Right now, four figures stood inside the chamberâthree if one only counted the living, but the Void Creatureâs presence warped the room enough to feel like an extra consciousness. And the general... the general couldnât stop sweating.
A cold droplet slid from his temple down his cheek as he stared at the floating abomination, its shifting mass barely contained by the reinforced arcane bindings. Even though Icarus had said, "Donât worry. It doesnât bite," the reassurance meant nothing. The general knew the truth:
if that creature broke free, he would die instantly.
It was two full cores above him.
Two entire levels of existence he could never hope to bridge.
The only reason he didnât collapse from sheer terror was because Kaedor and Icarus were hereâtwo monsters in humanoid form, beings so far beyond him that their mere presence forced the Void Creature to remain still.
Even so, the general wondered again what he was doing here.
He understood Kaedor had summoned him, of courseâthis was his first official assignment after receiving his recent promotion. A promotion he was proud of... and terrified by.
Being chosen directly by a Patriarch of the Eight Great Families?
This mission had to be executed flawlessly.
Icarusâ voice interrupted his spiral.
"Now then," Icarus said, tone suddenly sharpened to pure business, "let me tell you the details of the plan."
The general snapped to attention. He tried to meet Icarusâ eyesâbut one glance into that calm, lilac gaze sent a chill down his spine. It was like looking into a void that simply learned to speak.
He also understood the unspoken truth of the situation:
the reason Kaedorâs entire family was bedridden and pale âthe reason their fevers wouldnât breakâ was standing right in front of him.
Icarus.
The Warden of the Plague.
The man who could give and take breath with a thought.
The generalâs mind driftedââperhaps his class awakened because someone in his family once suffered a fatal disease? A mutation? A curse?ââbut he stopped thinking the moment Icarus smiled at him.
A smile that didnât reach his eyes.
"I heard Kaedor promoted you recently," Icarus began, voice smooth.
"It must be an honor to represent a Great Family in something this important. Your mission carries weight equal to your new rank. We expect full compliance."
The general straightened his back immediately.
"Y-Yes, sir. I will carry out the orders given to me. Iâm proud to do this."
He glanced at Kaedor, searching for acknowledgement from his Patriarch.
Kaedor didnât show approvalâonly a muted irritation, as if the entire situation tested his patience.
The general swallowed hard, Kaedorâs silent irritation pressing against his nerves like a physical weight. Before he could gather his thoughts, Icarus shifted slightlyâjust enough to reclaim the room.
"Good," Icarus said, his eyes narrowing with something that resembled approval but felt far colder. "I like that spirit. Letâs begin."
He stepped closer, the faint echo of his boots clicking softly on the stone floor. Somehow, even the Void Creatureâs amorphous body quieted as if listening. Or fearing.
"As you may have heard," Icarus began, hands clasped behind his back, "rumors are spreading about the Ritefield of Beasts." He tilted his head. "Some true, some exaggerated... but all surprisingly useful."
The general nodded, though he wasnât entirely sure what rumor Icarus was referring to.
Icarus continued:
"Youâll lead an army of prisoners. Men and women Lycans, convicted for crimes they will now attempt to repay."
A long pause.
The general felt something cold twist in his stomach.
Icarusâ tone remained perfectly smooth.
"On the day of the Ritefield, you will all be disguised among the celebrations. Drinking. Laughing. Acting like harmless fools enjoying tradition." He lifted one finger. "You must behave exactly like civilians, not warriors. Understood?"
The general blinked. Civilians? With prisoners? His first mission was... this?
He opened his mouth, instinctively forming a protest. The Void Creature stirred behind him, tendrils brushing the barrier. Icarusâ gaze snapped to himâsharp, expectant.
The generalâs throat tightened. He closed his mouth at once.
Icarus smiled. A small, satisfied curve.
"Good. Youâre learning when not to speak."
The general forced out:
"U-Understood... sir. You can expect great things from us. I... will make Lord Kaedor proud."
He looked again at Kaedor, hoping for at least a nod, a sign of support.
But Kaedor only offered this some words. "Soon youâll receive your soldiers. It will not be easy. Adapt. No matter the difficulty."
The general straightened instinctively. "Yes, sir."
Kaedor dismissed him with a single gesture. "You may leave."
The general exhaled shakily, bowed deeply, and turned toward the exit. Every step felt like he was walking through mudâfear weighing down his legs. He opened the door, slipped out, and let it close behind him.
The moment it clicked shut, the atmosphere in the room changed.
For several long seconds, the two simply stood in the now-closed chamber, the silence so heavy it felt like carrying a whole cow in your armsâawkward, crushing, absurdly difficult to maintain without collapsing.
Icarus still faced the door, lilac eyes narrow, as if scanning through layers of stone to ensure no lingering presence remained. Only when he was satisfied did he let out a soft exhale.
Kaedor flexed his jaw.
"So," he finally growled, "you didnât tell him theyâll be bait? That those prisoners weâre giving him will die the moment the elves strike?"
Icarus didnât turn. He merely tilted his head slightly.
"Does it matter?"
Kaedorâs fists tightened.
"It does if he loses composure on the field."
Icarus at last shifted to face him, expression smooth, patient, and infuriatingly calm.
"If your general hesitates in front of pressure, he cannot guide anything," Icarus replied. "Youâre a Patriarch of the Eight Great Families, Kaedor. Try to act like one."
A vein pulsed visibly on Kaedorâs forehead.
The worst part? He couldnât deny the logic. He couldnât deny the insult, either.
Kaedor took a breath through his nose, tryingâand failingâto stifle the irritation burning beneath his ribs. Every instinct told him to bare his claws, to remind Icarus who the true Apex warrior in this room was. In raw physical combat, Kaedor could crush Icarus. Their classes were too differentâone born for destruction, the other for contagion and manipulation.
But if he killed Icarus?
His family would die. Every last one of them. Slowly. Painfully.
Icarus had made that perfectly clear.
Kaedor had tried once before. The memory still tasted bitter.
Icarus took a casual step forward.
"You worry about prisoners?" he said. "Letâs not pretend you care. That general was nothing before today. You promoted him for convenience, not merit. You didnât want to lose anyone valuable."
Kaedorâs growl rumbled through the room, low and feral.
He hated that Icarus saw through him so easily. Hated it more that he wasnât wrong.
But what choice did he have?
This allianceâthis poisoned agreementâwas the only way to keep his bloodline alive. And Kaedor knew better than anyone:
If the Eight Great Families declared him responsible for breaking peace, his life was already forfeit.
Even if he surrendered. Even if he cooperated. Even if Icarus died first.
Kaedor narrowed his eyes.
There was no path forward that didnât end with his own death.
âSo be it,â he thought grimly. âBut my family will live. That is the price.â
Kaedorâs grim acceptance lingered in the air like smokeâdense, suffocating, impossible to ignore. Icarus watched him with a faint tilt of the head, as if observing an animal finally understanding the cage it lived in.
Only then did he speak.
"Good," Icarus murmured, voice smooth as still water.
"Clarity suits you. It makes cooperation... easier."
Kaedorâs lips curled back for a secondâsomething between a snarl and a sad smile.
"Cooperation," he repeated, bitterness dripping from each syllable. "You mean subservience."
Icarus didnât deny it. He took a slow step forward, moonlight from the high window catching the maroon of his coat, making his silhouette stretch long and thin across the floor like the shadow of a blade.
"You agreed because you had no choice," Icarus said. "And I accepted because I have no interest in your downfall, Kaedor. Unlike others... you are useful."
The word stung more than any insult. Useful. As if he were a tool. A temporary convenience.
Kaedorâs nails dug into his palms.
But Icarus continued. "Once I obtain the Essence from the World Treeâs core, the disease afflicting your family will be reversed." His tone remained frighteningly casual. "I promised you that, and I keep my promises."
Kaedorâs anger flickered, but beneath itâhope. Hope he despised himself for feeling.
"And if we fail?" he muttered. "If your plan collapses? If Sylvanel overwhelms us? If you fall before reaching that accursed tree?"
Icarusâ lilac eyes sharpened, their calmness turning predatory.
"Then your family will still live."
Kaedorâs breath halted.
"What?"
"If I die before completing my experiment, the disease will dissolve. It was crafted with that safeguard." He paused. A faint smile tugged at his lips. "I am cruel, Kaedor. Not heartless."
Kaedor didnât know whether to feel relief... or dread.
âHe truly holds all the cards... even in death, he wins.â
Icarus stepped past him, approaching the window overlooking the fortress courtyard. Soldiers trained belowâLycan warriors, young heirs, future leaders. None of them realized how close the family stood to ruin.
"Your death is inevitable," Icarus said, as if discussing the weather. "The Eight Families will demand blood for breaking peace. A Patriarchâs blood."
Kaedor swallowed, throat burning.
Icarus glanced back. "But not your childrenâs."
Icarusâ wordsâ"But not your childrenâs."âechoed through Kaedor like a blade drawn slowly across bone. A mercy and a sentence, wrapped into one.
The chamber felt colder. Heavier. As if the knowledge of his own inevitable death settled on his shoulders with physical weight.
Outside the window, the courtyard bustled with life. Young Lycans sparred, shouting challenges. Older warriors instructed them. Two heirsâhis heirsâwere among them, both fierce, both proud, both determined to inherit what he would soon lose.
They had no idea.
Kaedorâs throat tightened.
âSo this is the path,â he realized. âWar at my back, the Eight Families at my throat... and death waiting at the end.â
He exhaled through his nose, slow and controlled, forcing steel back into his spine.
âBut they will live. My bloodline will endure. Even if I fall, even if the world brands me a traitor... they will live.â
He allowed himself a final glance at the courtyardâat the two figures fighting under the sun, unaware of the cost their father was paying for their future.
âI suppose... itâs time to choose which of them will lead once Iâm gone.â âEither he... or she. I cannot leave the house without a head.â