Chapter 397 - 392: The Remaining
Chapter 397 - 392: The Remaining
Location:Kael’thoren / Outer clan territories / Southern desert
Date/Time:Mid Frostforge, 9940 AZI
Realm:Demon Realm (Upper Realm)
Sorvak found the first one in the outer clans.
The scout had been tracking for weeks — moving through territories that the basin programme hadn’t reached yet, the remote holdings where clan authority trumped royal decree, and outsiders were met with suspicion that bordered on hostility. Sorvak moved through them anyway. The winter-sky eyes that never stopped moving. The lean build of a demon designed for speed rather than confrontation. The particular talent for being in places he shouldn’t be without anyone noticing he was there.
The hollow one had embedded itself in a trade outpost. A minor customs official — the kind of position that nobody paid attention to. Checking cargo manifests. Stamping trade permits. The invisible work that kept commerce moving through the outer territories.
Sorvak found the gap on the Common Path first. The blank space where a customs official should have been. He didn’t approach. Didn’t engage. Marked the position and reported through the Path.
The containment team deployed the same night. Twenty-eight demons — Apexblight and above. Voidshadow restraints. The approach through the trade outpost’s service corridors, the routes that cargo handlers used at night when the customs offices were closed.
The customs official slept in a back room behind the inspection hall. Small. Functional. The bed of someone who didn’t need comfort because the body it wore was borrowed, and comfort was irrelevant.
Clean. The restraints hit. The blade followed. Disintegration. Crystal.
Sixteen down. Three at large.
***
Kaelen caught the second one through patience.
The strategist had built a surveillance net across every garrison, every administrative centre, every position of authority in the realm. Not looking for hollow ones directly — looking for patterns. Anomalies. The behavioural signatures that a centuries-old infiltrator might display when it knew its brethren were being hunted.
One anomaly surfaced in a regional governor’s office. A senior administrator who had served competently for decades — unremarkable record, unremarkable performance.
Kaelen’s net caught him through a reaction. When the public narrative about the Kael’thoren "infiltrator" reached the governor’s district, most demons responded with alarm. Fear. Questions. The administrator responded with nothing. No reaction at all. An event that shook the realm — and one man in a regional office showed zero concern.
Then the surveillance team noticed the second anomaly. The administrator had requested a transfer. Quietly. Through back channels. To a border posting — one of the few districts where the lockdown’s travel restrictions were loosest.
Not fleeing. Repositioning. The careful adjustment of someone who had heard that brethren were being killed and was moving toward an exit without drawing attention.
Kaelen flagged him. Ren reached through the Common Path — stretched himself thin to read one thread across the distance — and found the gap. The blank space. Confirmed.
Kaelen sent a team with a concentrated solution and a direct order from the king: wash in the administrator’s presence, with his hands in the basin, or be treated as a threat.
The administrator ran.
He made it forty feet before the containment team caught him. The demon skin shed in the corridor — alabaster erupting through jade, the feathered wings tearing free, the true form emerging in a space too confined for it. Radiance blasts scorched the walls. Two of the containment team went down — burns, not lethal. The Voidshadow restraints caught the wings.
The decapitation was messy. Not clean. The hollow one thrashing, half-transformed, the porcelain armour forming in patches. The blade found the throat on the third strike.
Disintegration. Crystal. Another warded box on the war council table.
Seventeen down. Two at large.
Two. Somewhere in a realm that stretched thousands of leagues in every direction. Running. Hiding. Knowing their brethren were dead, and the king was hunting.
***
Ren deployed with the first scanning team personally.
Fifty locator units — every one his workshops could produce in three weeks. Not enough. The demon realm stretched from the frozen northern reaches to the volcanic southern shelf, from the western coast where the cliffs dropped into the Abyssal Sea to the eastern mountain ranges that formed the border with the Radiant realm. Thousands of leagues in every direction. Each locator unit could scan a radius of roughly a hundred leagues through stone and soil — impressive for a formation-based device, inadequate for a realm that would take thousands of units and years of systematic grid work to cover.
They started at the desert’s eastern edge. The boundary — visible from the air as Ren flew the scanning line — where the sand met what should have been grassland. The transition was wrong. Not gradual, the way natural desert borders were gradual — the scrub thinning, the soil drying, the transition measured in leagues of declining fertility. This was abrupt. Grassland. Then sand. A line drawn across the realm by something that had consumed everything on one side and left the other untouched.
The demon realm was a land of extremes. The frozen north — the Shatter Wastes — where the mountains rose so high that the peaks pierced the cloud layer and the valleys below never saw sunlight. Ancient fortresses clung to those mountains. Watch posts built during the Second Incursion, carved directly into the stone, their formation arrays still burning against the cold. Once, they’d housed thousands. Now, a handful of sentries kept the fires lit.
South of the Wastes, the heartland opened — the vast, fertile plains where the bulk of the demon population still lived. Rolling grasslands, dense forests of ironbark and bloodoak, rivers that ran with essence-rich water from mountain snowmelt. The great cities stood here — Zhū’kethara, the capital, where Ren’s palace rose above the crater lake. Vel’tharon, the old merchant city, its market districts stretching for leagues in every direction, the architecture built for crowds that no longer came. Kael’thoren, the military seat, where the war council chamber held a table large enough for thirty, and now seated five.
Further south, the volcanic shelf — the Furnace Coast — where the earth’s heat broke through in geysers and lava flows, and the essence was so dense that low-tier demons couldn’t breathe comfortably. The forges were here. The great workshops that had once produced weapons and armour and formation arrays for armies of millions. Half of them cold now. The rest operating at a fraction of capacity — eight million demons didn’t need the output that hundreds of millions had demanded.
The western coast dropped into the Abyssal Sea — the cliffs so sheer that the water below was visible only as a dark line from altitude. Port cities lined the cliff edge, connected to the water by formation-powered lifts that descended hundreds of feet through vertical stone. Trade cities. Built for commerce between the demon realm and the Elven territories across the sea. The trade routes had thinned as the population shrank. Some ports still operated. Most were ghost cities now — their lifts still functioning, descending to empty docks, rising to empty markets.
And the east. The mountain ranges that formed the border with the Radiant realm. The passes fortified since before the Sundering. The defensive line that had held during every Zartonesh invasion — the choke points where demon garrisons had bled and died to keep the enemy from reaching the heartland.
Between the heartland and the eastern mountains — the desert.
It stretched westward from the boundary line. Vast. The sand covering what had once been the realm’s most productive agricultural region — the grain belt, the demon farmers called it, in the old histories. Fields that had fed hundreds of millions. Orchards that had stretched to the horizon. River systems that had supported irrigation networks spanning thousands of leagues.
All sand now.
Not entirely empty.
The abandoned cities were visible from altitude. Dozens of them scattered across the sand — their walls still standing, their formation spires still catching the light. Protected. Every one of them. The demon realm maintained its ghost cities the way other civilisations maintained graveyards — with care, with formations, with the stubborn refusal to let go. The streets were swept by automated formation arrays. The walls repaired by essence-powered maintenance systems. The gardens — what had been gardens — kept alive by irrigation formations that pulled water from underground reserves that no longer existed.
The grandest of them — Ashara’vel — stood near the desert’s centre. The old capital. Before Zhū’kethara, before the crater lake, Ashara’vel had been the seat of demon kings for tens of thousands of years. Its spires were the tallest in the realm — formation-crystal towers that caught the sunlight and scattered it in rainbows visible from a hundred leagues. Its libraries held more texts than any living demon could read in a lifetime. Its residential districts had housed two million. Its training grounds had graduated the warriors who fought the First and Second Incursions.
Empty now. The sand lapping at its walls. The formation arrays keeping the streets clean of dust that blew in from the desert the moment the sweepers passed. The spires still catching the light. The libraries still lit. The training grounds still marked with formation circles that no one would stand in.
Ghost cities. Waiting. The formations humming for populations that might never return — but the demons couldn’t bring themselves to let the cities fall. Nostalgia ran deep in demon blood. These places had been home. Had been filled with laughter and children and the particular chaos of a civilisation at its peak. Letting them crumble would mean admitting the people were never coming back.
So the formations held. The walls stood. The spires caught the light. And the sand crept closer every year.
Ren had flown over these cities before. Every demon king did. The empty ruins were part of the realm’s geography — the visible scar of a population that had been dying in stages for longer than most species had existed.
The Sundering had been first. When Doha broke apart — the world splitting, the realms separating — demons had been scattered across the divide. Millions lost. Families severed. Communities that had existed for generations, suddenly cut off behind passageways that hadn’t existed before.
Then the wars. Four Zartonesh invasions across the millennia. Each one costing millions of lives, the realm couldn’t afford. The defensive forts that dotted the desert — broken teeth in the sand — had been built for garrisons of tens of thousands. They’d been filled, once.
The race wars. The violence between species that had shared the world and decided they couldn’t. More demons lost — not to external enemies but to the hatred between neighbours.
The honourable suicides. Males whose last leaf was falling — the soul degradation that came from millennia without a truemate, the slow slide toward the devil state. Rather than become the thing they feared, they chose the Vor’shal. Ended themselves cleanly. Saved their souls so they could be reborn and wait for their truemate in the next life. Hundreds of thousands over the millennia.
The declining births. Fewer children every century. The healers who couldn’t explain it. The women who prayed at sacred sites and came home empty.
And then — eight thousand years ago — the births stopped entirely. The last demon child born. The final silence. Eight million demons left on a realm built for hundreds of millions. Ghost cities maintained by formations. Abandoned forts guarding sand. A civilisation holding its breath, waiting for something it couldn’t name.
The scanning team landed at the desert’s edge. Formation stakes driven into the ground at measured intervals — each one a locator unit, anchored to the soil, the detection arrays reaching downward through stone and sand. The grid expanding outward from the boundary line.
Ren worked alongside his people. Driving stakes. Calibrating formations. The demon king’s hands in the dirt — not because it was efficient, but because the soldiers needed to see their king doing the work.
The first units returned data within hours.
One site. A feeding zone. Several leagues across, buried beneath the sand just beyond the boundary line. The locator registered it as negative space — the absence of essence so complete that the instrument read it as a void in the earth. Something had been here. Had fed. Had drained the land above it until the grassland became desert.
The creature itself was gone. The feeding signature old. Whatever had been here had moved on.
One confirmed site. The scan had covered a fraction of the eastern boundary. The rest of the realm remained unscanned.
But one was enough. The desert’s expansion at this boundary wasn’t natural. Something had been feeding here. Something that was now gone.
"One site," Ren told the team. "We need to find the rest. Expand the grid south along the boundary. Deploy every unit we have. And start building more — as many as the workshops can produce."
***
Heiteng’s crystal activated that evening.
The dragon’s face. Mercury silver eyes. The horn-line. Behind him, the suggestion of warmth — wherever Heiteng was, it wasn’t a stone corridor this time.
"She accepted the gift."
Four words. Delivered flat. The dragon’s face carefully neutral.
Ren’s hand paused on the map he’d been studying. "The... gift."
"The crystal. With the starlight pattern. The one you slipped into the supply shipment with a note about ’appreciation.’"
"That was a diplomatic gesture."
Heiteng said nothing. His silence had texture — the particular quality of a dragon who had known Ren for thousands of years and could hear the lie as clearly as if it had been spoken aloud.
Inside the containment, the beast surged.
She accepted it. She ACCEPTED it.
"How did she—" Ren stopped. Cleared his throat. "What was her reaction?"
"She was confused. She put it on a shelf in her workshop."
On a SHELF. She KEPT it. She didn’t throw it away or give it back. She KEPT it on her SHELF.
The beast was vibrating. The particular frequency of joy — unreasonable, disproportionate, the joy of an animal whose entire existence had narrowed to a single point, and that point had just acknowledged its existence.
"It was diplomatic," Ren said.
It was COURTING. And she accepted. I am better at the mating game than you. You couldn’t even speak to her. I got her to keep a gift.
"You didn’t do anything. I chose the crystal."
I told you to send it. I said please. That crystal is MY victory.
Ren exhaled. Pushed the beast down. Focused.
"I have an update as well," he said. "We found a Nematomorpha feeding site at the desert’s eastern edge. Old. The creatures are gone. But the desert expansion at that boundary isn’t natural — something was feeding there."
Heiteng’s amusement vanished. The mercury silver eyes sharpening.
"The other realms need to check for the same thing," Ren continued. "Unexplained dead zones. Unnatural depletion. And I need her ideas about extending the locator range — our units don’t reach beyond the demon realm."
The emphasis on her. Heiteng’s eyes steady. Understanding.
"I’ll pass it along," Heiteng said. "All of it."
The crystal dimmed.
Jewels, the beast said immediately. Something with moonstone. She’d like moonstone. The way the light moves inside it — like her voice. Moving and alive and—
"We are hunting hollow ones."
We can do both.
"We cannot."
We can. You hunt. I plan gifts. Division of labour. Efficient.
Ren closed his eyes. The scan results. The dead zones. The missing Nematomorpha. Two hollow ones still at large. The leader hidden somewhere in the realm.
And his beast, planning jewellery.
Moonstone, the beast said firmly. Final answer.
NABC