Spellforged Scion
Chapter 42: The Sea is Blocked
CHAPTER 42: THE SEA IS BLOCKED
In the polished marble halls of Virethall, seat of House Delenir, candlelight flickered like whispers on silk. The heads of four great magi houses gathered in secret.
Though House Ignarion’s banners still flew high above the Central Tower of Arcalen, its grip on the magocracy had begun to crack.
Not with the sound of shattering glass, but with the creak of strained alliances and bruised pride.
Lord Halmere of House Delenir stirred his tea with absent fingers, watching the steam coil like a scrying mist.
"They’ve overreached," he said coolly. "Veltharion believes his line is blessed. But the world is tiring of dragons, real or conjured."
Lady Rhianna of House Velendrel folded her hands on the lacquered table. Her robes shimmered in subtle enchantments, glamours woven from glass-thread and confidence.
"House Ignarion’s has based its power entirely on their battlefield performance. Few houses can challenge the bloodline of the Crucible. And yet, they were shattered nearly instantly by House Ferrondel. Their losses are significant, enough that they cannot hold onto the monopoly they built any longer. They underestimated their enemies, and they paid for it. Now it is time for us to reap the spoils."
"Agreed," said Magister Tyrlin of House Sarthrenn. "We needn’t raise a single battalion. Just delay a shipment here, ignite a labor dispute there, introduce a ’regulatory review’ on shipments to Ignarion holdings..."
"And sow doubts," Halmere finished. "Let the smaller merchant houses see that ties to Veltharion are not without cost."
They moved like predators circling an old lion. No declarations, no open sabotage, only subtle fractures in supply lines, hushed dealings with southern mercantile leagues, and rumors allowed to bloom unchecked across the Courts.
But one voice remained hesitant.
Lord Dareth of House Lunavar drummed his fingers.
"And if they notice?"
"They already have," Rhianna said. "Why do you think Veltharion hides in his hold, trying his best to recoup his losses as swiftly as possible? He senses the wind turning. He will bark, but his bite is no longer something to be feared."
"Then let him bark all he pleases," Tyrlin said.
Veltharion stood before a window of obsidian glass, watching stormclouds gather over the spires of Emberhold.
He felt it, a change in the weave, in the way the world breathed beneath his feet.
Spies had whispered of trade convoys stalled, of minor mages once loyal to Ignarion now being courted with generous ’neutral’ grants.
House Ferrondel had remained silent, but Veltharion had begun to understand where he had faltered.
Caedrion was not some untested brat. He was wise beyond his years, patient and calculation. Capable of waiting while others bled themselves dry.
"Soft war," he muttered.
And it was already underway.
---
The throne of Submareth had not known such silence in centuries.
Dark coral lamps flickered with eerie bioluminescence, casting ghostly shadows along the vaulted chamber walls of the Abyssal Court.
The once-bustling halls were now quiet, hollow, scrubbed clean of dissent, of whispers, of schemers.
Thalassaria sat reclined upon her throne of pearl, she appeared serene, but beneath the calm was a storm yet to crash upon the surface world.
Those who had plotted against her were gone. Drowned by the very sea that gave birth to them.
And now, her thoughts drifted upward. To him.
She had never spoken to him, never touched his flesh. Never heard him speak her name. But she had watched him.
Through ancient crystals, and scrying pools she kept an ever close watch on the man. Those calculating eyes, that maddening restraint, the mind that thought in spirals rather than lines.
She had seen how he had rebuilt House Ferrondel with mere threads and will. How he stood alone against an army of dragons and refused to kneel.
He did not know she existed. Yet.
But she had chosen him.
Her fingers danced through the surface of her chalice, a sphere of suspended water containing the vision of a coastal watchtower ablaze.
Another blockade, another warning. The northern route to House Ignarion’s dominion now lay shattered beneath torrential waves.
"For too long I have allowed men to pass through my domain. But no longer... Caedrion my love... The Shivering Sea is now closed to your enemies." she whispered.
She stood, slow and graceful, every inch of her regal and ancient.
Her body shimmered with scales that caught the light of the deep, and her voice rang out with the clarity of command as she turned toward her generals, gathered in formation like a reef of stone.
"From this moment forward, no vessel is to pass through the northern tide. Let them burn. Let them vanish beneath the surface. House Ignarion is to know starvation before the year is done."
A low echo rippled through the chamber, a resonance of war drums from far deeper in the capital.
"And if they come to learn of our existence? If they send envoys?" one general asked, voice hoarse through a salt-scarred throat.
"Sink them," Thalassaria said, smiling faintly. "We are done hiding in the deep. Nor will we hear the falsehoods of those who once drove us to the sea!"
She stepped down from the dais, trailing ribbons of pale sea-silk.
Her hand caressed the edge of the scrying orb again, this time, revealing Caedrion sat in his steaming dub looking troubled. Worn. Still unaware.
Thalassaria tilted her head.
"See, my little land-dweller," she murmured, voice low and venom-soft, "this is but a fraction of what I can do for you..."
She pressed her palm against the orb, and the vision dissolved into inky blackness.
"Soon," she whispered. "Soon you will see me. And you will understand my love for you."