Ashborn 462: Fire With Fire
Added 2025-08-21 19:00:10 +0000 UTCVir arrived at the audience chamber to find a room on the brink of all-out war. Though Annas sat leisurely on his throne, smirking down at the room, the death glares Virâs forces were throwing him spoke volumes.
âOh, our Akh Nara is here. How good of you to join us,â Annas said theatrically. âCome, kneel before me and I will hear your terms.â
Ignoring the kothi, Vir pulled Maiya aside. âWhatâs going on?â
âHeâs threatening to explode the wrist tattoos he put on those children,â Maiya replied, looking ashamed. âThe children he recruited. As well as Greesha, Janani, and a few others.â
Virâs thoughts leaped to Hiya and Ekta, and even with the aid of his Foundation Chakra, he just barely stopped himself from attacking the vile scum. âWhere are they now?â he asked, fighting to keep his tone even.
âWeâve secured the adults, but the children⌠I donât know,â Maiya said quietly, slipping him a note that he checked just as discreetly.
Iksana found them. Mounting rescue operation now. Nearly there, stall for time.
That was the Maiya he knew. Relief flooded through Vir, and heâd never been so glad to have this amazing person in his life. Even still, turned away from Annas as he was, he dared not to betray those emotions.
Heâd seen the thin tendrils of prana extending from the kothiâs body, away into the walls. Though Vir was unfamiliar with the art that made this possible, his threats were likely quite real.
âThank you for the update, Maiya,â Vir said loudly as he turned back to his foe. âYouâre surrounded, Annas. Your forces have been destroyed. Samar Patag and the fires have been quenched. The city is firmly back in Guardian hands. Will you surrender, or do I have to kill you?â
To everyoneâs surprise, Annas laughed heartily.
âThere will be no killing me today. Did you not hear what she told you? If I die, the children die.â
He looked entirely confidentâeven alone and surrounded by enemies whoâd like nothing more than to chop off his headâcertain in his conviction that Vir would never sacrifice the children.
It made Virâs blood boil, though Annas had made a terrible mistake. Heâd failed to account for the Iksanaâs intelligence network.
âFifty lives, Annas⌠for an entire country,â Vir said coldly. âI donât think thatâs a bargain any real leader would hesitate to make, if they had to.â
For the first time, Annas flinched.
âThatâs a bluff,â he said. âYou wonât kill them. You wouldnât risk hurting them.â
Vir nodded. âI wouldnât if you gave me another option. We both know Iâd do nearly anything to avoid killing them. Giving up this war, however, is not one of them.â
Vir received a mix of looksâjudgment from some and approval from others. Vir ignored them all.
Maiyaâs team was actively extracting the children as they spoke. All Vir had to do was buy them a little more time.
âNo,â Annas, the smirk returning to his face. âI donât think youâll kill them so easily. So, my demands are as follows. First, the safety of my people. The Chitran require a place to call their own, and only Samar Patag will do. It must be returned to its rightful owners, as well as all villages and garrisons you have seized.â
The Asuraâwho had remained professionally silent until nowâbristled at the Kothiâs words.
Vir spoke first, heading off any potential crisis.
âIt was never my intention to annihilate the Chitran, Annas,â Vir said. âMy goal has always been peaceful coexistence. Samar Patag, however, is a Gargan city and will remain a Guardian Gargan City. That is non-negotiable. We will work together with the other clans to find a suitable home for the Chitran. Garga will even help with construction and related costs. Iâm sure we can agree upon something equitable for all our clans.â
Annas stroked his chin, considering Virâs words before giving a slow nod. âAcceptable.â
Vir pursed his lips. That Annas hadnât bargained harder meant there was something elseâsomething more importantâAnnas was holding out for.
âI have but one other condition,â Annas said. âGuarantee my safety, and we have a deal. I order my forces to withdraw immediately.â
âWhat forces?â Vir asked incredulously. âWe have driven off your allied army. We have doused the fires you set to this city, and we have killed the raiding party you used to take this castle. You have no one left, Annas. Itâs just you.â
Vir doubted Annas had more than a handful of soldiers left within the city, and it wasnât like anyone was exactly rushing to his aide.
âItâs just you, Annas,â Vir repeated, hammering home his dominant position in this negotiation. âAs the leader who perpetrated this conflict, who caused so much death and destruction⌠and as someone who aided the assault that led to my parentsâ death and the downfall of Garga, you must pay with your life or there will be no agreement between us.â
âWell, you can imagine how that might be a problem for me,â Annas said with a strained smile.
âI wonder if you asked all those you killed whether it was a problem for them,â Vir replied coldly.
âYou decided to take the mantle of the Chitran Raja, Annas,â Cirayus said in a tone devoid of sympathy. âYou are not some young boy. You knew exactly what that meant. Accept your death with grace, so that at least your final act in this life might be a positive one.â
âThen you leave me no choice,â Annas said, almost reveling in his words. âIâll be forced to kill those children. Perhaps a handful, to send a message.â
Maiya suddenly stepped forward. âActually, you may have some trouble with that. We just rescued the children. Iâm pleased to report theyâre no longer within the castle.â
Annasâ eyes flicked to Maiya, frowning.
âSo it would seem,â Annas said. âThough, Iâm afraid this changes nothing. I can activate those bombs whenever I please.â
âI doubt that,â Vir replied. âYou forget that I have the Iksanaâs Sight. I see prana as you see color, and the threads linking you to the children were as plain as day. Those threads have now been broken. Judging from their strength, I suspect your range of your art is no more than half the width of this castle? Quite the terrifying art, I must admit.â
It could only have been a manifestation of one of Annasâ Aspect arts, though which one and how, Vir could only guess.
âYouâre right,â Annas said with a sigh. âMy art has limited range. However, if Iâm not mistaken, youâve only managed to rescue around fifteen or so, yes?â
Vir looked to Maiya, who nodded.
âThere were fifty in all,â Annas continued. âDo you think I would have been so foolish as to bring them all here?â
âWhat do you mean?â Vir asked, the relief heâd felt vanishing as quickly as it had come.
âNo need to fear. They are quite safe,â Annas said. âTheyâre in a secure location, guarded by my elite troops, and I assure you, I do not need collars to kill them.â
He raised a tablet.
âThis tablet is keyed to my life. To my Prana. Should I die, or should it be damaged for any reason, it will activate, sending word to my forces.â
Vir had seen this form of rudimentary communications tablet in the past. While incomparable to the human counterpart, they sufficed for messages such as these. One of Saunakâs many projects was to devise an improved version.
So Annas had a contingency. No wonder he was still so calm.
Ash damnit. Why? Why did Annas have to cause so much pain wherever he went? Couldnât he have coexisted in peace?
It was far too late for that.
Annas waved the tablet in the air, as if daring anyone to try for it. âThe method might be different, but the end result will be the same. âSo you see, we are once again at an impasse. I will not leave this throne, nor can you kill me without killing those children. I guarantee you, it will be a bloody battle. How many more are you willing to sacrifice for your misguided cause?â
Vir wanted to throw those words right back at him. He was the one wronged here, not Annas. But Vir tapped his Foundation Chakra, calming his mind. Losing his cool here served no one, and he was once again forced to confront the same dilemma as moments earlier.
Except this time, there were no Iksana to secretly save the kids. They could be anywhere in the city, and with only a dozen Iksana, itâd take days to find them.
The thing was, Annas had badly misjudged Vir.
A year ago, his plan might very well have worked, catching Vir in a quagmire heâd be entirely unable to break out of.
But Vir had come to understand that there was no victory without sacrifice. Though the nightmares would plague him for the rest of his life, though he would weep for those he lostâsomething he already didâthere was no other option. To give into Annasâ demands would be to undermine the sacrifice of all who had come before. To return to this cycle of oppression.
As the clanâs Raja, Vir had to prioritize his peoplesâ wellbeing above all else. Including his own life. Including the lives of children, as much as it would gut him.
âI have nothing left to say,â Vir said sullenly. âOther than to wonder how someone who has lived as long as youâwho has accomplished this muchâcould let things come to this. You never stood a chance, Annas. Surely you knew that. Yet even if you did win, what sort of society would someone who killed children with such ease create? I for one, do not want to see it.â
âTheyâre not Chitran children! Are they!â Annas spat, displaying unbridled anger for the first time since their conversation began. âWhy should I care for the wellbeing of anyone who has caused my clan so much misery?â
So thatâs how it is, Vir thought sadly. Annas was so caught up in this cycle of hatred that he no longer considered Gargans people. To him, they were enemiesâobstacles in his path.
It was, sadly, an attitude common to demonkind. One that Vir swore to change.
Cycling his prana, Vir readied his katar. âThis has gone on long enough. There can be no compromise here. All forces, attââ
âComing through! Coming through! Yes, yes, make way!â a familiar, slightly deranged voice, shouted from a nearby hall.
All eyes in the room looked to the demon with wild white hair⌠and the gray demon who followed.
âRaoul? Saunak?â Vir asked. âWhat are you two doing here?â
And when did you two link up? They shouldnât have been anywhere near each other, with Raoul overseeing forces within the city, and Saunak piloting his Automaton.
âWhat needs to be done,â Raoul replied solemnly, staring at Annas.
âAh, our local traitor,â Annas said. âI was wondering if youâd show your duplicitous face.â
âWell, you see, Raoul predicted Annas might pull something like this,â Saunak said, beaming without a care in the world as he took position between the two sides. âSo we prepared a contingency, of a sort. If youâll all please look at the projectionâŚâ
Saunak tossed a palm-sized black metal sphere into the air, which bounced and rolled to a stop, sitting there for a moment before suddenly bursting into a blaze of light.
A projected moving image popped into the air above. It was similar to what the Bairans had used at their tournament, albeit on a much smaller scale.
The projection showed a field dominated by his Automatonâthe very same Automaton heâd used to turn the tide in the battle against Jagath.
âI had guessed our esteemed leader would hesitate to perform the dirty deeds necessary to win this war. Not all of us, however, share in that nobility. Some of us are more than willing to do whatever it takes.â
Annasâs smug look faded into a frown as the image zoomed in on what had to be at least two thousand soldiers, all bound, gagged, and blindfolded, that lay strewn about in front of the Automaton.
Raoul gave Annas a look of such pure loathing it sent a shiver down Virâs spine.
âFor you see, Annas, you are not the only one capable of taking hostages.â