CHAPTER 3: THREADS, VAPOR, AND THE LEGACY OF ASH

The air within the training hall of the Broken Horn Tavern was a toxic byproduct of magic and industry. It was never intended for human lungs, and certainly not for those of twelve year old children. The atmosphere was a suffocating soup of static electricity, thickened by the pungent stench of ozone and the metallic tang of cooling copper. Everywhere Silarias looked, the darkness was sliced by thousands of paper thin threads. They formed a glowing and vibrating labyrinth that seemed to pulse in perfect synchronization with the city breathing deep below them.

At the absolute epicenter of this web hung Mistress Vespera, suspended by invisible tethers. Her human arms were calmly crossed, but her six mechanical spider legs were spread wide as they wove a tapestry of fate from the shadows of the room. She was no longer a woman; she was a predator of flesh and machine.

Nyx stood at the heart of this swirling chaos. Her small frame seemed fragile against the backdrop of the overwhelming power of Vespera. She was no longer fighting the physical threads. Instead, she was trapped in a far more treacherous struggle with the icy cold beginning to crystallize in her own blood. Her royal energy, which she usually wore like a shield, flickered and died as it was smothered by the heavy air of the room.

Suddenly, the eyes of Vespera flashed with a cruel light. With a movement of her wrist so rapid it was a mere blur, she unleashed a wave of obsidian shadow threads. They whistled through the air like razor sharp whips.

“Silver Ebb,” Nyx whispered, and her voice was barely a ghost of a sound.

The reaction was violent. The shadows clinging to the rotten floorboards did not just move; they tore themselves free and surged toward Nyx as if she were a black hole. The entire room seemed to tilt. The attacks of Vespera were caught in the sudden gravitational shift and dragged toward the floorboards, held down by a crushing, invisible pressure. The massive wooden beams of the tavern groaned under the impossible weight.

Silarias, watching from the periphery, saw a thin, dark line of blood escape the nose of Nyx. He could feel the strain through the soles of his boots. The power she drew from the moon was not a gift; it was a heavy hammer designed to either forge her or break her. Her eyes, usually a sharp silver, turned a terrifying and hollow white.

Without a second thought, Silarias stepped forward. He used no refined technique, but opted for pure, raw intervention. He rammed his left gauntlet, the heavy, rusted metal that felt like a permanent extension of his arm, directly into the primary support beam of the room.

“Harmonic Pulse!”

The impact was not a loud detonation, but a low hum that vibrated into their very marrow. The wave rippled outward, perfectly tuned to neutralize the static pressure Vespera had created. For three critical seconds, the web went slack. The pressure on Nyx evaporated. She gasped for oxygen and collapsed to her knees as the silver light vanished from her gaze.

“The night possesses needles as well, little girl,” Vespera hissed as she descended on her clicking mechanical limbs. She touched a thread near the hand of Nyx, which instantly transformed into sharp ice crystals. “Control the cold or you will be the first thing to freeze in this world. An ice queen is useless if she freezes herself solid.”

Downstairs, the atmosphere was far more primal. The Great Hall of the Broken Horn smelled of roasted synthetic meat, stale ale, and the raw desperation of the Ward. Here, the law of the strongest was the only constitution.

A heavy tension hung over the long table assigned to Group 6 and Group 7. Silarias and Nyx sat huddled among the other outcasts. To their left, the twins Ren and Kael consumed their gray food rations with a speed that was almost inhuman. Opposite them, another boy gripped his fork with trembling hands as the wind shrieked outside.

A table away sat the Senior Class, who were the undisputed elite of the Bastard’s Ward. They did not just eat, but they occupied the entire space with their presence. Aurelius, their golden boy, hovered a heavy coin inches above his palm. His glowing stone burned with an arrogant and blinding white radiance, casting long, mocking shadows toward Silarias. Beside him, Calamity Jane tore through a piece of bone with her sharpened teeth. She did not look at her meal; she watched the room as if it were a cage she was seconds away from shattering.

The conversation died instantly.

Juro had struck the bar with his metal pipe. The sound rang out like the hammer of a judge in a terminal courtroom. The symbols on the pipe flared white hot as he exhaled a massive and oily cloud of black smoke. The smoke did not dissipate; it began to shape itself into a moving and terrifying apparition.

The orphans watched, fascinated and terrified, as the smoke manifested the silhouette of the Cursed Liberator. He stood upon a mountain of ash, holding a small burning sun in his bare hands. Beside him, people were shown weaving their own life force into reality, freezing a thousand arrows in the air above a city already half consumed by fire.

The emotional weight of the vision was a physical burden. It was a fragment of a war they had all lost before they were born, and a pain that lingered within the smoke of Juro. The older fighters in the room looked away. Silarias, however, could not break his gaze. The golden lion in his chest began to stir, and a profound heat radiated from his stone.

The silence was shattered by a distant explosion at the East Gate. The peace within the tavern was a lie that was finally unraveling. The fog outside was now as thick as wool and saturated with the smell of grease and electricity. The raiders had arrived, and they were monolithic monsters of rusted metal and grafted flesh.

The tavern emptied in seconds. Aurelius was the first into the fray, laughing as he manifested a massive hammer of pure light. He swung it wildly, shattering the helmets of the first wave of raiders. But his arrogance was a trap. While he stood laughing over a fallen foe, a massive robotic raider rose from the scrap pile behind him. It was a four meter tall titan of iron and hatred. Its massive saw arm began to spin so fast the metal blurred into a gray circle of death.

“BEHIND YOU, IDIOT!” Silarias roared.

He felt it then. The god stone in his chest did not just pulse, but it caught fire. He pushed his gauntlets to a level where the metal turned a brilliant incandescent red. The muddy ground beneath his boots began to liquefy into a pool of molten slag.

“Bansaday Flying Sun Lion!”

From his clenched fist erupted a wave of liquid golden fire. It did not resemble a mundane flame, but looked like living gold. The fire shaped itself into the massive and snarling head of a lion. The beast caught the spinning saw arm in its maw. The sound of melting metal echoed through the alleyway. With a brutal shift of his weight, Silarias threw his entire momentum into the strike. He hoisted the four ton monster off its feet and launched it into the sky with a staggering uppercut. As the machine reached the apex, the golden lion tore through its internal circuitry. The resulting explosion destroyed the construct in a silent golden flash.

Nyx was a shadow in the wake of his radiance. She moved with a cold and terrifying precision.

“Moon Binding!”

She did not engage the raiders directly. Instead, she reached into the black air and pulled. The shadows of the remaining raiders suddenly became physical, becoming sharp obsidian needles. The raiders were pinned to the mud by their own shadows, crushed by a heavy gravity Nyx had tethered to the dark side of the moon.

As the last of the steam vanished into the frigid night air, the silence that returned was heavy and judgmental. Aurelius wiped a smear of black grease from his leather jacket. His smile had vanished and was replaced by a look of suspicious confusion.

“Not bad, Nobody,” he said, although his voice lacked its usual venom. “Just ensure those golden teeth of yours do not bite your own tongue off next time.”

Silarias did not respond. He could not. He stood doubled over and his breathing came in frantic gasps. His wrists were scorched and the skin was a bright, angry red where the heat of the lion had leaked through his gauntlets. The lion had not felt like a technique he controlled; it felt like an occupation. It was as if something ancient had stared through his eyes and used his anatomy as a mere tool.

Jane walked toward Nyx, moving like a predator through tall grass. She circled the girl, who sat in the mud, and her skin was so pale she looked like a ghost.

“The night is a hunger, little princess,” Jane whispered, and her ears twitched. “If you do not learn to command these threads with your own will, they will realize your heart is the only warm thing left in this room. And then they will eat it.”

They walked back to the Broken Horn in a heavy silence. Lila waited in the deep shadows by the cellar door. Without a word, she stepped forward and placed a single cool flower petal on the burned wrist of Silarias. The searing pain vanished instantly and was replaced by a dreamlike and numbing cold.

“The sun is a lonely star,” Lila whispered into the wind, and her voice was like the rustle of dry leaves. “And the moon has no light of its own. You are the architect and the destroyer. Neither can build a world alone.”

In the damp cellar, beside the rhythmic snoring of Toji, the two children sat against the cold stone wall. They did not speak. They did not have to. The connection between them had shifted from the awkwardness of orphans to the heavy bond of survivors.

At the top of the stairs, the shadow of Jane looked down on them, and her eyes glowed in the dark.

“Tomorrow at five o’clock,” she commanded. “Then I will teach you how not to drown when the night gets dangerous. And you, Nobody? Make sure that lion learns to sit. If he breaks my tavern, I will skin you alive myself.”

Silarias closed his fist. The metal of the gauntlet gave a low hum in agreement. The hunt was no longer something they watched from the sidelines.

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