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    The Stark Blade, Nikolas Aetos

    Niko stared at the burning nightmare that had once been Olympia’s dock town, and not for the first time, he wondered where it was he’d strayed.

    Close to the clouds with their feet planted firmly on the deck of the Alikonia – higher than they would have been in the crow’s nest of the Eos – they had a commanding view of the wreckage. With vision refined by principle and passion, their eyes could see more than even the most gifted mortal. For once, that awareness was a curse more than it was a comfort. The clarity only made the sight of everything all worse. No matter how much he wished it would be so, Niko couldn’t overlook the broken corpses, no more than he could remain blind to the molten scar in the earth that led all the way back to the smoking city just over the horizon.

    Niko’s wife shuddered in his arms, her sleeping face twisting in agony. Iphys Aetos was tormented, even in her dreams, by a pain that Niko couldn’t comprehend. No matter what he’d tried, he hadn’t been able to cleanse the sudden agony that had struck her down in the light of that stark pillar. Their companions had been every bit as impotent when they’d tried. Only Archimedes had been able to accomplish anything, and even then his tonic had only been able to put her to sleep.

    It was silent on the deck but for his wife’s tortured sleeping sounds. The Heroes were trying to make sense of it all, and he could tell without words that they were failing miserably. Even the Sand Reckoner’s stick of charcoal had ceased its scratching motion. Archimedes looked out over the burning waves, not with shock or dismay, but with a weary old disgust.

    His cousins…

    Niko rose to his feet, his unconscious wife cradled in his arms. “I’m going.”

    “Are you out of your mind?” Roxane demanded. Out of reflex more than anything, if Niko had to guess.

    “Why bother asking when you know the answer’s yes?” Bardas replied, though the words lacked their normal teasing bite. The reformed reaver looked questioningly from Niko to the woman in his arms. “Though… you’re sure you want to bring her?”

    “Why bother asking?” Thaum threw the pirate’s words back in his face as Niko leapt from the deck.

    Three followed. His younger cousins protested and tried to follow him across the burning waves, but three remained behind to hold them back. Niko hardened his heart against their pleas – they were too close to this wasteland as it was.

    Their party moved inland, cautiously at first, then faster and faster as the grim sight grew worse. Faster, past the molten glassed beaches. Faster, through the uprooted fir forests. Faster, until they were sprinting at full speed through a dozen painted stages of tragedy. Niko held his wife tight against his chest, distantly wondering if the pounding of his heart would wake her, and searched for hope in vain. There was nothing left standing. There was no one left alive.

    “What is this?” Roxane swung her head, blood-red hair flying back and forth.

    “Who would dare-?

    “Forget daring, who would be capable? The kyrios wouldn’t let an invading force do half this much damage before he wiped them out. No. It’s not who, it’s what.

    “’What?’ You think this happened naturally? There are no fire mountains here. What sort of hurricane or tornado turns beaches to glass and rivers to flame? What sort of earthquake splits fertile earth and makes it bleed magma?”

    “Gods damn you, I wasn’t talking about the weather! Beasts! Monsters.

    “Who’s talking about monsters now of all times, when the Olympic Stadium is bursting at the seams with contenders? Unless it was Typhon himself-“

    “…”

    “Unless it was.

    “… Niko. What do you think?”

    Niko thought the Fates were never kind.

    Their first glimpse of the Father’s temple seemed almost like a mirage, so out of place was it among its surroundings. The ancient wonder of the world stood alone, intact where everything else had been broken down or uprooted. Yet there it was, as proud as it had ever been.

    There was no one inside, living or dead. Niko stopped just long enough to whisper a quiet prayer to the chryselephantine monument of the Father before continuing on. On, across the countryside separating Olympia proper from its western dock town. On, along the scattered remains of the red clay road that Niko had once walked as a bright-eyed philosopher. On to the sanctuary city. On to the free world’s beating heart.

    On to what remained.

    Niko’s brothers and sisters-in-arms wavered, staggered, fell to their knees.

    Niko stared blankly at the corpse of the Half-Step City, unable to make sense of it all.

    He reached out with his sharpest perceptions, cutting through the rubble, the smoke, and the relentless pounding rain in search of something. Anything. The voice of his better judgment was all but deafening. Reason told him that whatever this was, whatever it had been, a first-rank Philosopher and a ninth-rank Citizen had better chances swimming across the Styx than they did surviving a calamity of this kind. If Niko found his cousins here, he knew he’d likely find them crumpled corpses.

    Niko cast those thoughts aside. He’d been wrong about his cousins since he came home for his wedding. Surely he could be wrong here, too. Just one more time, and he would never take their lives for granted again. Let him be wrong again. Let the Fates be kind for once.

    When he finally found a survivor in the smoke, he leapt over the rubble of Olympia’s broken walls without hesitation. His companions followed close behind.

    The survivor was not a sturdy young soul, nor an old adept. She was just old. They found the old woman kneeling at the edge of the molten scar carved out of the city, as if it was a river like any other and she had come to fill her jug. She was covered in soot and muck, her arms stained up to her elbows with dried blood. Yet even as the city burned around her, even as the shawls pooling around her on the ground blackened and caught flame, she went about her work unchanged.

    “Old woman-!”

    “Get back from there!”

    “You’ll burn.”

    Niko put himself between the crone and his companions, lest they yank her bodily from the molten river bank. He crouched down beside her, carefully, shielding his wife from the slow-rolling heat of the river.


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    “Grandmother,” he greeted the old woman quietly. “What are you doing?”

    “What does it seem like I’m doing, young man?”

    Niko watched her peel away another scrap of soot-stained cloth and drop it into the molten river. All the while, her expression remained as placid as still water. As though she was somewhere else entirely.

    “It seems like you’re mourning,” Niko answered.

    The old woman’s lips cracked and bled when she smiled.

    “Oh yes. At my age, I do little else.”

    “Who are you mourning now?”

    The old woman cast another shawl into the river and watched it sink beneath the molten flame. Her eyes were dry, but her fingers trembled as they worked to peel another from her shoulders.

    “Among others, my fool husband,” she answered. “A thousand times I told him his optimism would get him killed someday, and a thousand times he ignored me. Today I won that argument. The last one that we’ll ever have.”

    “I’m sorry,” Niko said. The old widow scoffed.

    “Don’t be. He wasn’t.”

    “What happened to him?” Niko swept his eyes over what remained of Olympia. In the distance, the mountain under Raging Heaven glowed a sullen indigo, lit by shining amethyst veins. “What happened to this place? What did this?”

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