Long before his name is spoken by the people, a child is born beside a river already claimed by fate. Marked for leadership and shadowed by ruin, Kerreth rises to power with hope in his hands and the weight of an ancient future pressing close behind.
At his side stands Alren—protector, confidant, and the one soul sworn to stand between Kerreth and the world. Their bond is forged in youth and tested by rule, strengthened by trust, and bound by an oath that promises loyalty beyond reason.
When forgotten ruins stir and old powers awaken beneath the land, the kingdom is drawn toward something it was never meant to touch. As whispers of change ripple outward—through court and countryside alike—Alren finds himself chasing answers across a land slowly reshaped by fire and silence.
RUIN is a dark fantasy about love set against inevitability, the cost of holding power, and what remains when destiny refuses to be denied.
Some promises are strong enough to change the world.
(From the last pages of Alren’s journal, written in a hand grown unsteady)
I think this mountain has learned our names.
The stone listens when I speak to you. The dust settles differently when I say Kerreth. Sometimes, in the quiet between my breaths, I almost believe the earth remembers what you did here, that it understands why the fire was worth it.
My strength fades faster now. I can feel it in the way my hands shake when I clean your face, in the way standing leaves me breathless. The wound in my side never closed properly, but I have stopped trying to make it. Pain is simpler than hope.
You look like yourself again.
That still breaks me.
Your hair has grown softer with the days, dark with dust and shadow. Your hands are warm only because I warm them. I tell myself that matters. I tell myself you can still feel it somehow, even though I know better. Even though knowing better has never stopped me before.
I talk to you anyway.
I tell you about the army retreating. About the way the corrupted creatures fell quiet when you did—how the land itself seemed to exhale. I tell you the fire stopped spreading. That the river runs clear again. That children will grow up never knowing how close the world came to ending as if I know these things as truth.
You would have liked that.
I remember the river most.
Do you remember how cold it was the first time we swam? You complained the whole way in, and then laughed so hard when you slipped on the stones that I thought you might drown from it. You were always like that—afraid only until you chose not to be.
I think that’s what hurts the most.
You didn’t lose yourself all at once. You chose, again and again, to hold back. To wait. To love me even when loving me hurt. And when it came time to let go, you did that too—with your eyes clear and your hands steady.
I am so proud of you.
I wish I had said that more when you could hear it.
The scholars would call this place a tomb. A sealed ruin. A site of singular historical consequence. They would carve warnings into stone and argue over what name to give the crater where the Iron Root died with you.
They will never call it what it is.
This is where you chose the world over yourself.
This is where I stayed.
I told you once I would guard you even in death. I didn’t know how literal the vow would become. I suppose fate enjoys its symmetry.
My body is tired now. I don’t think I will see another sunrise from this chamber. That’s all right. I have seen enough light to last a lifetime, and most of it had your face in it.
If there is something beyond this—some quiet place where fire no longer hurts—then wait for me there. Not as a king. Not as a weapon. Just as the boy by the river who laughed too loudly and dreamed too brightly.
If there is nothing… then at least we end the same way we lived.
Together.
I am lying down beside you now. The stone is cold, but you are not. Or maybe I am imagining that too. It doesn’t matter. I will imagine you breathing as long as I can.
The moment Alren crossed the threshold of the ruins, the roar of battle behind him vanished as if cut away by a blade. The air changed—cooler, thinner, carrying the sharp tang of old stone and something metallic that caught in the back of the throat. His boots scraped against ancient steps half-choked by rubble, the echoes of his passage bending strangely, as if the walls were deciding whether to return them at all.
Light dwindled fast.
The entrance sloped downward into a vast interior hollowed long before any living kingdom had learned to name itself. Pillars rose like broken teeth from the floor, their surfaces carved with symbols worn nearly smooth by time. Veins of crystal threaded the rock, catching what little light filtered in and refracting it into fractured glimmers that skittered across the walls like nervous ghosts.
Alren slowed, hand tight on the hilt of his sword.
“Kerreth,” he called, voice rough, carrying too far and not far enough all at once.
No answer.
Only heat.
It rolled through the cavern in slow waves, a pulse felt more than heard, vibrating through stone and bone alike. Each step forward brought it stronger, heavier, until Alren’s breath came shallow and sweat slicked his palms despite the chill.
He followed the pull—not the one Kerreth felt, but his own. The terrible certainty that if he stopped moving, he would lose the last thread connecting him to the man ahead.
The ruins opened into a great central chamber.
Here, the ceiling soared beyond sight, lost in darkness. The floor fell away into a broad basin cracked and warped by seismic violence both ancient and new. At its center, the Iron Root stood embedded once more in stone, its dark surface glowing faintly from within, veins of ember-light crawling across it like living things.
And before it—
Kerreth.
He stood with his back to Alren, massive shoulders rising and falling with each labored breath. His skin burned brighter here, veins black as ink, firelight flickering beneath flesh too strained to contain it. The tusks framed his jaw fully now, no trace of the man who had once worn a crown without weight.
Yet his posture—
It was not triumphant.
It was exhausted.
“Kerreth,” Alren said again, softer.
Kerreth’s head lifted.
Slowly, he turned.
The look on his face cut deeper than any blade.
There was rage there, yes—coiled and violent and barely leashed. But beneath it lay terror. Grief. And a bone-deep weariness that spoke of holding back something far larger than any one body should bear.
“You shouldn’t have followed me,” Kerreth said.
His voice shook the chamber, echoing back warped and layered, as if the mountain itself were trying to repeat him.
Alren stepped forward anyway.
“I always do.”
Kerreth huffed a broken laugh. “Stubborn to the end.”
Alren crossed the basin slowly, carefully, each step bringing the heat closer to unbearable. His armor had cracked in places during the battle; blood dried along his temple and ribs. Every breath hurt. None of it mattered.
Alren paused. “This ends here. Between us.”
Kerreth’s eyes flicked past him, toward the distant tremors of the battle above still shaking dust from the ceiling. “They won’t stop.”
“They will if this ends.”
Kerreth’s gaze returned to the obelisk, firelight reflecting in his burning eyes. “You think killing me will end it.”
Alren swallowed. “I think losing you will.”
Silence stretched.
The Iron Root pulsed, brighter now, its inner glow syncing with Kerreth’s breath. The air grew thick, oppressive, carrying whispers at the edge of hearing—too low, too layered to be language.
Kerreth took a step back, closer to the stone.
“No,” Alren said sharply. “Don’t.”
Kerreth looked at him then, really looked, as if committing him to memory. “You said you’d stop me.”
“I said I’d try to save you.”
Kerreth’s jaw clenched. “Those are not the same thing anymore.”
The rage surged.
It came without warning this time, a violent wave that cracked the basin floor and sent Alren stumbling. Stone shattered outward from Kerreth’s feet as he roared, the sound ripping loose dust and fragments from the ceiling.
“Do you feel it?” Kerreth bellowed. “This is what it wants! This is what it’s been shaping me for!”
Alren forced himself upright, coughing, blood trickling anew from his mouth. “Then don’t give it what it wants!”
Kerreth lunged.
The speed was terrifying.
Alren barely managed to raise his sword before Kerreth struck, the impact flinging him across the stone like a discarded doll. He slammed into a pillar hard enough to crack it, pain exploding through his ribs. His sword clattered away, skidding across the floor.
Kerreth loomed over him, massive hand closing around Alren’s throat—but stopping short of crushing.
The heat burned.
Alren gasped, fingers scrabbling against Kerreth’s wrist, skin blistering where they touched.
“Say it,” Kerreth snarled, teeth bared, tusks gleaming. “Say my name again. Prove there’s something left worth holding back for.”
Alren’s vision swam.
He forced the word past the crushing heat, past the pain.
“Kerreth.”
The name landed like a strike.
Kerreth froze.
For a heartbeat, the fire dimmed.
Alren pressed on, voice shaking but relentless. “Kerreth. You’re here. You’re with me. You’ve always been.”
Kerreth’s grip loosened. His breath hitched, a sound torn from deep in his chest.
“Yes,” he whispered. “Again.”
“Kerreth,” Alren said, tears streaking through ash on his face. “I love you.”
The words echoed through the cavern, fragile and defiant.
Kerreth staggered back as if struck, releasing Alren completely. He fell to one knee, clutching his head, roaring in agony as the Iron Root flared brighter, its glow pulsing violently.
“No,” Kerreth gasped. “Don’t—don’t say it like that—”
Alren crawled toward him, dragging his broken body across the stone. “It’s the truth. It’s always been.”
Kerreth looked up.
For one perfect, devastating moment, his eyes cleared.
The black receded. The gold softened. Brown—warm, familiar brown—flickered through.
“Alren,” Kerreth breathed.
Alren reached him then, collapsing into his arms, heedless of the heat, of the danger, of everything but the man holding him.
“I’m here,” Alren sobbed. “I’m here. We can still—”
Kerreth held him carefully, impossibly gently, massive arms trembling as if they might shatter under the effort of restraint.
“I remember,” Kerreth whispered. “The river. The oath. The night we swore we’d never let the crown come between us.”
Alren clung to him, shaking. “Then come back. Please.”
Kerreth closed his eyes.
The Iron Root screamed.
The sound was not sound at all—it was pressure, a tearing sensation in the mind, a chorus of hunger and command that made the mountain groan. Fire erupted along the obelisk’s surface, veins blazing white-hot.
Kerreth cried out, arching back as the influence surged, ripping the moment apart.
Alren screamed his name again and again, trying to hold him there, trying to anchor him with love alone.
But the fire was louder now.
Kerreth tore himself free from Alren’s grasp, staggering back toward the obelisk, every step a battle. His skin glowed near white, veins blazing, tusks framing a face contorted in agony.
“I can’t,” he gasped. “It’s too much. It’s everything.”
Alren dragged himself to his feet, blood and sweat blinding him. “Then let me help you end it. Together.”
Kerreth shook his head violently. “No. This has to be me.”
He reached out, pressing one burning hand against the Iron Root.
The stone answered.
Light flared, searing, the chamber filling with heat so intense the air itself seemed to ignite. The mountain shook, cracks racing outward as ancient stone protested the strain.
Kerreth turned back to Alren one last time.
His eyes were clear.
Entirely.
“I love you,” Kerreth said.
Alren sobbed, stumbling toward him. “Don’t—please—don’t do this—”
Kerreth smiled.
The same smile he’d worn by the river, all those years ago.
“Protect them,” he said softly. “Like you promised.”
Then he turned.
He wrapped both arms around the Iron Root and let go.
The fire surged inward.
Not outward.
Kerreth screamed—not in rage, but release—as the hunger of the obelisk consumed itself, collapsing inward around the one vessel strong enough to hold it all at once.
Light blinded.
Sound vanished.
The mountain convulsed.
Alren felt himself thrown backward, body slamming into stone as the world shattered into white and heat and pain beyond comprehension.
And then—
Silence.
When Alren woke, the chamber was broken.
The ceiling had collapsed inward, sealing the basin in jagged stone and dust. The air was thick but breathable, heat fading rapidly, the oppressive pressure gone like a storm that had finally passed.
He coughed, rolling onto his side, pain screaming through every inch of him.
“Kerreth,” he croaked.
He forced himself up, vision blurring, and staggered across the rubble.
The Iron Root was gone. No, not gone. Smaller. A shell of what it once was.
Where it had stood imposing, there was only it’s shell and a vast, glassed crater in the stone— smooth, blackened, utterly inert.
At its center lay Kerreth.
He was smaller now, too.
Not the towering, burning figure from moments before, but the man Alren remembered—lean, scarred, russet skin marred by ash and cracks of cooled fire. The tusks were gone. The veins faded. His hair lay damp and dark against his brow.
He was still.
Alren fell to his knees beside him.
“No,” he whispered. “No, no, no—”
He pressed his ear to Kerreth’s chest.
There was no heartbeat. He had stopped it.
The world ended anyway.
Alren screamed then, a sound torn from his soul, echoing uselessly through the ruined chamber. He gathered Kerreth’s body into his arms, cradling him as if he could somehow pull life back through sheer will.
“I’m here,” he sobbed. “I’m here. You’re not allowed to leave me like this.”
Kerreth did not answer.
Alren rocked back and forth, clutching him, tears soaking ash and stone alike. His own injuries went unnoticed, blood seeping, ribs cracked, strength failing.
He did not care.
Hours passed.
Maybe days.
He would not leave.
He cleaned the blood from Kerreth’s face with trembling hands. He laid his cloak over him, tucking it around his shoulders like a blanket. He pressed his forehead to Kerreth’s and whispered everything he had never said when there was time.
“I’ll stay,” he promised hoarsely. “I’ll protect you. This place. This… grave. I swore.”
The mountain was quiet.
The fire was gone.
And Alren remained, broken and faithful to the last, keeping vigil over the man who had burned the world to save it—until there was nothing left of either of them but ash, oath, and memory.
There was no trumpet call, no cry of omen in the sky. The sun rose pale and distant behind a veil of ash that thinned the light into something anemic and wrong, painting the land in muted golds and bruised grays. The air smelled of iron and smoke long before the first blade was drawn.
Alren stood at the front of the assembled force and did not speak at first.
They had gathered in the low valley south of the broken hills, where the grass still grew in ragged patches and the earth bore only the early scars of fire. Banners stirred weakly in the morning wind—river-blue, black and gold, sigils once sworn in loyalty to a crown that now burned its way northward.
Men and women stood shoulder to shoulder, armor strapped tight, faces set in expressions that wavered between resolve and grief. Many of them had followed Kerreth once. Some had been saved by his laws, fed by his reforms, lifted by his mercy. They carried that history with them now, heavy as any shield.
Alren turned slowly, letting his gaze pass over them all.
He saw fear.
He saw anger.
He saw love.
And beneath it all, the terrible, steady willingness to do what had to be done.
“We march,” Alren said at last, his voice carrying without effort. It had learned how to command somewhere between heartbreak and resolve. “Not for conquest. Not for vengeance. We march to stop what cannot be allowed to continue.”
A murmur rippled through the ranks.
“You will see things today that should not exist,” he continued. “You will be asked to raise your weapons against what looks like beasts—and against what looks like a king.”
He swallowed once, then went on.
“Do not hesitate when the moment comes. And do not forget who he was.”
The silence that followed was absolute.
Then Alren turned north, lifted his sword—not in challenge, but in direction—and began to walk.
The army followed.
They met the corrupted land by midmorning.
The first sign was the trees.
They leaned inward toward the road, trunks warped, bark split and blackened in branching patterns that mirrored the dark veins Alren had memorized beneath Kerreth’s skin. Leaves hung shriveled and brittle despite the season, edges glowing faintly as if singed from within.
Then came the animals.
The deer emerged first.
They should have fled at the sound of marching feet. Instead, they stood at the tree line, watching. Their bodies were elongated, joints bent at wrong angles, ribs visible beneath hide stretched too tight. Their eyes burned with a dull, feverish gold, and blackened veins webbed across their flanks. Antlers twisted into jagged spirals that scraped against branches as they moved.
One stepped forward.
Then another.
Alren raised his hand.
The line halted.
The deer screamed.
It was not a sound meant for a living throat—too deep, too raw, carrying with it a pressure that made men flinch and horses rear. The scream echoed across the valley, and from the forest beyond came answering cries.
Hogs burst from the underbrush next, massive and misshapen, tusks grown long and curved like ivory scythes, hides cracked and oozing heat. Wolves followed, their forms stretched and muscled beyond nature, jaws splitting too wide as blackened saliva steamed where it hit the ground.
They did not charge at once.
They waited.
Alren felt it then, the presence pressing down on the battlefield like a hand on the back of his neck.
Kerreth.
Somewhere ahead, unseen, he was watching.
“Archers,” Alren called calmly. “Loose.”
The first arrows flew.
They struck true, burying themselves in corrupted flesh, punching through hide and bone. But where the creatures fell, the ground hissed, heat flaring as if the land itself rejected the corpses.
Then the beasts charged.
The battle broke open like a wound.
Steel rang against tusk and claw. Men shouted and screamed as corrupted bodies slammed into shield walls with unnatural force. Hogs plowed through ranks, sending soldiers flying. Wolves leapt impossibly high, jaws snapping, eyes burning.
Alren fought at the front, blade moving with practiced precision, each strike clean and deliberate. He did not let himself think of what the animals had once been. He did not let himself imagine them grazing peacefully in river meadows, hunted by children and seasons rather than fire.
He fought because he had to.
The corrupted creatures did not retreat.
They only fell—or kept coming.
Somewhere above the chaos, a sound rose that did not belong to beast or man.
A roar.
The ground shuddered.
The corrupted animals surged forward all at once, as if pulled by a single will, throwing themselves into the army with renewed ferocity. Soldiers staggered, ranks breaking, the line buckling under the weight of it.
Alren felt it like a hook in his chest.
“Hold!” he shouted. “Hold the line!”
He cut down a wolf mid-leap, the blade sinking deep into its neck, heat flaring around the wound. The body collapsed at his feet, twitching, eyes still glowing even as life left it.
The roar came again, closer now.
The beasts began to fall back, not in fear, but in obedience, parting as something massive moved through the trees.
Kerreth emerged from the forest like a living catastrophe.
He was larger still than Alren remembered from the night before, his frame filling the space between the trees as if the land itself bent to accommodate him. His skin glowed with internal fire, veins black and branching, tusks fully curved and gleaming. His eyes burned like twin suns set in shadow, gold light spilling from them with every movement.
The Iron Root dragged behind him, bound by chains now fused and blackened, carving a deep groove in the earth. It pulsed faintly, answering his presence like a heart recognizing its owner.
The army faltered.
Some fell to their knees.
Others backed away, weapons shaking.
Alren stepped forward.
“Hold,” he said again, softer now, but no less commanding. “That is still our king.”
Kerreth stopped at the edge of the battlefield, surveying the destruction with an expression that flickered between sorrow and something colder.
“So,” he rumbled, voice carrying effortlessly over the noise. “You came.”
Alren met his gaze across the churned earth and fallen bodies. “I said I would.”
Kerreth’s mouth twisted, almost a smile. “You brought an army.”
“I brought hope,” Alren said. “They chose to follow.”
Kerreth’s eyes swept the ranks. “They should have stayed home.”
“They would have died anyway,” Alren replied. “If not today, then tomorrow. This ends here.”
Kerreth laughed once—a sound like stone grinding under pressure. “It doesn’t end. It moves.”
He lifted one massive hand.
The ground cracked.
From the fissures, more corrupted creatures clawed their way free—half-formed, wrong, dragged upward by heat and hunger. The air filled with screams again as the army braced.
Alren raised his sword.
“Forward!”
The clash that followed was chaos.
The army surged, steel meeting flesh and flame. Corrupted beasts fell and rose again, dragged by invisible will until their bodies were torn beyond movement. Soldiers fought with grim determination, shouting names, prayers, curses—anything to keep themselves human in the face of it.
Alren cut his way forward, driven by something deeper than orders.
Kerreth moved like a god among them.
He did not strike indiscriminately. He swatted aside lines of men, sending them sprawling but alive. When he struck, it was precise—walls shattered, siege shields split, earth cracked open beneath his feet.
“Stop this!” Alren shouted, ducking beneath a sweeping arm that cracked stone where it struck. “You don’t have to do this!”
Kerreth turned toward him fully, eyes blazing. “You don’t understand what I’m holding back!”
“Then let it go!” Alren shouted back. “Let me carry it with you!”
Kerreth roared and slammed his fist into the ground, a shockwave rippling outward that sent Alren skidding across the dirt, armor screaming as it scraped against stone. He rolled to his feet just in time to see Kerreth wrench the Iron Root free from the earth and hurl it aside.
The obelisk struck the mountainside with a sound like the world breaking, embedding itself deep in stone, the mountain splintering and cracking beneath its influence, almost as if sucking it deeper into the stone…
For a moment, everything stilled.
Kerreth stood, chest heaving, fire raging uncontrolled now, the land around him cracking and sagging under the strain.
Alren rose slowly, blood trickling from a cut at his brow, eyes never leaving Kerreth’s face.
“This isn’t you,” Alren said quietly.
Kerreth looked at him.
For a heartbeat, something human flickered there.
Then Kerreth turned.
He ran.
Not away from Alren, but past him, toward the mountain where ancient ruins yawned open like a waiting mouth. Each step shook the ground, sending debris cascading down the slopes. He reached the stone face and began to climb, tearing handholds from solid rock, moving with desperate purpose.
Alren did not hesitate.
He just bolted, running after him, boots pounding against stone, breath burning in his chest.
Behind them, the battlefield raged on—steel and fire and screams echoing across the valley.
Ahead, the mountain rose, ancient and scarred, its depths hiding ruins older than any crown or prophecy.
Kerreth vanished into the shadowed opening.
Alren followed.
Because this had never been a war meant for armies.
It had always been meant to end with two men, a mountain, and the truth waiting in the dark.
Alren rode into Highreach at dusk, and the city received him like a wound reopening.
The gates parted at his approach, iron groaning, torchlight flaring against stone, and for a moment the familiar towers and banners felt unreal, like scenery from a life he had already lived and lost. The river below the walls caught the last of the sun and flung it back in ragged gold, as if the water itself were trying to remember what peace looked like.
People had gathered without being told to.
They stood along the road in knots and clusters, faces turned toward him, eyes searching his posture for answers he did not yet have the courage to give. Guards straightened as he passed. A few bowed. Some did not. No one cheered.
Alren felt the weight of it settle across his shoulders heavier than any armor.
He dismounted in the outer courtyard and stood there for a long moment, hands still on the reins, breathing in the smell of the city—stone dust, oil smoke, river damp, bread cooling somewhere nearby. Ordinary life. The kind that depended on the world not ending tomorrow.
He let go of the reins and turned.
“Summon the captains,” he said to the nearest guard. “All of them. And the river-commanders. And the old banners.”
The guard hesitated. “Protector—”
“I know,” Alren said quietly. “Do it anyway.”
Word moved fast after that.
It always did, when fear had already prepared the ground.
By full dark, the war hall was filled.
Not packed—no shouting, no press of bodies—but occupied with the steady, deliberate presence of people who understood what it meant to be called this way. Veterans with scars old enough to be pale. Young officers still wearing the shapes of their training. River-scouts with weathered faces and quiet eyes. Knights who had sworn their oaths to Kerreth and still wore his sigil over their hearts.
Alren stood at the head of the long table, hands braced against the wood, the torches casting his shadow long and broken across the floor.
For a moment, he could not speak.
Because if he did, it would become real.
Finally, he lifted his head.
“You all know what’s happening,” he said.
A murmur passed through the room—not disagreement, but recognition. They did. They had heard the stories. They had seen the smoke on the horizon. Some had lost kin already.
“The king has fallen under the influence of the Iron Root,” Alren continued, each word measured, precise, as if careful speech might hold the world together a little longer. “He is not dead. He is not gone. But he is no longer safe to leave unchecked.”
A hand rose from the far end of the table. Captain Edrin, gray at the temples, voice rough. “You’re saying we march against our own.”
Alren met his gaze. “I’m saying we march for them.”
Silence settled again, heavier now.
Another voice, younger, rawer. “Can he be saved?”
Alren closed his eyes for half a breath.
“I don’t know,” he said honestly. “But I know what happens if we do nothing.”
No one argued with that.
The planning took hours.
Maps were unrolled. Routes traced. Scouts assigned. Signals agreed upon. They spoke of supply lines and terrain and contingencies, but every plan bent around a single, unspoken truth: they were preparing to face something that had once been a man they loved.
Alren listened. Adjusted. Decided.
All the while, regret threaded through him like a second pulse.
If I had seen it sooner. If I had stopped the expedition. If I had forced him to rest. If I had broken my oath and bound him before the fire did.
Each thought cut cleanly, and he let them, because pain was better than numbness.
By the time the hall emptied, the sky outside the high windows had gone black, stars sharp and distant.
Alren did not go to his chambers.
He went instead to the old chapel beneath the keep—the one no longer used for ceremony, only for quiet. Candles burned low along the walls, their flames small and stubborn. Stone worn smooth by generations of knees and hands held the chill of the earth.
He knelt there alone.
Not to pray.
Just to breathe.
When he stood again, resolve had settled into him like bone setting after a break—still aching, but firm.
He left the city before midnight.
Kerreth waited where the land rose into broken hills and old scars split the stone like remembered pain.
The army made camp miles back, silent and dark, fires banked low. Alren went alone, cloak wrapped tight, sword at his back, every step guided by a pull he no longer tried to deny.
He found Kerreth standing at the edge of a shallow ravine, the Iron Root planted upright beside him like a watchful sentinel.
The night bent around Kerreth.
Heat shimmered faintly in the air. Ash drifted though nothing burned. His silhouette was immense now, shoulders broad enough to block the stars behind him, tusks catching moonlight like pale hooks. The gold of his eyes glowed steadily in the dark, framed by blackened sclera that swallowed reflection.
And still—
Still he stood with his head bowed slightly, as if listening.
“Kerreth,” Alren said.
Kerreth turned at once.
There was no surprise in his face.
“You came back,” Kerreth said softly.
“I never left,” Alren replied.
They stood facing one another across cracked stone and the low sigh of wind through broken grass. For a long moment, neither moved. The night seemed to hold its breath with them.
“You brought them,” Kerreth said at last.
“Yes.”
Kerreth nodded once. “I felt it. The land stiffened. Like it knows what’s coming.”
Alren stepped closer, stopping just outside the radius of heat that radiated from Kerreth’s body. “It doesn’t have to be this way.”
Kerreth let out a breath that fogged, then vanished. “It always was.”
Kerreth’s mouth curved in something that might once have been a smile. “You always believed words could change the shape of things.”
“They can,” Alren said. “They already have. Look at you—you’re still choosing restraint. Still standing here instead of burning the valley to ash.”
Kerreth’s hands flexed at his sides, fingers digging into stone without meaning to. The rock cracked softly under the pressure.
“Because you asked me to,” Kerreth said. “Because as long as you speak, it listens.”
Alren swallowed hard. “Then come with me. Now. We’ll turn around. We’ll go anywhere but forward.”
Kerreth shook his head slowly. “There is no away from this.”
“There is,” Alren insisted. “There’s me. There’s the city. There’s the river. There’s the life we built.”
Kerreth stepped closer, and the heat washed over Alren like standing too near a forge. “Say my name,” Kerreth whispered.
Alren frowned. “I just did.”
“No,” Kerreth said, voice tightening. “Say it like before. Say it like you mean me.”
Alren’s chest hitched. He took another step forward, ignoring the burn against his skin. “Kerreth.”
The name carried everything—riverlight and laughter, oaths whispered in the dark, the weight of a crown placed with trembling hands.
Kerreth shuddered.
For a moment—just a moment—the fire dimmed. His shoulders sagged. His eyes flickered, gold fading toward brown.
“Yes,” Kerreth breathed. “Again.”
Alren’s voice broke. “Kerreth. Come back to me.”
Kerreth’s hands came up, clutching at his own chest as if holding something in place. “Again,” he pleaded, desperation raw and naked now. “Please. Say it again.”
Alren did, over and over, the name a litany, a spell, a lifeline thrown into deep water. Each time, Kerreth answered—jaw clenched, breath ragged, eyes fighting their own light.
But the Iron Root pulsed beside them, faint and steady, like a heart that did not care how loudly it was contradicted.
The ground trembled.
Kerreth cried out, a sound torn from deep in his chest, and staggered back a step, one hand slamming against the obelisk as if to brace himself.
“No,” he gasped. “It’s not— it’s not working anymore.”
Alren reached for him, fingers brushing burning skin. “It is. You’re here. I see you.”
Kerreth looked at him then, really looked—eyes blazing, tears evaporating as they fell.
“I can’t hear you over it anymore,” Kerreth said, voice breaking. “Your voice…it used to be louder.”
Alren felt something in him give way.
“Then let me stay,” he said hoarsely. “Let me be here until the end. Don’t make me do this.”
Kerreth’s expression twisted with pain so deep it hollowed his features. “If you stay,” he said, “I will lose the last thing that makes me hesitate.”
Alren shook his head. “You won’t hurt me.”
Kerreth’s gaze dropped—to Alren’s hands, his chest, his throat.
“That’s what I’m afraid of,” Kerreth said.
The fire surged.
Not outward—not yet—but inward, coiling, pressing, demanding release. The ravine walls cracked, stones skittering down into darkness. The obelisk thrummed, low and hungry.
Kerreth roared, a sound torn between rage and grief, and fell to one knee, fist slamming into the ground hard enough to split it.
Alren knelt with him, uncaring of the heat, gripping Kerreth’s shoulders. “Fight it,” he begged. “Just a little longer. For me.”
Kerreth lifted his head.
The gold in his eyes burned brighter than ever.
“I am fighting it,” he said. “This is me fighting.”
Something inside Alren went terribly still.
Kerreth’s voice softened, layered now with something final. “Alren… listen to me.”
Alren leaned closer.
“I am gone,” Kerreth said. “And if you keep trying to pull me back, it will only teach it how to wear my face better.”
Alren’s vision blurred.
Kerreth reached out, cupping Alren’s cheek with a hand that trembled despite its strength. The touch was careful, reverent, as if he feared breaking something precious.
“You have to stop me,” Kerreth whispered. “Before there’s nothing left of the man you loved.”
Alren covered Kerreth’s hand with his own, tears finally spilling. “I don’t want a world where stopping you is my only choice.”
Kerreth leaned forward, resting his massive forehead against Alren’s. “Neither do I.”
They stayed like that for a long, shuddering moment, breath mingling, heat and grief and love bound together.
Then Alren pulled back.
Slowly. Deliberately.
“If I leave now,” Alren said, voice steadier than he felt, “it’s because I believe there’s still a piece of you worth fighting for.”
Kerreth nodded. “There is.”
“And if I come at dawn,” Alren continued, “I won’t hold back.”
Kerreth’s mouth curved in something like pride. “I wouldn’t respect you if you did.”
Alren stood.
The distance between them felt infinite.
“War begins at break of dawn,” Alren said.
Kerreth straightened, towering once more, fire coiling tight beneath his skin. He rested one hand against the Iron Root, claiming it fully.
“I’ll be waiting,” Kerreth said.
Alren turned away before he could change his mind.
He walked back toward the dark line of his army, each step a vow carved into bone.
Behind him, Kerreth watched until the night swallowed Alren’s shape entirely.
Then he turned north, fire in his veins and the weight of the world dragging behind him, and waited for the sun.
That was how it felt, at least, like the land itself had thinned, stretched taut between what had been and what could no longer be undone. The hills rose higher here, jagged and bare, their stone faces split by ancient faults and newer wounds. Nothing grew easily. What trees remained were twisted and scorched on one side, leaning away from a path that had become unmistakable.
The path of fire.
Alren had learned to read it the way he once read battlefields: the direction of shattered stone, the scorch patterns where heat had lingered too long, the places where the ground had softened and re-hardened under immense weight. He no longer needed villagers’ whispers or smoke on the horizon. His body knew when Kerreth was near.
The air changed first.
It thickened, growing heavy with heat and iron. The wind carried ash even where nothing burned. Alren slowed, hand resting on the hilt of his sword, heart pounding not with fear, but with a terrible, aching hope.
He crested a ridge just as the sun dipped low, staining the sky in bruised purples and burning gold.
Kerreth stood below.
He was no longer dragging the obelisk.
It stood upright beside him now, planted into cracked stone as if the earth itself had parted to receive it. The Iron Root looked almost small against Kerreth’s towering form—dark, angular, silent. Its surface drank the fading light, edges blurring as if the air around it bent.
Kerreth stood with his back half-turned, massive shoulders bare where his clothing had finally failed him. Tattered remnants of royal fabric hung from his waist and arms, scorched and torn. His skin glowed faintly, veins dark and branching like a map written in ink and fire. The tusks were fully formed now, curving from his jaw with cruel elegance.
And still—
Still he stood like a man at rest, one hand braced against the obelisk, head bowed slightly as if listening to something only he could hear.
Alren stopped breathing.
“Kerreth,” he said.
The name cracked the air.
Kerreth stiffened.
For a long, awful moment, Alren thought he would not turn, that this would be another passing, another refusal. But slowly, heavily, Kerreth faced him.
His eyes burned.
Not wildly. Not mindlessly.
They burned with recognition.
“Alren,” Kerreth said, voice deep enough to vibrate in Alren’s bones.
Alren took a step forward before he could stop himself. Then another. Heat pressed against him like a living thing, sweat breaking instantly across his skin.
“You’re still running,” Alren said, breathless. “You always did hate standing still.”
Kerreth huffed out something like a laugh. “I’m not running. I’m going where this ends.”
“That doesn’t sound like you.”
Kerreth’s gaze flicked briefly to the obelisk, then back to Alren. “It is.”
Alren shook his head, the denial rising fast and desperate. “No. No, it isn’t. You don’t know that. We can go back. We can—” He swallowed hard. “We can still try.”
Kerreth took a step closer.
The ground cracked under his weight.
“You saw the temple,” Kerreth said quietly. “You saw what happens to anything that tries to cage this.”
“We didn’t know enough then,” Alren shot back. “We know more now. The scholars, the clerics—”
“They’re afraid,” Kerreth interrupted. “And they should be.”
Alren closed the distance until the heat was unbearable, until standing this close felt like defiance of the world itself. He did not care.
“You are not a thing to be contained,” Alren said fiercely. “You’re not some cursed relic. You’re a man. My king. My—” His voice broke. “My home.”
Kerreth’s expression twisted, something raw surfacing beneath the fire. “That’s exactly why you have to go.”
“No.” Alren reached out, fingers brushing Kerreth’s arm. The heat burned, but he did not pull back. “You don’t get to decide this alone.”
Kerreth flinched at the touch.
Not in pain.
In restraint.
“I am holding it back,” Kerreth said, each word measured like a blade laid carefully on a table. “Every moment you stand here, it takes more effort not to let it loose.”
“Then let me help you carry it,” Alren whispered. “Like I always have.”
Kerreth’s jaw clenched, tusks catching the last light of the sun. “You already are. And it’s killing you.”
Alren laughed, sharp and almost hysterical. “That’s what you think?”
Kerreth’s eyes flared brighter.
“I know,” he growled. The word carried weight now—authority, command, something that made the air shudder. “I can feel what this wants. It doesn’t just want me. It wants everything around me to break so it can be the only thing left standing.”
Alren’s hands curled into fists. “Then fight it.”
“I am.”
“Harder!”
The rage surged then—not outward, but inward, shaking Kerreth’s frame as he struggled to contain it. The ground trembled beneath them, pebbles skittering, cracks racing through stone.
“You think I haven’t tried?” Kerreth roared.
The sound hit Alren like a physical blow, knocking the air from his lungs. He staggered back a step, heart hammering.
Kerreth caught himself instantly, chest heaving, eyes wide with horror at what he’d nearly done.
“I’m sorry,” he said, voice shaking. “Gods—I’m sorry.”
Alren straightened slowly, anger rising to meet the fear. “You don’t get to apologize and then tell me to leave.”
Kerreth’s hands clenched, fingers digging into his own palms hard enough that blood welled. And steamed.
“If you stay,” Kerreth said, “I will lose you.”
“You don’t know that.”
Kerreth stepped closer again, towering now, firelight flickering across his skin. “I do. Because every time I see you, it reminds me of what I was. And the closer you stand, the louder it screams for me to tear that memory apart.”
Alren’s breath hitched.
“Go,” Kerreth said, voice breaking. “Please.”
Silence stretched between them, heavy and unbearable.
Alren shook his head slowly. “Come back with me.”
Kerreth closed his eyes.
“Come back,” Alren begged, the word tearing loose from his chest. “We’ll find a way. I don’t care how long it takes. I don’t care what it costs. We’ll lock the gates, burn the roads, disappear if we have to. Just…come home.”
Kerreth opened his eyes again.
There were tears there, evaporating almost as soon as they fell.
“I can’t,” he said. “There is no home left for me.”
“Yes there is,” Alren insisted. “I’m standing right here.”
The rage answered before Kerreth could stop it.
It surged outward, not in flame but in force—a wave of pressure that knocked Alren backward, slamming him into stone hard enough to drive the breath from his lungs. He hit the ground, pain blooming across his ribs.
Kerreth froze, horror etched across his burning face.
“I told you to go,” he whispered.
Alren lay there gasping, staring up at the sky gone dark with night. Something inside him finally cracked—not hope, not love, but the last fragile belief that this could be turned back with words alone.
He pushed himself to his feet slowly, ignoring the pain.
“You don’t get to decide when I stop loving you,” Alren said hoarsely. “But you do get to decide when you become a threat to everyone else.”
Kerreth stared at him, understanding dawning like a second fire.
“You’d raise a blade against me.”
Alren met his gaze, tears falling unchecked now. “I’d raise an army.”
The words hung between them, irrevocable.
Kerreth nodded once, slow and heavy. “Then I really have lost.”
He turned away, gripping the obelisk’s rope once more.
Alren did not follow this time.
He watched Kerreth disappear into the dark, each step shaking the ground, until the heat faded and the night grew cold again.
Only then did Alren turn south.
Back toward Highreach.
Back toward banners and steel and vows he had prayed never to invoke.
As he walked, his grief hardened into resolve, into something sharp enough to cut destiny itself if it had to.
I will stop you, he thought, every step a promise. Even if it breaks us both.
I do not know how many days it has been since I left Highreach.
Time has become something else—measured not in hours but in distance between what he was and what he leaves behind. I follow a road that does not curve so much as burn, and every mile tells me I am both closer to him and farther from any ending I recognize.
I tell myself I am tracking a man.
I tell myself this because the alternative is unbearable.
Villages do not burn all at once. They blister. They smoke. They crack and weep and then harden into shapes that remember their former lives the way bones remember flesh. I arrive too late to save anyone, but early enough to smell him in the air—heat, iron, scorched stone. I know his path not because it is hidden, but because it is obvious. The land cannot forget him even if it wants to.
I still write his name as Kerreth.
I am not ready to surrender that yet.
The western temple is gone. Not razed. Not collapsed. Cored. As if something passed through it and took the center with it, leaving the walls to bow inward in grief. The priests are dead. Some burned. Some crushed. Some—emptied. I do not know how else to describe it.
The obelisk is missing.
I do not write stolen.
I write missing….taken back.
I saw him there, from the ridge. Only for a moment. Only enough to ruin me. He dragged the obelisk behind him like a burden he had accepted willingly, the stone bound with rope and iron. It is smaller than the legends would have you believe. Smaller than fear. Only a few feet long. The size of a child.
That is the cruelest part.
It does not loom.
It follows.
I called his name.
He did not turn.
I am afraid that if he does, I will not survive the answer.
I will keep going.
I have no other oath left.
The journal ended there for that day, the ink trailing off into a ragged tear where the page had been ripped and pressed back into place. Alren tucked it into his coat and tightened the straps across his chest, the leather stiff with ash and old sweat. His boots crunched over ground that had once been a courtyard, stones cracked and blackened, the outline of a fountain still visible beneath a layer of soot.
The temple had been beautiful once.
White stone, veined with gold, smooth beneath the hands of generations who had come seeking mercy or meaning. Now the stones were scorched and warped, some fused together by heat so intense it had softened the rock like wax. The air still shimmered faintly, as if the violence had not fully finished echoing.
Alren moved through the ruins slowly, reverently, as if through a grave.
He knelt beside a fallen column and touched it with his bare hand. The stone was still warm.
Not hot.
Warm.
As if remembering.
He stood again and followed the trail west, then north, then west again. Kerreth did not move in straight lines anymore. He moved as if pulled by something beneath the skin of the world, veering suddenly, carving new paths through places that had never known roads.
Alren passed a farmhouse where the roof had collapsed inward, beams burned through at the center. He found scorch marks shaped like hands on the stone hearth, fingers splayed too wide to be human. He found hoofprints fused into the earth where livestock had tried to flee and failed.
He did not find bodies everywhere.
That was worse.
In one village, the people had fled early enough to survive. They watched Alren from doorways and cellars with wide, hollow eyes. A woman with ash-streaked cheeks clutched her child so tightly the boy whimpered.
“He went that way,” she whispered before Alren could ask, pointing with a shaking hand. “He didn’t look at us. He just…passed through.”
Alren nodded his thanks and left before his presence could frighten them further. He did not tell them who the man was. He did not tell them he loved him.
He did not tell them he was still alive because that felt like a lie he could not afford to spread.
The land changed as he followed.
Fields gave way to scorched earth. Rivers steamed faintly where something hot had crossed them, stones cracked along the banks. Trees were stripped of bark, blackened down one side as if they had turned to shield something and failed.
At night, Alren camped where he could, though sleep came only in fragments. He dreamed of fire licking along his ribs, of hands too large to be gentle, of a voice calling his name from beneath the earth.
He woke each time with his hand on his sword.
On the seventh night, he found the drag marks clearly for the first time.
Two grooves cut into the ground, shallow but unmistakable, running between shattered stones and uprooted brush. Rope fibers lay snapped and fused along the path, their ends curled and brittle. The obelisk had been pulled here—not thrown, not carried in fury, but towed, methodical and relentless.
Alren followed the marks until the ground rose into a low ridge. From there, he saw the valley below.
It was still burning.
Not in flame, but in heat. The earth glowed faintly in places, seams of orange light tracing cracks like veins beneath skin. Smoke curled lazily upward, unhurried, as if it had nowhere else to be.
At the valley’s center, something dark and upright stood half-buried in the ground.
The obelisk.
And beside it—
Kerreth.
Alren dropped to one knee without thinking, heart slamming so hard he thought it might tear free of his chest. He pressed his hand to the earth, steadying himself, eyes locked on the figure below.
Kerreth was enormous now.
Not monstrous—not yet—but changed beyond denial. His shoulders were broader than any man Alren had ever seen, his silhouette heavy and powerful, the curve of tusks visible even at this distance when he turned his head. His skin glowed faintly, heat shimmering around him like a mirage. Dark veins traced his arms and neck in branching patterns that looked almost deliberate, as if drawn there by design rather than chance.
His eyes—
Even from afar, Alren could see them catch the light.
Gold.
Burning.
Kerreth stood with one hand resting on the obelisk, fingers spread wide against its dark surface.
Alren’s breath caught painfully.
He waited for Kerreth to scream. To rage. To destroy.
Instead, Kerreth knelt.
He pressed his forehead to the stone, shoulders shaking once—not with violence, but with something that looked perilously like grief.
Alren bit down hard enough to taste blood.
“Stay,” he whispered to the wind. “Just…stay.”
He did not move.
He watched until the sun dipped lower and shadows lengthened. He watched until Kerreth rose again, hitched the rope over one massive shoulder, and began walking north once more, dragging the obelisk behind him with a patience that felt infinitely worse than wrath.
Alren followed after dark.
He did not call out.
Not yet.
The destruction grew heavier as the days passed. It became less accidental, more directional. Where Kerreth walked, the land broke. Where he paused, things ended. Alren found a caravan overturned and burned, wheels melted into the road. He found a watchtower split cleanly in half, stone sheared as if by pressure rather than impact.
He found no bodies there either.
Kerreth was not killing indiscriminately.
That terrified him more than slaughter would have.
At a crossroads, Alren found signs of battle—scorched ground, scattered weapons, blood soaked deep into the dirt. He knelt and examined the marks carefully.
The guards had stood their ground.
Kerreth had not stopped.
Alren closed his eyes.
“I taught you better than this,” he murmured, then hated himself for the thought. Kerreth was not a student. He had never been. He had always chosen his own path.
Alren had simply believed he would choose them.
He began to hear stories before he arrived at places.
People spoke of a king of fire. Of a crowned beast dragging a stone that screamed when the ground broke. Of a presence that made the air taste like metal and ash.
Some called him a god.
Others called him the end.
Alren called him by name in his head until it hurt too much to continue.
One night, as Alren camped near the edge of a ravine, he woke to the sound of movement not his own. He rolled to his feet, blade in hand, heart pounding.
The obelisk stood at the far edge of the firelight.
Not moving.
Waiting.
And much, much larger now. As if growing the same way Kerreth had.
Alren froze, every instinct screaming.
Then Kerreth stepped into the light behind it.
Up close, there was no mistaking the scale of him now. He filled the space like a mountain fills a horizon, heat rolling off him in waves. His eyes glowed like embers banked behind glass. His tusks curved upward from his jaw, smooth and pale, terrible in their inevitability.
He looked at Alren.
Recognition flickered.
“Alren,” Kerreth said.
The voice was deeper, layered, resonant—but it was his.
Alren’s knees nearly gave out.
“You left,” Alren said hoarsely, sword lowering without conscious thought. “You didn’t say—”
“I couldn’t,” Kerreth interrupted. His hand flexed at his side, fingers curling slowly, deliberately. “If I had stayed, I would have burned you with me.”
Alren laughed once, sharp and broken. “You already are.”
Kerreth’s expression twisted—pain, regret, something darker threading beneath it. “I’m trying to keep it contained.”
Alren took a step closer despite the heat. “Then let me help you.”
Kerreth shook his head. “You can’t follow me where this goes.”
“I already am,” Alren said.
For a long moment, they stared at one another across the firelight and the stone that pulsed faintly between them.
Then Kerreth turned.
“I won’t hurt you,” he said quietly. “That’s the only promise I can still keep.”
He hitched the rope over his shoulder and walked away into the dark.
Alren did not follow immediately.
He stood there shaking, grief and fury and love warring in his chest until he thought he might tear apart from the inside.
Then he sheathed his sword.
Picked up his pack.
And followed anyway.
Because fate might be a road written in stone.
But Alren had spent his life learning how to walk roads meant to break men.
And he would walk this one to the end—even if the end was fire.
Not all at once. Not dramatically. If anyone had been asked when it began, no one would have been able to answer cleanly. It was a gradual narrowing, fewer public appearances, shorter councils, more decisions delivered through sealed writs rather than spoken from the throne.
He still ruled.
But he no longer stood among them.
The court adjusted the way it always did: quietly, nervously, with a hundred small accommodations no one acknowledged aloud. Chairs were reinforced. Doorways were widened under the guise of “renovation.” Meetings were moved to larger chambers with higher ceilings and fewer fragile things.
Alren noticed everything.
He noticed how courtiers flinched when Kerreth’s shadow crossed them. How laughter fell silent mid-breath. How the guards had begun to stand just a little farther back—not out of defiance, but instinct.
Kerreth noticed too.
“They’re afraid,” he said one evening, standing at the window while the city glowed below in lantern-light. His massive frame blocked half the view now, shoulders broad enough that the window seemed built for someone else.
“They’re uncertain,” Alren corrected, though the lie tasted thin.
Kerreth huffed softly. “That’s fear with better manners.”
Alren said nothing.
Because what haunted him more than the people’s reaction was Kerreth’s restraint.
The rage no longer came in flashes.
It simmered.
Alren could feel it when he stood near—heat coiled tight beneath skin, pressure behind every movement, a presence like a held breath waiting to be released. Kerreth fought it constantly, jaw clenched, hands flexing, voice carefully moderated as if each word were weighed before being allowed to exist.
He was winning.
That was the terrifying part.
Winning took effort.
And effort could fail.
The court pressed Alren in private.
Not directly. Never accusing. But questions gathered around him like crows.
“How long do you expect His Grace to continue like this?”
“Is it wise for him to see petitioners alone?”
“Should regency be… discussed?”
Alren answered them all the same way: with calm, clipped assurance and an undercurrent of steel that made further probing uncomfortable.
“The king is capable.”
For now.
The scholars pressed too.
Their conclusions had hardened from speculation into certainty, and certainty into dread.
“This influence does not plateau,” Liand said quietly during one late-night meeting, eyes sunken, hands shaking slightly as he turned a page. “It escalates. Always.”
“The obelisk was never meant to be carried,” Soryn added. “Nor guarded by mortal flesh.”
Alren stood with his hands braced on the table. “You’re saying nothing we don’t already know.”
Maris swallowed. “We are saying it will not stop.”
Silence.
Alren straightened slowly. “Then you find me a way to slow it.”
The clerics exchanged looks.
“That may already be beyond us,” Fenton said gently.
Alren’s voice hardened. “Then expand your understanding.”
They did not argue.
The first time Kerreth failed to contain the rage, it happened in private.
That, somehow, made it worse.
A messenger arrived with news of a border skirmish—minor, contained, nothing that warranted more than a measured response. Kerreth listened, pacing slowly, heat rolling off him in waves Alren could feel from across the room.
The messenger finished speaking.
Kerreth stopped.
Something snapped.
The air seemed to compress, like the moment before lightning breaks. Kerreth turned, eyes blazing gold against black, and slammed his fist into the stone wall beside the throne.
The sound was deafening.
Stone exploded outward, fragments skittering across the floor like shrapnel. The wall cracked deep, fissures racing outward from the impact point.
The messenger screamed.
Kerreth stared at his own hand.
Blood beaded across his knuckles—but it steamed as it fell, evaporating before it hit the floor.
“I didn’t mean—” His breath hitched. “I didn’t—”
Alren was there instantly, grabbing Kerreth’s wrist despite the heat, forcing his hand away from the wall.
“Kerreth,” he said, fierce and grounding. “Look at me.”
Kerreth did.
For a moment, the fire receded.
Then shame flooded in behind it.
“I’m losing control,” Kerreth whispered.
Alren cupped his face, thumbs pressing hard along the line of his jaw, right where the tusks curved beneath skin now hardened and unfamiliar. “You stopped,” he said. “That matters.”
Kerreth shook his head. “Not enough.”
After that, Kerreth stopped leaving his chambers unless absolutely necessary.
He issued orders from behind closed doors. He declined audiences. He let Alren stand between him and the world, a shield that felt thinner every day.
At night, the dreams returned.
Fire. Stone. Hunger without appetite. A sense of direction—not a voice, not yet, but a certainty that something waited somewhere beyond walls and crowns and vows.
Kerreth began waking at odd hours, standing at the window or the door, breathing hard as if he’d run miles in his sleep.
Alren slept lightly, always half-awake, attuned to every shift in Kerreth’s presence.
One night, Kerreth pressed his forehead against Alren’s chest, voice barely audible. “I don’t think I can outrun this.”
Alren wrapped his arms around him, bracing against heat and strength and inevitability. “Then we don’t run.”
Kerreth laughed weakly. “You always say that.”
Alren rested his chin against Kerreth’s shoulder. “Because it’s always been true.”
But even as he said it, Alren felt the truth twisting.
Because fate had stopped waiting politely.
It was pressing now.
The realization came quietly.
Not during a fight. Not during a vision or a prophecy or a scream.
It came as Alren sat alone in the armory, staring at weapons he prayed he would never need.
Blades of different alloys. Heavy spears meant to pierce thick hide. Ancient relics once thought ceremonial, now reexamined with grim practicality.
He saw the future laid out in cold metal and sharper truth.
Kerreth would not stop.
Not because he chose not to, but because the world inside him was changing faster than love could anchor.
And Alren—
Alren might not be able to save him.
The thought hollowed him out.
He pressed his palm flat against the table, breathing through it, letting grief and resolve coexist in the same terrible space.
“I will still try,” he whispered to no one.
Try until there was nothing left of him.
He returned to their chambers near dawn.
The room was quiet.
Too quiet.
Kerreth’s side of the bed was empty. The sheets cold. His cloak was gone.
So was his crown.
Alren’s pulse spiked.
He crossed the room in three strides, flinging open the door, scanning the corridor—empty. Guards stood at their posts, alert but unalarmed.
“Where is he?” Alren demanded.
The nearest guard stiffened. “Protector. He said not to wake you. He left before dawn. Alone.”
Alren felt the world tilt.
“Which direction?”
The guard hesitated. “North.”
Alren closed his eyes.
Of course it was.
The fire had finally chosen its path.
Alren turned without another word, already moving, already planning, grief and fury braided tight around his spine.
“Sound the horn,” he said. “Quietly.”
The guard blinked. “Sir?”
“Now.”
As the first pale light crept over Highreach, Alren armed himself—not as a court protector, not as a lover hoping for mercy, but as a man preparing to defy a destiny written long before either of them had been born.
It began with whispers—soft at first, contained to corridors and servant stairwells, to market stalls where voices dropped when guards passed. People spoke of the king’s illness, of a fever that lingered too long, of curtains kept drawn in the palace even on clear days.
Then they spoke of his size.
Of the way the doors seemed smaller when he walked through them. Of how the air felt tighter in his presence, as if the room had to stretch to accommodate him. Of the glow in his eyes when the light struck them just so.
The city did not panic.
Not yet.
But it watched.
Kerreth continued to rule.
That, more than anything else, unsettled the court.
He did not withdraw. He did not hide. He dressed in altered robes, black and white reforged with broader seams, gold filigree reworked to follow new lines of muscle and bone. His laurel crown was replaced with a circlet forged wider, the silvery gold resting against a brow that seemed carved now rather than shaped.
When he entered the hall, conversations faltered.
When he spoke, they resumed.
His voice had deepened further, carrying with it a resonance that felt physical, a vibration in the chest, a pressure behind the eyes. He spoke carefully, enunciating, controlling his volume as if aware of the effect he now had.
Alren stood closer than ever.
He adjusted unconsciously to Kerreth’s new scale—longer reach, heavier steps, greater momentum. He walked half a pace ahead when navigating crowded corridors, clearing space with posture alone. He learned how to brace himself when Kerreth stopped suddenly, how to read the tightening in his shoulders before the flare of irritation could crest.
He learned the signs.
The scholars stopped pretending within the week.
They gathered in the western archive, surrounded by stacks of pulled texts and unrolled maps, their faces pale under lamplight. Ink stained their fingers. Dust clung to their sleeves.
“This is not illness,” Liand said finally, voice stripped of speculation. “It does not behave like illness.”
Maris folded his hands tightly. “The obelisks were never inert. We know that now.”
“And the Iron Root,” Fenton said softly, “was not meant to be moved.”
Silence fell.
Alren stood at the edge of the room, arms crossed, every word cutting deeper than the last.
“What does it mean?” he asked.
No one answered immediately.
Finally, Maris looked up at him, eyes hollow. “It means the king has been altered by contact with something that does not relinquish what it claims.”
Alren’s jaw tightened. “He did not touch it.”
Soryn hesitated. “Prolonged proximity may be enough.”
Alren thought of the torn glove.
Of the heat.
Of the fever.
“Is it reversible?” he asked.
No one met his eyes.
Kerreth felt the rage before he understood it.
It came during a minor dispute—two nobles arguing over river tariffs, voices sharp but familiar, the kind of conflict Kerreth had mediated a hundred times before. He listened, brow furrowed, fingers flexing against the arm of the throne.
The room felt too loud.
Too small.
The words grated against something inside him, scraping raw.
“Enough,” he said.
The sound hit the chamber like a hammer.
The nobles froze mid-sentence, faces draining of color. A goblet rattled on the table. Somewhere, stone cracked—just a hairline fracture in the column behind the throne, unnoticed by all but Alren.
Kerreth stared at his own hand, still half-raised.
“I—” He swallowed. “I apologize.”
The nobles bowed hurriedly, backing away as if from a startled animal.
Kerreth stood abruptly, the motion heavy enough to make the floor groan. “We will reconvene later.”
He left the hall without ceremony.
Alren followed.
They did not speak until they reached the private chambers, the doors closing behind them with a heavy thud.
Kerreth turned, breath coming faster than it should have. “Did you feel that?”
“Yes,” Alren said.
“I didn’t mean—” Kerreth dragged a hand through his hair, fingers trembling. “I wasn’t angry at them. It was like—like something rose up and demanded silence.”
Alren stepped closer, placing both hands on Kerreth’s arms, grounding, steady. The heat was stronger now. The strength beneath his hands undeniable.
“Then we learn to stop it,” Alren said.
Kerreth laughed once, sharp and humorless. “And if we can’t?”
Alren did not answer.
The rage returned in flashes.
Never long. Never uncontrolled.
But unmistakable.
A snapped command that cracked plaster. A glare that sent courtiers stumbling back. Once—only once—a clenched fist that left a spiderweb of fractures in a stone table.
Kerreth always noticed afterward.
Always recoiled.
Always apologized.
“I don’t want this,” he told Alren one night, pacing the chamber, steps heavy enough to rattle the windowpanes. “I can feel it…waiting. Like heat behind a door.”
Alren watched him move, every instinct screaming danger and devotion in equal measure. “We’ll keep the door closed.”
Kerreth stopped, turning slowly. His eyes glowed faintly in the dim, gold set in black.
“And if it breaks through?”
Alren’s voice was steady when he answered. “Then I’ll be there.”
The public began to fear.
Not openly. Not yet.
But guards doubled. Children were kept closer. The river markets quieted when Kerreth passed. Priests burned more incense. The city adapted the way living things do when the weather changes—instinctively, without naming the threat.
Kerreth noticed.
It hurt.
“They look at me like I’m already gone,” he said quietly to Alren as they stood on the balcony overlooking the river.
Alren followed his gaze, the water glinting under moonlight, dark and endless. “They’re afraid of what they don’t understand.”
Kerreth huffed softly. “So am I.”
Alren turned toward him fully. “Listen to me. You are still you. You think. You choose. You care.”
Kerreth’s massive shoulders sagged. “For how long?”
Alren did not answer.
He had begun making decisions in silence.
Contingencies.
Routes.
Names of people who could be trusted if things worsened.
Weapons that could harm something like Kerreth—if it came to that.
The thought tore at him.
But love, he had learned, did not prevent preparation.
It demanded it.
That night, Kerreth dreamed of fire again.
Not destruction.
Not yet.
Just flame moving through him, shaping him, making space.
He woke with his heart pounding—and Alren already sitting upright beside him, watching, hand resting lightly on his chest.
“You growled,” Alren said quietly.
Kerreth closed his eyes. “I’m sorry.”
Alren leaned down, forehead to forehead, ignoring the heat. “Don’t apologize for breathing.”
Kerreth’s arms wrapped around him, careful despite their strength.
“I don’t want to become something that hurts you,” he whispered.
Alren swallowed hard. “Then we won’t let you.”
Outside, the city slept uneasily.
Inside, the king burned.
And the protector—blade, shield, and witness—stood closer than ever, knowing with terrible clarity that the time for watching was ending.
The fever had broken sometime in the darkest hour of night, leaving the room thick with the smell of sweat, damp cloth, and spent fear. Pale light crept through the tall windows of the royal chambers, tracing faint gold along the edges of carved stone and catching in the half-drawn curtains.
For a moment, Alren thought he was still dreaming.
Kerreth lay quiet against the pillows, breath slow and even, chest rising and falling beneath a linen sheet. His skin, though still flushed, no longer burned to the touch. The violent heat of the night had retreated, leaving behind only warmth—too much warmth, perhaps, but not the inferno that had wracked him hours before.
Alren sat in the chair beside the bed, spine rigid from hours of vigilance, hands wrapped around an empty cup that had long since gone cold.
When Kerreth’s eyes opened, Alren felt something inside his chest unclench for the first time since the fever began.
“There you are,” Alren said quietly.
Kerreth blinked, slow and heavy. “You look terrible,” he murmured.
Alren let out a breath that was half a laugh, half a sob. “You nearly burned the room down.”
Kerreth frowned faintly, as if sorting through fog. “I remember fire,” he said. “And… pressure. Like something trying to move through me.”
Alren leaned forward, resting his forearms on the bed. “You had a fever.”
Kerreth nodded once. “That explains it.”
It didn’t.
But they both let the lie sit between them, fragile and necessary.
Kerreth pushed himself upright—and froze.
The movement was not painful. That was the problem. It was effortless. His muscles responded with a strength that surprised even him, the sheet sliding down his torso as he sat.
Alren’s breath caught.
Kerreth had always been lean, all clean lines and controlled motion. Now, there was more of him. Not bloated, not swollen—denser. His shoulders filled the space between them differently. His chest pressed against the linen with unfamiliar breadth.
“You should lie back,” Alren said carefully.
Kerreth looked down at himself, brow furrowing. “Did I…lose weight?”
Alren swallowed. “No.”
Kerreth flexed his fingers experimentally. The tendons stood out starkly beneath his skin, veins dark and prominent, branching like ink spilled beneath glass.
“That’s new,” Kerreth said, too lightly.
Alren did not answer.
By midday, the court knew the king had been ill.
By evening, they knew he was recovering.
Kerreth insisted on sitting for a short council session, wrapped in lighter robes, crown set aside. The chamber was cool, stone walls keeping summer heat at bay, but sweat beaded at Kerreth’s temples anyway.
Alren stood behind him as always, eyes scanning the room, but his attention kept dragging back to Kerreth’s silhouette.
The robes no longer fell quite right.
They pulled across the shoulders. Strained faintly at the sleeves.
Kerreth noticed it too. He shifted once, then stilled, jaw tightening.
“Your Grace,” Chancellor Veylan said cautiously, “perhaps we should postpone—”
“I’m fine,” Kerreth said, sharper than intended.
His voice carried differently now.
Deeper. Resonant. As if it filled the chamber before anyone could stop it.
The tunic caught at Kerreth’s arms as Alren pulled it over his head, fabric stretching too tight before finally sliding free.
Kerreth stared at it in Alren’s hands.
“That’s… new,” he said again, less certain this time.
Alren folded the garment slowly. “You’ve grown.”
Kerreth laughed weakly. “People don’t just—”
He stopped.
His laughter faded as his gaze dropped to his hands again. The veins were darker now. Not black—but heading there. The warmth beneath his skin pulsed faintly, visible in the low light.
Alren reached out, brushing his knuckles against Kerreth’s forearm.
Heat.
Always heat.
“Does it hurt?” Alren asked.
Kerreth shook his head. “No. That’s the strangest part. It feels… good.”
The word hung between them like smoke.
Alren forced his voice steady. “Good how?”
Kerreth searched for language. “Like stretching after being cramped for too long. Like something locked finally turning.”
Alren looked away.
The eyes changed next.
Alren noticed it first at dawn, when sunlight poured in sharp and clear through the windows. Kerreth stood near the basin, splashing water on his face, hair damp and curling slightly at the ends.
When he looked up, Alren saw it clearly.
The whites of his eyes—the sclera—were no longer white.
They had darkened to a smoky gray, then deeper, bleeding slowly toward black at the edges. Veins webbed through them like cracks in obsidian.
And his irises—
Honey-gold now. Bright. Luminous.
They caught the light and held it, glowing faintly as if lit from within.
Kerreth saw Alren staring.
“What?” he asked.
Alren’s throat closed.
Kerreth stepped closer, peering into the small mirror. He leaned in, squinting.
“Oh,” he said softly.
The room was silent except for the distant sound of the river below.
“That’s not normal,” Kerreth added.
“No,” Alren agreed.
Kerreth straightened, rolling his shoulders. “It’ll fade.”
Alren did not argue.
He had learned when words would only make things worse.
The tusks began as pressure.
Kerreth complained of jaw pain that afternoon, a deep ache beneath the bone that made him press his palm against his face while reading reports.
“Like teeth coming in,” he muttered.
“You’re not a child,” Alren said.
Kerreth smiled faintly. “Feels like it anyway.”
By evening, the pain sharpened.
Kerreth paced the chamber, breathing through clenched teeth, fingers digging into his hair or the edge of a table hard enough that the wood creaked.
“Alren,” he said, voice strained. “Something’s wrong.”
Alren crossed the room in two strides, cupping Kerreth’s face gently despite the heat. He felt it then—the bone beneath the skin, shifting. Pressing outward.
Kerreth gasped as a sharp edge broke the surface of his gums.
Blood followed. Then something pale. Curved.
Alren’s stomach dropped.
Kerreth staggered back, gripping the table as another pressure followed the first.
Tusks.
Not fully formed. Not yet monstrous.
But unmistakable.
Kerreth stared at his reflection, hands shaking. “That’s—”
Alren caught him as his knees buckled.
“I know,” Alren whispered fiercely, holding him upright despite the burning heat. “I know.”
Over the following days, there was no hiding it.
Kerreth grew—slowly, relentlessly. Filling space as if the world were recalibrating around him. Muscles layered onto his frame, not bulky but powerful, until even Alren—who had always been larger, broader—found himself matched.
Then surpassed.
Kerreth’s clothes were replaced with looser garments. Then those too strained. His shoulders brushed doorframes. His presence filled rooms until people unconsciously stepped back.
The dark veins spread. His sclera turned fully black, a void around eyes that glowed gold like fire seen through honey.
And still—
Kerreth was himself.
He spoke gently. He listened. He laughed, though the sound carried new weight. He apologized when he frightened someone by accident.
“I’m still me,” he told Alren one night, voice low and earnest. “Tell me if I’m not.”
Alren rested his forehead against Kerreth’s chest, feeling the heat, the strength, the steady heart beneath.
“You are,” he said, though tears burned behind his eyes. “For now.”
Kerreth’s arms wrapped around him—careful, protective, strong enough now to lift Alren effortlessly if he wished.
“I don’t want to hurt anyone,” Kerreth said.
“I won’t let you,” Alren replied.
He did not know if it was a promise or a lie.
Outside, the city whispered.
Inside, the king burned brighter every day.
And Alren, holding him through the change, finally allowed himself to think the thought he had been avoiding since the torn glove.
The journey south began the way most journeys did—by pretending it would be simple.
Morning light spilled into the ruined valley in slanted sheets, turning broken pillars the color of old bone and making the moss along their bases glow an impossible green. Mist clung low to the ground as if reluctant to leave, curling around boots and the sled runners alike. When the workers, Torrence and Brayd—shoulders broad, forearms already wrapped in cloth—stepped into their harnesses to help pull the sled with the horses, leather creaked and rope fibers rasped against the reinforced beams.
The obelisk lay bound like a sleeping thing.
It was swaddled in layered ward-cloth stamped with clerical seals, its edges wrapped in padding and rope so thick it looked overprepared. Yet even from several paces away, the stone seemed to drink the air around it. The morning birds avoided the valley’s heart. The insects buzzed at the edges, unwilling to cross some invisible line.
Maris and Fenton moved in slow circles around the sled, murmuring blessings under their breath. Their robes were lighter than the ceremonial vestments they’d worn belowground, but still marked with stitched sigils and ash-treated hems. Liand and Soryn hovered with their satchels and rolled maps, eyes darting between the stone and their notes as though afraid their own memory would betray them.
Kerreth stood with his sleeves rolled again, dust still caught in the gold of his robe hems. His laurel crown was packed away, wrapped in cloth. He looked like a man who intended to earn his authority in sweat before he accepted it in ceremony.
Alren watched him from the edge of camp, a familiar ache tightening behind his ribs.
Kerreth didn’t look afraid.
He looked—focused. Present. Determined. He spoke with the workers, checked harness points, lifted the front beam with them to test the weight distribution.
“Here,” Kerreth said, bracing his shoulder into the sled’s frame. “If the pull shifts downhill, you’ll want the secondary rope anchored higher so it doesn’t swing.”
Torrence grunted. “Your Grace, that’s… actually good advice.”
Kerreth’s mouth curved. “Then take it.”
Alren stepped closer, the thin black travel clothes he wore already dusted at the hems. Gold caught sunlight in thin, bright threads. “You’re doing too much.”
Kerreth glanced up, eyes dark and steady. “I’m doing what I can.”
“You’re the king.”
“That’s exactly why.”
It was hard to argue with that without sounding like fear.
And Alren refused to hand fear a voice.
So he did the only thing he could: he stayed close enough that if Kerreth swayed, he could catch him—without making it look like catching.
They left the ruins by midmorning. The sled runners squealed softly over stone at first, then found a rough rhythm once the ground leveled into packed dirt and summer-hard clay. Grass brushed against boots. Sun climbed higher, warming the world into scent—pine resin and crushed wild thyme, damp soil hidden beneath dry crust.
The expedition was small enough that every footfall mattered. Every cough was heard. Every silence carried.
It should have felt manageable.
It did not.
Not because anything threatened them in the open. Not because there were ambushes or storms. The north in summer was almost kind—bright skies, long days, clear streams that ran cold over rounded stone.
It was the way the obelisk made the air feel thicker in its wake. Not heavier exactly. Just… more attentive. As if the world itself listened harder when it was near.
On the first day, Kerreth prayed with the clerics out of habit.
They stopped at dusk near a stand of birch, pale trunks like bone under twilight. Maris laid out a small cloth embroidered with a river motif, set a candle in its center, and sprinkled ash in a thin ring around it. Fenton spoke the opening words in a language older than the kingdom, syllables shaped to fall soft against the ear.
Kerreth knelt with them, hands folded, head bowed.
Alren knelt too, though he did not close his eyes. He watched the tree line. He watched the shadows. He watched Kerreth’s posture—how the king held himself even in prayer, as if devotion could be another kind of duty.
Afterward, the group ate stew thick with dried roots and salted meat. Kerreth accepted a bowl and ate slowly, then reached for a second. Then tore bread and dipped it without thinking.
Soryn raised a brow. “Hungry, Your Grace?”
Kerreth smiled, embarrassed like a boy caught taking extra. “Travel does that to me.”
It was an easy explanation. Everyone nodded. No one wanted to complicate it.
Alren did not speak, but he watched the way Kerreth’s fingers lingered near the bowl’s warmth, as if savoring heat more than food.
The second day, Kerreth ate even more.
The third, too.
By the fourth, it became a small joke among them—Torrence offering Kerreth the last strip of smoked meat with theatrical solemnity, Brayd pretending to guard the food packs like a jealous dragon.
Kerreth laughed. The sound warmed the camp. It made the journey feel less like a funeral procession and more like a summer expedition.
Alren laughed too, just once, because Kerreth’s laugh had always been a command of its own—live, for a moment, as if you can.
But that night, when Kerreth lay beside him under canvas, Alren felt the warmth radiating off him and did not laugh again.
It wasn’t the normal warmth of summer skin.
It was deeper. Steadier. Like embers banked beneath flesh.
“Are you all right?” Alren asked softly, careful not to wake the others.
Kerreth’s eyes opened, dark in the dim. “Yes.”
Alren hesitated. “You’re hot.”
Kerreth’s mouth curved faintly. “You’re cold.”
Alren pressed his knuckles briefly to Kerreth’s forearm. Heat, immediate. Kerreth caught his wrist gently, thumb brushing the pulse point.
“It’s summer,” Kerreth murmured. “Don’t turn every sensation into a threat.”
Alren forced himself to breathe out. “All right.”
Kerreth shifted closer, their shoulders touching. “Sleep.”
Alren did not say he couldn’t.
He simply lay there until the sky lightened.
On the fifth day, the eating stopped.
It happened in such a small way that no one noticed at first. Kerreth accepted breakfast, took two bites, then set the bowl aside with a tightness around his mouth that looked like restraint.
“Not hungry?” Liand asked, trying to sound casual.
Kerreth took a sip of water. “My stomach’s off. Something didn’t sit right.”
Maris nodded immediately. “Travel food. Salted too long. It happens.”
Fenton added, “And stress. You’ve carried much.”
Kerreth’s gaze flicked toward the sled, toward the wrapped obelisk dragging behind them like an anchored shadow. “I’m fine,” he said, quick and practiced. “Just need time.”
Alren watched him lift his chin as if lifting the topic away from them all.
The veins darkened next.
Subtle at first—faint lines under the skin at his wrists, the delicate branching at his inner elbows. Nothing alarming if you didn’t stare. Nothing impossible to blame on heat, dehydration, sun.
But Alren did stare.
He noticed them when Kerreth loosened his sleeves at midday. When he reached for water, fingers flexing. When he pushed hair back from his brow and the tendons in his neck stood out—dark threads visible where there hadn’t been any before.
Alren caught himself looking too often.
Kerreth caught him catching himself.
“What?” Kerreth asked one afternoon when they paused near a stream. The sun was brutal overhead, bleaching the world into sharp light and hard shadow.
Alren crouched to fill waterskins, buying time. “Nothing.”
Kerreth’s boot nudged a stone into the stream, splashing cold water. “You don’t say ‘nothing’ like you mean it.”
Alren straightened, the waterskin heavy in his hand. “You’re not eating.”
Kerreth shrugged, too casual. “I ate too much. Now I’m not hungry. Bodies change.”
Alren felt that phrase land wrong again—Bodies change—as if it were a simple truth rather than a warning.
“You’re sweating through your clothes,” Alren pressed.
Kerreth smiled, faint and steady. “We’re hauling a mountain’s weight of stone through summer.”
Alren wanted to say: Not like this.
Instead, he handed Kerreth water. Kerreth drank, then wiped his mouth with the back of his glove.
The glove.
Alren’s mind snagged on the memory of the torn seam.
He said nothing.
The eyes shifted slowly enough that it could have been sunlight.
In late afternoon, when the sky turned honey and the world softened, Kerreth’s deep brown eyes caught the light and seemed… lighter. A faint golden edge at the iris. A warmth where darkness had lived.
Soryn said something first, squinting over his notes. “Your eyes—have they always been that color?”
Kerreth blinked. “What?”
“Like…honey,” Soryn said, uncertain. “Or amber, when the sun hits.”
Kerreth laughed, dismissive. “The sun hits everything.” As if that explained anything.
Liand leaned in, then pulled back as if ashamed to stare. “Could be reflection. Light fatigue. Dehydration.”
Maris immediately crossed himself, then tried to hide it by adjusting his robe.
Fenton cleared his throat. “It is not uncommon for illness to change the appearance of the eyes.”
Illness.
Kerreth latched onto it like a lifeline.
“See?” he said, smiling more brightly than he needed to. “A fever coming on. I told you my stomach was off.”
Alren kept his expression blank, but inside something coiled tight.
Because Kerreth’s smile was too practiced.
Because Kerreth’s warmth was too constant.
Because the obelisk dragged behind them, silent and bound, and yet Alren felt as if they were being followed by something that did not require footsteps.
They reached Highreach on the eleventh day.
The city appeared first as a line of pale stone against the green of hills, banners snapping in warm wind—black, white, and gold. The river glinted like a blade under sunlight. Smoke rose from chimneys in lazy spirals. The scent of the city arrived ahead of it: bread and horse sweat, river damp, metal from smithies.
The gates opened at Kerreth’s approach.
Guards straightened. Citizens paused in the street. Heads bowed—not deeply, not fearfully, but with a respect that had grown familiar.
Kerreth sat tall in the saddle, robes dusted, hair wind-tossed, laurel crown restored to his brow. The silver-gold leaves caught sunlight and made him look…inevitable.
Alren rode beside him, cloak heavy on his shoulders—for ceremony rather than warmth—gold embroidery tracing the hem like a river map. His eyes never stopped moving.
They escorted the obelisk through the city at a careful pace.
The sled runners groaned over cobblestone. Ropes creaked. People leaned back from the street edge as it passed, instinctively giving it space.
A child pointed, wide-eyed.
His mother pulled him close and whispered something Alren couldn’t hear, but the fear in her posture was clear.
Kerreth’s jaw tightened.
He did not look at the child. He kept his gaze forward, as if acknowledging the obelisk’s effect would give it more power than it deserved.
They did not keep the stone in Highreach.
Not even temporarily.
The western temple—smaller than the grand sanctuary Maris spoke of in half-finished theories, but still consecrated ground—lay beyond the city’s western ridge, set among low hills where wind combed through grass like hands through hair.
It was a quiet place.
White stone walls. Gold-inlaid door arches. A courtyard with a shallow reflecting pool fed by a spring, water so clear it seemed unreal.
When they arrived, the priests of the temple met them at the gates with incense and ward-chalk. They did not touch the obelisk. They did not come within arm’s reach. They directed the workers with careful gestures, voices measured, eyes wary.
Kerreth dismounted and approached the temple steps, stopping precisely where the ward-line had been drawn.
The High Priest—an older woman with silver hair braided tightly, her face lined like carved stone—inclined her head. “Your Grace.”
Kerreth returned the gesture. “It will be kept here.”
“It will be contained,” she corrected softly. “Kept implies possession.”
Kerreth’s mouth twitched, acknowledging the point. “Contained, then. Until we can determine the true temple—your scholars’ ‘west sanctuary.’”
Maris bowed. “We believe the primary vault lies far beyond these hills. This temple is… a holding place. Safe enough for now.”
The High Priest inclined her head once, sharply. “Safe is a matter of degrees. But yes. It will do.”
Kerreth nodded. “Then it stays here. Guarded. Studied. Untouched.”
Her gaze flicked to him, sharp as a blade edge. “Especially untouched.”
Alren felt the emphasis like a nail driven home.
The workers maneuvered the sled into the temple courtyard, ropes groaning, leather straining. The obelisk was lowered into a recessed stone cradle already prepared for it—lined with ward-etchings, ash sigils, and channels carved to prevent even accidental contact. When the bindings were finally loosened and the stone settled, the air seemed to ease, just slightly, like a held breath released.
No one cheered.
The High Priest marked the threshold with chalk and spoke a sealing prayer in a language that tasted old and brittle in Alren’s ears. The temple doors closed with a resonant finality, stone against stone, the echo rolling through the hills and fading into cicada-song.
Kerreth exhaled slowly.
“It’s done,” he said.
Alren watched his shoulders sag—just a fraction. Relief, real and earned.
The debrief took place the following morning in Highreach’s western council chamber, a room smaller than the grand hall but no less imposing. Tall windows admitted the sharp, clear light of late summer. Dust motes floated lazily above a long oak table scarred by centuries of use.
Kerreth sat at the head, crown of silvery laurels gleaming softly. His robes were freshly cleaned, white and black stark against his russet skin, detailed gold filigree tracing lines that echoed river and flame alike. He looked composed. Commanding.
Too warm.
Alren stood behind him, hands clasped, cloak falling in heavy black folds edged with gold. He felt the heat radiating off Kerreth even at this distance, subtle but undeniable.
Liand unfurled maps across the table—inked notes, sketched ruins, carefully measured distances. “The structure was clearly built around the obelisk,” he explained. “Which suggests foreknowledge. Intent.”
Fenton cleared his throat. “Our texts describe the Nine Obelisks not as relics of worship, but as… anchors. Touchstones between the world and what lies beyond it.”
“The None,” Maris said quietly.
The room stilled.
Kerreth folded his hands atop the table. “Speculation.”
“Yes,” Maris agreed. “But informed speculation.”
Kerreth’s eyes flicked briefly toward the window—toward the western hills where the temple lay hidden. The light caught his irises again, turning the brown to almost a honeyed glow.
Alren noticed. He always noticed.
“We proceed carefully,” Kerreth said. “We locate the primary vault. We do not experiment. We do not rush.”
The High Priest inclined her head. “Wisely spoken.”
The meeting stretched long into the afternoon. Reports were exchanged. Hypotheses floated and were weighed down by caution. By the time it ended, voices were hoarse and minds exhausted.
Kerreth rose from his seat, steadying himself with one hand on the table for just a breath too long.
Alren was there instantly. “You should rest.”
Kerreth waved him off, smiling faintly. “After dinner.”
He did not eat.
The tray returned untouched.
Alren found him later that evening in his chambers, seated near the window, sleeves rolled, staring out at the river as dusk bled into night. The glow of lanterns caught the gold on his robes, made the dark veins beneath his skin stand out more starkly than before.
“You missed supper,” Alren said gently.
Kerreth didn’t turn. “Not hungry.”
Alren crossed the room, knelt beside him. The heat was unmistakable now—radiating, constant, like standing too close to a forge.
“You’re burning up.”
Kerreth finally looked at him, eyes glassy, unfocused. “I’m fine.”
The words were slower this time. Less certain.
Alren pressed the back of his fingers to Kerreth’s cheek.
Too hot.
“Kerreth,” he said, sharper now. “You’re not.”
Kerreth tried to stand.
He swayed.
Alren caught him before he could fall, arms locking around his torso, feeling the fever-sharp heat through layers of cloth. Kerreth’s breath came fast and shallow, sweat already slicking his skin.
“I’m sorry,” Kerreth murmured, voice strained. “It hurts. Like—like fire in my blood.”
Alren guided him to the bed, stripping off outer robes with shaking hands. He sent for water, for cloths, for anyone who might help—though even as he did, dread coiled tight in his chest.
Kerreth thrashed as the fever surged, muscles locking and releasing, teeth clenched against a cry. His veins stood out dark and angry beneath glowing skin, heat rolling off him in waves.
Alren pressed cool cloths to his forehead, his neck, his chest. Changed them again and again as they warmed instantly in his hands.
“Stay with me,” Alren whispered, forehead pressed to Kerreth’s temple despite the heat. “You’re here. You’re safe. I’ve got you.”
Kerreth gasped, fingers clutching weakly at Alren’s sleeve. “It’s burning,” he said, barely audible. “Alren—please—”
“I know,” Alren said, voice breaking. “I know.”
He stayed through the night.
When Kerreth cried out, Alren held him. When he shook, Alren anchored him. When the fire surged, Alren bore witness, helpless and terrified, his thoughts circling one terrible truth he could no longer deny.
This was no illness.
No food.
No summer heat.
This was the obelisk.
And as dawn crept pale and fragile over Highreach, Alren sat with Kerreth burning in his arms, the city waking beyond the windows, and understood with cold clarity that whatever had been unearthed in the north had not been left behind.
Morning came pale and cool in the valley of ruins.
Mist clung to the lower stones, pooling in broken stairwells and the mouths of collapsed corridors. Sunlight filtered down late, slanting through jagged gaps in the ruined arches and catching on motes of dust stirred by movement below. The air smelled of damp stone and crushed moss, sharp and clean, with a faint metallic undertone that no one could quite place.
Kerreth was already awake when Alren emerged from the tent.
The king stood near the edge of the excavation pit, sleeves rolled to his elbows, bare forearms streaked with dust as he helped one of the workers haul a crate of rope into place. His white-and-black robes were hitched up at the waist, gold catching the early light, and his laurel crown lay set carefully on a folded cloth nearby, removed for practical work.
“Careful,” Kerreth said, bracing his weight as the crate tipped. “The bottom’s heavier than it looks.”
One of the workers—a broad-shouldered man named Torrence, already sweating through his padded tunic—grunted. “Your Grace, you don’t have to—”
Kerreth smiled, easy and untroubled. “I know. I want to.”
Alren paused, watching.
Kerreth looked… good like this. Grounded. Engaged. His lean frame moved with purpose, every motion deliberate but unstrained. He listened when spoken to, asked questions without arrogance, and offered help without command. If there was tension in him, it was the familiar kind—the tension of responsibility, not fixation.
Alren let himself breathe.
“You’re up early,” Kerreth said, glancing over as Alren approached.
“So are you.”
Kerreth shrugged. “Couldn’t sleep. Too much to do.”
Alren stepped closer, lowering his voice. “You don’t need to prove anything to them.”
Kerreth’s expression softened. “I’m not.”
That was the truth.
The ruins descended into the earth like a broken throat.
Wide stone steps, worn smooth by centuries of passage, led down into darkness where the air cooled sharply and sound changed shape. Voices echoed oddly, coming back flattened and distant. The walls bore carvings—some geometric, some organic, all old enough that their edges had softened without losing intention.
The clerics insisted on preparation.
Maris and Fenton donned layered vestments reinforced with stitched sigils and ash-treated cloth. The scholars followed suit, hands wrapped in thick leather gloves lined with treated wool, faces half-covered with veils meant to filter dust and breath. Even the workers were outfitted with heavy gloves, layered aprons, and masks that made them look anonymous, almost ceremonial.
No bare skin.
No unnecessary contact.
No lingering.
Kerreth submitted to the same precautions without complaint.
Alren helped him pull on gloves—thick, pale leather reinforced at the palms—then tighten the straps with a practiced tug. His own black cloak had been set aside in favor of fitted working layers, still edged in gold but stripped of excess. The sword remained at his side.
“You’re not going down first,” Alren said quietly.
Kerreth nodded. “I know.”
They descended together once the way was deemed stable.
The lower chamber was vast.
Columns rose like petrified trees, cracked but still bearing weight. The ceiling arched high overhead, lost in shadow, and at the chamber’s center yawned a pit—newly exposed, edges raw where the earthquake had split ancient stone.
Within it, something dark waited.
Not visible yet. Not fully.
But the space around it felt… attentive.
Maris swallowed audibly. “This is deeper than the records suggested.”
Soryn adjusted his spectacles with a gloved finger. “The temple was built around it. Not for worship. For containment.”
Kerreth’s gaze moved slowly across the chamber, taking in every detail. He did not step closer to the pit. He did not reach. He stood still, hands folded behind his back, posture composed.
“How long has it been buried?” he asked.
Liand hesitated. “Older than the oldest dynasties. Possibly older than written record.”
Kerreth nodded once. “Then we proceed carefully.”
The obelisk emerged by degrees.
First, the top edge—dark, matte, swallowing light rather than reflecting it. Then more, as workers strained at ropes and pulleys, muscles shaking with effort. Stone groaned. Dust fell in fine sheets.
The Iron Root was not beautiful.
It was angular, asymmetrical, veined faintly with lines that looked less like carvings and more like scars. Its surface was cool even in the lamplight, absorbing warmth, refusing to shine. It stood shorter than anticipated, its base still sunk deep in the earth like a tooth that refused extraction and yet somehow still lacking the substance that would make it as heavy as it was. Its weight was the burden of a mountain.
No one touched it.
Not directly.
The workers kept distance, guiding it with ropes looped through reinforced channels carved long ago into the stone itself—as if its makers had anticipated removal.
Kerreth watched from the edge of the chamber, breath slow and controlled.
“It doesn’t feel…” he began, then stopped.
Alren turned his head slightly. “Doesn’t feel what?”
Kerreth considered. “Hostile.”
Maris stiffened. “That means nothing.”
“I know,” Kerreth said gently. “I’m not assigning meaning. Only noting absence.”
Alren studied him carefully.
There was no hunger in Kerreth’s eyes. No trance. Just curiosity sharpened by responsibility.
Still—Alren stepped half a pace closer.
The extraction took hours.
Sweat soaked through cloth. Muscles trembled. Voices barked commands and confirmations. The obelisk rose inch by inch, dust sifting down its sides, ancient grooves emerging like memories surfacing from sleep.
Kerreth moved among them when needed—steadying a rope, bracing a beam, fetching water. He spoke little, listened much. When one worker stumbled, he caught him by the arm without thinking, grip firm and reassuring through layers of glove and cloth.
“Easy,” he said. “I’ve got you.”
Alren saw the gratitude in the man’s eyes.
He also saw how close Kerreth had been.
Too close.
They returned to camp by late afternoon.
The sun was sinking, painting the valley gold and copper, and the air smelled of crushed grass and cooling stone. The obelisk now lay secured on a reinforced sled at the edge of the excavation site, wrapped in layered bindings, warded and watched.
The mood was almost…relieved.
Dinner was quiet but warm. Bread torn by hand. Stew ladled into tin bowls. The clerics prayed longer than usual, voices low and steady, asking not for blessing but restraint.
Kerreth sat beside Alren on a fallen stone, shoulder brushing his. “Well?” he asked softly.
Alren exhaled. “You listened. You didn’t rush.”
“I never planned to.”
Alren studied him in the firelight. His russet skin glowed warm beneath dust and sweat. His hair, cut slightly shorter now for summer, fell into his eyes anyway. He looked tired—but whole.
“I’m proud of you,” Alren said.
Kerreth’s smile was small, genuine. “That means more than the crown ever will.”
They leaned together, quiet, watching sparks rise into the darkening sky.
For a moment, the world held.
Alren noticed the glove while Kerreth was washing his hands.
It lay discarded near the tent, folded carelessly atop a crate.
The leather was torn at the seam between thumb and forefinger.
Not ripped open.
Just… split.
Alren picked it up slowly.
His pulse thudded once. Hard.
“Kerreth,” he said, keeping his voice even.
Kerreth looked up from the basin, water dripping from his fingers. “Yes?”
Alren held up the glove.
The fire crackled. Someone laughed softly across camp.
Kerreth glanced at it—and smiled.
“Oh. That,” he said lightly. “Caught it on a stone edge. Must’ve missed it.”
Alren stepped closer. “Your hand.”
Kerreth dried it on a cloth and held it up.
Bare.
Clean.
Unmarked.
“I’m fine,” he said. “See?”
Alren searched his face.
There was no deception there. No fear. Just calm certainty.
Still—
Alren closed his fingers around the torn glove.
“Next time,” he said quietly, “you tell me.”
Kerreth nodded, still smiling. “Of course.”
He reached out, touched Alren’s wrist—bare skin to bare skin, warm and grounding.
“I promise.”
The obelisk sat silent in the dark.
And for the first time since the expedition began, Alren did not sleep.
Summer had arrived in the Riverlands, and with it came a warmth that made the earth itself seem alive. The forests along the northern roads were dense, full of leaves glimmering in shades of green so vivid they hurt to look at, and the air smelled of moss, wet stone, and sun-warmed pine. Even the river that wound beneath Highreach carried a sheen of gold in the morning light, reflecting clouds and birds like a polished mirror.
Kerreth rode at the head of the small expedition, cloak brushing against the saddle, laurels resting lightly on his head. His deep brown eyes scanned the horizon, taking in the ridges, the distant mountains, and the glimmers of ancient ruins half-hidden in forest and stone. He had grown into his role fully now, the weight of the crown settling on his shoulders like a living thing, and the people of the Riverlands had begun to feel that authority radiate from him as surely as sunlight spreads across the hills.
Alren rode beside him, taller, broader, his dark tan skin gleaming in sweat beneath the black and gold cloak he wore over a simple white tunic and emblazoned leather armor. His thick black hair caught the sun in waves as he adjusted the straps of his sword, eyes sweeping constantly over the road and the surrounding trees. He had grown accustomed to reading Kerreth like a second language—the tilt of his shoulder, the subtle flex of his fingers, the way his gaze lingered too long on lines in the earth or stone. And he had begun to notice, slowly, a faint compulsion stirring in the young ruler, subtle but unmistakable, as they drew ever closer to the northern ruins.
The expedition was small: just the two of them, two clerics named Maris and Fenton, two scholars named Liand and Soryn, and two burly workers tasked with hauling the obelisk when it was uncovered. The journey north was long, and the roads rough. Gravel crunched beneath hooves, and the wheels of the small carts groaned as they jostled over uneven ground. Yet Kerreth seemed unconcerned by distance, instead tracing invisible lines in the hills and streams as if the land itself were a map that only he could read.
At midday on the first day, they stopped at a clearing near a brook. The sun was high and hot, striking the leaves at angles that turned them translucent green, and the sound of water tumbling over rocks made conversation easy.
Kerreth dismounted, boots crunching on loose gravel, and immediately knelt by the stream. He cupped his hands in the water, brought it to his lips, and drank deeply. Alren followed, kneeling beside him, his blue eyes flicking to the trees.
“Do you feel it, Alren?” Kerreth asked softly, voice carrying the faint hum of curiosity. “The land… it speaks here.”
Alren shook his head, though he did not speak immediately. He kept his hand near the hilt of his sword, instinctive and protective. “It hums,” he said finally. “But that’s the wind, the water, and the trees. Not speaking, not yet.”
Kerreth tilted his head, eyes narrowing, as if listening beyond what Alren could hear. “Perhaps,” he murmured. “But I feel a rhythm here. Old as the stones. Old as the river.”
Alren’s gaze followed him. The young ruler’s expression softened as he looked at the water, the sunlight catching the gold detailing on his robes. For a brief moment, he was not ruler or heir or even a man thinking of ancient obelisks—he was just Kerreth, the boy by the river, fascinated by what the world had to offer.
Alren allowed himself a small smile, brushing a hand over his journal where he had begun recording these excursions. “Then I’ll trust your rhythm,” he said. “But I stay close.”
Kerreth’s hand brushed briefly against Alren’s shoulder, a touch fleeting yet grounding. “Always,” he replied.
The first night of camping, the fire crackling and sparks drifting into the violet of evening, was peaceful. The small group settled around the flames, sharing bread, cheese, and smoked meat. The two clerics whispered prayers under their breath, murmurs blending with the crackle of fire. Scholars debated quietly about the northern mountains and the signs that the tremor might have exposed older, buried ruins.
Kerreth leaned back on a smooth stone, hands resting lightly on his knees, eyes reflecting the firelight. Alren sat beside him, cloak draped over both of them as evening cooled, and traced patterns in the dirt with his finger while he watched Kerreth.
“You don’t speak much with the others,” Alren observed quietly.
“I listen,” Kerreth said, voice soft. “Words are easy. Patterns are harder. And these stones, the land… it teaches better than speech.”
Alren nodded slowly, studying the way Kerreth’s brow furrowed ever so slightly as he stared into the flames, and then, as if prompted, reached out and brushed his hand over Kerreth’s. The warmth of his touch lingered, and Kerreth’s fingers tightened briefly in acknowledgment.
The clerics noticed nothing, the scholars argued quietly about the likelihood of the ruins, and the workers prodded logs in the fire for warmth. But Alren’s eyes were never off Kerreth—not for a moment.
Over the next days, the road became harsher. Hills rose steep and jagged, forest giving way to scrub and scattered rock. Birds cried overhead, and the air smelled of stone and pine resin. Streams were narrow, but the riverbeds dry, forcing the party to ration water and plan foraging carefully.
Evenings became ritual. Maris and Fenton prayed together beneath a starlit sky, murmuring chants to ward against the unknown. Kerreth joined them nightly, kneeling quietly, hands resting lightly on the dirt, eyes closed. Alren stayed beside him, hand often brushing against Kerreth’s back, the smallest, almost imperceptible reassurance.
Later, the party ate by fire, shared stories of home, or played simple games to keep spirits light. Kerreth laughed easily in these moments, deep and rich, a sound that seemed to warm the entire forest. Alren allowed himself to relax into these moments as well, enjoying the ease of it—the touch of a hand, the warmth of sun and fire, the boy he had loved and protected now stepping fully into manhood without losing the spark that made him Kerreth.
It was on the seventh day, as the sun reached its zenith, that they first glimpsed the ruins.
They were half-buried in a hollowed valley, stone spires jutting from earth like the ribs of some great, long-dead beast. The walls were blackened in places, worn smooth by centuries, carvings faint but visible—symbols and patterns older than memory, and some so jagged that even the clerics could not identify them.
Kerreth dismounted immediately, boots clinking on stone. He ran fingers along a carved line that spiraled up a pillar, thumb tracing grooves so fine they almost vanished beneath his touch. A faint tremor of compulsion shivered through him, subtle, insistent—not yet a voice, not yet a call, but a tug at his chest and mind.
Alren’s hand went to his sword instinctively. “Kerreth,” he said low, tone careful. “Stay close. Do not linger near a single stone too long.”
Kerreth looked up at him, eyes dark with curiosity and restrained intensity. “I feel it,” he admitted softly. “Not danger. Not yet. But… something beneath the earth. Waiting.”
Alren’s jaw tightened, blue eyes scanning every shadow, every loose stone. He could feel it too—the earth’s subtle shift, a low vibration, a presence just beneath perception. He stepped closer to Kerreth, hand brushing the younger man’s arm in a grounding gesture. “We observe. We do not touch. You understand?”
Kerreth inclined his head, exhaling slowly, and allowed Alren to guide him back a few steps. “Yes,” he said. “I understand. For now.”
The following day was laborious. The workers rigged levers and pulleys to prepare for the extraction of the obelisk once uncovered. Kerreth watched, offering input when needed, suggesting angles and weights. Alren stayed beside him, noting every gaze that lingered on a carved stone, every small shiver of fascination or compulsion. He kept meticulous mental notes, quill poised in the journal back at camp, though tonight he would transcribe everything carefully.
Meals were simple: dried bread, roasted nuts, boiled vegetables, and water drawn from the small stream that snaked through the valley. At night, Kerreth and Alren shared the warmth of the fire, leaning close, hands brushing, foreheads occasionally touching as they spoke softly about the day, about strategy, about nothing at all. These moments were private and delicate, intimacy born not of grand declarations but of proximity, trust, and the comfort of shared silence.
Sometimes, Kerreth would trace his fingers through Alren’s hair, the waves of black against his fingers, or press a hand to his chest, feeling the steady rhythm beneath. “You keep watch,” he murmured one night, voice low and tender, “so I may see without danger.”
Alren smiled faintly, lips brushing the dark cloak. “And I will keep it, as always.”
The northern sun moved high overhead, casting golden light over jagged spires and scattered glyphs. Shadows lengthened in the valleys, and the air carried the scent of moss, stone, and distant rain. The obelisk waited somewhere beneath the earth, patient, immense, and ancient.
And Kerreth felt only the subtle pull of curiosity, fascination, and the promise of understanding something older than even the river he had been born beside.
Winter melted slowly into spring, then drifted into early summer. Highreach thrummed with life under Kerreth’s hand. Snowmelt swelled the river, spilling over its banks in pale silver ribbons. Trees along the hills began to whisper with new leaves, delicate green and glistening with rain. Birds returned to the towers, calling sharply, wings flashing against gray stone. The city smelled of wet earth, smoke, and the subtle tang of blossoms.
Kerreth moved among his people with the measured grace of a ruler fully conscious of his place. His robes glimmered faintly in sunlight, the laurels of his crown catching glints of silver. Where once he had seemed young and uncertain, he now carried the weight of command with a quiet, almost magnetic authority. His hair was shorter, combed and tamed, and his eyes swept every hall, every street, as if the world itself were a map he could read by sight alone.
Alren remained at his side, a constant shadow. His black cloak rustled faintly against the marble steps, sword always within reach, eyes scanning, cataloging. He had begun keeping a ledger of Kerreth’s behavior, noting every small obsession, every moment his attention lingered unnaturally long on old ruins, every tremor of curiosity. The northern ruins had left traces in the young ruler that Alren did not yet name.
The first tremor came quietly, far to the north.
It shook mountains that had slept for centuries, rumbled through stone, and carried down into valleys and rivers. Highreach felt it as a low vibration beneath feet and walls, a subtle shudder in doors and windowpanes. Citizens froze mid-step, fingers tightening on railings, eyes lifting to the sky. Scholars muttered in corridors, consulting ancient texts and scrolls, the faint dust of old knowledge rising with every page turned.
Kerreth felt it immediately, deep in his chest, like the world itself had exhaled through the hills. He stepped out onto the balcony of the main hall, hands resting on the cold stone. Frost from winter had long since disappeared, replaced by the smell of rain-warmed earth and early blossoms. The river below gleamed in early sunlight, silver against green, and the distant mountains trembled imperceptibly, yet enough to make the air feel alive, shifting, listening.
“Earth speaks,” he said quietly, eyes narrowed. “Do you feel it, Alren?”
Alren, beside him, nodded. “I felt it. The tremor is far north, but it carries.” He ran a hand over the hilt of his sword, eyes calculating. “Nothing destroyed, yet the world shifted.”
Kerreth’s gaze lingered on the horizon, distant peaks jagged and pale under sunlight. “Sometimes, what lies beneath waits for the right moment to show itself,” he murmured.
Alren noted the phrase. He had heard it before, in different words, during northern expeditions. The ledger in his mind ticked another warning.
Weeks passed. Scholars and clerics descended from Highreach’s towers, parchments and notes in hand. Kerreth received them in the great hall, the black-and-white marble glinting faintly under high windows, sunlight falling across gold filigree in angled shards.
A scholar with hair streaked in gray and robes dusted with soot stepped forward first, voice carrying across the hall. “Your Grace,” he said, bowing slightly. “The northern tremor has revealed something… significant.”
Kerreth’s brown eyes lifted. “Speak plainly.”
A cleric, tall and gaunt, stepped forward, the folds of his robes whispering against the floor. He held a map, edges frayed and marked with symbols of ancient design. “The earth shifted, exposing a structure… a ruin of immense age. Within it, we believe, lies a monument we have long feared to find in the open.”
Kerreth leaned on the carved dais, fingers brushing over smooth stone, eyes scanning the map. “A monument?”
The scholar swallowed. “An obelisk, Your Grace. One of the Nine of The None.”
A faint tightening in Alren’s chest accompanied a deepening shadow in his mind. He stepped slightly closer to Kerreth, cloak brushing the marble. His blue eyes flicked across the parchment and then back to the scholar. “You’ve heard of them before?” he asked softly.
Kerreth’s jaw tensed, brown eyes sharp. “Legends,” he answered for the scholar. “Tales of stones older than kingdoms, carved in the earliest temples and altars, deep beneath the earth.” He lifted a hand, tracing a line across the map where the northern mountains rose like jagged teeth. “The tremor… it has opened one of these stones to the surface. We must see it.”
The cleric’s hands shook faintly. “It is dangerous, Your Grace. The obelisks… they are not meant for mortal hands. They draw to themselves those who approach, those who linger too long. We only know of their power through fragments.”
Kerreth’s eyes glinted. “And yet the world moves. And I move with it. I will go. I will see this stone.”
Alren’s fingers tightened on the hilt of his sword beneath his cloak. “Kerreth—”
“I will not send others while I remain behind,” Kerreth interrupted softly, voice steady as iron. “I will lead. I will witness. You will come with me, Alren, as always. No one else.”
Alren’s blue eyes met his, unwavering, a silent calculation running across every muscle, every thought. “As always,” he said finally, voice low.
The hall fell silent, save for the faint rustle of parchment and the soft tapping of sunlight across gold filigree. Outside, the river gleamed under a warming sun, the mountains distant and patient, and the land seemed to hold its breath.
Kerreth straightened, black-and-white robes gleaming, laurels of silvery gold ever present on his head. He moved through the hall with measured authority, chest lifted, presence commanding without threat. Alren followed, silent as shadow, a ledger of vigilance hidden beneath the folds of his cloak.
In the north, beneath mountains older than memory, something waited.
The northern ruins had revealed nothing spectacular—at least, nothing to the untrained eye. Jagged stones jutted from the earth like broken teeth, weathered arches crumbled into rubble, and frost clung stubbornly to the faint carvings in the walls. Yet Kerreth saw patterns where others saw ruin.
Columns etched with worn glyphs traced lines along the walls, spirals of symbols that seemed to shift depending on the angle of light. Some stones hummed faintly under his touch, a low vibration that thrummed through the bones. Alren noticed, but did not comment. Instead, he recorded it in the soft leather-bound journal he had begun keeping—a ledger of observations, not yet fear, just vigilance.
The expedition camped among the ruins one last night before returning south. The wind moaned through fractured towers and twisted stairways, carrying with it a faint scent of iron and decay. Kerreth sat cross-legged on a flat stone, sketches spread around him, and traced patterns with precise fingers. His brow was furrowed, jaw tight, eyes dark under ash-brown hair that stuck out at odd angles beneath his winter cap.
Alren crouched beside him, cloak heavy and leather of his armor creaking with the movement. “Do you tire of stones yet?” he asked quietly, voice low against the whispering wind.
Kerreth shook his head, lips curved faintly in thought. “Stones never tire,” he said. “And neither does history.”
Alren’s blue eyes swept the ruins once more, cataloging frost-laced pillars, scattered glyphs, and the way Kerreth’s hand lingered over certain carvings longer than others. He wrote each movement in the ledger—finger tapping here, shoulder leaning closer to stone there, breath held just so when a pattern aligned.
“Do the scholars know how far north this goes?” Alren asked.
“Not fully,” Kerreth said. “Not yet. But they will. They must.”
The return to Highreach was marked by winter sunlight slicing through low clouds, silver and sharp against blackened stone. The city lay spread across a river bend, rooftops dusted with frost, smoke spiraling from chimneys. Bridges arched in pale stone over dark waters that reflected the morning sky like shards of glass.
By the time they arrived, the city’s banners had been replaced with new colors: black, white, and gold, signifying Kerreth’s ascension. Citizens lined the streets, breath fogging in the cold air, eyes wide with hope and curiosity. Children waved small flags, while elders whispered prayers into the river’s current, perhaps to bless what had just become inevitable.
So it was finally time…
The coronation ceremony took place in the grand hall of Highreach, a room vast enough that sunlight from high stained-glass windows painted the black and white marble floors in fractured light. Scholars and clerics filled the seats along the walls, robes rustling, murmuring about ruins and glyphs, speculating about the structures Kerreth had seen.
Kerreth stood at the dais, clad in official robes of white and black with bold gold filigree on his chest and tracing the hems and edges. A crown of silvery gold laurels rested lightly on a cushion nearby, catching the sunlight in gleaming arcs as it waited to be awarded. The fresh cut of his hair and the posture of his shoulders gave him a composed weight, a presence that demanded attention without threatening.
Alren, standing a step behind him, wore a new black cloak heavy with gold embroidery around the hems, the weight of leather and new shining white and gold steel lending him a presence both commanding and silent. His eyes swept the hall constantly, taking note of glances, posture, and the way the young ruler moved.
Veylan, the chancellor, stepped forward, voice steady and deep. “Kerreth of the Riverlands, do you swear to rule with justice, to weigh mercy against necessity, and to guide your people with both mind and heart?”
Kerreth inclined his head. “I swear it.”
“To protect the weak, to confront the strong, and to wield the crown not for glory but for the land?”
“I swear it.”
Alren’s hand brushed against his sword hilt—instinctive, quiet, protective. Kerreth’s gaze met his briefly, a flicker of gratitude in deep brown eyes, and then the ritual continued.
The crown was set upon his head, silver laurels gleaming. A hush fell, broken only by the faint shiver of wind through high windows and the soft scrape of robes across marble.
That night, after the city slept under frost and starlight, Alren sat at the edge of the balcony, journal in hand, quill scratching softly across pages. The wind tugged at his black cloak, gold embroidery catching in dim candlelight, and he cataloged everything from the northern expedition: stones that hummed, glyphs that shifted under the light, the faint pull that seemed to guide Kerreth’s attention.
Kerreth joined him, leaning lightly on the balcony stone, breath misting in the cold air. His eyes, deep brown but almost honeyed and luminous under the moon, followed Alren’s hand as it wrote.
“You do not sleep,” Kerreth observed.
Alren didn’t stop. “I watch. I record. So that later, we can remember everything we saw.”
Kerreth smiled faintly. “A ruler keeps records. A protector keeps memories.”
Alren’s hand paused on the journal. “Sometimes they are the same.”
Kerreth leaned back, hands resting on the balcony’s cold stone. “Tomorrow,” he said quietly, voice threaded with a kind of calm determination, “we begin again. Lessons of winter, lessons of stone. The land expects much of us now.”
Alren’s blue eyes met his. “And I will not fail you.”
Kerreth’s fingers brushed briefly against Alren’s shoulder, a subtle grounding. “I do not expect you to.”
Outside, Highreach lay quiet beneath a frost-fingered sky. Candles burned in windows, smoke spiraled upward, and the city waited—like the land itself—for the ruler who had finally claimed it, and the protector who would walk every shadow beside him.
Somewhere beyond the hills, ancient stone remained, patient, silent, waiting for attention.
The snow had not yet fallen, but the northern winds carried a sharpness that bit through wool and leather alike. The road out of Highreach stretched gray and uneven, lined with skeletal trees and frozen rivulets.
Kerreth rode at the head, cloak pulled tightly around his shoulders, breath fogging in the early light. The blue of his coat caught the pale dawn, and the sun glinted off the silver clasp at his throat. His ash-brown hair, unbound, whipped slightly in the wind, and his deep brown eyes scanned the hillsides with a precision that made even seasoned scouts pause.
Alren followed immediately behind, tall and broad, boots firm against the stirrup irons, black hair falling over his shoulders like a river of shadow. The morning light struck his piercing blue eyes, making them shine against the dark tan of his skin. His armor was polished but practical, worn leather straps creaking as he shifted weight in the saddle, hand resting lightly on the hilt of his sword. He moved like a shadow meant to guard light, a presence both grounding and silent.
Behind them, a column of fifty mounted men and women from the Riverlands’ guard moved in careful formation, banners snapping in the wind. The valley beneath Highreach stretched wide, green giving way to brown winter soil, hills soft in the haze. A thin mist hovered along the river, silver threads tracing the current.
“This is the northern route?” one scout asked, voice small against the wind. His cloak was frayed, mud caked along the hem.
Kerreth didn’t answer immediately. He was already scanning the distance, eyes narrowing as he noticed ridges, broken stones, and a line of pale ruins atop a ridge beyond the forest. “Yes,” he said finally. “It follows old trade paths. Watch the ridges. We do not travel blind.”
Alren shifted, scanning the hills with a practiced eye. “And if this is a trap?”
Kerreth smiled faintly, almost amused. “Then we meet it as we would any other: carefully, deliberately.”
Alren’s hand twitched near his sword. “You’re not afraid?”
“I’ve learned to measure fear,” Kerreth said. “Not pretend it doesn’t exist.”
By midday, they reached the ruins.
Stone pillars, half-buried in moss and dirt, jutted from the earth like jagged teeth. Windows, once large and arched, gaped like hollow eyes. The wind moved through the broken halls, carrying a scent of dust and something older—something metallic, faintly bitter.
Kerreth dismounted, boots crunching over frost-stiffened soil. His fingers brushed over the carved stone, dark grooves that felt older than kingdoms, older than memory.
Alren came to stand beside him, eyes tracing every line of the ruin, ears attuned to the faintest sound. “These are... old,” he said, though the words were more statement than question.
“They are older than we know,” Kerreth murmured. His fingers lingered over the carvings, tracing patterns that seemed almost like script but defied comprehension. “Something was here before us. Something deliberate.”
Alren’s gaze flicked to him. “Careful,” he said. “Touch nothing unnecessarily.”
Kerreth straightened, turning to him with a faint grin. “You worry too much.”
Alren didn’t answer. He never did when Kerreth smiled like that. Instead, he catalogued everything: the shift of stone, the frost melting along cracks, the way Kerreth’s hand lingered too long on one particular column—slightly warmer, almost humming under his touch, though Alren could not see why.
That evening, they made camp near the ruins. Smoke from the fire curled upward, painting the stones in orange light. Men and women cooked stew in blackened iron cauldrons, laughter rising like thin smoke over the frozen earth.
Kerreth sat cross-legged on a flat slab of stone, poring over sketches made from the day’s observations. Symbols, grooves, and the faintest traces of carving were reproduced on parchment.
Alren crouched beside him, shoulder brushing his own pack, sword at hand. “You’re spending more time here than with the men,” he said.
Kerreth looked up, eyes dark but thoughtful. “They follow orders. They don’t see patterns. I do.”
Alren’s lips pressed into a thin line. “Patterns can kill a man if he follows them too far.”
Kerreth leaned back on his hands, looking up at the starless sky. “And yet a ruler must follow patterns,” he said softly. “Or the world bends without him.”
Later, in the small hours, Alren could not sleep. He watched Kerreth from the edge of the firelight as the heir-apparent stood alone by the edge of the frozen stream that ran past their camp. The wind tugged at his cloak, tousled his hair across his face.
“I know why you came north,” Alren said quietly, stepping into shadow. His voice carried, soft and deliberate.
Kerreth didn’t turn immediately. “Do you?”
“I do,” Alren said. “And I do not approve.”
A pause, long and sharp, filled with the sound of wind across ice and stone. Kerreth finally looked at him, expression unreadable. “It is not about approval,” he said. “It is about what must be seen.”
Alren’s hand rested on the hilt of his sword, though he did not draw. “And what you see could undo you.”
Kerreth’s eyes, dark pools under ash-brown hair, flicked to the frozen ruins behind them. “Perhaps. Or perhaps it shapes me. Perhaps it shapes us all.”
Alren’s blue eyes searched him. He noted the subtle tension in Kerreth’s jaw, the way his fingers itched toward the stone they had passed, and the almost imperceptible pull in the young ruler’s chest, like a compass needle drawn north.
“I will stay,” Alren said finally. “Whatever this does to you. Whatever you become.”
Kerreth’s lips curved faintly in acknowledgment, though his gaze returned to the distant hills where ruins jutted like broken teeth against the winter sky. “Then we march,” he said. “North. Always north.”
In the shadows of the trees, where snow had yet to settle, something ancient waited.
Not yet named. Not yet hungry. But patient, deliberate, and aware of the king who marched toward it.
Alren did not see it. But he began to notice the pull—in Kerreth’s movements, his glances, the almost imperceptible moments when the young ruler’s attention lingered too long on stone, patterns, and lines older than memory. He began keeping notes—not yet of fear, but of vigilance, careful and precise, cataloging each behavior, each obsession.