The northern winds were colder here.
Not the chill of winter but something older, heavier.
A cold that clung to the soul.
Their convoy crested the ridge, and what awaited below wasn't a camp…
It was a graveyard that still breathed.
Tents sagged half-collapsed. The banners of the Northern Vein Guard fluttered weakly, their edges blackened by some unseen rot. Soldiers moved like ghosts faces pale, eyes hollow, veins along their necks traced in shadow. The air shimmered with distortion, a faint, oily haze twisting the horizon.
Lord Lito Corzedar dismounted first, his expression carved from stone. His Shinrei pulsed faintly, stirring the corrupted air aside with every controlled breath.
"By the winds… what happened here?"
A soldier stumbled forward armor dull, eyes dim, a tremor running through his limbs. He knelt immediately, his voice brittle as frost.
"My lord… you came."
Lito's voice thundered low, the command in it tempered by dread.
"Speak. Where is my son? Arden?"
The soldier swallowed hard, his throat dry and shaking.
"T-this way, sir…"
He gestured weakly toward the central command tent, where a faint, sickly blue light pulsed beneath the folds of weathered canvas.
Khael followed in silence, senses unraveling the scene with every step. Every flicker of Shinrei was uneven threads stretched thin, twisted, and left to decay. The air itself hummed, whispering broken emotions, fragments of grief and madness that clung like whispers to the wind.
When they reached the tent, the stench of ash and medicine mixed with something worse the metallic tang of burned Shinrei.
Inside, Arden Corzedar lay upon a cot. His once-proud frame trembled with every breath. His skin had turned pale as ash, black veins spreading outward from his chest like roots of despair.
His eyes fluttered open.
"...Father?"
Lito's composure cracked for the first time. He dropped to one knee beside the cot, gripping his son's arm with trembling hands.
"Arden…! Hold on, boy. Hold on."
Khael stepped forward, calm but fierce.
"Don't move him yet," he warned. "The veins are pulsing irregularly, it's feeding off his own Shinrei."
Lito turned, eyes blazing with desperation.
"You said you knew what this was, Khael. What is it?"
Khael exhaled, his gaze narrowing as he studied the black motes drifting through the tent tiny fragments of corruption twisting through the air like dying embers.
"They call it a curse," he said slowly. "But it's not divine. It's man-made."
The murmurs around them stilled. Even the storm seemed to pause.
He rose, grabbing a stick from the fire and drawing faint lines in the dirt not as a teacher, but as a man pulling truth from madness.
"Most think it's the gods' punishment," he continued. "But this... this is chemical. A corruption born of greed. They call it Vein Rot."
He pointed to the markings rough sketches of the human Shinrei veins.
"It starts with Lunaris Dust, a synthetic stimulant designed to force open the Vein Gates. Soldiers take it thinking it'll make them stronger, faster. They inhale it, mix it into rations, anything to feel more alive."
His voice darkened, the embers in his tone turning to iron.
"But the Dust burns the Shinrei from within. It forces the flow beyond capacity until the spirit itself begins to tear, what they call the Sunder. The body burns, the soul collapses. Emotion dies. And what's left… isn't human anymore."
A young medic trembled, whispering,
"Then… they're beyond saving?"
Khael's gaze flicked toward the dying soldiers. Their breaths were shallow, uneven but faint threads of light still pulsed within their veins. Life. Faint, fragile, but still there.
"No," he said quietly. "Not beyond saving. But close. Very close."
He turned back to his father.
"If we act now, I can reverse it, a Shinrei Reversal Ritual. But we'll need every Wave and Bloom user in the camp. They'll help harmonize the emotional field. And we'll need the antidote, Eclora Mist. Without it, the corruption will return."
Lito's expression hardened. "You're saying someone did this intentionally."
"Yes. Someone distributed the Dust. Someone wanted this army to tear itself apart."
Khael's eyes gleamed in the firelight — fierce and furious.
"And they succeeded. But not completely. Not while I'm still here."
The silence that followed was heavy enough to choke on. Then, finally, Lito spoke.
"You're certain of this, Khael?"
Khael met his gaze, unwavering.
"Completely."
The elder lord studied him for a long moment not as a father judging a son, but as a commander weighing another commander. Then, softly:
"Then do what you must."
Outside, thunder rumbled across the ridge. The clouds churned like a wounded beast. The air itself grew alive tense, waiting.
Khael's voice rang out, cutting through the storm.
"Clear this area! Form a perimeter gather the healers. We begin now!"
As the soldiers moved, Khael knelt beside Arden once more. His brother's breath came in ragged bursts, skin glowing faintly with corrupted light.
"Khael…" Arden's lips trembled, voice thin as mist. "You came…"
Khael smiled faintly, warmth breaking through the storm in his eyes.
"Of course I did, idiot. You're not dying before we have that match I promised."
A weak laugh escaped Arden's lips before unconsciousness claimed him.
Khael's smile faded. His hand hovered above Arden's heart and from his palm, golden threads of Shinrei unfurled like radiant veins. The corrupted haze recoiled instantly, sizzling like oil meeting flame.
Gasps rippled through the tent.
A healer whispered in awe,
"That aura… it's resonating with the land itself…"
Lito's eyes widened, realization dawning.
"Dragon Veins."
Khael didn't look up.
"Yes. Like I said… in the letter 2 years ago… My blood ties me to the world's Shinrei flow. I can redirect it channel it into them. But it's dangerous. If I lose focus, the backlash will consume me too."
"Then I'll be your anchor," Lito said.
Khael froze, eyes flicking up.
"...Father?"
Lito's aura ignited wind and lightning weaving through the tent like threads of silver fire. His voice was steady, resolute.
"You heard me. You'll channel the Reversal. I'll stabilize the field. We do this together."
Khael hesitated then nodded, pride and pain flashing in his gaze.
"Then let's save our people."
Outside, the storm raged. The soldiers gathered in a wide ring around the dying camp, their torches forming a trembling halo of light. The healers stood at the perimeter, hands raised, hearts pounding.
Khael traced the first sigil. The ground beneath them began to glow lines of Shinrei spreading outward like veins of molten gold. The air thrummed, the scent of ozone and hope thick in every breath.
Behind him, Lito extended his hand. His aura flared, wind howling like a guardian spirit.
For the first time in decades, father and son stood together not as warriors of the same family, but as conduits of salvation.
And above them, the heavens roared.
Thunder answering thunder.
As the Corzedars defied a curse born not of gods, but of man's hubris.
To be continue