Interlude II The Lord’s Ire
INTERLUDE II: THE LORD'S IRE
The evening light in Lord Polan’s study was, as always, perfect. It slanted through the tall, leaded glass window, illuminating the great parchment spread across his oak desk.
It was a beautiful thing, this map. To a common merchant, it was a drawing of the land. To the Iron Spurs, it was a high crime—an act of treason captured in ink. The location of the Ley Lines was the Order’s most jealously guarded secret, protected by law and lethal force.
But the Spurs had forgotten who drew the first lines.
It was a masterpiece synthesized from the forbidden geography his ancestors had charted centuries ago. It was the Volanus Legacy made manifest—the Merchant’s Liberation. Polan traced the thick line that bypassed the Iron Spur tolls.
The Spurs claimed their high fees were necessary to maintain the network, but Polan saw the truth in the ledgers.
The cost of their neutrality was stagnation.
How many merchant houses had collapsed because they couldn’t afford the Spur tariffs?
How many harvests rotted in the silos of the interior because the transport fees outweighed the profits?
The Spurs weren’t evil; they were obsolete. They were a stranglehold on the future, squeezing the life out of commerce to feed their own arrogance. He wasn’t just building a road; he was breaking their grip. He would flood the markets with cheap grain and iron, creating a golden age of prosperity.
And, of course, as the architect of that age, he would guide it.
But the key to opening the gate was missing.
A soft, hesitant knock interrupted his calculations. Marin entered, looking pale. Behind him stood Valtois, the envoy Polan had sent to the Academy. The man looked wrecked—dusty, trembling, and smelling of fear.
“My lord,” Valtois stammered, bowing low. “I… I have returned.”
Polan stood. Rage would break the man; kindness would bind him. He smoothed his features into a mask of warm, welcoming concern.
“Valtois. Sit, man,” he said, his voice gentle. “Marin, wine for our traveler.”
Valtois slumped into the chair, looking as if he might weep with relief at the lack of anger. “My lord, the Academy—they were impossible. The Master, Aris Thorne, he… he rejected your claim.”
Polan took the glass of wine from Marin. He turned to hand it to the envoy, but his arm arrested in mid-air. For a split second, the crystal goblet hung suspended, the dark red liquid trembling just short of the rim. The silence in the room stretched thin, sharp as a wire.
Then, the moment passed. Polan’s smile returned, warm and unruffled, and he completed the motion, pressing the glass into Valtois’s shaking hand.
“Drink. Tell me what they said.”
Valtois took a gulp, his hands shaking so hard the crystal chimed against his teeth.
“They claim she is under their protection. They say your marriage is irrelevant. And…” He choked on the words.
“They say she has petitioned for a formal dissolution. A divorce, my lord. They claim she is a citizen of Spurs’ Heart now. ”
Silence settled over the room. Marin gasped, looking at Polan with horror.
Polan didn’t rage. He felt a weary, thinning patience. Her defiance had once been a stimulating game, a challenge to his intellect. Now, it was simply tedious. The novelty of the struggle was fading, replaced by the irritation of inefficiency.
“Oh, Gessa,” he whispered.
Valtois, emboldened by his master’s apparent sorrow, leaned forward. “My lord, perhaps her father? Master Vane is a man of the old ways. Surely if you appealed to him, he could pressure her? He could disown her, cut off her retreat...”
Polan looked at the envoy, a faint, indulgent smile touching his lips. “A kind thought, Valtois. But Master Vane is limited.”
Internally, Polan suppressed a sneer. The old man was a frightened provincial lord who had practically given Gessa away, terrified of her wildness. He had no spine. And he had no idea what he had possessed.
Polan’s mind drifted to the secret knowledge locked in the hidden compartment of his bookshelf—the Volanus Codex. The genealogy chart was burned into his memory.
House of Vane.
Master Vane thought his daughter was merely spirited or difficult.
He didn’t know that his family carried the only bloodline in three centuries recorded to produce female Wayfinders of unprecedented power.
He didn’t know that Polan had tracked that genetic anomaly for twenty years, waiting for the perfect moment to acquire it. Her.
He looked at a diamond and saw only glass, Polan thought. I am the only one who knows her worth.
“No,” Polan said softly. “Her father cannot help us. The Spurs have stolen her, and they have turned her against her own blood. They are manipulating a sick woman to steal a legacy they don’t even understand.”
He turned back to Valtois, resting a hand on the man’s shoulder. “You did well, Valtois. You walked into the lion’s den for me. I will not forget that. Go. Rest. We will speak of your reward in the morning.”
Valtois wept openly then, kissing Polan’s ring before stumbling out.
Once the door closed, Polan’s expression smoothed into cold, hard iron. The divorce petition meant nothing. It was ink on paper. It could not undo the architecture of a soul.
He had spent five years meticulously forging her mind, charting every fear, every trigger, every pressure point that led to her exquisite breaking. This defiance was a temporary madness, a flicker of rebellion born of distance and the false courage of new allies.
It could not survive his presence. He knew it with certainty.
A single look from him, the right word spoken in that specific, quiet tone, the familiar cadence of his voice when expressing his ‘disappointment’.
.. that would be all it would take to unravel this pathetic facade of strength she’d constructed.
She was his. The Spurs were simply the wall keeping him from his property.
“They hide behind their laws,” he murmured. “They think their mountain is untouchable because the world relies on them.”
He walked back to the map. His finger traced the trade routes that fed the Academy.
He considered the Iron Road—the slow, heavy caravans that moved the kingdom’s grain. He could attack those easily. A few paid bandits, a few burning wagons... it would hurt their coin purse. But it wouldn’t break their reputation. It wouldn’t prove they were obsolete.
No, he needed to break the Wayfinders.
The Spurs boasted that their magical couriers were untouchable, slipping through the ether like ghosts. They claimed their seals had “never been compromised”.
Polan smiled, razor-thin. They were untouchable only because no one else understood the physics of their magic. But Polan lived on the Ironwood. He knew the truth that the Spurs pretended to ignore: magic had a predator.
Raw, cold iron.
He picked up a solid chunk of raw ore from his desk—a paperweight he kept to remind him of the source of his wealth.
It was ugly, pitted, and black. To a Spur, it was death.
Natural deposits grow slowly, allowing the Lines to drift around them over centuries.
But a sudden, massive injection of iron—a dam dropped overnight—would give the current nowhere to go.
It wouldn’t bend; it would crash. If a Ley Line hit a deposit of this magnitude, the magic didn’t just stop; it shattered.
It would eject the traveler violently into the physical world.
He looked back at the map. The Ley Lines were alive; they drifted over time like riverbeds shifting in silt. A map three hundred years old should have been useless.
It was a projection, of course. Three centuries of drift created a margin of error that would terrify a lesser man.
Nature was chaotic. The lines might have shifted a mile, or ten.
But Polan trusted his math more than he trusted their mysticism.
Even a near-miss with this amount of iron would send shockwaves through the system.
It was a gamble. But a gamble worth taking.
“You travel the river,” Polan whispered to the invisible couriers on his map. “But you forget that a river can be dammed.”
He dipped his quill in red ink.
He moved his hand to the northern border, to the territory controlled by Malak, The Serpent. Malak had the men to hold the ground. Polan had the iron to poison it.
He made a small, red mark directly across a major Ley Line intersection near the Blackstone Mountains, adjusting his hand a fraction of an inch to account for three centuries of drift.
“I will salt the earth with iron,” he decided. “I will turn your highways into traps. And when your precious, untouchable couriers start falling out of the sky, broken and bleeding... the world will see that you are not gods.”
He set the quill down. It was an act of war, certainly. But it would not be Polan’s war. It would be Malak’s.
If the gamble failed, if the Spurs retaliated, they would look to the bandit warlord holding the territory.
They would burn Malak out of his holes, and Polan would simply express his shock at such barbarism from the safety of his manor.
Malak would take the gold, and if necessary, Malak would take the blame.
History was written by the victors, but it was usually paid for by the blindly faithful.
He would be the Architect of a new age. And Gessa? When she saw the Spurs fall, when she realized there was no magic strong enough to protect her from him, she would return. Not as a prisoner, but as a believer.