Hunger aura.
Power blotted out Lindon’s senses, and he was swallowed by blinding pain.
8
Akura Malice had submerged herself in a world of silhouettes. Her World of Night technique. Shadows and dreams moved around her, vague shapes she could make out only distantly.
But they came with impressions. As she saw the outline of a woman with a staff, she wouldn’t necessarily be able to identify it with her eyes. But her spirit felt Emriss Silentborn. The Remnant Queen would be involved in her future soon.
Close by, drifting in the emptiness, she found the shadows of a ruined city. There would be a battle here, but she felt as though the battle hadn’t included her. So she would travel to this place in the aftermath of someone else’s battle.
These hints and clues were difficult to piece together, but the World of Night was the best technique Malice had to interact with Fate. In these recent years, the future had been even more obscured than usual.
She had seen no hint of the Bleeding Phoenix rising, for instance, and usually the Dreadgods were as difficult to spot as sharks crammed into a bathtub. But this made twice within half a decade that she had failed to spot one.
Someone was meddling with her perception, or with the flow of the future. Fate, as she understood it, was only a tendency for things to happen a certain way. Just as you could stop an object from falling by catching it, so you could take action to prevent certain outcomes.
Most of the time.
Malice scanned these suggestions of the future, trying to piece them together, and realized she couldn’t. Some events seemed even to contradict one another.
Something strange was going on. She had immersed herself into this world several times over the last few months, spending every ounce of her attention to try to unravel the future. She couldn’t allow herself to be caught unawares again.
Moments after thinking that, she was caught unaware.
Four shadows suddenly loomed up in her World of Night, surrounding her, like black statues that had sprouted from the ground. A bird, a shelled warrior, a tiger with a halo, and a dragon accompanied by clouds.
She didn’t need her spiritual sense to recognize the Dreadgods.
They lurked in the distance forever, threats that always existed somewhere in the world, but now they were here. Right now. Looking down on her.
And with every passing second, they grew larger.
Malice tore the technique apart and stepped back into the real world.
“Dreadgods!” she called, and while terror coursed through her soul, her voice was that of a majestic queen.
Carried by her will, those words echoed throughout Moongrave. Everyone heard as though she stood before them.
And the entire city rushed into action.
They did not panic. They had prepared for this. Shelters were opened, powerful sacred artists were awakened, emergency constructs were wheeled out of treasuries, and messages flew all throughout her territory.
Malice herself reached out to Charity, who had contacted her at almost the same time.
Her granddaughter’s voice rang in her mind. “It’s the northwest, Grandmother. Mercy’s still there.”
“Then bring her back,” Malice ordered. “And move our people into position.”
Lindon sat up with his head and spirit screaming.
He had been brought to the second floor of his house on Windfall and lain on the couch. He had never entirely lost consciousness, but he didn’t remember much. Just the blinding sight of so much hunger, washing over the land in a wave.
If he hadn’t been open to the Void Icon at the time, it wouldn’t have been so bad, but he had his aura sight and his perception and his Sage senses open wide.
Even now, he was finding it hard to focus his vision. He kept sliding between seeing double, seeing blurs, and seeing only the colored wash of aura.
A fuzzy mass of red that Lindon was sure was Yerin broke off from talking, appearing at his side in a blink. “Whoa, steady there. Don’t rock the boat. Can you drink?”
A cup was lifted to his lips, and Lindon took a sip of water. Something waved in front of his face.
“Still got your eyes? How many arms do I have?”
Lindon peered at her. “Eight.”
She chuckled, and so did Eithan, who was apparently still in the room. They must have thought he was making a joke about her sword-arms, but he really saw four of her, each with a pair of hazy human arms.
“You’ll be fine after some rest,” Eithan assured him. “You were looking right at the field when it dropped.”
That spiked Lindon’s alarm. “The suppression field! The Dreadgods…”