Chapter 30 #3
Through Elio’s truth overlay, she could see exactly what she was building. Reality became exposed without the master’s deception obscuring her work.
Through Cyrus’s fire, she had protection, containment ready to sever the connection if corruption tried to jump through their contact.
Four people, working as one, each unable to do this alone. Together, we were possibly capable.
First modification complete, Marigold reported, her voice strained. Blood ran from her nose. The drain is now persistent instead of complete. He’s bleeding energy continuously but slowly.
Encoding it into the lattice, I said, my fingers flying across my tablet. Making it permanent instead of temporary. Portal mages—follow my adjustments. We’re modifying the northern boundary.
The portal mages responded, building the new architecture on top of the old. They followed specifications I was inventing in real-time based on what Marigold was showing me through her necromancy.
Second modification, she said, making the bleed rate proportional to his resistance. The harder he fights, the faster he drains. If he stops fighting, the drain slows to sustainable levels.
Elegant, cruel, exactly what we needed. His own rage would become his execution.
I encoded it into the dimensional framework, turning her cycle authority into permanent boundary conditions.
Third modification… She stopped and gasped.
Marigold! Elio’s truth overlay flared, showing the master surging through their connection and trying to corrupt her through direct contact. He was pouring himself through like poison into a wound.
I’ve got her, Cyrus said, fire blazing between them. He wasn’t burning the connection, just defining its edges to prevent corruption from spreading beyond the quarantine’s boundary.
I’m fine, Marigold gritted out. He’s just… He knows what I’m doing, and he’s trying to stop me.
Then finish it, I said. What’s the third modification?
Making him understand what we did. Her voice had gone cold, hard. Making the termination rule conscious instead of automatic. So he knows, every moment, that he’s bleeding. That his infinity is ending. That he’s mortal now.
Revenge. Justice. Truth. I encoded it.
The lattice accepted the modifications. The termination rule shifted from automatic drain to conscious decay. The master’s quarantine became his slow execution.
It’s stable, I reported, checking dimensional stress throughout the structure and feeling the architecture hold. The lattice is self-maintaining. The bleed rate is sustainable.
Marigold pulled back from the quarantine and severed the connection. She collapsed backward into Cyrus’s arms, Scout tumbling from her shoulder.
She was shaking, blood running from her nose and her eyes. Her magic was raw and scraped from touching something that old, that corrupted, that wrong.
But she was alive. Conscious. Her.
Through the quarantine, I heard the master’s voice—not enraged but something worse. Recognition.
You made my immortal system… mortal. It almost sounded like respect. You didn’t destroy what I built. You just gave it a death sentence, let it run out naturally instead of forcing elimination.
He paused, but when he spoke again, his voice was quieter, more human. Your father tried to tell people this once. That infinity without ending was corruption, not transcendence. The council silenced him for it. And I let them because it served my purposes.
He paused again. He was right.
After a beat of silence, he said, Tell me, traitor’s daughter. When I finally bleed out—decades from now, centuries maybe—will you remember that you chose mercy? That you made me mortal instead of eliminating me? That you picked harmony over domination, even when domination would have been easier?
Marigold looked at the quarantine from Cyrus’s arms, at the dimensional prison that was now also a slow execution.
Yes, she said simply. I’ll remember. Because that’s what makes us different from you.
The master’s laugh was bitter. We’ll see. You have decades of cleansing ahead. Decades of watching witches struggle with the corruption I left behind. We’ll see if your harmony lasts when the actual work begins.
He wasn’t wrong, but we’d won anyway.
Alpine convergence stable, I said into the communication spell—a glowing orb that would carry my message back to Parker at Wickem. My voice was hoarse from strain. Corruption contained. Modified termination rule functioning. The master is quarantined with persistent bleed. System is mortal.
Parker’s voice came back immediately through the spell: Copy that. Standing by for replication protocol.
I looked at my team in the Alpine chamber.
At Marigold, still shaking in Cyrus’s arms. At Elio, his truth magic finally banking after twenty minutes of sustained overlay.
At Cyrus, his fire dimming to a protective glow instead of active defense.
At the portal mages, exhausted but steady, waiting for the next order.
It works, I said, but not the way I designed it. The master’s consciousness is functionally infinite. Each convergence point will require individual adaptation. We can’t just replicate the blueprint. We have to redesign for local conditions.
Understanding settled over the chamber.
This wasn’t going to be a simple deployment. This was going to be five separate executions, five unique problems, and five chances to fail.
Then we adapt, Marigold said from Cyrus’s arms. Her voice was weak but certain. Point by point.
Through the communication spell, I heard Parker coordinating with international teams back at Wickem. I could hear the assembled representatives processing what we’d learned.
The Alpine success proved the concept worked, but it also proved the concept was incomplete. Theory met reality, mathematics met magic, and design met execution.
All of them proved insufficient without partnership.
Transport back to Wickem, I said to the portal mages. We need to adjust the specifications before deploying to the other convergence points.
The return portal opened—a circle of shimmering space cutting through the air. We stepped through one by one.
Back to the war room. Back to planning. Four hours until solstice. Four convergence points remaining.
And now we knew each one would be different. Each one would require everything we had. But we’d proven it was possible.
That would have to be enough.