Downloading The Weight of Unmaking
"The table is in the wrong position."
It was, Vessin Kael concedes. She moved it. And with that, the commission begins.
Vessin is the Empire's finest structural engineer - solitary, exacting, more fluent in load tolerances than in human connection. She has spent eleven years building things that outlast the politics that commissioned them, working alone because the problems she solves are best solved that way, and telling herself, carefully and accurately, that she has never been lonely. When a void-collapse at the contested northern border threatens to sever the trade routes between two rival empires, Vessin is assigned the most structurally impossible commission of her generation: design a bridge across an active rift in the fabric of the world.
The catch: she cannot do it alone.
Caelindra Sorath is the Celestial Kingdom's preeminent architect - brilliant, meticulous, and carrying eight years of quiet wounds from a mentor who took credit for the foundational work that built her career. She arrives at the neutral-ground commission site with four models that need revising and the unsettling awareness that Vessin Kael's published papers have already changed how she thinks about load theory.
They are assigned to build together. The junction calculus - the mathematical framework that would allow a bridge to span the boundary between two incompatible structural conditions - does not exist. Neither architect's methodology is sufficient. The void is actively collapsing. They have seventeen days.
What follows is a love story told entirely in the language of two people who have only ever trusted their work. Two women who find each other through foundational audits and notation arguments, through a void-walk past the safety boundary and the slow discovery that the other person has been the variable they couldn't account for. When a political adversary moves to claim credit for the breakthrough they are building together, Vessin and Caelindra must decide not only how to defend their work - but whether the framework they've built in the drafting hall is the only thing worth protecting.
Set against an immersive secondary world where necromantic compression and celestial tension-load theory represent two fundamentally different ways of understanding what makes things hold, The Weight of Unmaking is a slow-burn sapphic fantasy about intellectual trust as intimacy, the cost of building alone, and what it means to design something meant to outlast you - together.
The void remembers what crosses it. So do they.