Chapter Thirteen
KING AEVARYN
Ihad not slept in three days.
This was not unusual. In the final stages of campaign planning, I rarely slept more than two hours at a stretch, my mind refusing to release the variables until they had resolved into something workable.
The maps on the table in front of me had been annotated and re-annotated until the original lines were barely visible beneath my markings.
My senior commanders had learned over the years to bring me fresh copies every morning because by evening the previous ones were illegible.
Tonight, the maps were still clean.
That bothered me more than the sleeplessness.
I stood at the head of the war table and looked at the northeastern corridor, where Caerwyn's forces had been consolidating for the past six weeks, and tried to find the variable I was missing.
The rebel numbers were insufficient for a direct engagement.
I had confirmed that through three separate intelligence sources, and I did not rely on fewer than three for anything this consequential.
Their supply lines were extended and vulnerable.
Their leadership, whatever its other qualities, was running on ideology and captured momentum, neither of which sustained an army through a winter campaign.
By every metric I had developed over two centuries of ruling, this should have been straightforward.
And yet.
The candle nearest the northeastern corridor guttered without any draft to move it. I watched it recover and thought about Malric, the rebellion’s second in command.
He was the variable. He had always been the variable.
A boy I had underestimated because he had his mother's face, and I had made the mistake of assuming he had inherited her submission along with her features.
He had not. He had inherited her mind, which was considerably more dangerous, and he had spent the years I'd wasted watching him grow quietly into someone who understood exactly how power worked and had developed a thorough ideological objection to how I used it.
His mother had been the same.
I set that thought aside. It was not useful tonight.
The eastern flank needed a second artillery placement.
I reached for the marking pen and annotated the position, then stepped back to assess the sight lines.
The ridge at Caerwyn's western edge would give us an elevation advantage if we moved the second division two days ahead of the main force.
The timing was tight but manageable. Voren could handle the coordination.
He was reliable if not imaginative, which was exactly what that assignment required.
I made the notation and moved to the supply assessment.
The numbers were good. They were better than good.
I had spent the past two months ensuring they were better than good, diverting resources from three provincial allocations that could afford the reduction and consolidating everything into this final push.
When this engagement concluded, the rebellion would be finished.
Not suppressed. Finished. The rebel network would fracture without its center, the provincial sympathizers would retreat to plausible deniability, and the question of succession and stability that had been hanging over the kingdom for two years would resolve.
I would need to visit Aveline before the final campaign to get a bit of her power to sustain me in the final battle.
She was always unsettled when I had been away for extended periods.
The siphoning array managed the baseline draw, but the supplemental collection I performed during visits kept the reserves at the levels I needed for sustained magical output.
I had calculated that I could operate for six to eight weeks on current reserves without significant degradation.
The campaign would conclude in four. But I would need everything I could muster to win the war with any kind of finality.
It was good that I had not promised her to any alphas.
None deserved my daughter or the boost to their power.
I could not accept any competitors to the throne, even if she were my heir.
Her power would give any alpha a significant boost, while I could only achieve a small benefit of her overall potential.
I had tried to create a closer bond when she was younger, hoping a familial bond could subsume the mate bond, but her mother got in the way, furious at my testing.
But it allowed me to hide her in the tower and ensure she would never meet another alpha, and her power would always be mine, even if it were limited.
At least it couldn’t be turned against me.
I glanced back down the northeastern corridor and sensed it.
Not dramatically. Not a blow or a surge or anything with violence in it.
Simply an absence, the way you notice a sound has stopped only when the silence it leaves becomes apparent.
A connection I had maintained for so long that it had become ambient, a background note I no longer consciously registered, went quiet.
I froze.
I reached for it as I always did, the practiced internal motion of extending awareness along the established channel, the one that ran through the array in the tower floor, through the supplemental bindings I refreshed on every visit, through twenty years of accumulated and carefully maintained work.
Nothing.
I reached again, funneling more power into the connection. The channel was there. But something interrupted the flow, as if breaking the structure at the source. Something had interfered with the array.
I considered for a moment that something had happened to Aveline, but then discarded that. That sensation would have felt different. There was an alert to indicate she was in danger. This had nothing to do with her and everything to do with our bond, weak as it may be.
I was at the door of my chambers before the marking pen had finished rolling across the war table.
The portal was in the east wall of my private rooms, behind the hanging I'd had installed twelve years ago when I'd decided that riding out to the tower took too much time and I needed faster access.
Building a portal to a specific fixed location required considerable skill and considerable power, and I had expended both.
But it had served me without failure for over a decade.
I pulled the hanging aside and pressed my palm to the activation point.
The portal opened.
Or it began to open. The familiar sensation of the passage forming, the dimensional fold that connected my east wall to the tower's lower entry—and then it hit something.
Not a ward, not exactly. A ward had texture, had the identifiable quality of another caster's intention.
This was more like walking into a wall in the dark, a flat resistance that had no spell-work signature I could identify because it wasn't spell-work.
It was her.
I stood with my palm against the activation point and pushed, because I did not accept resistance as a final answer.
I had defeated every resistance in over two centuries of rule and I was not going to begin tonight.
The portal strained against whatever was blocking it.
The strain traveled from my arm to my chest as my reserves kicked in, drawing on the array’s stored energy before the portal closed.
Not collapsed. Shut from the other side.
I lowered my hand.
The east wall looked back at me, stone and mortar and the blank indifference of inanimate material. The hanging swayed slightly from the movement of air the failed portal had displaced and then went still.
I stood in the quiet of my private rooms and processed what had just happened with the methodical attention I applied to all tactical problems, because that was what this was. A tactical problem. An unexpected variable. Something that had changed in my absence and required assessment and response.
The array had been interrupted. The portal had been blocked.
The blocking had come from within the tower. Which meant someone was in the tower.
The only people who should have been in the tower were the tower itself and Aveline.
Aveline did not have the power to block a portal of that construction because Aveline had never had access to her power in sufficient quantity to do anything more than occasionally make the candles flicker when she was distressed.
Someone had found her.
Someone had gotten through the wards, past the thorn barrier, past the sentinel constructs I'd placed at the perimeter, past every layer of protection I had designed specifically to prevent this.
They had reached her and they had apparently done something to her that had disrupted a century of carefully maintained infrastructure.
The sound that came out of me was not something I allowed in front of other people.
It moved through the room, which caused the candles on the war table to go out, the marking pen to roll off the edge, and the maps to shift in the displaced air of it. I stood with my hands at my sides and let the rage move through me, and then I pulled it back in, contained it, and began to think.
Someone in the rebellion knew about the tower.
That was the first implication, and it narrowed the field considerably.
The tower’s location was not secret the way a buried document was secret, but it was not advertised, and reaching it required specific knowledge of the forest paths through the Wyrdwood, which had been unmapped by design.
Either there had been a breach in my inner circle, or someone had been very patient and very thorough.
I moved back to the war table, looked at the maps, and understood that the campaign I had been planning was no longer the campaign I needed to run. Aveline was my priority. I had to secure her. The rebellion could wait.
For now.
The northeastern corridor was still relevant. Caerwyn's forces were still a tactical problem. But the order of operations had changed entirely, because the rebellion's purpose had shifted the moment they'd found the tower. They had not been looking for a fight. They had been looking for her.
They had found her.
Which meant they now had access to something that changed the military calculus so completely that the maps on my table were temporarily irrelevant.
I lit the candles again with a gesture that was sharper than necessary.
I needed to speak to Commander Voren, and I needed him in the next hour.
The eastern deployment would accelerate—not by two days but by four.
The artillery placement I'd marked for the ridge would need a third position added.
And I needed my personal guard assembled before morning, because I was no longer directing this campaign from the war room.
I was going to the Wyrdwood myself.
I pulled the hanging back across the east wall and looked at the blank stone behind it for one moment.
She was on the other side of that wall, unreachable, with people who did not understand what she was or what she was capable of or what she would become if allowed to develop without management.
She had been safe in the tower. She had been contained, stable, and safe, and I had kept her that way for years because I understood what unchecked amplifier-class power did in the hands of someone who had no training, no context, no comprehension of the scale of what they carried.
I had not imprisoned her.
I had protected the world from a catastrophe she would never have forgiven herself for causing.
They would undo all of it. They would tell her whatever served their purposes—the rebellion's version of events.
This sympathetic reframing painted me as the villain in a story that was considerably more complicated than villainy.
They would push at the bindings I'd spent years maintaining.
They would think they were liberating her and they would not understand what they were releasing until it was already loose.
I turned back to the war table.
The marking pen had left a smear across the eastern flank when it fell.
I picked it up and looked at the smear and thought about Aveline's face the last time I had visited—the way she had asked how we knew she was still dangerous, the question she'd been working up to for longer than she'd realized, the first small sign that the conditioning was beginning to thin.
I had told myself I would reinforce it on my next visit.
I had been too occupied with the campaign.
That was a mistake. I did not make many of them, and I did not repeat the ones I made, and I would not repeat this one.
I drew a line through the eastern flank notation and began to redraw the campaign entirely.