Chapter 70: Cutting the statues down
They kept coming back.
Every time Stephan sheared a limb from stone, the shattered pieces knit back together like a tide filling a hole. He’d hacked a fist clean off and watched stine reknit into knuckles. He’d gouged a breastplate down to the ribs and the carved armor flowed back like poured metal cooling into place. It was the kind of regeneration that felt obscene, unnatural, not repair but a will dragging itself back into shape.
He was breathing hard now, blood from a cut above his brow streaking down his temple and into his eye. Each inhalation seared the ribs that still throbbed where the statues had slammed him into the wall. He had burned souls twice already for that hot, impossible stitchwork inside his bones. He could feel the cost in his chest, something hollowing out, the hunger of his reserve clicking down like a counter.
"They’ve gotta have a weak spot that will actually finish them," he muttered through grit teeth, tasting smoke and iron. The woman’s laughter slid through the hall like silk over chainmail. "You will break yourself long before you break them," she’d said. Maybe she was right. Maybe not.
His eyes flicked over the giants as they heaved themselves up again. Runes flared and coiled along joints, veins of carved script pulsing where plates met plate. There: at every repair, the runes flared brighter, the seams glowing like stitches where the statue drew its life. He’d been slashing muscle and armor, but the real work was being done in the lines, those braided sigils that fed revival into stone.
A thought struck him, sudden and cold: their regeneration wasn’t random. It was anchored.
He darted forward, blade a whisper, dodging a crushing footfall that crushed the flagstone where he’d stood a heartbeat before. Up close, the runes were a maze, tight, unreadable, but at the base of each statue their swords weren’t simply planted. The hilts sunk into sigil-circles carved into the floor, rings of light pooling into the stone like ink. Every time a limb snapped back the energy bled from those circles. The swords were anchors. The anchors fed the runes.
He staggered back, mapping it all together. Cut the rune seams and they reattached. Crack the anchors and the feed would be cut slow enough for his hands to finish the job. Maybe. Maybe the throne itself, those chains, that vein of metal that disappeared into the mountain, was the motherfeed. Smash a circle, and the tide might recede.
"Anchor points," he whispered. "That’s their heart. Not the head. Not the joints."
The second statue came at him, blade rising in a hammering arc. He slipped under the blow, rolling through wet grit, and drove his sword across the rune circle with a savage, desperate slash. The Ossuary responded, black flame licking the cut, tasting runes like acid on flesh. The circle flared white, then cracked. For a heart-stopping second nothing happened. Then the stone shuddered and a shock peeled outward, like the scream of a thing losing its limb.
The statue staggered.
Not enough.
It bellowed, and the other halted, as if sensing the wound. Runes along the first statue’s leg sputtered and dimmed. Repair slowed. The seams bled smoke instead of light.
Stephan’s lungs screamed. He felt the cost of his last soul fires pressing like hands at the back of his skull. He could go all in, burn more, push the flame until the anchors shattered, but the price would be teeth and marrow. He had to be surgical. Fast. Clean.
He wiped blood from his blade, the Ossuary’s black edge humming in his palm like a beast pleased.
The plan was simple enough to be insane: break the anchor, prevent repair, then sever the statue’s core before the mountain could pour more energy through the floor. Take out the circle at the base of the nearest statue. Then move to the second while the first staggered. Finally, if the throne’s chains were the real tap, force a connection to the throne and snap it shut.
He drew a breath, all the black fire in his chest coiling like a cat ready to spring. The second statue reared, greatsword high, runes pulsing a warning.
Stephan launched.
Edge bright, black flame screaming, he lunged for the rune-circle sunk into the floor, and the hall answered with a sound like the mountain tearing.
Stephan dove like a blade of shadow.
The second statue’s greatsword whistled overhead,an arc meant to cleave the world, and he slid under it, boots skidding on obsidian dust. Pain screamed along his ribs with every motion, but the Soulforged heat in his veins steadied him; the wound knit, the breath eased, and the black fire in his palm did not falter. He could feel the anchors now: the rune-circles sunk into the floor, the way light bled from them into the hilts. That was the heart. Break the feed, and the stone would stop stitching itself back together.
His sword sang. He struck.
The Ossuary’s edge bit into the nearest rune-circle like a molten blade through paper. Runic light flared, white, harsh, and for a terrifying half-second the floor pushed back. The statue’s leg twitched as if struck by lightning. Dust sheeted outward as the circle cracked with a sound like a bell shattering.
Ding! Anchor Severed.
The first guardian staggered, the rune-stitched seams along its knee sputtering and dimming. Stephan didn’t wait to savor it. He vaulted up the length of its blade, boots clanging metal as he sprinted the haft like a ladder. He hurled himself at the statue’s midsection and lashed with a whipping arc of black fire, Whip Lash, so hot it tasted like old graves.
The cathedral of the cavern answered in explosions. Stone splintered; runes along plate and tendon-glow burst like starshrapnel. The statue’s head fractured; great chunks of carved stone rained down. Sparks of rune-light fizzed and died. For the first time the thing collapsed, not into a neat fall but like a puppet whose strings are cut: the torso folded, the greatsword tumbled from numb fingers, and the colossus crumpled into a heap of jagged obsidian, exhaling a last groan of runic energy as it hit the floor. Dust billowed, swallowing the torches’ purple flames in choking waves.
Stephan rolled clear, coughing grit from his lungs, and tasted blood and iron. He felt the cost, soul-energy hiccuping in his chest, but victory tasted like it always did: cold, necessary, and intoxicating. He didn’t give the room time to celebrate.
The second statue responded with a blind, furious motion, throwing its weight at him in a lurch that would have shattered any lesser body. Stephan dodged, let it overcommit, and in that single instant he struck the next rune-circle at the blade’s base with a savage, circular cut that bit deep. The circle screamed as stone cracked from the inside out. The statue’s runes blinked and stumbled; seams stopped knitting.
The giant tried to anchor itself by brute force. It reared, toothless hollow sockets flaring, and brought its greatsword down in a strike meant to bury Stephan in the floor. Stephan gambled, he put his shoulder into the blade’s edge, feeling the impact rattle like a bell in his bones, then twisted, levering the sword aside. With the statue’s balance broken, he drove his knee into its knee joint and slashed up the seam where the runes pulsed brightest.
Black fire licked the seam. The rune at that joint flared white and then purged, as if the mountain itself was snuffed. Cracks spidered from the wound like lightning. The greatsword slipped from stone hands, clanged uselessly, and the statue, massive, inexorable, buckled.
There was a sound the mountain had never made for him before: a keening, like iron dragged across the throat of the world. The statue’s legs folded; plates shattered like ceramic. Stone ribs caved, and the carved sentinel gave way, collapsing into a collapsing ruin of jagged shards. The echoes rolled up the chamber like waves. Dust clouded the air; the purple torches guttered under the ash.
Stephan stood in the settling stillness, chest heaving, sword smoking in his grip. The hall felt emptied of a pressure he hadn’t known had been bearing down on it. The throne room exhaled.
Somewhere above, the chained woman made a sound that was not quite a laugh and not quite a sob. Her tone braided joy with an edge of worry: admiration that a mortal could wound what the gods themselves had bound, and concern that he had learned the right lesson. She had set his exam. He had passed.
Stephan’s ribs throbbed; blood trickled from a split lip and spat a dark smear on the stone. Soulforged warmth receded like tidewater; he could feel the ledger of consumed souls ticking in his bones. But the cost had been worth it. The sources of the statues’ immortality lay in splinters and broken sigils now. The anchors were cut. The feed was severed.
He looked up at the woman on the throne. Chains hummed, the metal’s song thin and furious. The room smelled of hot stone and scorched rune, alive with the aftermath of violence.
Stephan wiped his blade on a shard of stone and let out a long breath, the grin returning to his face not because he was unbroken, but because he now had a path forward.
"You called them guards," he said, voice raw. "They were nothing but anchors."
Her reply was a whisper that swelled to fill the hall: "I’m really impressed that you managed to cut them down."
She smiled."Now will you set me free?"