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Chapter 16 - The First Anchor

Maren was standing at the table when Kael walked through the door.

Not sitting. Standing — the Ancient Codex open, Asha's annotations marked with strips of paper, three copies of the ritual sequence laid out in order, the map of Valdenmoor's underground spread beneath all of it with the seven anchor points circled in grey ink that Maren had matched to Asha's original color with the particular precision of someone who understood that details mattered.

Seventeen years of waiting. Redirected into two days of preparation.

"Level 42," Maren said, without looking up.

"Yes."

"I expected 40." A pause. "What happened?"

"Ancient Remnant."

Maren looked up. The ancient eyes moved over him — reading the new stats through the Sovereign bond, registering the Death Affinity crossing three hundred, the Moor's Warden title, the boundary passive sitting in his ability list like a new room added to a house.

"Vael," Maren said quietly.

Kael stopped. "You knew it."

"Knew of it. Asha's notes mentioned a boundary keeper on the Ashenmoor — something old that had chosen to remain." A pause. "She never named it in the texts I found. Only described it." Maren looked at the codex. "She wrote — when the right one comes, Vael will know. And Vael will be ready to rest." A very long pause. "She planned all of this."

"Three hundred years ago," Kael said.

"Physicians plan for contingencies," Maren said. Something in its voice that wasn't quite grief and wasn't quite awe. "She was a very good physician."

His mother appeared from the kitchen. She looked at Kael the way she always looked at him when he returned from somewhere — top to bottom, checking for damage with the efficiency of someone who had been doing it since he was old enough to get into trouble.

"Dinner," she said.

"We need to move tonight," he said.

"You need to eat first." She looked at Sera. "Both of you. You've been on that moor for two days."

Sera sat down without argument, which told Kael she was more tired than she'd been showing. He sat beside her.

His mother set food on the table. Maren remained standing — it didn't eat, hadn't eaten in seventeen years, but it stood at the table's edge with the posture of something that remembered what sharing a meal meant and chose to be present for it anyway.

They ate in silence for two minutes.

Then Sera opened her notebook.

"Route," she said, turning it so Kael could see. She'd drawn the underground tunnel network from Asha's map in her own hand — cleaner, annotated, with timing marks at each junction. "Northeastern anchor first. We enter the tunnel system through the tannery drain — same entry as the catacombs. Forty meters down, then two hundred meters northeast through a pre-city passage that runs under the tannery district." She turned a page. "The anchor chamber is sealed. Key of Depths opens it. You go in alone — the chamber is too small for the full formation."

"How small?"

"Asha's notes say four meters by four meters." She paused. "You, the Commander for protection, and Daren. The rest wait outside."

Kael looked at the route. "Watch patrols?"

"Three units operating in the tannery district tonight — Level 25 to 28. They're looking for a Level 1 Necromancer." She glanced at his ring. "Show them Level 35. Guild contractor. They'll wave you through."

"Time to the anchor from here?"

"Twenty-five minutes through the tunnels." She turned another page. "The ritual sequence for each anchor — Maren, how long per anchor at Level 42?"

Maren moved to the table and pointed to the first marked page. "At Level 40 Asha estimated eight minutes per anchor. At Level 42 — perhaps six." A pause. "The Spirit cost at Level 42 is manageable for the first three anchors. By the fourth you will need recovery time." It looked at Kael steadily. "I have prepared something for that."

It produced a vial from its coat.

The liquid inside was the color of deep water — darker than the Essence of Depths, more concentrated.

[ITEM DETECTED:]

[SPIRIT DRAUGHT — MAREN'S BREW]

[CONSUME: RESTORES 60% SPIRIT INSTANTLY]

[COOLDOWN: 2 HOURS]

[QUANTITY: 3]

Three vials. One for anchor four, one for anchor six, one for the primary.

"You've been busy," Kael said.

"I had two days," Maren said. "And seventeen years of prior research." A pause that was as close to dry humor as Maren got. "The ingredients were available at the Hunter's Market. Your mother helped."

Kael looked at his mother, who was clearing plates with the expression of someone who had decided that helping a Lich brew Spirit restoration draughts was simply the next practical thing to do.

"You helped Maren brew," he said.

"It needed an extra pair of hands for the distillation," she said. "And before you say anything — " she turned to face him " — I grew up in the Ashrow. I have done stranger things for survival than stir a pot."

He didn't say anything.

He drank his tea.

They left at midnight.

Full formation through the annex basement — the Commander organizing exit order, crawlers first, beetles flanking, wraiths above. His mother stood at the basement door and watched them go with her hands folded and her face doing the layered thing.

She didn't say be careful.

She said: "Come back with it done."

He nodded once.

Then they were in the tunnels.

The pre-city passages were nothing like the catacombs.

Where the catacombs had been dressed stone and careful construction the northeastern tunnel was raw — cut through earth and rock with tools that predated the city's founding, the walls irregular, the ceiling low enough in places that the troll had to crouch and the Commander had to turn sideways. The tunnel smelled of old stone and deep water and the particular cold of places that hadn't had air move through them in a very long time.

Maren walked beside Kael, the codex under one arm, reading Asha's annotations by the grey light Kael generated without thinking.

"The anchor will resist," Maren said quietly. "Not like the catacombs binding — that was Asha's own work and it recognized you through her. This is Church architecture. Second Grand Inquisitor. It was built specifically to resist Death's Chosen."

"How?"

"It feeds on death energy and converts it to reinforcement. The more you push death energy against it directly the stronger it gets." Maren turned a page. "Asha's solution — and the reason the Key is necessary — is to approach it through the System's architecture rather than through raw death energy. The Key opens a channel that bypasses the conversion mechanism." A pause. "You unravel from the inside rather than forcing from the outside."

"Like the catacombs."

"Identical in principle. Different in resistance level." Maren glanced at him. "The catacombs binding cooperated at the end. Wanted to release." Its ancient eyes were steady. "The Veil anchors will not cooperate. They are not bound dead looking for rest. They are weapons. They will fight back."

Kael absorbed this.

"How hard?" he said.

"Hard enough that I want you to know before you touch the first one." A pause. "At Level 42 you can manage it. But it will not be clean."

He nodded. Filed it. Kept walking.

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