CHAPTER TEN #2
"I don't intend to use these weapons as weapons," Thalia said, spreading her hands in a placating gesture.
"I want to understand the material properties of the Deep Ones.
To learn how they might be fought." She paused, choosing her next words carefully.
"I don't believe conventional weapons can stop them. Not even ice-metal."
Naj's rigid posture eased slightly, though wariness remained in every line of his body. "On that, we can agree," he said slowly. "The Deep Tide will consume what it touches. Metal, stone, flesh—all are the same to it. All return to void."
"But I watched Cassia fend them off," Thalia countered. "On the fortress-whale. Her storm magic drove them back, at least temporarily. Long enough for Thrum'kith to escape to safer waters."
Naj bowed his head, the mention of his captain bringing grief to his weathered features. "Cassia gave her life for that delay," he said softly. "And it was only that—a delay. Not victory."
"Has storm magic always had this effect on the Deep Ones?" Thalia pressed, leaning forward. "Even in the earlier days, when they first began to spread beyond The Maw?"
"Not wholly," Naj admitted. "Only somewhat. It cannot drive them back permanently—nothing can. But yes, storm magic seems to... affect them. Disrupt their cohesion long enough for escape. Like what Cassia did for Thrum'kith."
Thalia nodded, her suspicions confirmed.
"I want to create experimental weapons," she said, gesturing to her workbench where various metals lay prepared alongside tools of her craft.
"Weapons that combine my ice-glacenite forging technique with storm magic.
I want to see if we can create blades capable of striking the Deep Tide itself. "
Naj shook his head, disbelief evident in his expression. "That's foolish. Like creating a weapon to kill the ocean. The Deep Tide is a force of nature, girl. Not an entity that can be fought with swords, no matter how cleverly forged."
"I'm not so sure that's true," Thalia argued, her conviction growing with each word. "Forces of nature have patterns, rules. They follow predictable paths. But the Deep Tide consumes everything it touches, leaving nothing behind. No natural force is so absolute."
"Some forces consume utterly," Naj countered. "Surges of the sea. Wildfires."
"Surges recede," Thalia shot back. "Fires burn themselves out.
Their destruction is terrible but finite.
" She stepped closer, her eyes fixed on Naj's.
"The Deep Tide can be driven back. Your people have been doing it for generations, pushing it away long enough to escape.
I believe it can be forced to retreat to its origin—and I'm determined to find out how. "
The forge fell silent save for the steady growl of the central furnace.
Luna and Ashe had moved slightly apart, giving Thalia space for this crucial negotiation while remaining close enough to intervene if necessary.
The other Wardens watched with wary interest, their earlier fear now tempered with cautious curiosity.
"Will you help me?" Thalia asked finally, her voice soft but urgent.
"The ice-glacenite we discovered can withstand contact with the black metal.
And I've witnessed the effectiveness of storm magic against the Deep Tide.
" She spread her hands, encompassing both the mainland and archipelago traditions.
"I believe we need both. Combined, strengthened through alliance. "
She hesitated, then decided to reveal more.
"I have an ability—rare on the mainland.
I can sense currents of energy in metals, in natural materials.
I can't perform storm magic myself, but I can feel the patterns within lightning.
" She mimicked the jagged path of electrical discharge with her fingers.
"Everyone calls storm magic chaotic, but I can tell it’s not chaos.
It's an art. As precise in its way as the most intricate cryomancy. "
Naj watched her with unreadable eyes.
"We won't defeat the Deep Tide divided," Thalia continued, her voice gaining strength. "Not mainland against archipelago, not cryomancy against storm magic. We need alliance. True alliance, not just temporary cooperation."
Silence stretched between them, heavy with the weight of generations of conflict and mistrust. Naj looked away, his gaze drawn to the distant glow of the central furnace.
For a moment, Thalia thought he would refuse—would retreat into the fatalism that seemed to have gripped the Wardens since their capture.
But then he turned back, something resolute hardening in his weathered face.
"I will help you," he said, his voice rough but certain.
"Though I think we are like children building walls of sand before the tide.
" A ghost of a smile crossed his features.
"But if we are to die either way, better to die fighting than cowering. "
Relief flooded through Thalia, so intense she nearly staggered with it.
This was just the beginning—a fragile alliance between a handful of individuals, forged in secret against the wishes of those in power.
But it was something. A starting point. A chance, however slim, to face the darkness together rather than divided.