Page 138 of The Shadow Orc's Bride

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“Open,” he said.

The hinges groaned. The bolts sheared. The doors drifted inward. Smoke spilled out, carrying the scent of fear and enamel and something older—the breath of the Shadow, returning home. He smelled marble dust and dye, the aftermath of men realizing they had served the wrong master.

He climbed the marble stairs, boots echoing. Beyond the threshold waited voices—shouting, steel, the unmistakable pitch of Eliza’s command cutting through the noise. The Shadow under his skin went still, listening.Hold.

He went toward it.

Chapter

Seventy

At the threshold of Istrial’s great hall—doors yawning inward on tired hinges—Azfar’s whisper found him, as if the old man had put his mouth to the seam of the world and breathed through it.Now or never.

The ward-nets collapsed as a heard-of-but-never-seen creature collapses—noiselessly, with the pressure of absence, with a change in the weight of air that made men think of storms and ancestors. The runes laced across the Lion’s Court went dull, then dark, then—worse—forgetful. The magic Thalorin had hammered into the keep’s stones unhooked itself like a buckle worked by a trembling hand.

Rakhal felt it in his teeth. The relief had pain in it. Space opened inside his chest as if something had stepped out and left a room behind. The Shadow, caged long enough to learn how to pace, lifted its head and did not bother to ask.

Noise ran through the court and over the bridge—panicked orders in enamel-bright accents; a drum struck off-beat and then thrown; the scuff and squeal of boots making promises they couldn’t keep to the stone. Above it all, Eliza’s word from the hall—drown—moved like a cold wind through a fevered room.

“Don’t look at me,” Rakhal told Shazi. She grinned anyway, feral and faithful, and turned to make work with knives so she wouldn’t have to watch the part of him that would not be knives for much longer.

He opened his hands.

They were already scarred. He did not need ceremony for the Shadow, but men do; so he gave himself one. He drew his blade across his left palm, then his right, not deep but decisive. Blood welled without embarrassment. The Shadow leaned in as if to smell him better.

“Azfar!” Shazi shouted over the court’s roar—not calling for help, calling the old man to witness. Azfar stood on the shattered verge of the tower stairs, staff planted, hair white as salt, mouth set not in prayer but in math. He nodded once, as if a figure had balanced, and then he began to speak.

Not in the ancient tongue, or not only. The old words were a scaffolding; he put newer ones through them, simple ones, city words: bread, name, law, mercy, stop. The sound threaded the court like a seam. Rakhal’s breath caught on the needle.

He pressed his bleeding palms together.

Shadow met blood. It hissed as cold water hisses on iron. The hiss deepened into a chord, then into a choir. Something under the bridge answered—stones that remembered siege and oaths, bones that remembered work. The line between what he lifted and what lifted him became a red thread through black cloth, stitched tight. He pulled on it.

The dead of Maidan rose.

They rose as if standing from a night too long for comfort: apprentices still in red with chalk on their fingers; dockwrights with knotted wrists; orphans in shirts torn to the ribs; soldiers who had hated orders but loved the way their city sounded in the morning when the bakeries were already awake. They stood where they had fallen—at drains, under lintels, insidelaboratories where the air had been a blade—and they stepped out of those places like men stepping off boats. They gleamed and guttered; some burned like wet lamps, some like sparks in a coal pan; all of them were present in a way the living found unbearable to look at for long.

They turned their faces toward him.

He did not command them. He tried to, and the attempt broke in his mouth like a bad fruit. They didn’t need a master. They needed a conduit. He widened his chest and let the thread run through him like a pier lets a river go around its legs. The dead leaned forward as men lean when called to a familiar task.

The Ketheri crumpled. Enamel meant nothing to ash. Pikes cut ghosts and learned humility. Where the ghosts passed, men’s hearts failed before their bodies did. The living felt their courage pulled out like thread from cloth, leaving them hollow and shaking. The dead did not slaughter; they simply made every soldier remember the death waiting in his own bones—and that memory was enough.

Lances drove and found their riders falling through saddles into a cold that had no room for horseflesh or heroism. A captain with a gold-fringed banner screamed orders until his voice realized it was alone; then he screamed to find himself and could not.

Ghosts poured through Rakhal’s hands in a continual exhale of names. He knew them and did not. He felt an old woman with a knife for peeling apples lift that knife and make a soldier change his mind about history. He felt a scribe’s pen become a splinter that taught a gaoler a truth about fingers. He felt a boy with no shoes clamp his small teeth into a lion-embossed wrist and not let go. The city had always been a choir; he had never stood in the center of it before.

“Back!” someone howled in Ketheri, the word hitting men with the force of permission. “Back!” another voice took up,and then the court unraveled—formation into swarm, ranks into frightened arithmetic.

“Rakhal!” Azfar shouted, voice raw. “Enough?—”

He couldn’t hear the end of it. Sound thickened. The river’s voice rose through the arches until it was above them, then around them, then inside them. The world lifted as if the city were a table tilted for clearing. He felt everything he had eaten and lived and refused become fuel. Heat bloomed under his tongue.Is my hair on fire?He didn’t raise a hand to check.

The counter-sigil burned across the court as if someone had drawn a line with a cold knife through air. He felt it from two directions—the bond-mark in his chest where the tug lived like a consent, and its answering flare across the stones, slung on a chain under Eliza’s gorget. It flared. He saw it. So did Azfar. The old man’s head snapped toward her.

“He’s gone too far!” Azfar roared, and the sentence was a rope he threw across a gap. “Eliza!”

She was already running.