The wind howled through the Hollow Vale like a cry from a long-dead god. Cold, biting, and full of memory. It scraped across Thalen's cloak as he stood on the ridgeline, his sword resting against his shoulder. Beneath him, the land stretched wide ash-choked, cracked, and riddled with the remnants of ancient war. Fires smoldered in the distance, not wild but controlled, burning in lines that marked the advance of something unnatural.
They were moving again the Iron Revenants.
"Two hundred strong," said Eryndor behind him, folding his arms. "And those are just the ones we can count."
Thalen didn't respond immediately. His gaze was fixed on the front ranks. Gleaming armor, spiked and blackened by fire. Motionless until commanded. And at their center, a figure cloaked in crimson haze the Revenant Warlord.
"He's challenging me again," Thalen murmured.
"You've already fought him once."
"And I lost," Thalen said, a sharp breath following the confession. "I didn't even scratch him. My blade shattered on his aura."
Eryndor grunted. "He's using something similar to Tyrant Spirit. It's not the same, but it's close."
"He's corrupted it."
Thalen stepped forward, letting his cloak billow behind him. His blade still the same one he was born with, though no longer common pulsed faintly at his side. A faint silver hue surrounded it, the whisper of Blade Aura. But deeper within, something else stirred. Hot, regal. Restless. The Tyrant Spirit.
"Last time I relied only on technique," Thalen said. "That won't be enough now."
"You're not ready to fuse them," Eryndor warned. "You've barely begun to feel what it means to carry both. The Tyrant Spirit isn't a weapon it's a weight."
"And yet it's mine," Thalen answered. "No one else can carry it for me."
Behind them, the camp stirred. Soldiers and low-ranked aura wielders moved to reinforce the barricades, their eyes wide with fear. Some of them had seen Revenants before once-dead warriors bound in chains of rust and fury, resurrected by the Warlord's cursed command. They did not feel pain. They did not speak. Only followed.
"They'll break the line in hours," Eryndor said. "If you're going to stop him, it has to be now."
Thalen nodded.
He descended the ridgeline alone.
The battlefield trembled at his approach, not from his power, but from what was watching thousands of dead eyes beneath iron helmets, heads turning in unison. Thalen's steps echoed louder than they should have, the sound carried by the weight of intent. Not fear. Not defiance. Something between.
He stopped within a hundred paces of the Revenant Warlord.
A hush fell over the undead army.
The Warlord moved slow and deliberate, his rusted blade scraping the earth like a plow harvesting death. The crimson haze around him flared as he drew closer, each step stamping hatred into the soil. His voice rolled out like stone dragged across stone.
"You return, broken child."
Thalen tightened his grip on his sword. "Not broken. Tempered."
The Warlord laughed a hideous, hollow sound. "Then let me test your steel."
He surged forward, and the world screamed.
Thalen moved too, blade flashing in an arc meant to intercept. Blade met blade and for a heartbeat, sparks danced like fireworks. Then came the pressure.
The Warlord's aura slammed into him heavier than it had been last time. A tide of anguish and domination. The corrupted essence of leadership twisted into tyranny. Thalen's feet skidded back through dirt and ash, boots tearing furrows in the earth. His blade groaned beneath the force.
He gritted his teeth.
Draw. From. Within.
His inner aura surged the Blade Aura first, responding to his call like a loyal hound. Precision. Focus. Edge. His sword stopped retreating.
Then came the roar.
The Tyrant Spirit broke loose like a storm, golden and immense. It cloaked him in a mantle of presence, a king's fury made manifest. The ground cracked beneath him, and the sky above dimmed slightly, as if even the sun dared not burn too brightly in its shadow.
The Warlord stepped back, not in fear, but in recognition.
"You've touched the second flame."
"I've lit the torch," Thalen growled. "Now watch it burn."
He struck again this time not with a swordsman's technique, but with a sovereign's decree. His blade cut downward in a motion that rippled through the field like a bell toll. The air split. Aura met aura. The Warlord blocked it, but staggered for the first time.
A gasp rippled through the Revenants a soundless shudder, like wind through bone.
Thalen advanced.
His swings were no longer clean they were savage, fueled by will more than form. He let the Blade Aura guide his strikes and the Tyrant Spirit empower the weight behind them. They hadn't fused fully not yet but they no longer clashed.
They danced.
The Warlord growled, retreating a step, then two, then anchoring himself. He raised his sword high and slammed it into the ground, releasing a shockwave of corrupted aura. It raced outward in a wave meant to erase everything in its path.
Thalen stood still.
He closed his eyes.
His aura didn't explode outward it pressed down, collapsing in on itself before expanding like a detonation of command. The shockwave met it mid-air and shattered like glass on stone.
When the dust cleared, Thalen stood tall, his blade humming.
The Revenant Warlord roared, charging again, maddened now. But Thalen met him head-on.
Blade to blade, strike to strike. The rhythm of battle was a drumbeat, and Thalen was no longer just surviving he was leading.
Then came the moment.
The Tyrant Spirit inside him pulsed. The Blade Aura cried out in answer.
And for a single heartbeat they touched.
The fusion wasn't perfect. It wasn't permanent. But it was enough.
Thalen's sword ignited in golden light, its edge wreathed in a second aura. He spun into a final strike one honed by training, carved by will, and crowned by legacy.
He whispered as he swung:
"Fall."
The Revenant Warlord raised his blade to block too slow.
Thalen's strike cleaved through metal, aura, and command. The Warlord screamed as his body split, the crimson haze dispersing into the sky like smoke escaping a bottle.
And then silence.
The Revenants behind him froze. Without the Warlord's power to bind them, they dropped where they stood, like puppets with cut strings.
Thalen stood alone amid ash and ruin, breathing heavily.
His blade glowed faintly. His knees buckled not from injury, but from release. The battle was over.
Behind him, Eryndor watched, eyes wide.
He hadn't just witnessed a victory.
He had seen the birth of a king.