Chapter 9 Tanith
NINE
TANITH
The shelter holds.
I repeat this fact to myself as night falls over Niren Hollow, watching the darkness press against the partial walls that surround us. The shelter holds. We survived the ambush. We are alive.
The words ring hollow in a city where forty thousand people are not.
Arax has built another fire—smaller than last night’s, positioned to minimize light leakage while maximizing heat retention.
My body aches from the battle—muscles pulled, bruises forming, the deep exhaustion that comes from pushing Termination magic past comfortable limits. But my mind refuses to quiet.
The city outside our shelter tells a story I can’t stop reading.
I rise from my position near the fire and move to the gap in the wall that serves as a window. Niren Hollow spreads before me in the failing light, its wounds visible even in darkness.
They were here just seven months ago.
Now the only evidence of their existence is absence—the negative space they left behind, the outline of a city that no longer contains a city.
“You should rest.”
Arax’s voice cuts through my contemplation. I don’t turn from the window.
“I’m thinking.”
“Thinking doesn’t require standing in an exposed position.”
“This isn’t exposed. You cleared the surrounding terrain.”
A pause. I feel his attention on my back, that weighted awareness I’ve grown accustomed to over the past days. He watches me constantly. I’ve stopped pretending I don’t notice.
“What are you thinking about?”
The question surprises me. He doesn’t ask questions like this—personal questions, questions that invite disclosure rather than operational analysis. His conversation style runs toward statements and observations, information delivered without request for reciprocation.
“Cost.” I keep my gaze on the ruined cityscape. “I’m thinking about what this costs.”
The silence that follows has a different texture than his usual pauses. Heavier. I turn from the window to find him watching me with an expression I can’t read—not blank, exactly, but carefully controlled. Guarded in a way I haven’t seen since our first meeting.
“My cost.”
“You’ve been doing this for centuries. Eliminating threats, erasing problems, cleaning up after disasters like this one.” I gesture toward the window, toward the dead city beyond. “What does it cost to end things so completely? Year after year, century after century?”
“You’re asking about psychological damage.”
“I’m asking about you.”
He doesn’t answer immediately. The fire crackles softly between us—different from the hiss and pop of previous nights, a more natural sound that suggests the corruption here is less dense than other territories we’ve crossed.
I wait.
Arax isn’t a man who fills silence with chatter. If he’s going to answer, he’ll do it on his own timeline. Pushing won’t help. So I return to my position near the fire and lower myself cross-legged to the ground, giving him space to decide whether this conversation continues.
The minutes stretch. The fire burns low. I’m about to give up and attempt sleep when he speaks.
“I remember all of them.”
His tone gives nothing away—the same flat delivery he uses for mission briefings. But the words themselves land with unexpected weight.
“Every ending. Every elimination. Every person, creature, structure, or magical framework I’ve erased.
” He shifts position against the wall, a minute adjustment that might indicate discomfort or might mean nothing at all.
“Dragons don’t forget. Our memories don’t fade or blur with time. What we experience, we retain.”
“That sounds like torture.”
“It’s not.” He meets my eyes across the fire, the low light catching in his irises. “The memories are data. They inform future decisions. They allow pattern recognition across a very long existence.”
“Data.” The word tastes bitter. “You remember forty thousand deaths as data.”
“I didn’t kill forty thousand people. The Choir did.”
“But you’ve killed others. Erased them, the way the Choir erased this city.”
“Yes.”
No defense. No justification. Acknowledgment, simple and absolute.
Horror would be the appropriate response. Moral revulsion, confronting a creature who admits to a lifetime of methodical killing. But what I feel is recognition. The terrible familiarity of looking at someone who has done unforgivable things and survived them.
“Do you regret any of them?”
“Regret is inefficient. It doesn’t undo the action.
It doesn’t alter the outcome.” He pauses, and I see the careful consideration happening behind his eyes.
“But I remember which ones I would choose differently, if the circumstances were presented again. I remember which endings served their purpose and which created consequences I didn’t anticipate. ”
“That sounds like regret with extra steps.”
His lips twitch—barely perceptible, gone almost before I register it. But the brief expression transforms the severe lines of his face into an almost-human configuration.
“Perhaps.”
I pull my journal from my pack, more to give my hands occupation than from any real need to document. The pages fall open to maps I’ve been drawing since we entered the Dead Roads—expansion patterns, failure zones, the slow cartography of a dying world.
“I destroyed a kingdom once.”
The words emerge without conscious decision, pulled from me by the weight of his honesty. If he can speak of endings without flinching, I can speak of one.
Arax goes still. Not the watchful stillness of a predator—the deeper quiet of someone giving full attention to unexpected information.
“The Morrith Sovereignty.” I keep my eyes on the journal, tracing the lines of a map I drew months ago. “Eastern edge of what’s now the Reach. Three million people, give or take. Major ley-line nexus, agricultural surplus, stable magical infrastructure. I was twenty-four years old.”
“I know of it. The collapse was attributed to ritual cascade failure.”
“The collapse was me.”
I close the journal and force myself to meet his eyes. He deserves this confession face-to-face, not the coward’s version delivered to my own hands.
“A faction within the sovereignty had discovered how to weaponize Termination magic. Not through my bloodline—through artificial replication. Stolen samples, forced breeding programs, experimental synthesis.” The memories rise like bile, and I swallow them back.
“They called it the Ending Initiative. Bureaucratic language for abomination. They were building an army of ending-touched soldiers. Weapons that could unmake anything they encountered.”
“The implications would have been—”
“Catastrophic. If they succeeded, if they deployed those weapons beyond their borders, the result would have made the Ash Choir’s rituals look like campfire tricks.
” I force my breathing to stay even, drawing on years of practice at discussing impossible things.
“I found out because they tried to recruit me. Sent an emissary with honeyed words about serving the greater good, about controlled endings, about the precision weapons I could help them create. When I refused, they tried to take samples by force.”
“They failed.”
“They failed. And when I escaped, I realized I couldn’t simply run.
Couldn’t pretend I hadn’t seen what they were building, couldn’t leave it to someone else to stop.
” I pause, letting the weight of the memory fill the silence.
“So I ended it. The research facilities, the breeding programs, the faction members, the political infrastructure that supported them. All of it.”
“The cascade that destroyed the Sovereignty.”
“Was me. My magic, applied at a scale I’d never attempted.
The termination spread further than I intended—broke containment, propagated through connected systems, collapsed the ley-line nexus that powered half the kingdom.
” I let that sit between us. “Three million people. Not all at once, not instantly like the Choir’s victims. The cascade took weeks to finish.
Famine, infrastructure collapse, magical failure. A slow death instead of a quick one.”
Arax absorbs this without visible reaction. No horror. No judgment. Just that complete attention, processing information the way he processes everything.
“The alternative was worse.”
“The alternative was worse.” I repeat his words, tasting the familiar justification.
“I’ve run the calculations a thousand times.
If the Sovereignty had completed their program, deployed their weapons, the body count would have been in the tens of millions.
Maybe hundreds of millions. The cascade I triggered was the lesser catastrophe. ”
“You’re not asking for absolution.”
“I’m not asking for anything.” I set the journal aside, suddenly weary of holding it. “I’m telling you because you showed me yours. Seemed only fair to show you mine.”