Chapter 17
The world didn't end with a bang; it ended with a roar so profound it swallowed the very concept of sound.
When Leonard's mace struck the Resonance Anchor, the frequency didn't just vibrate the stone—it shattered the crystalline bond of the three-hundred-year-old ice shelf hanging ten thousand feet above the Vanguard Vault. For a heartbeat, the God-Slayers stood frozen, their amber cores flickering in confusion as the "song" of the mountain changed from a low hum to a tectonic scream.
Then, the white tide fell.
Million of tons of packed powder, jagged ice, and ancient permafrost descended like the hand of a vengeful god. Leonard had just enough time to see Kaelen's visor shatter under the first wave of pressure before the darkness hit. It wasn't like falling into water; it was like being buried in liquid concrete. The air was punched out of his lungs, his Null-Armor groaned under the atmospheric weight, and then—silence.
Absolute, suffocating silence.
Leonard woke to the sound of his own blood drumming in his ears. It was pitch black. His limbs were pinned, his chest compressed by a weight that made every shallow breath a victory of will over physics.
Clara. The baby. The Weavers.
The thought acted like a jolt of lightning to his nerves. He flexed his fingers. They moved. He was encased in a small pocket of air, created by the jagged slant of a fallen granite pillar that had wedged itself against the vault's exterior wall.
He triggered the emergency glow-strip on his forearm. A dim, flickering green light filled the cramped space. He was upside down, his legs tangled in the tattered remains of a Weaver's cloak. Beside him, his blackened mace was half-buried in the snow, its cold iron surface reflecting his own battered face.
"Clara!" he tried to shout, but it came out as a pathetic, dry wheeze. The oxygen was already thinning.
He began to dig. Not with his hands—that would trigger a secondary collapse—but with his Null-Resonance. He pressed his palms against the packed ice above him and hummed a low, steady note. It was a technique he'd used in the Korthusian mines to find the "soft" spots in the rock. The ice began to vibrate, the crystals loosening just enough for him to push through.
After what felt like hours, he broke into a larger cavity. It was a hollow space formed by the collapse of the vault's grand archway. And he wasn't alone.
Across the cavern, a faint, sickly amber light pulsed in the dark.
Kaelen, the God-Slayer, was pinned from the waist down by a fallen slab of Null-Lead. His bone-white armor was cracked like an eggshell, and his Pulse-Saber lay shattered in the frost, its energy leaking out in harmless, static sparks.
"The... Prince..." Kaelen coughed, a spray of dark blood hitting the snow. The amber core in his chest was dim, stuttering like a dying candle. "You... buried us all... for a girl."
"I buried you for a future," Leonard rasped, dragging himself toward the Slayer. He didn't reach for his mace. He reached for the ceramic plates of the Slayer's armor. "Where are the others?"
"Dead... or digging," Kaelen whispered. "But the Horn... the Horn has a secondary... pulse. My brothers... they know exactly... where my heart... is stopping."
Leonard looked up. Through the cracks in the ice and stone, he could see a faint, blue shimmer. It wasn't the sun. It was the Celestial Pulse.
Clara was alive. She was using her power to keep the inner sanctum from collapsing, but the light was a flare in the dark for any surviving Slayers.
"I can't let them find her," Leonard said.
"You can't... move," Kaelen sneered, a final, spiteful spark returning to his eyes. "And you... have no magic. You are just... a man in a hole."
Leonard looked at the Slayer's dying amber core. He looked at the shattered Pulse-Saber. Then, he looked at his own Null-Armor.
"I don't need magic to win a hunt in the dark," Leonard said. He reached down and gripped the edge of the slab pinning the Slayer. "I just need a bigger hammer."
Leonard didn't kill the Slayer. Instead, he began to strip the amber shards from Kaelen's broken armor. He wasn't building a weapon; he was building a Decoy. By lacing the shards into a piece of discarded Weaver's silk and dragging it toward a different part of the collapse, he could lead the surviving Slayers away from the vault.
It was a gamble. If he failed, he would die in the dark, and Clara would be defenseless. If he succeeded, he would buy them the time they needed to dig out.
As Leonard finished the decoy, a scratching sound echoed from the tunnels above. It wasn't the sound of a shovel. It was the rhythmic, metallic tink-tink-tink of Pulse-Steel claws climbing through the ice.
The second God-Slayer wasn't digging for Kaelen. He was hunting for the "Void" that had dared to strike his brother.
Leonard extinguished his glow-strip. He pulled his cowl over his face, disappearing into the absolute blackness of the tomb.
"Come on then," Leonard whispered to the dark. "Let's see how well you hunt when you can't see the stars."
