Chapter 13
THIRTEEN
TANITH
The map table dominates the command tent, covered in markers and notations that have been updated three times since dawn. I’ve been staring at it for hours, watching patterns emerge from the chaos of intelligence reports, and what I’m seeing makes my stomach clench.
“The northern cell is accelerating.” I tap a cluster of markers near what used to be the Doffin Crossing. “These three ritual sites activated within the same twelve-hour window. That’s not coincidence—it’s coordination.”
Commander Vaelrix studies the configuration from across the table, her expression revealing nothing.
Syrren stands at her shoulder, silver-touched hair catching the tent’s lamplight.
Other officers line the table’s edges—dragons in human form, their attention divided between the map and the human witch who has inexplicably been given voice in their strategic planning.
Arax stands to my left. Not behind me, not across from me—beside me.
The positioning is deliberate. He made it deliberate when we entered, and I hesitated at the tent’s threshold, uncertain of my place in a room full of dragons.
He walked to the table, stopped, and looked back at me with an expression that communicated one thing clearly: here.
So I stood here. And I’ve been standing here for three hours, offering analysis that dragons twice my age have been forced to acknowledge.
“The coordination suggests centralized command.” Vaelrix speaks with the clipped authority of someone accustomed to giving orders. “We’ve assumed the Choir operates through decentralized cells.”
“They do. But the cells are following a shared ritual calendar.” I pull a sheaf of notes from my satchel—observations I’ve compiled over months of tracking the Choir’s activities.
“Each major ritual occurs on specific celestial alignments. The pattern isn’t obvious because they’re using a calendar that predates most modern tracking systems, but once you map the correspondences—”
“You’re saying they’ve been coordinating all along.” Syrren’s interruption carries a note of skepticism. “We have intelligence assets in multiple cells. None of them have reported centralized directives.”
“Because the directives are encoded in the ritual framework itself.” I spread my notes across an empty section of table, pointing to the diagrams I’ve drawn.
“The Cardinal doesn’t need to send messengers.
The methodology contains the instructions.
Each cell knows what to do and when to do it because the magic itself carries the information. ”
Silence follows. I feel the weight of dragon attention like physical pressure—predators assessing whether I’m prey or a complication worth eliminating.
“Show me.” Vaelrix moves around the table to examine my diagrams. Her nearness radiates heat and barely contained power, the Wrath domain she commands pressing against my magical senses like a physical force.
I don’t flinch. I’ve spent too long surviving threats to be intimidated by dragons.
“Here.” I trace the ritual sequences I’ve documented. “This symbol appears in every Choir framework I’ve examined. It’s not decorative—it’s a timing mechanism. The symbol changes based on celestial position, and the change triggers specific phases of whatever ritual the cell is conducting.”
“A magical clock.”
“A magical conductor. Every cell is playing from the same score, even if they can’t hear each other.
There’s one notation I haven’t been able to account for.
” I point to a glyph near the margin of my diagram—something I’ve copied from three separate sites.
“It appears in the anchor frameworks but not in the cell rituals. The structure suggests it’s designed to receive and hold ending-magic rather than expend it.
I don’t know what it’s feeding.” I make a note beside it. “Something to watch for.”
Vaelrix straightens. Her eyes—the color of old blood—find Arax across the table. “You’ve vetted this analysis?”
“I’ve observed her methodology.” Arax’s tone is its usual flat neutral, but I’ve learned to hear the subtle variations beneath. “It’s sound.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
“It’s the answer I’m providing.” He doesn’t elaborate. Doesn’t justify. Doesn’t explain why he’s defending a human witch’s intelligence work to his commanding officer.
The tension between them vibrates through the air. I note it for later consideration—the politics of dragon hierarchies aren’t my concern, but understanding them might become necessary.
“If she’s right,” Syrren interjects, breaking the silent standoff, “then the cells we’ve been treating as isolated threats are actually components of a single operation. The scale of what they’re building—”
“Would be catastrophic.” I finish their sentence without apology. “The ritual framework they’re constructing isn’t designed to expand the Reach gradually. It’s designed to collapse an entire region into a permanent ash state. Instantaneous. Irreversible.”
“How large a region?”
“Based on the node positions I’ve mapped, everything from the Doffin Crossing to the southern edge of the Reach. Three hundred miles of territory. Every settlement, every ley-line nexus, every person who hasn’t already evacuated.”
The number lands with the weight I intended. Three hundred miles. Hundreds of thousands of lives, minimum. A death toll that would dwarf anything the Choir has achieved previously.
“We need to eliminate the cells.” Vaelrix’s response is immediate and absolute. “All of them. Simultaneously, before they can complete their framework.”
“That’s not possible.” I keep my voice even, though the suggestion makes my skin crawl. “The cells are too dispersed. Even if you deployed every dragon in the Ashen Flight, you couldn’t hit all targets within the same window. And if you miss even one—”
“The ritual completes anyway.” Arax speaks without looking at me. “The framework is designed with redundancy. Destroying ninety percent of the cells would delay the outcome, not prevent it.”
“Then we need a different approach.” I turn back to the map, tracing the node positions with one finger. “These three sites are the framework’s primary anchors. Without them, the redundancy fails. The cells can still operate, but they can’t achieve the catastrophic collapse they’re working toward.”
“You’re suggesting precision strikes.”
“I’m suggesting we stop treating this like a military campaign and start treating it like surgery.
” I meet Vaelrix’s gaze directly—a choice that probably violates some dragon protocol I’m unaware of.
“Mass elimination won’t work. The Choir has planned for it.
What they haven’t planned for is someone who understands their ritual architecture well enough to cut the supports out from under them. ”
“And you understand this architecture.”
“Better than anyone else in this tent, obviously.”
The claim hangs in the air, bold and possibly suicidal. I’ve effectively told a room full of apex predators that I know more than they do about the threat they’ve been fighting for decades.
Arax’s presence at my side intensifies. Not moving, not speaking, but radiating a focused attention that I feel against my skin like sunlight.
“The primary anchors.” Vaelrix returns her attention to the map. “Show me.”
I point to three positions—two in the northern reaches of the Choir’s territory, one in the southeast. “These sites are different from the others. The ritual signatures are older, more stable. They’ve been active for years, not months.
Everything else the Choir has built connects back to these three points. ”
“They’re the foundation.”
“They’re the spine. Collapse them, and everything attached falls apart.”
“And the people in those sites? Conducting the rituals?”
“Most of them die.” I don’t soften the assessment. “The ritual backlash when an anchor collapses is severe. Anyone within the immediate vicinity won’t survive it.”
“But the surrounding settlements—the civilians caught in the larger collapse—they survive.”
“Yes.”
Vaelrix considers this. I watch her process the trade-off.
But the way she’s looking at me suggests she expected a different answer.
“Most witches I’ve encountered would argue for attempting to save everyone. Would insist on finding a solution that doesn’t require any deaths.”
“Most witches haven’t spent years watching the Choir unmake entire cities.
” I don’t look away. “I don’t enjoy acceptable losses.
I don’t pretend they’re anything other than what they are—people who die because the alternative is worse.
But I stopped believing in bloodless solutions a long time ago. ”
Silence. Then, unexpectedly, Vaelrix’s mouth curves—not quite a smile, but an acknowledgment of respect that surprises me.
“Scaleleaf.” She doesn’t look away from me. “Your assessment?”
“Her analysis is correct. Her proposed strategy is tactically sound.” A pause. “And her understanding of acceptable losses is… appropriate.”
Coming from a dragon assassin, that’s practically a ringing endorsement.
“Very well.” Vaelrix straightens, her decision made. “We proceed with precision strikes against the three anchor sites. Scaleleaf, you’ll coordinate the assault teams. The witch—”
“Tanith.” Arax’s correction is immediate and flat. “Her name is Tanith.”
Another silence. I feel the ripple of surprise pass through the assembled officers—the Ashen Flight’s most emotionally detached operative, correcting his commanding officer on behalf of a human.
Vaelrix’s expression doesn’t change, but her attention sharpens on Arax in a way that makes me want to step between them.
“Tanith,” she continues, the name precise on her tongue, “will provide intelligence support. Her expertise on Choir ritual frameworks is apparently unmatched.”