45 Frost 122
Silver-white fire blossomed where Talon stepped. Where he walked, the mistborn corruption that was warping the world around him was burned away. He concentrated on the purifying nature of the fire that he wielded. He watched as corrupted people and animals were incinerated in the wake of his purifying flames, their inhuman shrieks and beastly howls telling him everything he needed to know. There had been a few that he had managed to spare from further corruption, purifying their bodies. There was a point however, when not even the cleansing nature of his dawnfire could undo what those afflicted by the mist corruption became. Talon brought up a hand. In his palm a sphere of dawnfire began to grow until it resembled a small sun that blazed with the light of the morning. He released the fire allowing it to spread outward from his body to form a dome that rushed outward, burning away the mist corruption as it went.
The dawnfire slowly began to dissipate. As it did, creatures sprung up from the shadows that were cast by the light of his aura. Dozens of them crawled out from the shadows and began hastening toward him with ravenous intent. Talon turned to face them. As the creatures scrambled toward him, gaping maws dripping with viscous shadow, a roar split the air. Not a moment later, the area was filled with scorching hot dragonfire that swallowed everything in its path. Talon felt the fire wrap around him. The heat incinerated the surge of shadowspawn that had launched itself at him but Talon remained unharmed. He was kin to fire with it being his Arche element and as the Demigod of Light, one of his chosen forms of its expression was the fire of sunlight and the dawn. No, fire was as close to him and as nurturing as the caress of his beloved, the very dragon who breathed the fire that was now protecting him.
Aoren landed. The mighty red dragon spread his wings as he finished expelling his fire. Talon fluffed the feathers of his wings slightly and shook them, ridding them of some of the ash that had collected on his form. The steps of his beloved dragon caused the ground to shake slightly as Aoren came to sit protectively around him.
There will be much work to be done, beloved. Are you sure we should not be devoting our time to shoring up Kalzasi?
Aoren’s mind-voice was like thunder and fire when he was in his dragon form. It was a soothing heat that wrapped around him and calmed the edges of his frayed nerves. Talon nodded. Of that there was no doubt. Zaichaer was in ruins. Its people were scattered. Those that remained in the mist-corrupted city were fighting for their lives. Compounded by the advent of the eclipse and at every turn, they had the odds stacked against them. The angry part of himself wanted to believe that this was what such a place mired in prejudice deserved. He recognized that was just the part of him that was hurt, traumatized and still healing.
“We can no longer be islands in the Northlands, beloved. With every passing day, there are those who see us as a land to be conquered as opposed to a sovereign territory.” Talon leaned down, taking a handful of rock and earth into his hand. He brought it up close, extending his aethereal senses he focused on the aura radiating off of the dirt as opposed to the individual grains of rock and earth. He could see a significant portion of the misty corruption had been purged from its but there were still trace elements that had not been burned away. He was not surprised. It was easy for him to banish superficial corruption but with what happened here? It would take many dedicated seasons of work before Zaichaer recovered from the fallout. If it ever did.
“If we are to stand united, Karnor must be shown that unity is the way forward.” He let the dirt fall from his hand. “Besides, this will eliminate fears that I am going to go on a rampage.”
The dragon chuffed.
By all rights, you should finish what that blast started.
He did not voice disagreement with his husband. By all rights, he should have leveled what remained of the city. But that would not have brought him peace. It would not resurrect his mortal father, Savien. It would not bring back the thousands of people killed. There was no going back to what they were before all of this unfolded. Not for him. Not for anyone. He was silent as he looked out over the ruins where they stood. The place they stood in was mostly ruins. The buildings were all mostly collapsed. It was an open place where something of an enclosure could be built. He was using his power and influence both in Kalzasi and abroad to arrange for supplies and materials to be given to Franky and the survivors in the Knob at the moment but that was not a permanent solution to the problem that they faced.
“We will build the enclave here. I will devise a few methods to make it more defensible.” He would also be implementing controls to help not only combat the mist corruption but to push it back. It would take time but he would find the right methods. It was simply a matter of getting started.