Abraham awoke to the scent of dried herbs and the low murmur of distant chanting. His vision swam at first, shapes blurring into one another like wet paint, until the world snapped back into harsh clarity.
He lay on a bed of woven mosses and hide, tucked within a circular hut. Bone wind chimes hung from the ceiling, rattling gently with every breeze. Tess sat cross-legged beside him, eyes closed in shallow meditation.
"You're finally up," she said without looking.
"How long was I out?"
"Half a day. You passed out in the middle of the trial, blood coming out of everywhere. Again. Honestly, I should start charging you for every time you make me panic."
Abraham groaned. His body felt like he'd been squeezed through the skeletal digestive system of a titan. Yet beneath the pain… something else simmered. Power. The sigil on his palm pulsed with heat.
Tess opened her eyes, giving him a quick once-over. "The Bonecallers didn't kill you, so that's something. Garruk was, how to say it, impressed?"
Abraham tried to sit up and failed. "Impressed enough to help?"
She snorted. "Help? No. Intrigued enough to not gut you in your sleep? Sure."
A moment later, Garruk himself entered the hut. The tall, broad-shouldered leader of the Bonecallers ducked through the doorway like a living statue come to life. His tattoos still glowed in rhythm with Abraham's mark.
"You survived the Rite of Spiral Flame," Garruk said in his gravel-voice. "Pain is a teacher, and you... you are a diligent student."
Abraham managed a wry grin. "Do I get a diploma?"
Garruk ignored the joke. "You wield death not like a tool, but like an instinct. That makes you dangerous. And useful."
Abraham sat up slowly, forcing the ache down. "What do you want from me?"
Garruk tossed a bone dagger onto the ground. Its blade was etched with swirling runes. "A bargain. We train you in the true art of marrowcraft. In return, you do something for us."
Tess narrowed her eyes. "What kind of something?"
Garruk turned his eyes toward the northern mountains. "There is a place—The Ossuary Vein. A labyrinth beneath the earth, sealed for centuries. We lost many elders there. Something has awakened beneath its crypts."
Abraham's eyes glinted. "You want me to break in?"
"Enter," Garruk corrected. "Not break. The seal can only be opened by someone marked by the Spiral Flame. You are the key, Necromancer."
***
Later that night, as the Bonecallers celebrated his survival with a ritual feast, Abraham sat alone with his tome. He sketched diagrams of the bone warriors he fought, annotated with notes about their movement patterns and bone density.
Chop loomed nearby, watching the flames. Its carapace had begun to exude faint wisps of black smoke, like a forge ember burning beneath its shell. Occasionally, it let out low clicks that matched Abraham's heartbeat.
The beastlings sat farther out, huddled together. Since the trial, many had changed even more. One had grown bony wings—rudimentary, but present. Another had developed a long, snakelike tail made of vertebrae. A third had multiple rib cages along its abdomen, vibrating faintly as it breathed.
"They're evolving with me," Abraham murmured.
Tess sat beside him, handing him a charred leg of meat. "You're becoming something else, you know."
"Is that bad?"
"I haven't decided yet."
They watched the Bonecallers dance in a ring, their bodies lit by fire and magic, every move laced with power.
Abraham turned to her. "Will you come with me? Into the Ossuary Vein?"
Tess stared at the fire. "You really think I'd let you go down there without me?"
He grinned.
Later, Tess braided her hair back tightly and sharpened her blades by moonlight. "You know, I always thought necromancers would be cold. Detached. But you? You're warm. Unstable, yes, but warm. And that's enough to shake me a little bit."
Abraham chuckled. "You flattered me. That's the nicest insult I've ever received."
***
The next morning, they stood at the edge of the Vein. The land around it was barren, sucked of color and life. Bones jutted from the earth like broken fingers reaching for salvation.
A massive gate loomed ahead—two slabs of fossilized spine twisted into an arch. At its center, a skeletal hand held an orb of marrow, glowing with sickly green light.
Abraham stepped forward and raised his marked hand.
The orb pulsed.
The gate shuddered.
A thousand whispers filled the air.
"Welcome back..."
Tess drew her weapons. "Oh, that's not creepy at all."
The gates groaned open, revealing an expanse of darkness that stretched down in spirals. The walls were lined with stacked skulls, thousands of them. And each one humming softly.
Abraham stepped forward, Chop close behind. The beastlings followed, hesitantly, as though drawn by an unseen force.
Tess held her ground, eyes scanning the entrance. "You sure about this?"
"No," Abraham said. "But I have to be, right?"
They descended.
***
The Ossuary Vein was no simple crypt. It was alive.
Bones shifted underfoot. The walls wept marrow. Eyes blinked from sockets embedded in the stone. The path forked in dozens of directions, each one whispering Abraham's name.
He followed his instinct.
Hours passed. Days, maybe. Time lost meaning in the Vein. Abraham's dreams bled into reality—visions of a skeletal crown, of tendrils made from spinal cords, of a voice calling itself "The Root of New Beginning."
In one chamber, they found a Bonecaller—long dead but still speaking. Its body was woven into the walls, face stretched in silent scream. Yet it spoke without breath.
"The throne accepts no false kings."
Tess had to drag him away.
Chop began glowing in the dark. Its steps left trails of ash. It sensed something. It remembered.
At the heart of the Vein, they found it.
A door made entirely of living bone, pulsing like a heart. It beat in time with Abraham's.
He placed his hand on it.
It opened.
Beyond was a staircase that spiraled downward into silence.
As they descended, a new voice echoed in Abraham's mind. It was soft, amused, and unmistakably feminine.
'So the heir comes crawling. Let's see if you're worth the marrow I gave you.'
Abraham's knees buckled.
Tess caught him again. "Abraham!"
He vomited.
Blood. Bone chips.
But he stood.
"I'm fine," he lied, staggering forward.
Tess didn't believe him, but followed anyway.
Behind them, Chop hissed—its carapace splitting slightly, revealing a flickering, green flame beneath.
Something had awakened.
And it was watching.
***