The blood had finally risen. And it would never fully drain again.
Light erupted from the cobblestones above—not the warm, golden glow of Bright Haven’s magic, but a sickly, ultraviolet flash that showed every crack in the world. Through the stone ceiling, Kaelen heard the screams begin. Distant at first, then cascading. The harvest-doubling spells snapped. The warmth charms died. A thousand floating lanterns rained glass onto the streets. Blood Over Bright Haven
Tonight, he would break it.
The first knot silenced the alarms. The second knot made the watching gargoyles blind. The third knot… the third knot required a price. Not his blood—too cheap. His name . He whispered it backward into the amber pool. It felt like tearing out a root from the base of his skull. He would never hear someone say "Kaelen" again without a pang of vertigo. The blood had finally risen
His plan was simple, elegant, and monstrous. He would reverse the polarity of the primary Confluence Node. For one minute—no more—the Well would stop drawing. It would give back . All the accumulated anguish, all the stolen life-force, would flood upward in a silent, invisible wave. Through the stone ceiling, Kaelen heard the screams begin
The truth was this: magic required fuel. And the fuel was pain.
Every floating lantern, every warmth charm in a nursery, every harvest-doubling spell that kept the lower districts from starving—it all drew from the same reservoir. The mages of the Luminari called it the "Aetheric Well." Kaelen had traced the conduits. They didn't go up to the heavens. They went down . Down through bedrock, past the catacombs, past the sealed gates of the Brine Deeps, to a writhing, silent plane of existence where something old and vast was slowly being bled dry.