Page 280 of The Ascended

Page List

Font Size:

He knew everything. Every plan, every alliance, every hope we'd built. And he'd destroy them all if I didn't stop him here.

I needed more time.

"But not all domains are planning rebellion," I said, grasping for anything to keep him talking. "Some are loyal to you. More loyal than the balance should allow. Isn't that right?"

"You're full of surprises, Thais Morvaren." He actually sounded impressed. "I thought my merger with Axora was more... discreet."

"Why do you even need to merge with War?" I pressed. "Won't you be strong enough after this to command your will across the realm?"

"You're thinking too small."

"Well, mortal minds and all," I drawled. "As you've mentioned several times. Help me understand, if you're going to kill me anyway."

"Why stop at this realm when I could have the next? And the next after that?" His eyes gleamed. "I need an army for that. One that will eventually join the forces I left behind."

My blood ran cold. He wanted all the realms. All four pantheons.

And suddenly, Darian's death at the banquet made terrible sense. Priests stationed in military camps, seeking blessed amongst trained soldiers. Specifically targeting those who already knew how to fight, how to follow orders, how to wage war.

Then Xül's admission crashed through me.So few of the Aesymar possess true gifts themselves. Immortal but essentially powerless.

"The Ascended," I said slowly. "You're gathering the power the Aesymar lack. But the Trials kill most contestants—how can you build an army when so few survive?"

Olinthar's expression didn't change. "The Trials serve their purpose. Those who die were never strong enough to matter. Those who survive?" He paused. "They've learned the only lesson thatmatters—that divine will is absolute. The perfect soldiers don't just have power. They have loyalty beaten into them."

Thatcher! This would be a great fucking time to wake up!

“You speak of other worlds, but no one even knows if the other realms survived the Sundering," I protested.

"I intend to find out." His expression turned distant, almost dreamy. "Sometimes I feel my beasts, clawing across my skin when I dream."

The prophecy. The hordes of monsters from Vaerhuun. His army, waiting for their master's return.

But the woman with ashen hair—how did she fit into this nightmare?

"Enough talk," Moros said suddenly. "The convergence approaches."

I thrashed against the bonds with renewed desperation as he walked back to Thatcher's unconscious form.

"Thatcher!" I screamed. "Wake up! Please!"

Nothing. Not even a flicker of movement.

Moros smiled. "He sleeps deeply, dear. A necessary precaution."

But as he picked up the knife and turned his attention fully to my brother, I felt it—the bonds holding me weakened. Just slightly. Just enough.

I gathered every ounce of power I possessed, compressed it into a single point of burning light, and tore myself free.

The bonds shattered. I hit the ground hard but rolled to my feet.

Moros looked up, and for the first time, interest flickered across Olinthar's features. Then he smiled.

"Finally," he said.

Pain exploded through my abdomen.

I looked down in shock to see a blade protruding from my stomach. Someone had stabbed me from behind. But this was no normal blade—poison burned through my flesh, spreading like wildfire.