The bleeding had stopped, but Kael's head still rang with echoes.
He sat on the tailgate of Tessa's supply wagon, a cloth pressed to his nose, watching the southern horizon where the distortion had been. It was gone now—faded like morning mist—but the resonance hadn't returned to normal. The bones still hummed wrong, a frequency that set his teeth on edge and made his skull ache. Around him, the caravan was a controlled chaos of frightened people trying to pretend they weren't frightened. "Drink this." Joren pressed a tin cup into his hand. Water, blessedly cold. Kael drank, tasting salt and metal. "How many others?" "Bled? Seven. Old Meris passed out but he's awake now. The Sohm sisters are fine—they never worked the deep mines, so less dust in their blood." Joren sat beside him, moving carefully. "Petran's having a panic attack. Cors is talking him down." "He shouldn't be out here. Too young." "We were all too young once." Joren's voice was flat, distant. He was staring at his hands, at the tremor that had started in his fingers. The corruption made him shake sometimes, usually when he was stressed or tired. Right now he looked both. "You need to rest," Kael said. "I need answers more." Joren finally looked at him. "What was that? Really?" Kael didn't answer immediately. How could he explain something he barely understood himself? The distortion had felt purposeful—not random, not a natural phenomenon. More like something reaching across distance, searching for a specific target. The vessel approaches. The singer draws near. "I don't know," he lied. "Maybe a storm we didn't detect." "That wasn't a storm and you know it." Joren's jaw tightened. "I've seen godstorms, Kael. Been caught in two of them. They don't bend air like that. They don't make shapes." "Then what do you think it was?" "I think something's waking up. And I think whatever it is, it's connected to you." Kael's hand clenched around the cup. "Why would you think that?" "Because you heard voices. I saw your face—you weren't just sensing resonance, you were listening to something. Understanding it." Joren leaned closer, voice dropping. "I'm not judging. I'm just asking: what did it say?" Kael met his eyes. Saw genuine concern there, beneath the cynicism and the fear. Joren had secrets too—the corruption wasn't something you got by accident. Whatever had happened in his imperial service, it had marked him as surely as the dust had marked Kael. Maybe that was why Kael trusted him. Both of them were carrying wounds that wouldn't heal. "It said someone's coming," Kael finally admitted. "Someone important. A singer." "Singer? Like a bard?" "No. Something else. Something that can..." He struggled for words. "Command the resonance. Control it with their voice." Joren's expression darkened. "Voice resonance. Gods, those are rare. Empire keeps a registry of anyone with even a hint of the ability." He was quiet for a moment. "If something out there is calling to a voice resonant, and the empire finds out..." "They'll come," Kael finished. "In force." "Which means we need to move. Now. Before—" "Tessa! Riders incoming!" The shout came from the western perimeter. Kael was on his feet before his conscious mind processed the words, cup forgotten, hand already reaching for the knife at his belt. Joren moved with him, military reflexes kicking in despite his condition. They ran toward the wagon circle's edge where a young scout named Relle stood pointing west, arm steady despite the fear in her voice. "Eight riders. Maybe nine. Moving fast." Kael followed her gesture. There—dust plumes rising against the bone-white ribs, still distant but closing. The morning sun glinted off something metallic. Armor, maybe, or weapons. "Imperial?" Tessa appeared beside them, crossbow already loaded. Kael squinted, trying to make out details. The riders were in formation—too disciplined to be bandits, too purposeful to be traders. "Probably." "Wonderful." Tessa turned, voice rising to carry. "Everyone stay calm! Keep the circle! Do not—I repeat—do not point weapons at them unless I give the word!" "Why would imperial riders be out here?" Cors asked, joining them. Her single eye was narrowed with suspicion. "Could be routine patrol," Davos offered weakly. "Nothing's routine in the Expanse," Joren muttered. He'd drawn his knife—a long fighting blade with a god-bone handle that probably cost more than everything Kael owned. "They're coming from the wrong direction anyway. Patrols run north-south, not east-west." Which meant they weren't patrol. They were searching for something. Or someone. Kael's stomach tightened. The timing was too perfect. The distortion, the voices, and now imperial riders appearing within hours? That wasn't coincidence. The vessel approaches. "Stay close to me," he told Joren. "If this goes wrong—" "I know the drill. Don't worry, kid. I've talked my way out of worse." "Have you?" "No. But there's a first time for everything."Latest Chapter
Confessions pt 3
"I had a sister," he said finally, the words coming without conscious decision. "Younger. Living in the coastal cities, if she's still alive. I haven't seen her in three years.""Why not?""Because deserters can't exactly visit family without imperial agents showing up." He touched his corrupted neck, feeling the black veins pulse beneath his fingertips. "And because I didn't want her seeing me like this. Better she thinks I died in service than knowing I'm rotting slowly in the Expanse.""Does she know what you did? What happened in that chamber?""No. I never told her about the missions, the operations. I only sent letters saying I was doing well, rising through ranks, making the family proud." Joren smiled bitterly. "She thought I was a hero, a proper imperial soldier protecting the empire from threats. She wrote back telling me about her studies—she's training to be a physician—about how she wanted to work in the outer territories helping people who couldn't afford expensive
Confessions pt 2
"When we breached that door, it released the unfiltered aetherich that had been building up in the chamber for a decade, it was the kind of exposure that killed." The moment replayed in his mind with perfect clarity—the door coming down, the rush of air that tasted like bronze and ozone, the civilians' faces—fear giving way to confusion as his squad members started falling."Three soldiers died on the spot. They Just collapsed, as their brains couldn't adjust to the frequency." Joren touched his neck, the gesture unconscious. "Two others developed sensitivity, started hearing things, feeling things they couldn't explain. Command pulled them out within hours, sent them to research facilities for evaluation.""And you got corrupted," Petran said quietly."Wrong genetics. I had some compatibility markers—enough that the exposure didn't kill me outright, but not enough to develop actual abilities. So my body tried to adapt and failed. The dust got into my cells, my brain, and started
Confessions pt 1
Joren couldn't sleep. The corruption always got worse at night, pulsing, spreading, reminding him that each waking moment he spent brought him inches away from death.He sat watch beside the cold fire pit, checking the perimeter more from habit than necessity. Nothing moved in the salt flats except bone-crawlers hunting in the dark. Their carapaces caught starlight, gleaming like mother-of-pearl as they skittered across a vertebrae half-buried in sediment.Military training died hard. Even now, three years after desertion, and two years into corruption, he still checked sight lines and approach vectors, positioning himself where he could see threats before they saw him —old habits from a life he'd left behind, or tried to."Joren?" A hesitant voice came from the darkness. Petran emerged from between the wagons, moving with the careful quiet of someone trying not to wake others. "I didn't mean to startle you."Joren's hand had already moved to his knife before he registered who it
Schemes and Plans
After the Council session, Sereen returned to her private quarters in the Spine's administrative district. The apartment was sparse—she'd never cared much for luxury or comfort. Function mattered. Results mattered. Everything else was distraction.She poured herself a glass of wine—good vintage, a gift from Councilor Venn after their last successful Engine activation—and stood at the window overlooking the Corpse Vault entrance.The entrance was a massive archway carved directly into Tharos's sternum, flanked by guard towers and defensive emplacements. Sealed doors of god-bone and steel, three feet thick, designed to withstand anything short of a direct Engine blast. Beyond those doors lay the Deep Spine—the network of chambers and passages that followed Tharos's preserved circulatory system down into the corpse's core.And at the very center, in a chamber flooded with preservation aetherich, lay Tharos's heart.Still intact. Still, in some incomprehensible way, still beating.Once ev
The Council
The Council chamber was already full when Sereen arrived.Twelve chairs arranged in a circle, each occupied by a member of the Engine Council—the administrative body that governed all aspects of god-corpse exploitation throughout the empire. Miners and engineers, physicians and philosophers, military commanders and bureaucrats. The most powerful people in the empire, second only to the Emperor himself.And they were all looking at her.“Lady Marcellus.” Councilor Venn spoke first—an older man with the weathered face of someone who’d spent decades in the field before ascending to administrative power. “Thank you for joining us. We’ve been reviewing the incident reports from the Lorn Expanse. Concerning developments.”“Concerning,” Sereen agreed, taking her seat. “But manageable.”“Manageable?” Councilor Thrace—younger, aggressive, politically ambitious—leaned forward. “Two unregistered resonants with combined capabilities exceeding our trained operators, currently loose in imperial ter
The Architect's Vision
Lady Sereen Marcellus stood before the God-Engine and felt nothing.This bothered her more than she cared to admit.The Engine filled the chamber—thirty feet of crystallized aetherich suspended in a lattice of god-bone and imperial steel, pulsing with a rhythm that mimicked a heartbeat if hearts beat once every seven seconds. Blue-white light flickered through its core, casting shadows that moved wrong, that bent at angles geometry couldn't explain. The air hummed with barely contained divine energy, a frequency that made most people nauseous after prolonged exposure.Sereen had been standing here for three hours and felt perfectly fine."My lady." Her chief engineer, a nervous man named Pavik, approached with a leather portfolio stuffed with paper records and a calculation slate tucked under his arm. "The resonance spike you requested confirmation on—we've verified it. Two sources, operating in tandem. The synchronization is… unprecedented.""Show me."Pavik set the slate on the near
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