Chapter 10
The railway station is worse than the subway.
August knows it before they're even inside, feels it in the way the death energy thickens as they cross the rail yard, pressing against his senses.
The ambient power here is immense. The station has been teeming with it for decades, since a derailment killed twenty-three people, and the years of concentrated grief and violent death have turned the site into something that makes August's own magic stir restlessly beneath his skin, reaching toward the darkness.
He has to actively hold it back. The temptation to draw on it, to let the ambient energy feed his depleted reserves, is almost physical, and that's before they even enter the building.
Knox is running interference somewhere across the city, keeping the Order's attention pointed at a false lead in the harbor district.
August has met the man exactly once and is trusting him with his life, which is either a testament to how much he trusts Vale or an indictment of his survival instincts. Probably both.
Vale is a steady presence beside him as they pick their way across rusted tracks, and August is grateful for the silence between them.
He's been quiet since last night, since the library, since the reading chair, since five words that had fallen out of him before he could stop them.
You're going to break me. He'd said it with his face pressed against Vale's throat and Vale's hands against the frozen center of his chest, and he'd meant it with every atom of his failing body, and then he'd pulled away and pretended it hadn't happened because that was the only thing he knew how to do.
Vale had let him pretend. Had followed him back to the stacks without pushing, without asking, without doing any of the things that would have forced August to confront what he'd just admitted.
They'd worked in silence until security arriving had driven them out, and they'd walked home with Vale's hand on his shoulder, and August had covered that hand with his own without thinking about it and neither of them had mentioned it afterward.
Now it sits between them, unacknowledged, unresolved, and they're both carefully stepping around it.
"The rift will open on the main platform," August says, because if he's talking about strategy he's not thinking about the weight of Vale's hand in his or the way his chest still aches where Vale's palms had been.
"The death energy is concentrated at the derailment site. That's where the veil is thinnest."
"Voss will have adjusted," Vale says. "He knows we're closing his rifts. He'll compensate."
"More undead. Stronger. And possibly something else." August's jaw tightens. "The Cabal texts mentioned guardian constructs, things bound directly into the ritual structure to protect the rift. Not just undead emerging from the breach, but entities anchored to it. Defending it."
Vale glances at him. "You didn't mention that before."
"I was hoping I was wrong." August's mouth sets in a grim line. "I'm not usually that lucky."
They enter through a maintenance access point, a rusted door that August scouted three days ago, back when he was still working alone and assumed he'd be doing this by himself.
He produces the key from his pocket without explanation, and the tunnel beyond slopes downward into a darkness so complete that it seems to swallow Vale's sword-light the moment it blooms.
The walls are damp concrete, cracked and stained with mineral deposits that look like old blood in the low light.
The further they descend, the heavier the air becomes.
The death energy presses against August's skin, and he can feel his magic responding, the shadows at the edge of Vale's light reaching toward him, curling around his ankles, whispering in a language he's spent fourteen years learning to understand.
Come in. Come down. You belong here.
He doesn't. Not yet.
The corruption on his skin is holding, faint grey lines, the product of hours of Vale's sustained healing throughout the afternoon.
They'd sat at August's kitchen table, cross-referencing Cabal notes and mapping the station layout, and Vale had kept a hand on his arm through most of it.
Just resting there. A steady current of warmth flowing between them while they worked.
August had let himself have it without fighting, without questioning, because he'd used up all his resistance in the library and had nothing left to build walls with.
He's trying not to think about what that means. About the fact that he'd spent an entire afternoon with Vale's hand on his skin and hadn't flinched once. About the fact that the warmth had felt less like healing and more like something he can't name without it becoming real.
The ambient death energy pushes harder as they descend, and August feels the first spike of pain lance through his chest, the corruption stirring, responding to the call of so much concentrated death. His jaw clenches. His hands fist at his sides.
Vale reaches out and takes his hand.
The warmth is immediate. It flows through their joined fingers and into August's arm and down into his chest, and the pain dulls, doesn't vanish but softens to something bearable.
August's shoulders drop. His breathing eases.
He threads his fingers through Vale's and holds on, and they walk the rest of the tunnel hand in hand in the dark, and August doesn't let himself think about how it feels like the most natural thing in the world.
If he thinks about that, he'll think about the library and he can't afford that right now.
Right now, he needs to close a rift and not die.
The tunnel opens onto the platform.
It's vast, far larger than the subway station, with a vaulted ceiling lost in darkness overhead.
The platform stretches in both directions into shadow, the tracks below buried under decades of debris and dust. Sickly emergency lighting flickers along the walls, casting pools of yellow that do nothing against the dark.
The air is thick, almost liquid, saturated with death energy that coils and tastes of copper and ash and something far older, something that predates the derailment by centuries.
The Cabal built their ritual sites on places already steeped in death, and this one has been accumulating power since before Haven was a city.
August can feel spirits down here. Dozens of them, the derailment victims, still trapped, still confused, still suffering after all these years. No one ever came to help them. No one ever comes to places like this.
He wants to stop. Wants to reach out to them, talk to them, guide them home. The pull is almost unbearable, the same pull that has driven every choice he's made for years, the inability to walk past suffering without doing something about it. But there's no time. Not tonight.
I'll come back for you, he thinks. I promise.
"There," August says, pointing toward the far end of the platform where the death energy is densest, a visible distortion in the air marking the spot where the veil is thinnest. "That's where it'll open."
Vale releases his hand and draws his sword.
The blade blazes to life, white-gold light flooding the platform, and the shadows recoil.
August feels the loss of contact immediately, but he pushes it aside.
The warmth Vale built into him over the afternoon is still there, a reserve, a foundation. He'll need every bit of it.
They take position. Vale at the center of the platform, sword raised, a pillar of holy light in the suffocating dark. August behind him and to the left, hands loose at his sides, shadows already gathering in his palms. They've done this before. They know the rhythm.
It doesn't make the waiting easier.
The air pressure drops.
It happens faster than the previous rifts, no slow buildup, no gradual descent of temperature.
One moment the platform is still, and the next reality buckles.
The veil tears, and the rift erupts into existence with a sound that splits the air, a ragged wound in the world that pulses sickly green and bleeds darkness from its edges.
It's massive, twice the size of the subway rift, three times the warehouse, and the death energy that pours from it hits August with a force that staggers him back a step.
The undead come immediately.
Not a trickle. A flood. They pour from the rift in a surge of bone and shadow and screaming, and these are nothing like what they've faced before.
Skeletal warriors in corroded Cabal armor, moving with a speed and coordination that speaks to binding magic far more sophisticated than brute-force reanimation.
Wraith-forms that don't scream but whisper, their voices threading into August's mind, trying to find purchase, trying to turn his own death magic against him.
And behind them, emerging from the rift's mouth with a grinding, deliberate menace, a guardian construct.
August's blood freezes.
It's enormous, twelve feet of fused bone and black iron, vaguely humanoid, with arms that end in bladed appendages and a skull-face that glows with the same green light as the rift.
It moves with a terrible patience, each step shaking the platform, and August can feel the binding magic radiating from it.
This thing isn't just undead. It's a structure.
A piece of the rift's architecture given physical form, designed to protect the breach from exactly what August and Vale are trying to do.
"August!" Vale's voice cuts through the chaos. He's already moving, sword blazing, cutting through the first wave of skeletal warriors with brutal efficiency. "The construct, can you—"
"I see it." August's hands are already wreathed in shadow, power building between his palms. "Focus on the warriors. I'll handle it."