The roar of a gunshot cut through the air, breaking the suffocating silence. The commander’s backup, trained to respond without hesitation, immediately redirected their focus toward its origin.
“Come on!” Evee called out, her voice sharp and urgent as she sprinted through the haze of chaos. She didn’t give Emily a chance to process or second-guess. Instinctively, Emily followed, her feet pounding against the ground as they disappeared into the smoke that choked the city.
The devastation they left behind was unimaginable. With the destruction of Ebonspire Academy, River's hope for maintaining its supremacy had all but crumbled. What little control the soldiers had managed to maintain evaporated, replaced by an uncontrollable panic that spread like wildfire.
The academy lay in ruins—a massive crater at its heart marked ground zero. The once-grand institution was reduced to rubble, with nearby buildings incinerated and structures within a three-mile radius fractured, barely standing. Over five thousand lives were lost in an instant: students, teachers, researchers, visiting families. The names of the dead would linger like ghosts in the minds of the survivors.
Above the wreckage, the ash hung in the air, a thick, unnatural cloud spreading outward like the breath of some monstrous entity. It wasn’t just ash—it was tainted, carrying the residues of failed experiments, corrupted magic, and unstable technology. This radioactive fallout didn’t just kill; it transformed.
Evee’s true ability was far more insidious than a simple explosion. The ash she had unleashed twisted the laws of life and death. Those who inhaled it or came into direct contact with it were consumed. Their flesh charred and blackened, their minds dissolved into a hive-like connection. They became feral infernal soldiers, their bodies ablaze with flames no water could extinguish, their very existence a curse on the land.
These infernals rampaged through the streets, burning everything in their path—buildings, trees, people. Their screams were no longer human but guttural howls that echoed through River’s shattered streets. Mothers clutched their children as they fled blindly, desperate to escape the flames and the monsters. Some who tried to flee were caught by the ash and succumbed, their bodies becoming one with the fiery hive. The streets were filled with a madness that even the most hardened soldiers couldn’t contain.
Emily, newly teleported to Rivermirror with Evee, felt the weight of what had just happened crush her. She sank into herself, the image of her family—her parents, her sister—burned into her mind. She had abandoned them. Left them for dead. And now, she could never go back. Her stomach churned, and her hands trembled, but she forced herself to swallow the bile rising in her throat. She had to survive. To live in Rivermirror’s merciless world, she had no choice but to harden her heart.
“Who are you?” Evee’s voice broke through Emily’s haze. It wasn’t a question born of suspicion but of curiosity, as if she were trying to understand the stranger who had helped her.
“She’s with me,” a voice answered from the shadows. Hound emerged, his steps measured, his appearance unsettlingly calm and unbloodied despite the destruction around him.
Evee nodded, her gaze lingering on Emily as if in silent gratitude before walking away.
Emily and Hound traveled in silence to his hideout—an abandoned underground shelter, damp and cold. The walls were lined with symbols, runes, and inscriptions, all radiating a faint dark glow. Emily couldn’t help but feel the oppressive weight of the place as they descended deeper.
Finally, unable to hold back, Emily asked, “What do you want from me?”
Hound stopped abruptly, turning to face her. His expression was unreadable as he gestured toward the walls. “Look around, Emily. What do you see?”
“Characters, runes, inscriptions…” she hesitated, her eyes narrowing as she noticed something deeper. “... a dark attribute symbiote. What will you do with this power?”
His voice was sharp, cutting through the tension. “You help me, I keep you out of prison. You’re not here to ask questions.”
Emily stood her ground, crossing her arms. “I know you, Hound. I will not serve as an accessory to your murders or whatever you have planned.”
Hound sighed, a bitter chuckle escaping his lips. Slowly, he began to strip off his shirt, revealing the intricate runes etched across his body in deep blue ink. The sight was both mesmerizing and harrowing. “I watched my mother die, overworked as a slave,” he began, his voice trembling. “I should have pushed her off the building… It would’ve been the greatest mercy I could’ve offered her.”
Emily said nothing, sensing he needed to speak. She sat down, her gaze unwavering as he continued.
“That was the first time I killed. I killed our master, his wife… even his children. Even the girl Puck wanted.” His voice cracked, and tears began to stream down his face. “I told Puck I was done being weak. I blamed myself for her death. I promised him that, no matter what, we’d stick together. That I’d have his back. That I’d give my life for his.”
The pain in his voice was palpable, raw. Emily’s heart ached for him, but she knew this wasn’t the time for comfort.
“I started smoking and drinking, but it wasn’t enough to ease the pain and anger. Then the ether addiction began. It helped me cope with the grief. But even that wasn’t enough.”
“The side effects are great,” Emily interjected softly, “Excessive and nonstop abuse of ether is why your body depends on it. Why you burn when you transform…”
“Yes,” Hound admitted, his voice barely above a whisper. “And why my emotional state is always numb. It doesn’t just take away the grief—it takes away everything. And for the first time since my mother died, I’m refraining from it. My body has to be clean for the symbiote to work.”
Emily hesitated before asking, “How are you feeling now?”
“It’s all coming back,” he confessed, his voice breaking. “My parents’ death, Puck’s murder… everything.” His shoulders shook as sobs wracked his body. “I don’t recognize myself anymore. So help me, Emily.”
Her gaze softened as she placed a hand on his shoulder. “You were a student at Ebonspire Academy, weren’t you? I’m putting my life in your hands. I know I can’t undo the past… but we can build a future from the rubble.”
Hound’s voice steadied, though the sorrow lingered. “The reason they call me Hound… it’s a name I gave myself for what I’ve done. But I want to create a world where children don’t face the horrors I did.”
Emily’s voice cracked as she asked the question weighing on her heart. “When you look far into the future you want to create, do you see River still standing?”
He hesitated, then shook his head. “No. All I see is death, anger, fire, and steel. In both River and Rivermirror. But from that destruction, we can create something new.”
Tears welled in Emily’s eyes, but she quickly wiped them away. She glanced at the runes on his chest and smirked faintly, trying to lighten the mood. “First of all, your main rune arrangement is wrong. What would you do without me?”
A faint smile crossed Hound’s lips as he muttered, “I don’t know.”
The name Evee sparked fear in every man’s heart. It had been a week since River soldiers stepped foot in Rivermirror. While most were able to migrate from the infected area, tens of thousands of River citizens were absorbed into the aftermath. Their houses burned, their families burned, joining the infernal. It spread like a virus until it annihilated a quarter of River.However, the city made a speedy recovery, restoring a makeshift balance. Despite the recovery, a lingering unease hung in the air like smoke that refused to dissipate.“They’re always a step ahead… almost like they survey us. What am I missing?” Bleak muttered, jotting on his whiteboard. The squeaks of the marker echoed through the dimly lit, isolated room. His gaze drifted over the scattered notes, connecting fragments of information like pieces of a puzzle. “What are you thinking, Emily? Leaving River will only complicate your sentence.”Bleak paused, his brow furrowed, as he connected the misplaced points. He recal
“Well, at least that’s what I thought initially, but you survived a dark symbiote. That changes everything,” Bleak stated, retracting his claws. “A possibility I planned for.”Hound circled him slowly, as if strategizing his next strike, waiting for the perfect moment. “Here without backup, not even a means of communication. You must be a man with a death sentence.”Bleak stood confidently in the center of the room, fully aware of Hound’s every micro-movement. “Why don’t you take a peep at the future? More specifically, a few minutes from now at Demi Hotel, room number 14.”Hound complied, using Bleak’s soul fragments—the strongest connection to the vision. One of his eyes began to burn rapidly, silver-lined smoke streaking from it as he continued to circle. His other eye remained silver, burning but steady. This new ability, part of his evolution, allowed him to scavenge webs of the near future while remaining conscious in the present.Then, his eye went dark. The darkness transition
Tears streaked his face with a precision that seemed almost artistic, each drop accentuating the anguish as he gently caressed Argent’s cold, pale face. His movements were slow, deliberate, as if savoring every fleeting moment of connection with her lifeless form. At a distance, the seers whispered among themselves, their eyes flitting between him and the others, their murmurs laced with doubt and suspicion about his loyalty. Despite the weight of their judgment, Hound lay there, unmoving, consumed by his grief for the remainder of the day.“A streaking silver flame, burning through the streets, destroying property and reducing citizens to ash without discernible cause... there’s only one person who fits the description,” Blanc stated as he entered the room, stepping through the shattered remnants of the door with his cane tapping rhythmically against the floor. Emily trailed closely behind him, her steps cautious, while Bleak staggered in after them, his face battered and bruised from
Six months later…The trajectory of River’s decline had spiraled into chaos, the scale of its losses growing exponentially. Violent protests erupted in the streets, escalating into uncontrollable riots that forced the imposition of martial law. Rivermirror, in its growing power, severed its ties completely, banishing River’s citizens from its borders. Under the new law, any River resident found within Rivermirror’s territory would face immediate execution if sufficient evidence was presented—unless a Baron explicitly approved their presence. Rivermirror declared itself an independent city, governed by its Barons, with Hound assuming the role of overseer of all Seers. His position was absolute, his influence terrifyingly vast.With Binge’s vast knowledge and experience, along with Gazier and Evee’s mastery of core hunting and resource management, the installation of the relay core was a resounding success. Dubbed “Prototype 0,” the system became the backbone of Rivermirror’s stability
“A young woman refuses to leave the border, sir!” a Seer announced, barging into the conversation with urgency in his voice.“River?” Hound asked, his tone devoid of interest, not even sparing the Seer a glance.“Yes, sir!” the man exclaimed eagerly, his body stiff as he awaited Hound’s next words.“Then kill her. Such details are beneath me,” Hound responded, each word dripping with irritation.The Seer hesitated before continuing, his voice wavering slightly. “If I remember correctly, Emily forbade any form of violence toward anyone matching the description. Emily said—”“Emily said?” Hound interrupted, turning his attention to the man. He moved toward him slowly, his footsteps soft but deliberate, like a predator stalking its prey. “I wasn’t aware Emily’s authority surpassed mine.”The Seer bowed his head, his confidence crumbling as Hound drew closer. Sweat began to bead on his forehead, and his voice trembled as he stammered, “I—I made a grave mistake, Baron. It won’t happen agai
“You may be able to kill your best friend without a second thought, but I’m not you, Hound,” Emily said, her voice firm.“You do realize I’d be dead if not for April’s intervention, don’t you?” Hound clarified. “Tell me, what do you think would have happened if April was a second late?”Emily closed the distance, her face etched with sorrow. “I’m sorry, I—”“Play along, Em. Answer the question,” Hound cut her off, his tone unwavering.She hesitated but eventually spoke, her words measured. “Well, you would be dead. Binge, too. Everyone in the house, for that matter. And since both of you are Barons, there’d be chaos in Rivermirror—power struggles, political instability. With you gone, she’d take your place as Seer. Binge’s death would destroy everything he built, especially the food supply. He’s the only one who understands how it works.”Hound gently lifted her face, brushing her hair aside with surprising tenderness. “Do you understand now why she must die?”Emily’s eyes softened,
At Binge’s lair, the dream began. Once a core of Rivermirror’s hope, it had grown dark and foreboding. Binge—a man who once ended city-wide hunger and fought for peace—had achieved greatness, but at a cost few would dare to pay.The large table, sculpted in the shape of Rivermirror’s map, was where the remnants of the elites gathered. Around it, a fractured council sat, each burdened by their own shadows:Binge: With stress plucking his hair one by one and his skin tainted green from the relay core’s toxic exposure, he looked twice his age. The foul smell of death emanated from him, unmistakable and suffocating.Gazier: Once loud and brash, he had grown quieter and more calculating, his experiences with Binge teaching him that muscles alone couldn’t solve every problem.Evee: Sweet and vibrant on the surface, but her eyes betrayed her—a woman who had seen unspeakable horrors and carried them silently.Hound: The calmest and most composed in the room. Armed with knowledge of every answ
“I thought I forbade you from continuing this project. The consequences will be unbearable if not properly managed and contained, Vorn! Why don’t you ever heed my warnings?” his mentor protested angrily.Speechless in defeat, Vorn reached out, touching the glass encasing the relay core. It pulsed rhythmically, like a beating heart. A long silence followed before he turned to face his mentor. “There is more to magic than meets the eye, sir. I know it’s dangerous, but it has the potential to change our lives for the better. As its creator, it’s my responsibility to safeguard it with my life.”His mentor’s stern gaze didn’t waver. “If anyone catches wind of your success—this thing...” he gestured at the living core, crossing his arms as if to shield himself from its presence.“No one will know. I’ll have it secretly transported to River Island. It’s secluded, far from the mainland, and holds no global interest. I trust Erlin to keep it safe there,” Vorn insisted, his voice trembling with
His lifeless body slumped under its own weight as Emily looked on, her expression disturbingly blank. Another corpse—nothing more. She slowly raised her gaze from the fallen soldier to Gazier, who stood hunched forward, struggling for breath.“How much for your gun?” he asked through a pained grin, wincing at the burn of his recent backstab wound. Emily, edging closer, offered a curt reply:“I’m not selling.”She moved until she was almost within arm’s reach, studying Gazier with a blend of concern and malice. He, noticing her tense scrutiny, tried to dispel the uneasy silence:“Let’s see. You tracked me down, handled those soldiers, and showed up just in time. So, let me guess—the big, bad boss is on his way, and I’m screwed?”He tried a dry chuckle, but Emily’s face remained impassive.“Tough crowd,” he added quietly.Her anger slowly melted into grief. She rested her forehead on Gazier’s shoulder, tears flowing silently as her fingers bunched in his shirt, wrinkling it with every t
Near Gazier’s LocationA distant explosion rocked the street as part of a building facade blew outward, sending Gazier hurtling through the air. His body smashed through the wide glass windows of the adjacent structure, shards raining down around him. He crashed onto the floor inside, momentarily disoriented, only to roll to his feet in one fluid motion. Three armored soldiers appeared in pursuit, gliding seamlessly across the gap using ethereal wingsuits generated by their core-powered suits. The wingsuits shimmered, then faded away upon their landing.They quickly surrounded Gazier, forming a tight perimeter. One soldier—their leader—slung a rifle from his back and pointed it straight at him, the others following suit.“WHERE ARE THEY?” the leader barked.Raising his hands, Gazier attempted a calm smile. “I’m not sure what you’re rambling about. We could talk this out like civilized men, yeah?”The soldiers closed in, making sure he had no avenue of escape. There was a frustrated ed
Hound stood atop a small podium outside his residence, facing rows of seers assembled in strict formation. Their eyes bore faint, glowing tear marks that betrayed a shared unease. It was stiflingly quiet; the throng of onlookers included scientists kept under watch and, on the podium beside Hound, Emily and Evee—Sofie clinging to Evee’s side. Although the sun blazed overhead, the sweat on the seers’ faces wasn’t from heat, but from raw anticipation of what Hound might demand.He began pacing, shoulders tight. His gaze skimmed over the crowd, lingering on each wary face. Finally, he spoke in a low, resonant voice:“You are bound to me by oath. You live for me, and you die for me if I will it so.”A murmur rippled through the onlookers, their apprehension flaring at his words. He paused, hands trembling as if he fought to steady them.“Yet you have served me faithfully all this time. As your Baron, I offer you a choice.”Hound glanced to the side, where the scientists stood under guard,
“It feels so eerie. I remember reading about them in Hound’s book,” whispered one of Gazier’s trusted soldiers, standing far enough away that their new companions couldn’t overhear. “What did the book say to do about them?”“They were supposed to die to the moths,” Gazier replied, a wry twist to his lips as he knotted a frayed lace on his dirty boots.“WHAT?” The soldier’s voice nearly echoed in the hushed, abandoned office building they had chosen as a temporary sanctuary. Four floors high and cluttered with ancient desks and toppled chairs, it felt marginally safe so long as they remained quiet. “Then why are they here—alive?”Gazier took a moment before answering, tugging the knot tight. “I’ve decided. Fuck the book!”The soldier’s eyes went wide at those words. “Hound always said it was for the greater good—that all the killing served some higher purpose. And you believed him for a long time.”“I do believe him,” Gazier muttered, voice ragged with frustration. “But the bodies just
Claps echoed in the distance—slow, steady pulses that weren’t loud enough to draw the wax moths’ attention, yet insistent enough to pique curiosity. The black-armored soldiers moved in formation along the vine-choked walls of a derelict building, rifles raised. At a silent command from their leader, they halted at the structure’s corner, preparing for whatever lay beyond.Just as they readied themselves to rush in, the echo of shotgun shells being loaded made their hearts jolt. Instantly on alert, they realized they were surrounded by a different band of survivors—far less welcoming than the last group. Some perched on rooftops, others crouched in nearby alleys, all hidden behind wax-coated masks and training weapons on the soldiers. A dozen pairs of eyes glinted in the murk. Remarkably, that rhythmic clapping persisted, but no one spared it a glance.Time passed in a tense stalemate before they finally understood the source of the sound. Beneath the stifling hush of the apocalypse, t
Hound, gripping Binge’s horn with a vice-like hold, twisted the creature’s overgrown head and slammed it into the nearest wall, the impact sending cracks through chipped concrete. Anger radiated from Hound with each motion, his knuckles white against Binge’s twisted horn.“You know,” he began, voice lilting with derision, “I understand why you stood up to me. The Relay Core’s got you all fired up. After all, it’s the reason you’re in this sorry state.” His smile widened, eyes going bright with a twisted excitement as if savoring every pained breath Binge took.“You’ve done me no real wrong. And I’m not even mad at you,” he added, studying Binge’s snarling face from the corner of those bloodshot, vein-riddled eyes. A low, menacing growl rumbled from Binge’s throat, refusing to waver despite the pain.“It’s my nature to harm,” Hound continued, pressing Binge’s head harder into the wall until the grinding of bone on brick was audible. “And, well… being a leader takes that out of my hands
The reinforced steel door swung open, revealing the horrors lurking just beyond. They entered the dim, silent room with cautious steps, unsettled by Binge’s unusual quiet. The air itself felt hostile, thick with the metallic stink of blood and the nauseating reek of decaying limbs. Strewn about the floor were the scientists, each missing at least one limb, their torn flesh and viscera laid bare as they crawled, clinging to life by a thread of sheer will.Sofie pressed closer to Evee, her grip tight and trembling, as though she feared losing hold of the only stable thing left. Perched on the ceiling in a far corner, Binge watched them like a predatory beast, his overgrown nails and twisted limbs planted firmly against the walls. His stare felt invasive, a silent threat daring them to make a wrong move.“You are ever so generous!” he hissed, the crimson glow of his eyes locking onto Sofie, who buried herself deeper against Evee, her arms wound protectively around Evee’s waist.Without w
“You said they were a crew—mostly scientists—and they’re familiar with Erlin?” Emily asked, her breath still ragged from a late-night core-hunting mission with Gazier. Hound, standing near a cracked windowframe, sighed with fatigue from her relentless questions, already regretting he’d revealed so much.“Yes, are you familiar with them?” he countered, eyeing Emily warily. She hesitated, glancing away in a manner that piqued his suspicion. In a swift movement, he closed the gap between them until their noses almost touched. “Spill!”Emily steadied his face with her palms, fingers resting gently along his jawline. She searched his eyes—dark and intense—before placing a brief peck on his lower lip. The moment was fleeting but charged with electricity. She slipped past him, making her way to the grand glass window overlooking the skeletal skyline outside. “What are we doing, Hound?” she asked quietly.“I don’t think I understand your question. Speak plainly,” he said, following her to the
“What is the reason for your visit?” He repeated himself, his tone still steady and calm, his eyes darting around looking for a volunteer to respond. A long silence ensued while the tension rose. The corridor itself seemed to hold its breath, anticipating the next move.“We are here for a routine checkup,” a scientist finally voiced, shaking from terror. There were no words but it was very clear the others did not approve of his cooperation by their exchanged morbid expressions. The fluorescent lights overhead emphasized every twitch of their faces, rendering their fear in stark detail.“A checkup on what exactly?” Hound asked, but before he could get a response Vorn interrupted, “A checkup on something above your clearance.” He spoke with absolute confidence, and no fear in his eyes. The tension crackled like electricity between them, distant machinery humming somewhere deeper in the building.A seer emerged from behind him, the sound of an unsheathing blade screeching filling the em