Chapter 17 Krath #3
And standing beside the pool, arms raised in triumphant greeting, the Pale Marshal himself. No longer projection, but his true form—solid, powerful, radiating malice that makes air itself recoil.
"Welcome," he says, voice carrying across the chamber with inhuman resonance. "I was beginning to think you’d lost your way."
Rhea’s hand tightens in mine, and I feel her determination blazing bright despite exhaustion. "This ends now," she calls out, voice steady despite the power arrayed against us.
"Indeed it does," the Marshal agrees with cruel amusement. "But perhaps not as you imagine."
The pool of shadow begins to rise, forming tendrils that reach toward us with hungry purpose. But Rhea is moving, pulling chalk from her supplies to scrawl protective sigils with desperate speed.
That’s when I realize the true scope of her magical depletion. The sigil she’s attempting should be child’s play for someone of her abilities—instead, it flickers weakly, barely maintaining cohesion. She’s been hiding just how much our running battle has cost her.
"Rhea, stop," I say, catching her wrist before she can attempt another spell. "You don’t have the reserves for this."
"I have to try," she insists, though I can see truth in her eyes. She knows as well as I do that she’s operating on empty, drawing on life force rather than renewable magical energy.
Shadow tendrils lash out with frightening speed, and I throw myself between them and Rhea, my blade carving burning arcs through darkness. But there are too many, coming from too many directions.
One tendril slips past my guard, striking Rhea’s outstretched hand where she’s been channeling magic. The contact is brief, barely a heartbeat, but the effect is immediate and devastating.
Power erupts from her branded wrist—not controlled energy of spellcasting, but raw magical force seeking any available outlet. The rune carved into her skin cracks with sounds of breaking glass, and blood seeps from wounds that mirror damage to her spirit.
She screams—not from physical pain, but from agony of having her magical core torn open and exposed. The sound echoes off chamber walls, cutting through me deeper than any blade.
"Rhea!"
I catch her as she collapses, consciousness flickering unstably. Whatever binds us wavers dangerously, carrying echoes of her pain directly into my awareness. I can feel her life force draining away, flowing into the diseased power that fills this chamber.
But worse than physical damage is spiritual violation. The Marshal’s touch has left contamination in her magical core—necromantic energy that spreads infection through her natural power. Dark veins web across her skin from the branded wrist, pulsing with malevolent light.
If I can’t find a way to purge it, it will kill her slowly and painfully.
The Marshal’s laughter booms across the chamber, triumphant and cruel. "Did you truly think you could challenge me in the heart of my power? Every step you’ve taken, every choice you’ve made—all of it leading to this moment."
I gather Rhea’s limp form against my chest, feeling the fragile flutter of her pulse. The cracks in her branded wrist continue to spread, dark veins flowing through her magical pathways.
"She’s dying," the Marshal continues with false sympathy. "The contamination will consume her from within. But I can offer mercy, if you’re willing to bargain."
"What do you want?"
"Your willing surrender. Accept the chains I offer, and I’ll purge the contamination from her system. Refuse, and watch her die by inches while my power grows stronger."
The choice he’s offering isn’t really choice at all. But looking down at Rhea’s pale face, feeling the way her life force flickers, I find myself considering options I swore I’d never accept.
Two centuries of freedom, bought with her life. The curse renewed, chains reforged, but she would live. She would have the chance to continue growing, learning, becoming everything her brilliant mind might achieve.
The thought of losing her is agony beyond anything the Marshal inflicted during my imprisonment.
But even as I weigh impossible choices, I feel her hand tighten weakly in mine. Her eyes flutter open, focusing on my face with tremendous effort.
"Don’t," she whispers, voice barely audible but carrying absolute conviction. "Don’t surrender everything we’ve built for me."
"Rhea—"
"We’re stronger together. Use that. Use what we share. Turn his own power against him."
I stare down at her, understanding flooding through me. What binds us doesn’t just share strength and magical energy. It shares everything, including the contamination spreading through her system.
If I can take the darkness into myself, dilute it between two souls instead of letting it consume one...
The plan is desperate, probably suicidal. But it’s the only option that doesn’t require surrendering everything we’ve fought to protect.
"Trust me," I whisper against her ear.
"I do," she breathes back.
I lower my mental barriers completely, opening whatever flows between us to its fullest extent. Instead of sharing strength or magical energy, I reach for darkness spreading through her system, drawing it into myself.
The contamination burns in my veins, necromantic energy that seeks to destroy everything it touches. But I have advantages she lacks—two centuries of existing in the space between life and death, supernatural resilience that can absorb punishment that would destroy a normal person.
More importantly, I have something to fight for that’s worth any amount of pain.
The Marshal’s triumphant expression shifts to confusion, then growing alarm as he realizes what I’m attempting. "Impossible. The contamination cannot be transferred—"
His words cut off as whatever binds us flares brighter than ever before, carrying more than just necromantic poison. It carries love, determination, and absolute refusal to let death claim what we’ve built together.
For one brilliant moment, we share everything—consciousness, life force, the very essence of who we are. But instead of losing ourselves in the merger, we become something greater. Two souls unified by choice rather than compulsion, love rather than necessity.
The contamination doesn’t just transfer to me—it’s transformed by our union, necromantic energy purified by the strength of what exists between us. What should have been poison becomes cleansing fire, burning away the Marshal’s influence and leaving only clean power behind.
Rhea gasps, color returning to her cheeks as dark veins fade from her skin. The cracks in her branded wrist seal themselves, leaving only smooth skin marked by the spiral that binds us together.
But the effort has cost us both. We lie tangled together on the chamber floor, breathing hard from more than physical exertion. Every nerve ending feels raw, exposed, hypersensitive to the slightest touch.
"How?" the Marshal demands, his voice carrying the first note of genuine fear we’ve heard. "How did you purify what cannot be cleansed?"
I help Rhea sit up, keeping one arm wrapped protectively around her waist. "Because you’ve never understood what real love can accomplish. You know possession, obsession, hunger to consume—but not the choice to give freely."
"Love," he spits, the word carrying contempt and something that might be envy. "The same weakness that destroyed you before."
"No." Rhea’s voice is steady despite our exhaustion, carrying conviction that makes the chamber walls seem to tremble. "Love is what makes us stronger than you could ever understand."
She’s right. What binds us doesn’t feel weak anymore—it feels stronger than anything either of us has ever known. Not magical compulsion, but conscious choice. Not chain, but freely offered hand.
The Marshal raises his hands, drawing power from the pool of concentrated death at the chamber’s heart. Shadow tendrils rise, reaching toward us with renewed hunger.
But we’re ready for him now. Unified not by desperation, but by love that’s been tested and proven stronger than anything he can bring against us.
"Ready?" I ask, helping Rhea to her feet.
"Ready," she agrees.
The final battle begins.