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Chapter 27: Phase Two

  
Chapter 27

  Phase Two

  Bartholomew’s radiant mace, wreathed in divine

  fire, slams into Malak’s skeletal frame. A shockwave of holy light bursts

  outward, splintering brittle bones and sending fragments skittering across the

  chamber. Malak’s tattered robes disintegrate into dust. His staff clatters to

  the stone floor with a hollow clang. Silence falls—deep, heavy, absolute.

  Then, like storm clouds parting after a violent

  downpour, the weight of necrotic magic lifts. The air lightens. The icy chill

  fades. The ground trembles, the chamber releasing a final, dying breath.

  Eileen exhales shakily, her fingers still faintly

  aglow with divine energy. Her whispered prayer barely stirs the air. Crispin

  hunches forward, metal limbs creaking, as his mechanical heart hisses and

  clicks, struggling to stabilize. Cindy flicks her blade, dark ichor sizzling as

  it evaporates, the last wisps of necrotic energy curling into nothing.

  Genevieve stands still, staff humming with residual arcane power, her sharp

  eyes scanning for danger.

  Bartholomew steps forward, the summoned Crusader

  glowing at his side. His voice is low but edged with caution. “Is it done?”

  Genevieve hesitates, her grip tightening around

  her staff. A wrongness lingers—heavy and crawling.

  “No,” she breathes.

  The air thickens, a vacuum pulling inward.

  Shadows ripple and surge toward Malak’s shattered remains. The bones twitch.

  Then, with a sickening snap, they twist and reassemble—too fast, too precise.

  Dark tendrils snake across the floor, binding the bones, stitching sinew where

  none should be, dragging life—or something fouler—back into Malak’s broken

  form.

  A voice slithers through the chamber, hollow and

  cold, echoing from every crack in the stone.

  “Porcelain fools… I am eternal… you are frail.”

  Before Bartholomew can act, an invisible force

  seizes the Crusader. The spectral warrior convulses, its celestial glow

  faltering as unseen claws tear into its form. The light shatters. Then, with a

  final flicker, the Crusader vanishes—snuffed out like a candle. Bartholomew

  clenches his fists, jaw tight, feeling the hollow where his creation once

  stood.

  Malak rises again—but changed. No longer mere

  bone, his form is spectral, decayed, wrapped in pulsing shadows. Hunger

  radiates from him.

  Across the chamber, shielded behind the towering

  bulk of an Automaton Knight, Elara feels the shift in the magical weave. A cold

  ripple crawls up her spine. Her golden eyes narrow.

  “Something’s wrong,” she murmurs.

  High above, perched on a Construct’s shoulder,

  Nia cups her hands around her mouth. “The damn thing got back up again!”

  Roaka grins wide, axes gleaming in her hands.

  “Good. I wasn’t finished.”

  Ulla steps forward, tightening her shield straps.

  Her hammer hums with stored energy. “They can’t hold him alone.”

  But Rin is already gone, shadows swallowing her

  form. Her voice drifts back—soft, sharp, certain.

  “We’re going in.”

  Malak’s half-formed body pulsed, dark energy

  writhing around his skeletal frame like living shadows. His hollow eyes flared

  with malevolence as he lifted a bony hand.

  “Soul Siphon,” he whispered—a deathly rasp that

  slithered through the chamber like cold fingers on the back of the neck.

  The air warped. A sickening pull radiated from

  the Lich, and then—souls bled from the walls, seeping through cracks in the

  stone and dust beneath their feet. Wisps of pale energy twisted toward Malak’s

  gaping maw. Faint, tortured screams echoed—thin, frayed—as if the dead

  themselves resisted. Power flooded his decayed form, his health bar

  climbing—slow, steady, relentless.

  Bartholomew lunged. His mace, wreathed in divine

  fire, cleaved through the dark—but Malak flicked his fingers. An invisible

  force slammed into Bartholomew’s chest, hurling him backward. Metal screeched

  as his shield scraped stone, sparks flying as he skidded across the floor. The

  siphon deepened.

  “We have to stop that cast!” Eileen’s voice

  cracked through the chaos.

  Genevieve was already in motion. Arcane sigils

  spun around her hands, raw magic crackling as she shaped the counterspell.

  But then—

  The ceiling erupted in black fire.

  Shadowflame rained down, searing streaks slicing

  through the chamber like the wrath of a vengeful god. The Automaton Knights

  pivoted, shields raised high, but the barrage was relentless. Violet blasts

  shattered the ground—Cindy dove aside as stone exploded where she’d stood,

  while Crispin barely raised an arcane barrier before a bolt slammed into it,

  the shockwave forcing him to a knee.

  The ground trembled. Scattered bones stirred.

  With a hollow clatter, skeletal warriors rose,

  their eye sockets burning cold blue—dozens of them.

  “Undead!” Eileen shouted, slamming an idol into

  her palm. Divine wards rippled out, shimmering like glass.

  Ula charged first, shield up, hammer blazing with

  consecrated fire. She barreled into the throng, her weapon crashing down—holy

  energy exploded outward, shattering skeletons into dust. Roaka followed, twin

  axes spinning in a storm of primal fury. Her blades met Malak’s staff in a

  violent clash of steel and dark energy.

  At the rear, Elara lifted her staff high. Life

  essence coiled around her, fierce and radiant. She released it in a wave,

  nature and light surging across the battlefield. Undead caught in the blast

  crumbled to ash.

  Rin slipped through shadows, twin daggers

  flashing. She seared rotted flesh, shattered spines—each strike precise,

  merciless. Molten flames seeped into cursed bone, and the thralls collapsed

  before they could rise again.

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  From her perch, Nia nocked an arrow. “Eat this,

  bone-bag,” she muttered. The shot flew—a streak of white-hot light—piercing

  Malak’s ribcage. The Lich staggered, his siphon faltering as the stolen souls

  scattered like torn mist.

  Bartholomew saw his chance.

  His wings snapped wide, divine energy roaring

  through him. He launched forward, shield gleaming like a falling star. With a

  deafening crash, it smashed into Malak’s chest—divine force slamming against

  decayed bone.

  The Lich reeled, cracks spiderwebbing through his

  ribcage.

  But Malak’s hollow eyes blazed brighter. “Frail…

  still so frail…” he rasped, raising his staff once more.

  The battlefield, once reeking of rot, falls into

  a tense silence. Both armies waver—undead ranks collapse as Malak siphons their

  life force, their brittle bones crumbling into dust. Around the battered

  survivors of the Caravan guilds, Automaton Knights lock shields in a tight

  turtle formation, their metal bodies gleaming beneath swirling smoke and

  shadow.

  Then, the chaos reignites.

  Spellfire streaks across the sky. Blinding bursts

  of divine light clash with the dark, while steel meets bone in a deafening

  grind. The ground quakes under the relentless assault, dust rising with every

  heavy blow. The air thickens with the scent of scorched metal, blood, and the

  bitter sting of dark magic.

  At the storm’s center stands Malak.

  His skeletal fingers curl around his staff, dark

  tendrils spiraling out, warping the air like heat waves. His voice—a whisper

  and a roar—echoes through the minds of all who face him.

  “Soul Fracture.”

  Chains of shadow lash out, snapping around

  Bartholomew and Ula. Their wards shatter like brittle glass. Sigils flicker,

  then die. The divine energy flowing from Eileen and Elara falters, dulled as

  though pushing through thick fog.

  Eileen clenches her jaw. “Elara! Burst

  healing—now!”

  Elara slams her staff into the ground. Light

  spirals upward before crashing down in a wave of vibrant green. Life surges

  across the battlefield, mending torn flesh and steadying ragged breaths.

  But Malak’s minions don’t falter.

  A skeletal knight charges Roaka, rusted blade

  raised high. She doesn’t flinch—her axes flash, cleaving bone with brutal

  precision. Sparks fly as Crispin unleashes a chain-lightning slash, bolts

  arcing through clusters of undead. Genevieve follows, hands a blur as she casts

  a gravity well. The spell pulls the shambling dead into a tight knot.

  From her perch, Nia grins. Her arrow ignites

  mid-flight.

  “Boom,” she whispers.

  The explosion tears through the horde, shattered

  bones scattering like jagged rain.

  Still, Malak stands—relentless, unshaken.

  With a flick of his staff, black fire pours from

  the sky. Shadowflame screams through the air, slamming into Automaton shields.

  Metal groans under the strain, heat rippling through iron, but they hold.

  Damage-dealers scramble, narrowly avoiding the searing blasts.

  Malak’s hollow jaw stretches into a mocking grin.

  “You fight in vain.”

  But he’s not alone.

  A shadow ripples behind him.

  Rin emerges, swift and silent, her twin daggers

  glinting. She drives one deep into Malak’s spine. “Assassination.”

  Dark energy convulses through him, unstable magic

  bursting from the wound in violent, ghostly flames. He howls—not from pain, but

  fury—his skeletal hands rising to retaliate.

  But Ula is already there.

  With a roar, she barrels forward, shield first.

  Her impact lands like a battering ram, slamming into Malak’s chest and knocking

  him off balance.

  Bartholomew doesn’t miss the opening.

  His sword rises, divine energy spiraling around

  the blade like liquid gold. Light fractures the darkness as his voice booms

  across the battlefield.

  “Press the attack!”

  A surge of energy floods both teams.

  “Self-sacrifice,” Bartholomew declares.

  His halo fractures, light splintering outward.

  Fiery wings ignite and crumble into ash. The cost is steep, but the wave of

  boons and buffs washing over the raid party makes it worth it.

  “You there!” he shouts.

  Ula straightens, jabbing a thumb at her chest.

  “Me?”

  Bartholomew nods. “Main tank.”

  A toothy grin spreads across her face, tusks

  gleaming. She slams her hammer against her shield with a resounding clang, the

  challenge unmistakable.

  “Come on, bonehead!” she roars, taunting the

  Lich.

  Malak’s health dips below 60% as he clashes with

  Ula.

  The tide is turning.

  The combined force of both teams drives him back.

  Each strike pushes him into a frantic rhythm—wild, aggressive, but edging into

  predictability.

  Then he roars.

  A shockwave of dark energy explodes outward,

  slamming into the warriors and flinging them across the chamber. Bartholomew’s

  metal frame skids along the stone floor, sparks spraying as steel scrapes rock.

  His mechanical lungs seize—hollow, empty.

  Silence.

  Malak is gone.

  The chamber holds its breath.

  Then, the shadows stir—twisting, coiling, alive.

  The air thickens, brittle with unnatural cold. Violet fire erupts from the

  chamber’s heart, spiraling skyward in a blinding column.

  Malak steps from the blaze—transformed.

  Ghostly flames writhe across his spectral form.

  His skeletal hands stretch into jagged claws, dripping raw power. The tattered

  robes that once clung to his withered frame are gone, devoured by darkness. In

  their place, bone and shadow twist into grotesque armor, its edges constantly

  shifting—as though his very essence frays at the seams.

  He has shed his mortal shell.

  He is something worse.

  Bartholomew grits his teeth, forcing himself

  upright, servos whining in protest. His grip tightens on his sword. “He’s

  transcending…”

  Elara staggers to her feet, wiping blood from her

  lip. Her sharp gaze flicks toward Eileen, silently asking

  Eileen doesn’t answer right away. She closes her

  eyes, feeling the warped currents of magic in the air. It bites at her skin,

  cold and wrong. A shiver crawls down her spine before she exhales sharply and

  opens her eyes.

  “We adapt.”

  Malak lifts his clawed hands.

  The world trembles.

  A heavier darkness erupts—denser than magic. It

  gnaws at reality itself, unraveling its core.

  The chamber walls fracture, cracks splintering

  like shattered glass before they collapse into the abyss. The floor quakes

  beneath the raiders, then breaks apart, leaving them stranded on floating

  platforms adrift in a vast, starless void. Darkness churns around them, pulsing

  like the breath of something ancient—and hungry.

  Malak’s voice rises from the deep—layered,

  distorted—echoing with voices that are not his own.

  “The harvest begins.”

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