Spellforged Scion
Chapter 47: Envoys
CHAPTER 47: ENVOYS
Caedrion lay in bed as the summer sun crept higher.
The warmth of Aelindria’s embrace pressed against him, soft and steady, a living shield against the cool morning breeze.
For a fleeting moment he allowed himself to linger, brushing a loose strand of hair from her face.
How long can days like this last?
The thought came unbidden, heavy.
Ignarion’s fleets bled at sea, their prestige crumbling under the weight of other Magi Houses whispering for blood.
And in Dawnhaven, his army swelled: infantry drilled, cavalry hardened, artillery forged. All the while his mind ran like the gears of his machines.
Logistics, supply lines, pioneers, engineers. Bridges, trenches, wagons, powder.
A flick on the forehead snapped him from calculation. Aelindria’s eyes were open, sparkling with mischief.
Before he could scoff, she kissed him, slow and deliberate, her whisper brushing his ear.
"You think too far ahead, little brother. Shouldn’t your first words be good morning when your wife wakes in your arms?"
Caedrion chuckled, rolling her beneath him. "You’ve grown bold, big sister. Have you forgotten your place, now that we’re wed?"
Her cheeks flushed, her eyes lowered, and she braced herself for the "morning ritual." But a knock on the door broke the spell.
"My lord," came the muffled voice of a servant. "There are elves at the border."
Elves? He nearly dismissed it, caravans often passed through Dawnhaven. But the voice added, hesitant:
"Some of them... are Magi."
That was different. Trade was normally handled by nullborn elves; Magi rarely lowered themselves to merchanting.
For several of them to appear at once? Either spies cloaked in plain sight, or emissaries testing the waters of diplomacy.
With a sigh and a muttered apology to Aelindria, Caedrion rose.
"Not today. I’ll make it up to you later."
She buried her face in the pillow, pouting like a child. "Fucking elves..."
By midday the caravan had been admitted under the Architect’s Seal, the same rune Caedrion had quietly reengineered.
Once only a pass-mark, now it was a tether, every bearer a glowing spark on the map projected from his throne.
He watched them from the dais, their movements traced in light across the hall’s great crystal.
At first they behaved, peddling wares in the market. But within an hour, two broke away, slipping down alleys, rooftops, weaving cloaks of shadow about themselves.
To any other lord, they would have seemed invisible. To Caedrion, they blazed like beacons.
He snapped his fingers. Rustlight leapt between them, and with a thunderclap the two intruders were wrenched into his hall, kneeling, pressed down by a barrier they couldn’t see.
Their glamours flickered, hoods slipping to reveal fine-boned features and eyes wide with shock.
Caedrion’s voice echoed from the throne.
"Curious. The elves send Magi as merchants, and within two hours you split off, slinking through my streets like thieves. Tell me... why? I am so curious to know your intentions."
They glanced at each other, silent. Caedrion’s smirk faded to steel.
"I will give you one chance to speak. Lie to me, and I will know. Say nothing, and I assure you, I can make you sing truths you’ve never dared whisper aloud. I have methods of persuasion that peel soul from flesh like bark from a tree. Choose, and choose quickly."
The pressure deepened, their lungs seized, cloaks tearing as the enchantments collapsed under the Architect’s mark.
The two elves gasped, realizing the man before them had not only seen through their spells but dragged them across space with a flick of his hand.
For the first time in centuries, Magi of the Elves felt what it meant to be prey.
---
For weeks the currents whispered to her.
Foreign keels cut across the Shivering Sea with growing frequency, sails of pale cloth and runes fluttering above the waves.
Elven ships. Once they had steered well clear of Submareth’s domain, wary of tales told in their own long halls.
But now? Now they intruded daily, lingering at the edges of her dominion as if testing her patience.
Thalassaria stood upon her coral balcony, gaze sweeping the endless blue-green expanse above.
The faint tremors of hulls pushing through water tickled her senses, every motion carried to her through the sea itself. She did not need spies. The ocean was her spy.
"Too many," she murmured. "Too bold."
Her advisors gathered behind her, restless. Some hissed for restraint, others whispered of war.
She silenced them with a raised hand and spread her arms wide. The leylines across her body blazed, teal light spilling into the abyss.
The sea obeyed.
A wall of water surged upward from the waves, coiling and climbing until it loomed taller than the Elven ships themselves.
Foam churned, lightning crackled through the mist, and within that crest her form took shape: colossal, fluid, terrible.
A face of living tide gazed down at the fleet, eyes glowing like lanterns beneath the storm.
The sailors screamed. Some fell to their knees in prayer, others scrambled across the decks as the shadow of her wave swallowed their vessels.
Her voice rolled like thunder, carried in every droplet.
"Elves. For a thousand years you respected my sea. You kept to your trade lanes and skirted my borders, knowing whose dominion this is. Yet now, you linger. You intrude. Daily."
The wave’s face bent lower, the force of it rocking their ships dangerously side to side. Masts creaked, sails snapped.
"Tell me, have you forgotten the pacts your ancestors made? Or do you think me grown blind with age? Answer, for the Shivering Sea does not suffer trespassers lightly."
Silence. Only the hiss of rain and the groan of timber. Then, finally, one of the priest-magi aboard lifted his staff, voice quavering yet defiant.
"Great Queen, we mean no offense! We only... observe. Rumors spread of war upon the land. We would know if it touches the waves as well."
Her laughter was like crashing surf.
"Observe? You creep like thieves, and call it observation? You send priests instead of merchants and think I would not notice?"
The wave reared higher, blotting the sun, until the sailors wept openly and clutched the rails for balance.
And then, just as suddenly, she let the water fall back into the sea with a deafening roar, drenching the fleet but sparing their lives.
Her final words curled through the mist, low and possessive.
"You have forgotten the power I wield... See it clearly for yourselves. This is but a drop in the ocean of what I am capable of. Remember it, elves. Remember, and fear. The Shivering Sea is closed."
And with that, the waters calmed. The ships bobbed like corks in the swell, sails dripping, crews shivering. None dared sail further into her realm.