Raphael grabbed the newly reattached right hand and snapped the index finger off at the base. He threw it behind the Inquisitor.
The arm hadn't fully integrated yet. No pain signal reached him from it, the tissue hadn't established the nerve connections that would have made that possible.
The Inquisitor glanced back at the finger lying on the ground behind her. Her expression darkened.
"You, you dare!"
She read it as provocation. The rage that came up in her was immediate and total, and the timing was convenient, above the intersection, the second bolt had finished gathering, dense and coiling, ready on her command. Her finger swept downward.
The lightning came.
Raphael's expression didn't change. He snapped the middle finger off the same hand and threw it upward, then brought the remaining fingers together in a sharp snap.
Crack.
Arcane energy poured through his circuit into both finger segments simultaneously, triggering Tendril Branches the moment the charge found them.
The small pieces of knuckle and bone didn't stay small, they grew, the expansion violent and rapid, meters of dense flesh-tendril erupting upward in the span of a single breath, the mass reaching fifteen meters before the growth rate slowed.
"What?"
The tendril from behind her reversed course and came at her before she'd finished the word.
She had no confidence in her body's ability to absorb a direct hit from something moving at that speed and mass, she threw herself sideways, scrambling clear with the specific urgency of someone who had done the math already.
Raphael noted it. Filed it.
Her concentration broke with the dodge. The purple bolt above, suddenly without direction, skewed off its original angle.
The tendril rose to meet it.
The bolt sheared through it completely, the flesh and arcane mass blown open, scattered into ash and dispersing droplets and faint residual energy.
What had been fifteen meters of living weapon came apart in under a second.
The thunder hit the ground.
Raphael was already gone from where he'd been standing.
The tendril's destruction had served its purpose, a moment of visual cover, combined with the concealment property of the Wraith Form, and he'd slipped sideways into one of the reflective surfaces scattered across the battlefield.
A broken shopfront window. A puddle. It didn't take much.
The intersection went quiet.
The Inquisitor turned a full circle, her remaining hand pressed against the wound at her shoulder, her eyes cutting across every surface and angle of the empty street.
Nothing.
"Cowardly insect. Running and hiding, I'll find you, and when I do I will cut what's left of you into pieces small enough to feed to dogs..."
The venting ran out. She pressed her lips together and shifted into something more controlled, her mouth moving in a longer, more complex passage of the old language.
The stump at her right shoulder responded.
Not with flesh. The regeneration that answered her incantation built differently, brown and fibrous, structural, the form of it wrong in a way that drew the eye. Branches.
Actual branches, jointed like wood, extending from the wound in the configuration of an arm's internal architecture, leaves and smaller growths filling in where muscle and tendon would have been.
A complete limb by the end of it, brown and botanical and entirely functional.
She flexed the new fingers. Made a sound that was almost a laugh, though nothing about her expression supported the classification.
"Terrible luck. I wait years for this opportunity and the target runs." She exhaled. "This was supposed to be efficient. Both of them in one location—"
She paused.
"Where did the witch go? The badge was responding clearly, she should be somewhere in this area."
She turned the thought over and her expression changed, moving through several stages of reluctance before arriving at something she clearly didn't want to accept.
"Unless, no. No, that doesn't make sense. Male witches aren't, but he was the only one the badge."
A single drop of red fell from the sky.
It hit the road in front of her and spread, a thin, circular film, the remnants of the tendril that had been struck and scattered above.
Barely enough to catch light. She glanced at it without particular interest and looked away.
In the surface of that droplet, a reflection moved.
Raphael came out of the mirror at full speed, dropping the Wraith Form the instant he cleared the threshold, the domination slot switching to the new ability before his feet had finished finding the ground.
*Flesh Bishop • Inertia.*
*[Jason Lance — Soul Integrity: 91%.]*
A scream from somewhere that wasn't the intersection.
He was already inside her reach. Target: the spine, the specific cluster of nerve architecture that, once inertia-dissolved, would strip her of motor function from the point of contact downward.
Her body reacted before her mind did.
She spun and brought her arm up, blocking with her palm, taking the hit rather than letting it reach her back. The contact lasted less than a second.
Her arm went dead.
Not painful. Not numb in the way that cold or impact produced. Just, absent.
The limb was still attached, still visible, but the signals running through it had gone quiet, the tissue losing the tension that made voluntary movement possible. It hung from her shoulder like something decorative.
"You—!"
She hadn't seen it coming. Hadn't tracked him from the blood drop reflection, hadn't anticipated that something could survive inside a surface that small.
The strike had arrived from a direction she'd classified as impossible.
The gun barrel ended the sentence.
Cold metal, pressed to the center of her forehead, the bore diameter clearly visible from where she was standing. Her training told her what that caliber meant at contact range.
The Judgment Tribunal had produced exceptional warlocks over the centuries. It had not produced people whose skulls could survive a large-bore round at zero distance.
She went very still.
Raphael's voice came out flat.
"Tell me who sent you. Tell me how you found this location."
The old woman's face was a controlled storm, the anger held in check by the specific calculation of someone who understood the current geometry of the situation, the pride fighting the math and losing.
Her eyes moved sideways. Then she forced them back to his face.
"I spent years tracking your father. Accumulated significant intelligence. Analyzed his movement patterns across a long period." A fractional pause. "Then a dead priest's case pointed me toward the Lance family. The Lance family pointed me toward you."
Raphael's three remaining right-hand fingers moved to her throat.
"I remember how the last lie felt, don't you?" The tone didn't change. "I'm not interested in the story. I ask, you answer. That's the arrangement. Argue with it and I kill you."
The Inquisitor's composure cracked at the edges.
"You dare?!" She caught herself. "You're an official operative. Killing a Tribunal member would be a political incident of significant—"
"Would it?" His eyes held hers. "I was a criminal before I had this identity. The underground still knows how to reach me. You'd be dead either way."
The pressure at her throat increased by a degree. "You, specifically, would be dead."
The street around them was empty. The closed shutters, the stopped cars, the absent pedestrians, the intersection had been cleared by the first lightning strike and hadn't refilled.
There were no witnesses making calculations about what happened next.
Just the two of them, and the question of who was more willing to follow through.
