Chapter 72: I can’t land a hit
Stephan launched forward at blistering speed, his sword wreathed in black fire. The sheer force of his charge split the air, the stone beneath his boots fracturing as he closed the distance in a blink. Whether it was an attempt to cut Asriel in half before she could react, or simply to test the true weight of her power, even he wasn’t sure.
One thing was certain: this woman was no mere prisoner. She was dangerous. Her aura screamed it, raw, oppressive, endless.
And yet... she didn’t move.
Her hands stayed clasped loosely behind her back, violet fire dancing lazily across her shoulders as though mocking him.
She’s underestimating me, he thought, eyes narrowing. Perfect. That gives me an opening.
He reached her in a blur, his blade cutting in a clean, flawless arc. The strike was precise, fueled by everything he had, enough to carve through a mountain. The impact rang out like a thunderclap. He skidded to a halt behind her, sword low, his chest heaving with adrenaline.
The silence was deafening.
"What the fuck just happened?" he muttered, spinning around.
Asriel stood exactly where she had been, untouched. No wound, no blood and not even a crease in her robes. Only her smile had changed, wider now, predatory.
"That was a nice cut," she said, her voice smooth as silk. "But I’m afraid it won’t be enough to cut me down."
Stephan’s grip on his sword tightened until his knuckles whitened. He knew he had landed the strike. He’d felt resistance, the split-second sensation of impact, and yet it was as though his blade had cleaved through an illusion.
Something’s wrong with her, he thought, heat pounding in his temples. It’s not a simple shield. It’s something deeper. I need to know what just happened. I need to tear through it.
His lips curled into a grin, defiance burning through the confusion. "Don’t underestimate me, witch. I’ll figure out what’s keeping my blade from touching you."
Her eyes glimmered violet, amused. "Well then," she said, her tone like velvet over steel. "Give it your best, boy."
The challenge ignited his blood. He lunged again, black fire roaring around him as he swung faster, harder, his movements a blur of lethal precision. This time he didn’t hold back, slashes rained down in a storm of steel and flame, each one striking from a different angle, each one meant to dissect her into nothing but ash.
But Asriel never flinched.
Every cut met the same impossible resistance. Each strike that should have torn her apart left her utterly unharmed, as though reality itself bent to deny him. She watched him with the patience of a predator indulging the futile thrashing of its prey.
"You burn so bright," she murmured, almost fondly, as he drove his sword down in one final overhead strike that shook the cavern. "But a candle can never scorch the sun."
Stephan leapt back, panting, sweat dripping down his temples. His chest heaved, his ribs ached from the strain, but his eyes never wavered. He wasn’t afraid. No, what twisted through his veins now was worse than fear. It was hunger.
He wanted to crack her secret. He wanted to break her. And for that, he would gladly burn every soul he had.
The black flame thundered toward her like a living thing, sleek, hungry, a crescent of night that had shredded a line through bone and stone. It hit the place where Asriel stood and... passed through.
The wave didn’t touch her. It didn’t even ripple her dress. It slid on, a ghost of fire, and slammed into the obsidian wall behind her with a hollow clang. Dust exploded outward. A rune along the stone flared white and then guttered like a snuffed candle.
Stephan skidded to a stop, chest heaving. He watched the plume of smoke curl and die against the wall and felt a cold, small thing crawl across his skin, an annoyance, a cold dread.
It went through her like she was mist, he thought. But my blade hit something earlier. I felt it. Felt resistance. Felt... contact. What the hell is she?
Asriel didn’t move. She only smiled, slow and amused, like someone watching a child fail at a puzzle for the fifth time. "Fighting me is useless, human," she said. "I will kill you here and then find my body."
"You’re going to be talking less once I figure out how to cut through whatever magic you’re weaving," Stephan spat back, the grin a sharp edge. He could feel his heart pounding in his throat, anger keeping fear at bay. "Now let me try hitting her with Whip Lash from a distance and see what happens."
He set his stance. Feet planted, breath measured. The black fire pooled into the Ossuary’s edge, then spilled outward in the familiar whip-arc. "Whiplash!"
The flame uncoiled and arced, then ghosted through her like glass through fog and struck the wall where he’d just come from. The place where his earlier strike had landed, where he’d felt something solid in the air, sizzled. The stone smoked. A single rune along the wall groaned and went dark.
Asriel’s laugh was soft. "You are amusing. Your little tricks bruise my bindings but not me. You swing at echoes and ghosts."
Stephan’s jaw clenched. He remembered the sensation, a millisecond of resistance when his blade had passed her. It hadn’t been the woman’s flesh. It had been something else, something placed between him and her. A seam. A stitch. A pattern in the air that accepted steel for a second and then let it pass. His mind raced through the possibilities, warding circles, mirror-forms, soul-glass, a tether to the throne, then a tighter idea snapped into place.
The wall. The rune. The seam where the whiplash hit and the rune died. Not her. Not the woman. The circle, the anchor. She’d been standing in front of an arrangement, an illusion projected outward, held together by nodes in the chamber. The statue runes, the floor anchors, the throne’s braid, everything fed the projection. Hit the feed and the illusion stumbles. Hit the anchor and the body becomes vulnerable.
Good. Useful thought. Dangerous to try.
He forced his breath steady. Pain throbbed in his ribs, every inhale a knife. Souls burned inside his chest like coal. He’d already spent too many to get this far, and the ledger in his head counted down like a threat. But there was a seam, tiny, almost invisible where the whiplash had punched through, and seams could be cut.
He looked at Asriel again. Up close, the light bent around her like water around a rock. The seam flickered at her feet, a hairline trail of shimmering air, the only place his blade had ever met anything at all. That’s where he’d struck before. That’s where the contact had been real.
Stephan tightened his fingers on the hilt until the metal bit his palm. "Alright then," he said under his breath, no bravado, just a flat, hungry focus. "Let’s tear the stitch."
He launched, not at her, but at the seam, aiming to slice the wound where his previous attacks had registered. If he could rip open the projection, even a little, maybe the real woman behind it would be exposed. Maybe then his steel could drink.
As he moved the world narrowed to the edge of his blade and the faint, glittering line in the air. The mountain seemed to hold its breath.
And then Asriel’s smile sharpened into something lethal, and the air itself answered with a sound like a thousand whispered names.
Stephan’s blade cut the air, an obsidian flash arcing toward the seam of light he’d marked, his one chance, the one weakness he thought he’d glimpsed. His breath burned in his lungs, ribs screaming, but his focus was a razor. For an instant, the chamber seemed to freeze, his strike poised to land.
Then the world snapped.
Asriel moved.
Not the lazy, mocking stillness she’d worn before, but a blur of violet light that tore across the space like lightning incarnate. She was on him before his eyes had even caught the motion. One moment she was by the throne, the next she was in front of him, her hand already wreathed in crackling violet soul-energy.
Quarter way. She met me quarter way.
Stephan’s mind barely formed the thought before her fist slammed into his stomach.
It wasn’t just a strike, it was a spear of raw force compressed into flesh and bone. His eyes bulged as the impact ripped the air from his lungs. He gagged, coughed wetly, and a spray of blood burst from his mouth. His whole body jolted with the shockwave, bones creaking under the violence of her power.
He tried to stagger back, but her other hand snapped out, clutching the small of his back. The grip was iron, the gesture cruelly deliberate. She wouldn’t let him escape. Wouldn’t let him soften the blow by being thrown clear. No, she wanted every ounce of that punishment to stick.
For an agonizing heartbeat, he hung there impaled by her fist, ribs groaning, veins lit with pain. His sword almost slipped from his fingers.
Then she released him. Not gently, no, she hurled him. Her grip flung his broken frame backward, violet light trailing after him like a comet’s tail.
He smashed into the throne. Stone that had endured centuries groaned and split like rotten wood. The seat shattered under his weight, shards of obsidian exploding outward in a rain of jagged black teeth. The shock rattled through the chamber, dust cascading down from the vaulted ceiling.
Stephan crumpled amidst the ruin, coughing blood onto the fragments. His chest heaved, every breath a labor, vision swimming in red haze.
From above the wreckage, Asriel’s voice slid down, smooth as silk, cruel as the chains she had worn. She didn’t even raise her tone.
"I told you," she said, smiling faintly as violet sparks danced lazily around her knuckles, "it’s useless."
The words echoed in the cavern, not loud, but absolute, like a verdict already delivered.