Mercifully, the onslaught ended, leaving smoke rising from her arms—singed again—and her madra dangerously low.
She’d stopped it.
The green-horned man watched the whole thing with flat, dead eyes. “Remember you said that, Sopharanatoth.” Yerin guessed that was the dragon.
Yerin’s spirit trembled as another powerful soul was unveiled somewhere on the island. Yerin couldn’t put a name to its advancement level, but it felt impossibly ancient.
Then the mammoth rose over the trees and raised its trunk, trumpeting into the sky. She could see it mostly as a pile of fur in the distance; it looked like a mountain’s pet dog.
The stranger pointed in that direction. “My friend was listening. He’s not happy.”
The golden Thousand-Mile Cloud rushed in as though blown on a storm’s wind. Two Truegold dragons dropped from it, right in front of Sopharanatoth.
“Sophara,” one said. “We have to leave.”
The mammoth blasted another note.
“We have to leave right now.”
The Underlady raised her sword again, but was tackled by her retainers. She struggled against them, and though she could surely overpower them if she tried, they managed to wrestle her onto a smaller Thousand-Mile Cloud.
“Skysworn!” she howled. “I will come for you! Your Empire cannot protect you! You cannot hide from me!”
She kept wailing as the cloud carried her into the sky.
When she vanished, the giant Thousand-Mile Cloud started to slide away. It moved quickly, for something so huge.
Yerin took a deep breath of relief as the pressure was lifted, letting herself be soothed by the Truegold madra flowing through her. Mercy looked to her, and then to the newcomer.
“Hi!” she said brightly. “I’m Mercy.”
Chapter 17
Lindon sensed no Eyes of the Deep in Harmony’s possession, and his Goldsign was even more dense than before. It seemed like a hole hovering behind his head.
“He’s only a step away from breaking through to Underlord,” Orthos rumbled. “He’ll have a weapon in his soulspace, and he’ll have soulfire in his body, but he won’t be able to infuse it into his techniques yet.”
“Then we have nothing to fear,” Lindon said. He should have been terrified, but the Blackflame running through his channels was stronger than ever, and he felt nothing more than eager.
Harmony raised two fingers, and Lindon activated the Burning Cloak. He had seen this technique before.
Fingers fell, deceptively slowly, and a blade of shadow flickered between Harmony and Lindon. The blade sliced a shallow gash in stone, but a sidestep powered by the explosive Burning Cloak put Lindon five steps to the side. It would be hard to avoid if you didn’t know how it worked, or if your body wasn’t fast enough to keep up. But shrouded in the burning black-and-red of his Enforcer technique, he was ready for anything.
Harmony’s eyes flashed, and his fingers moved in a complex pattern.
Half a second later, shadow-blades flashed at Lindon from every angle. His eyes widened, but he didn’t have enough time for panic. He kicked forward, slid on his knees and bent backward to avoid a horizontal slash, rolled to avoid one coming from above, and raised his Remnant arm to seize the technique coming from his right.
The blade was thin as a string and not solid—it was a Striker technique, not Forged. The hunger madra crushed it easily.
Orthos slammed into Lindon’s side, knocking him away, as a blade came from behind that he hadn’t noticed. Orthos disappeared, his own Burning Cloak taking him away from the technique.
Harmony hadn’t moved, looking at his own fingers curiously. “It’s truly incredible,” he said. “I can see as Monarchs do.”
Lindon gathered dragon’s breath into his left hand, but he didn’t release the technique. “We have no grudge against the Akura clan. I serve on a Skysworn squad with Akura Mercy. Let’s leave together.”
At the sound of Mercy’s name, Harmony’s expression twitched. Lindon couldn’t read his expression, but the young man’s spirit grew darker.
“Shouldn’t have said that,” Orthos muttered.
Harmony pulled his hand up, and Forged black blades erupted beneath Lindon and Orthos. They split, dodging the technique.
And without discussion, they both rushed for Harmony.
They came at him from either side, and Harmony glanced from one to the other. He spoke as they ran at him, shaking out his sleeves. “Come, let me show you.”
Lindon struck with his Remnant arm as Orthos bit down on Harmony’s left hand.
In an instant, the purple flooded out of Harmony’s irises, filling the whole eye. It looked as though he had smooth gemstones in both eyes.
Gauntlets of purple crystal covered his hands, and he seized Lindon’s arm in one and the back of Orthos’ neck in the other.
Their charge stopped as though they’d been locked in stone.
Orthos struck with his front leg, Burning Cloak flaring, and Lindon slammed his half-formed ball of dragon’s breath at Harmony’s chest with his left hand.
Harmony spun in place, releasing them and avoiding their attacks. In the same motion, he struck each of them with the backs of his fists.
Orthos took it on the shell, skidding back a few paces.
Lindon flew across the room.
His ribs throbbed with pain. A month ago, the strike would have caved in his chest. But his Truegold Enforcer technique and weeks of eating sacred beast meat made him tougher than that.
Lindon hit the floor on his feet, but Orthos had already engaged Harmony one more time. He cycled Blackflame to his feet, ready to dash back in.
Until he looked up.
The jeweled tree shone down on him, the Eyes of the Deep soothing his spirit with their placid, thoughtful presence. Dross was up there, somewhere. He’d been too late.
Blackflame turned that failure to anger, and once again he prepared himself to return to battle...
Until he caught a glimpse of purple among the tree’s cages.
He looked closer to make sure he wasn’t seeing things. Dross wasn’t as bright or violet as he’d been before, as though blue madra had seeped into him, but he was still a different color to all the other Eyes of the Deep.
Maybe he could still be saved.
“Hold on, Orthos,” Lindon shouted, and with the assistance of the Burning Cloak, he leaped into the iron branches of the tree.
Orthos gave him a wordless shout of frustration. Harmony had kicked him into the ceiling, and was now launching a series of shadow-blades at him. Only a few weeks ago, Orthos would have died there.
His mind, body, and spirit had been rejuvenated by his time in Ghostwater. This place had remade him just as much as it had Lindon. He twisted in the air, agile as a snake, not only avoiding the blades but flashing out with dragon’s breath that scorched a line along the floor, forcing Harmony to raise a sword and to leap back.
But Lindon could still feel the turtle’s frustration. He wouldn’t win on his own, so Lindon would have to be quick.
He flipped open the cage, which was surprisingly easy. He had thought he might have to burn it open, but it didn’t even seem to lock. Then he reached in with his left hand, pulling on Dross’ vessel.
It was locked in place.
Lines of light ran from the rest of the cage to the gem as madra sealed it inside. Dross mumbled something from the jewel, like a man mumbling in his sleep.
Lindon reached out his Remnant arm, hesitating before he touched the lines. He didn’t know what severing this connection would do to Dross; as far as he knew, it might be the only thing sustaining the construct’s life.
But Orthos cried out behind him, and he hooked a white finger around the line of madra. He didn’t have time to examine this carefully.