Avery stumbled back through the rift, chest heaving, knees threatening to give out beneath them. The Veil spat them out like something unwanted, and for a moment the world tilted, shadows and light twisting in unnatural spirals.
When their vision cleared, they were back in the barren stone hall where missions began and ended. The silence here was worse than battle. Worse than the Wraiths. They had failed. The corrupted soul’s scream still echoed in Avery’s skull, sharp and mournful, like a knife scraping glass. They couldn’t shake the image of it thrashing against their tether, almost within reach before being ripped away. Almost. The sigil on their palm still burned faintly, its light pulsing with accusation. Kael stood several feet away, scythe still faintly glowing from battle, his expression unreadable. He didn’t speak at first—just stared, as if weighing every word. Avery forced themselves to meet his eyes, though it felt like staring at a storm they couldn’t withstand. “I almost had it,” Avery said hoarsely. The words sounded pathetic even to them. Kael’s lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a sneer, wasn’t quite pity. “Almost doesn’t matter. Not here.” He tapped the blunt end of his scythe against the ground. “That soul is gone. You don’t get second chances with the Veil.” Avery’s throat tightened. “I—” “Don’t,” Kael cut them off sharply. “Excuses won’t keep you alive. Excuses won’t restore balance. All you’ve proved today is that you’re too weak to follow through.” The words stung worse than claws. Avery’s fists clenched, nails digging crescents into their palms. “I was trying to save it,” they snapped, louder than they meant. Their voice echoed against the stone. “It wasn’t just… a thing. It was someone. I could feel it.” Kael’s eyes narrowed, pale fire flashing. He stepped closer, until Avery could feel the cold radiating from him. “Do you think I don’t know that?” His voice was a low growl. “Every soul begs. Every one of them screams. If you listen to that instead of doing your job, you doom them—and yourself.” Avery flinched, but Kael’s words struck deep. Some part of them knew he was right, but admitting it felt like surrendering the last shred of their humanity. “You’re not human anymore,” Kael said quietly, as if reading their thoughts. “Stop pretending you are.” The silence that followed was heavy. Avery’s chest rose and fell, each breath jagged. From the shadows above, the Council’s presence stirred. The air rippled with their attention—icy, suffocating. The obsidian thrones remained empty to the eye, but their voices filled the hall like a storm of whispers. “You return empty-handed,” the central voice said, echoing through Avery’s bones. Avery bowed their head instinctively, throat dry. “I—tried.” The chorus hissed. “Tried is failure. Failure corrodes the balance. Do you understand what has been unleashed?” Kael stepped forward, inclining his head. “It was my oversight. The fledgling wasn’t ready. I’ll take responsibility.” A low murmur passed among the Council, a sound like chains dragging over stone. Finally, the central voice replied, “No. The fledgling carries their own burden. Each reaper is bound by their failures as by their oaths. They will carry this weight.” The sigil seared against Avery’s palm, pain biting deep into flesh. They gasped, clutching their hand, as the burning carved something deeper—an addition to the mark, a line of shadow curling like a scar. “Each lost soul binds you tighter,” the chorus intoned. “Lose too many, and you will become the very thing you hunt. A Wraith.” Avery’s heart froze. They looked up sharply, horror twisting their gut. “What?!” Kael’s gaze flicked toward them, sharp and warning, but the Council’s voice rolled on. “Every hesitation, every failure, every broken tether frays your humanity. That path ends in hunger, chaos, oblivion. Do you wish to test the truth of this?” “I—I didn’t know—” Avery stammered, but their words were drowned beneath the thunder of the Council’s fading presence. Shadows receded into silence. The hall was empty once more, except for the two of them. Avery’s knees gave out, and they sank against the cold floor, breathing hard. “A Wraith…” they whispered, staring at the new scar etched into their sigil. The thought clawed at them. The very creatures they had fought—monstrous, howling things without reason—could be their fate. Kael finally spoke, his voice quieter than before. “Now you understand why hesitation is death.” Avery shook their head, eyes burning. “I can’t… I can’t just shut it off. Pretend they’re not people. How do you do it? How do you not feel it?” Kael’s jaw tightened. For a long moment, he didn’t answer. Then he turned away, his silhouette sharp against the dim light. “You stop asking questions like that,” he said. Silence pressed in. Avery swallowed hard, the ache in their chest sharp and raw. But as the silence stretched, Kael finally turned back, his eyes softer—not kind, but less merciless. “You won’t survive like this,” he said, almost reluctantly. “But maybe… you can learn.” He extended his hand, palm upward. A swirl of shadow and light formed in the air, solidifying into a training weapon: a smaller scythe, thinner, meant for beginners. Its blade shimmered faintly, pulsing like a heartbeat. “Take it,” Kael said. “You’re not ready for the real thing. But you’ll learn to handle this before the Veil swallows you whole.” Avery stared at the weapon, chest tight. Their hand trembled as they reached out, wrapping their fingers around the cool, weighted handle. The instant they touched it, the sigil flared, threads of energy snapping into the blade. It felt alive. Heavy. Terrifying. Kael studied them, his expression unreadable. “Training starts now. You won’t get another chance.” Avery swallowed, gripping the weapon tightly, determination flickering in their chest even through the fear. For the first time since their death, something sparked inside them—a stubborn, fragile defiance. They would not become a Wraith. No matter what it took.The Vein pulsed around Avery like a living heartbeat, threads of memory and light stretching in every direction. She hovered at the center, tether coiling taut between her and Kael, every pulse resonating in her chest. “I feel it… responding,” she whispered. Her fingers traced patterns through the currents, and the light followed, bending, twisting, shaping itself to her intent. Small fragments of lost souls drifted past, drawn toward her command, freed from the endless swirl. Kael’s eyes never left her. “Slow,” he cautioned. “The Vein doesn’t just obey. It tests you. One wrong move and—” “I know,” Avery interrupted, eyes fixed on a strand of deep violet energy, darker than the rest. It wriggled and pulsed like a living serpent. “But this… this is what it wants me to see.” She extended her hand, letting the thread coil around her fingers. Visions flared in her mind: a human family torn apart by an unclaimed death, a soldier lost in a battle centuries ago, a reaper long vanished fr
Avery’s eyes opened to nothing.No sky, no ground, no familiar horizon — only light. A living light, pulsing and shifting with a rhythm that seemed almost conscious. It wrapped around her, coiling and flowing like molten rivers, brushing against her skin and sinking into her bones. Her mark — the tether seared into her chest — throbbed with warmth and urgency, syncing with the Vein’s heartbeat.Beside her, Kael appeared, a figure of smoke and shadow, tethering the currents of gold and black that spiraled between them. His presence was a steadying force, but even he seemed dwarfed by the sheer vastness of the Vein.“Delan?” His voice cut through the hum, rough and low, carrying across the currents.“I’m… here,” she whispered, awe-laden. Her voice barely felt real. In this place, even sound was strange, stretching and dissolving before it reached her ears.The Vein shifted. Threads of light, thousands of them, coiled toward her hands like curious snakes. Each carried a pulse — fragments
The Vein roared. Not in sound — sound couldn’t exist here — but in vibration, in the tremor of light against the edges of perception. The portal shimmered in the center of the chamber, a vortex of living energy that stretched through mirrored dimensions. Ryn Hale stood before it, helm tucked under her arm, her expression carved from focus. Behind her, the retrieval squad prepared in silence. Five of them — all reapers of rank, each bearing the sigil of the Council burned into their breastplates. Their scythes thrummed faintly with resonance, reacting to the pulse of the Vein ahead. Soreth’s voice crackled over the ether-channel. “Team Alpha, your objective is clear. Find Varyn and Delan. Secure the anchor point. Do not engage any entities beyond containment protocol. If instability exceeds threshold, abort immediately.” Ryn’s reply was steady. “Understood, Commander.” “May the current guide you.” The portal flared white — and they stepped through. --- Light folded. Space inv
Silence. Avery floated through it, weightless, her body a ghost among ghosts. The pulse that had carried her through the Vein had slowed to a whisper, its current flickering like the heartbeat of a dying star. She didn’t know how long they had drifted—hours, years, or lifetimes—but time didn’t mean anything here. In this place, memory was the only constant. Kael’s voice broke through the hum, rough and steady. “Stay with me, Delan.” She blinked, vision sharpening. Kael was just ahead, dark energy rippling off him like smoke. The light of the Vein wrapped around him in slow ribbons, revealing glimpses of his human self beneath the spectral armor — a flicker of who he once was. “I’m here,” she breathed, though her voice sounded distant, carried on echoes rather than air. They stood — or perhaps floated — on a stretch of translucent ground, a crystalline corridor carved through the Vein’s living core. Around them, ghostly silhouettes drifted in the current: fragments of souls, memo
The Council Chamber had never felt small before. For eons, it had been a cathedral of eternity — marble white and shadow-black, suspended between realms, lit by the glow of the Vein itself. But now the light that filtered through the mirrored walls was dimmer, sickly, uncertain. The hum beneath the floor — the heartbeat of the world they’d built — had grown uneven. Edran stood at the center of the dais, one hand gripping his staff hard enough to crack the obsidian beneath it. “Reports confirm the current has slowed by eight percent. The Vein’s rhythm is faltering.” Murmurs rippled through the gathered reapers and lesser councilors — a sound of restrained panic. Aethren, standing at his left, glanced at the data-stream hovering above the soul mirror. The numbers pulsed faintly in pale blue script, symbols of the Vein’s flow translating into patterns of energy and decay. “That should be impossible,” he murmured. “The current has never wavered in recorded history.” Veyra’s voice dri
There was no sky in the Vein — only light. Endless, pulsing, breathing light. Avery floated in its glow, her body weightless, her senses stretched beyond the limits of flesh. The world around her thrummed like a heart too large for comprehension. The sound wasn’t sound, but vibration — resonant, omnipresent, alive. When she opened her eyes, she saw Kael. He drifted not far away, bound to her by the tether — a ribbon of gold and shadow that shimmered and twisted between them. But he wasn’t moving. His form flickered, dissolving in pulses of black smoke and silver light, his face unreadable, his essence fraying around the edges. “Kael…” Her voice was small against the Vein’s hum. She reached for him — her fingers brushing the tether instead of his skin. The contact sent a shudder through her entire body. It wasn’t just a link anymore. It was a wound. The tether burned. She gasped and pulled back as heat flared through her chest, the mark over her heart igniting in gold. The teth