The last thing Kaelen, called the Tile Wizard, remembered was the perfect, crystalline geometry of his defense. He stood, feet planted on the cracked flagstones of the Sunken Keep, his hands moving in a fluid, practiced dance. From his fingertips, not fire or lightning, but shimmering planes of hardened force erupted into being. They were not mere shields; they were a masterpiece of interlocking hexagons and reinforced squares, a wall of shimmering, honeycombed light that sang with the energy of a structured universe. Each tile was a calculation, a precise equation of force distribution and impact absorption. And the impact was coming. The Horde of the Shrieking Maw, a seething tide of chitin and rage, broke against his tessellation like a black wave against a diamond cliff. Behind him, he could hear the ragged, panicked breath of Prince Theron, the sole heir to the Solar Throne. "Hold them, Wizard!" the Prince shrieked, his voice stripped of its usual regal composure, sharp with a child's fear.
"My father's kingdom depends on it!" Kaelen did not answer. Speech was an inefficiency his art could not afford. His entire world was the flow of energy, the placement of tiles. A spear of obsidian, thrown by a chieftain, struck a central hexagon. Kaelen felt the shockwave through his soul, his mind instantly recalculating, diverting the force outwards through a cascade of surrounding tiles, dissipating it harmlessly. It was beautiful. It was, for a moment, perfect. Then came the flaw.
It was not a flaw in his design, but in his foundation. A thunderous blow from a siege beast shook the very foundations of the keep. The flagstones beneath Prince Theron's feet buckled. The prince stumbled, his ankle twisting with a sickening crunch, and he fell against Kaelen's back. The disruption was minuscule, a half-second break in Kaelen's concentration. But in a structure holding back annihilation, a half-second is an eternity. A single tile, a crucial pentagonal anchor near the base, flickered.
The harmonic resonance of the entire wall faltered. "My Prince, steady!" Kaelen gasped, the words a violent expulsion of focus. But Theron was clawing at his cloak, his eyes wide with animal terror. The Horde sensed the weakness. They redoubled their assault, hammering at the flickering tile. Kaelen knew the formulae for recovery.
He could rebuild, reinforce, if he had just five seconds of stable footing. He turned his head, his eyes meeting the Prince's. He saw no gratitude there, no understanding of the sublime art being performed for his sake. He saw only the raw, desperate will to live. "I'm sorry, old friend," Theron whispered, and the words held a chilling, premeditated calm.
Before Kaelen could process them, the Prince acted. He didn't push him; that would have been too crude. He used Kaelen's own moment of instability, leveraging his weight and pulling a jeweled dagger from his belt. With a precise, brutal thrust, he severed the leather cord around Kaelen's neck from which hung his focus—a polished lodestone etched with celestial algorithms. The connection shattered.
The song of the tessellation became a scream of tearing reality. The wall of light didn't just vanish; it imploded, then exploded outwards. The feedback hit Kaelen like a falling mountain. He felt his bones, so carefully aligned with the world's fundamental structures, turn to glass and shatter. His skin, once a canvas for weaving energy, crisped and blackened. He was thrown backward, through the crumbling archway of the keep, into the raging river below. His last conscious thought was not of pain, but of the broken equation. The perfect, beautiful pattern, ruined by a single, treacherous variable: Prince Theron. Consciousness returned not as a dawn, but as a slow, stubborn stain seeping into non-existence.
Kaelen was aware. He was aware of the cold, an absolute zero that had nothing to do with temperature and everything to do with the absence of life. He was aware of pressure, the immense weight of water and earth. He was aware of a profound wrongness, a state of being that defied every natural and arcane law he had ever mastered. He was buried. Buried deep in the silt at the bottom of the Serpent's Coil River, his body a ruined puppet pinned beneath rocks and rot. He tried to move.
Nothing happened. He had no limbs to command, no lungs to scream with. He had only a point of view, a trapped, frantic awareness anchored to a corpse. This was his existence for a time that had no meaning. Days, months, years—the concepts were meaningless.
He was a prisoner in his own skull, a ghost chained to a relic. He raged, a silent, endless scream against the darkness, against the betrayal. He rehearsed the moment of his fall a million times, each time seeing the cold calculation in Theron's eyes more clearly. The stumble had been real, but the betrayal was not a panicked act. It was a plan.
The Prince had needed a distraction, a cataclysmic release of energy to cover his own escape. Kaelen's death had been a calculated component of Prince Theron's survival. His art had always been about patience, about understanding that great structures are built one tile at a time. Now, his vengeance would require the same. He began, as was his nature, with observation. He focused not on moving his body, but on perceiving it. He sent his will, the last ember of his being, into the ruins of his form.
He found the shattered spine, the splintered ribs, the skull fractured like a dropped pot. This was not a body; it was a site of disaster. But the magic that had made him the Tile Wizard had not entirely left him. It had been woven into his very cells, a latent potential for order. He began, painstakingly, to command that potential. His first act was not to move, but to align.
He found two minute fragments of bone in his spine, pressing against the ethereal tapestry of his nerves. He focused his will upon them, not as a muscle, but as a force. He imagined a tile of gentle, persuasive energy forming around them. For an aeon of concentrated effort, he pushed. A microscopic shift. Then another. Until the two fragments were no longer a source of chaotic pain, but were realigned, a single, stable point in the ruin of his body. It was the first tile laid in the reconstruction of Kaelen. The work was agonizingly slow. He had no focus, no lodestone.
His mind was his only tool. He learned to draw minute amounts of necrotic energy from the decaying life around him—the worms, the fish, the river weeds. It was a foul, greasy power, the antithesis of the clean, mathematical energy he had once wielded. But it was a tool. He used it to fuse bone, to knit desiccated tendon, to command dead tissue to obey a dead will. He learned to tessellate the rot, to create structures of resilience from his own decay. Finally, on a day he only knew by the sudden, distant vibration of a passing barge, he commanded a hand to move. The fingers, stripped of flesh in places, white bone gleaming, twitched in the mud.
It was a spastic, horrible motion. But it was his. The long, slow process of excavation began. He was a prisoner digging his way out of a coffin of earth and water, one painful, deliberate movement at a time. When his skull finally broke the surface of the riverbed, it was not into sunlight, but into the murky, filtered gloom of deep water. It took him another lifetime to crawl from the river, to drag his waterlogged, broken form onto the muddy bank. He lay there, under a moon he never thought to see again, a thing of mud and bone and relentless will. He looked at his hands. They were skeletal, held together by strands of leathery tendon and the stubborn geometry of his will. He was a walking contradiction, a dead man held upright by the ghost of an art dedicated to preserving life. He had no heart to beat, but a cold fire ignited in the hollow of his chest. He was Kaelen the Tile Wizard no longer. He was the Tessellated Dead. And he would build a new masterpiece. Not a wall to protect a prince. But a labyrinth, perfectly designed, to entrap one.
