Elowen
The chamber screams. Not in any sound a human throat could make — something deeper, the groan of stone.
The ward lines have begun to bleed a large amount of unexplained light, upward instead of across the floor, flaring in pulses that throw shadows no single object in the room could cast. I feel the floor shift beneath my feet, a slow quarter-inch lean that corrects itself and then doesn't, the ground deciding it no longer owes me horizontal.
Malrec's hand is on my neck. Not gripping — pressing, thumb against the base of my skull. He steers me toward the ritual's center and I move because the alternative is worse, but my left hand is already working.
The herbs are in the hem of my sleeve, the paste darkened and half-dried against the fabric.
I drag my palm along the nearest line as he pushes me past it.
The reaction is immediate and wrong in exactly the way I hoped — a hiss of displaced energy traveling the length of the carved line like a flame racing along oil.
Malrec doesn't notice. He is watching the central mark, watching the wildspont's column of energy build above the chamber in that bruised, climbing dark I remember from the outer basin overlook. Confident, still, despite everything that has already gone wrong around him.
I press more paste into the next crack. And the next.
The corrupted energy doesn't absorb it cleanly the way it did in the workroom with the small bark sample.
Down here, this close to the rupture's heart, the reaction is unstable.
The herbs interrupt rather than contain.
The floor jolts once, hard, like something enormous just shifted below us, and a pillar on the east wall folds inward at its center and simply stops.
"Stop." Malrec's voice, directly beside my ear. His hand rotates at my neck with a precision that sends white light across my vision, and I understand exactly how much force he is restraining. He has been aware of what I was doing for longer than he has shown.
I stop moving. I don't stop thinking.
"The sleeve," he states. He strips it from my arm with one motion, turns the fabric out, drops the remaining paste onto the burning line where it sizzles and dies without contacting anything useful.
Then he looks at me with an expression I have not seen on his face before — not anger. Impressed contempt.
"You understand the mechanism better than I expected," he admits.
"Malrec."
"It changes nothing." He continues steering me toward the center.
The column of energy is thicker now, denser, pulling at the air around us so that my hair moves toward it against the direction of any wind.
"I planned for interference. I built tolerance into every anchor sequence.
Your delay costs me minutes. Not the outcome. "
The main sigil is beneath my feet before I can find purchase against it.
The carved lines pulse under my boots — a pulling sensation, physical, as though the magic is attempting to locate something inside me it can use.
I remember what he said in the hours before Draekir arrived.
He is going to use my body as a conduit whether I agree to it or not.
"Draekir will not reach you in time," Malrec says, repositioning me.
"That was the design. Zevrik holds the inner approach, the corrupted creatures hold the perimeter, and by the time anyone reaches this chamber the anchor sequence will be complete.
Your death stabilizes the collapse. His death removes the last political obstacle.
The region fractures beautifully, and what grows in the space—"
"You planned to kill him."
"I planned to use him. There is a distinction." He reaches for the binding at my wrists. "Your connection to the stabilizing flora makes you the ritual's anchor. His connection to this territory makes him the accelerant. Together you generate enough rupture energy to—"
I drive my elbow into his jaw. It's not precise.
The impact is enough to break his grip on my wrist for two seconds, and I am moving before he recovers — dropping low, tearing a piece of loose stone from a collapsed ward marker, swinging it at his knee with everything I have.
I feel the impact travel up my arm. He staggers.
The herbs are gone from my sleeve but I have them on my palms still, residue deep in the creases of my skin, and I press both hands flat against the anchor stone and push everything that remains of the paste into the carved surface.
The anchor flares, destabilizes, its light turning the wrong color and then collapsing into a dimness that spreads along the connected lines like ink dropped in water.
Malrec hits me from behind. I don't lose consciousness, which surprises us both. I grab the stone, spin, and get my knee up between us before he can pin me against it.
"You cannot stop it," he says. His composure has cracked down the middle. "The anchors are too far along. Even with the damage—"
The chamber convulses.
Not a tremor. A full structural convulsion, the floor tilting fifteen degrees and correcting violently, sending loose stone cascading from the ceiling.
Two of the four remaining lines collapse simultaneously — not from my sabotage, from overload.
The ritual is consuming its own foundation.
The energy that was supposed to travel outward along paths has begun folding.
I understand it before Malrec does, and I see the moment he understands it too. His face changes.
The wildspont is not simply erupting. The magic is pulling inward, collapsing toward the central carving like water down a drain. The anchor marker is no longer directing energy — they are being consumed by it. Malrec's careful plan has passed the point of his control.
The column narrows, thickens, brightens at its center to a white that has no warmth in it.
The roots that tore through the east wall begin blackening from the floor upward.
A soldier near the outer passage attempts to run and stops mid-stride, caught in a ripple of corrupted energy that moves through him before he can clear it.
I press myself against the ritual stone and keep my hands flat against the carved surface. The residue on my palms reacts with the stone's energy in a low, sustained interference. Enough to buy seconds. I need Draekir to have seconds.
Malrec turns to face the column. Both hands raise in the configuration of a command ward, the kind designed to redirect enormous quantities of raw energy. He is trying to recover control of something that has already decided it doesn't belong to him.
The wildspont doesn't answer. He tries again, louder in the motion, more of his own energy feeding the construct, and for one breath the column wavers. Then it resumes, faster than before. The chamber floor has begun slanting in all four directions simultaneously.
He can't stop this alone. He never could. He built something that required everything to go correctly, and too many things haven't.
The carved lines beneath my boots are no longer warm — they are burning, the heat traveling through the leather, and I lift one foot and then the other and understand there is very little time left before this floor becomes untenable.
The collapse is eating itself alive, and when it reaches the point of full rupture it will either implode and take the surrounding forest with it, or it will explode outward and take Duskmire.
I look at the roots. Still growing, still pale at the tips where they haven't reached the corrupted energy yet. Still alive.
My hands hurt. The residue on my palms has reacted until there's nothing left of it, the interference it provided has run its course, and the carved anchor at my back pulses with a heat I can't maintain contact with much longer.
I need more. I need him to get here. Malrec is still fighting the column, his construct burning through his own reserves at a rate I can see in the set of his shoulders and the shaking at his wrists.
He knows he is losing. The knowledge has not made him stop.
That is the part that frightens me most.
The chamber screams again. Lower this time. The sound of something vast and foundational giving up its last attempt to hold. I press my bleeding cheek against the cool root tip pushing through the stone, close my eyes, and hold on.
Get here, I think, in the direction of the outer ruins, in the direction of whatever sound he is making that I cannot hear over the collapse. I have held everything I can. Get here now.
The wildspont answers with another pull, and the floor tilts, and I hold.