellow players might be around. Or what it would mean if they were.
âSome,â Vanded said. âYou lot have always moved to your own tides. Spread thin as ghosts lately. Valecrestâs leading the Pyric Oath and Covenant against The Silence Between, if you havenât heard. Wakeshadeâs been fighting on the same fronts. Halstrad was holding Darnelle last I heard, though itâs never easy keeping track of her. As for the rest, who knows.â
Vera paused at the first name, her jaw tightening. âAbout Elariaâdo you know ifâŠâ She trailed off, then shook her head. âNo, never mind.â
Vanded gave her a curious look but didnât press.
âBut Halstradâs in Darnelle?â she continued. âYouâre sure?â
âShe was supposed to be.â
âHas she stayed around the whole time? Or did she go missing at some point?â
His brows drew together. âMissing? Hard to say if you mean since the Chainfather Ascendant, but sheâs been active these last few months at least. And good thing that. Weâve needed every hand we could get against this tribulation.â
That didnât help her much in the moment. Still, it was something. At least now she had a direction to start with.
Mireya Halstradâone of her old guildmates. The only one she knew with any connection to the Graven Daughter. Vera wanted to know if this Halstrad was her friend, trapped here like she was, or just this worldâs version of that character.
A small motion pulled her attention back to the desk, where Serel had placed the Wick in front of her, elbows propped up, chin resting on her hands. The Wickâs pulse had started shifting between quick and slow pulses.
âBy the way, what exactly does that thing do?â Vera asked. âI wasnât aware it was good for anything besides reagent work, but you said itâs like a diary you donât have to write?â
âThatâs what I said, yeah,â Vanded replied. âThe Wick keeps memories. Catches impressions from whatâs around itâsights, sounds, even parts of feelings. Curious little thing, I always thought. Doubt itâs soaked in much more than the moment I handed it to your girl, but even thatâs plenty for a young mind.â He tapped a finger to his temple and grinned. âLets them see moments from other eyes. Not too different from those plays theyâve been putting on about you these days.â
Vera felt the urge to cringe at there being plays about her, but she kept her composure. âYou said you gave one to your daughter too?â
His grin softened into something quieter, still warm, as his eyes lingered on Serel. âAye. When she was about your lassâs age. Loved it more than anything. Had a memory of her mother in there too.â
Vera watched him. She hadnât known he even had a daughter. For a second, she thought to ask, but something in his tone stopped her. She looked away instead.
After a while, Vanded cleared his throat, the air shifting back toward its earlier rough humor. âSo, you planning to tell the world youâve gone and had a kid?â he asked, half-grinning again. âWhenâd you even find the time to pop one out?â
Veraâs expression flattened. She looked at him. âI genuinely hope thatâs not how you usually refer to it around women.â
He just laughed, clapping a broad hand on her shoulder. âNothing wrong with a bit of banter, eh? Now, whoâs the lucky cinderborn?â
She stiffened. âCinderborn? What makes you think theyâre cinderborn?â
âThe eyes,â Vanded said, pointing between hers and Serelâs. âTouch of crimson there, along with your silver. Iâd like to know where sheâd have picked that up if not from a cinderbornâs contribution.â
âPlease. Donât. Ever. Call it that. Again.â Vera shuddered. âYouâre channeling way too much uncle energy with the personal questions. Let it rest.â
âUncle energyâŠ?â Vanded looked confused whether that was something to be proud of or not, but after another moment of eyeing her, he seemed to take the hint. His attention drifted back to Serel, expression settling into something more thoughtful. ââŠHeard from Gard the girl disappeared for a while during the night. That true? Did it have anything to do with the Silent Lord or the Pale Reconciliation?â
âNo. It didnât. But what happened was resolved.â
She considered telling him about the Graven Daughter but decided against it. However familiar it might feel interacting with him, this man was only half an acquaintance. The other half was a stranger.
âRight,â Vanded said, the word hanging for a few seconds before he let it go.
Vera breathed out, eyes on Serel as the girl was now humming softly, fingers tracing the Wickâs glow. Was she⊠trying to record herself, maybe? Vera would have to experiment with the thing later to see how it worked.
âYouâve done well, Vera,â Vanded remarked after a while. âShe looks happy.â
ââŠNot sure how much of that praise I really deserve, but thanks.â A faint warmth crossed Veraâs face.
A beat passed, then the man straightened, rubbing his palms together. âRight. Heard you wrecked our dueling hall the day you got back.â
Vera blinked, turning toward him. ââŠI offered to pay for that.â
He barked a laugh. âPay for it? Iâve broken that room more times than I can count. Pretty sure itâs not your first time either. Whatâs a little structural damage between comrades?â
âIâd wager comments like that are why Gardâs having such a hard time as your Vice-Master.â
The man sobered a little, gaze drifting toward the door. âCan you blame me? Manâs just too good at doing my job for me. Heâll make a better Chapter-Master one day.â He was silent for a bit. âTruth is, Iâve got more weight than I care to take on right now. Marrowfenâll bleed for years after this night, and Iâm no healer. But guess I should at least try where I can.â
He rolled his neck, then cracked his knuckles. âThough if Iâm to do that after running near two days without sleep, Iâll need to clear my head first. Work the early morning rust out of my system.â His grin returned wholeheartedly as he looked at her again, and there was something very familiar in that expression. âThatâs what I was waiting on you for. What do you say, Mournvale? Fancy a throwback to the old days? A duel to shake the dust off?â
Veraâs eyes narrowed. âRight now?â
âAs good a time as any. Unless the Ashborn Ascendantâs afraid she burned herself out last night.â
Vera considered him. Then a slow, sharper grin curved across her lips. âNo, actually, Iâd love that.â
âHah. Thatâs the spirit!â
She rolled one arm, stretching her shoulder.
If he didnât mind her wrecking the hall before, he probably wouldnât mind if she actually created a new window for real, would he?
-----------------------------------------
Andrin crossed the Cinderwalk in silence. Emberlight ran along its length, reflecting off the ash-gray walls of the eastern spire. Below, Caer Virell sprawled through the haze, its forges ever-burning.
Inside, the Ember Courts were empty. His steps echoed through the myrrh-scented outer chamber as he made his way toward the Keeperâs door. The red oak shimmered faintly with heat as he reached to push it open and stepped through.
The Flamebearer of the Covenant of Flame and Keeper of the Pyric Oath sat near the far wall, armor set beside her. Light caught faint motes of ember rising from her bare shoulders and arms, pulsing with each slow breath. Fresh scars crossed bronze-tan skin, glowing dimly with residual Resonance as they faded.
Andrin waited before speaking. âKeeper.â
Her eyes stayed closed. âAnother report?â
âYes. But not from any of the fronts. Itâs from Marrowfen.â
She said nothing.
âWe discussed the Boneward Concordâs edict before,â Andrin continued. âThe situation remains unclear, but several emergency Ashmarks left the city for the surrounding dominions, calling for aid. After that came reports of the revival of one of the Silent Lords.â
Elariaâs eyes opened, bright crimson. The chamber darkened under their light. âWhich one?â
âWe donât know. But that wasnât the most important part of what was passed along.â
She looked at him, waiting.
âThe Silent Lord was destroyed,â he said.
âDestroyed?â Elariaâs brow furrowed. ââŠBy Blazegrip?â
Andrin shook his head. âNo. Not as far as I can tell. The account came through a single Ashmark sent to Karthvaleâs Chapter and relayed from there, so itâs not verified, but they mentioned the Ashborn Ascendant.â
The air thickened instantly. The Flamebearerâs gaze fixed on him. For a long moment, she didnât move. When she rose, Resonance kindled around her like the pull of a tide. She lifted a gauntlet from the floor, fastening it with a sharp motion, then the next. âHave you sent Sigilists from the Ardent Circle to scry Marrowfen?â
Andrin watched her. âI have.â
âRecall them.â
He blinked. âMay I ask why, Keeper?â
She fastened the second gauntlet, then reached for the breastplate and pauldrons, securing each clasp in turn. âTheir sight wonât be needed there. But the fronts will need them.â When the final clasp locked, she crossed the chamber to the dais. Dawnbrandâs steel came alive as she drew it, veins of trapped fire running across its surface. âSend word to Yria. Ask that she delay the Mistshroud Rite and act in my stead for the time being.â
Andrin hesitated, then froze once he realized what she meant. âYouâre going to Marrowfen yourself?â
âI am. The Firesworn are yours until I return.â
Beyond the high, open slits that sat behind her desk came a soundâdistant at first, building into a roar that spread across the sky.
Elaria moved toward the opening, pulling her scorched-weave cloak around her shoulders. Her helm locked into place last, eyes burning brighter behind the slits. As she stopped before the windows, emberlight flared across the chamber in a final pulse. Wings of ember unfurled from her cloak, scattering ash across the floor with a hiss.
Outside, a shadow swept past the spire, its shape cutting through the haze for a heartbeat before vanishing with the thunderous beat of wings.
Elaria was gone with it, leaving only the faint distortion of heat where sheâd stood. Andrin lingered at the entrance of the chamber, staring after the fading blur of motion as it vanished toward the horizon, wondering what had suddenly gotten into his Keeper.
Comments
Seeing how she is putting on all her armor, I foresee some sort of confrontation between elaria and Vera - probably because elaria is peeved that her daughter was kept from her for years.
Alek M
2025-11-11 11:19:43 +0000 UTCThat shit is not funny
Rossonious
2025-11-11 05:46:27 +0000 UTC