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CHAPTER FORTY: The Pain And Sorrow Left Us Hollow

  The

  Invictan Encampment – That Evening

  The

  plateau is quiet save for the whisper of the wind and the low hum of

  the camp’s generators. The night sky above stretches vast and

  indifferent, an expanse of black carved with rivers of pale aurora,

  the faint green light washing over the Invictan encampment below.

  Spartan

  stands near the edge, her cloak rippling against the cold air. In her

  arms, the memory of Marus’ weight still lingers, the feel of his

  armor pressing against hers, the way his head had slumped against her

  chestplate. Now his body rests in one of the mobile stasis pods,

  awaiting rites of return to Invicta proper.

  Beside

  her, Rho Voss

  looms, a giant shadow against the pale snow. His armor reflects none

  of the aurora’s glow; it devours the light instead. Together they

  look northward, where the distant mountain ridges melt into the

  horizon, where the colossal

  serpentine skeleton

  of the ancient creature coils through the landscape, an ossified

  reminder of a war long before theirs.

  For

  a long time, neither speaks. The camp’s noise fades to a distant

  murmur, laughter, the clatter of trays, the hiss of machines venting

  steam.

  The

  cold nips at Spartan’s face, reddening her cheeks and nose. Her

  breath comes out in small, fleeting clouds.

  Then,

  at last, Rho Voss

  moves. The massive warrior shifts slightly, the snow crunching

  beneath his armored boots. He reaches up, slow, careful, and with a

  single gauntleted finger brushes against her cheek.

  The

  touch is almost absurdly gentle for someone who can tear tanks apart

  with his hands.

  Spartan

  glances up at him. Her blue and green eyes, dimmed from exhaustion,

  meet the smooth, unreflective black of his visor.

  Rho

  doesn’t speak, but he reaches into the pouch at his waist, pulling

  out his notepad. His handwriting, etched by stylus into its screen,

  glows softly in the dark:

  [What

  weighs on you?]

  Spartan

  stares at the words for a moment before her gaze drifts back toward

  the distant bones in the snow. Her jaw tightens.

  “…Spurius

  Marus,” she says quietly. “He was still just a boy.”

  The

  words hang in the air, heavy and cold.

  “I

  watched him grow up,” she continues, her voice steady but subdued.

  “His father, Decurion, fought beside me at Korvall. Held the line

  until the end. Marus was barely ten then.”

  She

  pauses, exhaling sharply. “I promised his father I’d keep him

  safe.”

  The

  wind stirs her hair, pulling loose strands across her face.

  “I

  know what this life is,” she murmurs. “Death is our trade. Our

  blood feeds the Forge; our souls keep the fires lit. But…”

  Her

  voice falters, just slightly. “It doesn’t make it easier when

  it’s one of the children. My children.”

  She

  glances down, her gauntleted hand flexing at her side. “We’re

  forbidden families. Forbidden attachments. But I’ve trained them

  all. Raised them through battle and blood. Watched them become

  soldiers, leaders… martyrs.”

  A

  small, humorless smile touches her lips. “It’s the closest I’ll

  ever come to a family.”

  For

  a moment, the only sound is the wind howling through the ravine

  below.

  Rho

  Voss reaches out again, this time his hand settling firmly upon her

  pauldron. The weight is grounding, wordless, a gesture that says more

  than any vow could.

  Spartan

  leans slightly into the touch. She doesn’t cry she never does, but

  her expression softens, the fury and command slipping away, leaving

  only exhaustion and quiet sorrow.

  After

  a long silence, she finally murmurs, almost to herself, “He died

  for Invicta. For the Forger. For me. That will have to be enough.”

  Rho’s

  notepad flickers again as he writes a single phrase and holds it

  where she can see:

  [He

  will be remembered.]

  She

  looks at the words for a moment, then nods, slow, deliberate.

  “Always,”

  she answers.

  Spartan

  leans gently into Rho

  Voss’s arm, or as close to “leaning” as the

  heavy plating of Olympian armor allows. The gesture is awkward,

  metallic, yet somehow still tender. Her gaze drifts back toward the

  mountains, where the wind twists and hums across the ridges like

  something alive.

  After

  a moment she murmurs, “I can hear it again… that howling.”

  The

  wind wails over the peaks, soft at first, then rising in pitch,

  threading through the canyons and hollows until it almost resembles

  song, mournful and distant.

  “It

  sounds like…” she squints, listening. “Some kind of hymn. Or a

  lament.”

  Rho

  tilts his head slightly, his towering form rigid against the cold. He

  writes something quickly on his notepad and holds it out.

  [You

  think it’s the dead?]

  Spartan

  exhales, the faintest wisp of a chuckle slipping past her lips.

  “Maybe. Or maybe it’s just the wind.” Her eyes narrow a little.

  “But… it feels real. Like something calling from the

  ether.”

  Rho

  shrugs, his heavy pauldrons shifting. The steel plates grind softly

  against each other. He scrawls another line: [We’ll

  find out. When there’s time.]

  Spartan

  hums in agreement, her eyes tracing the far horizon. “Yes… when

  there’s time.”

  But

  before either of them can speak further, the soft crunch of boots on

  snow draws their attention from behind. Instinctively, both turn,

  Spartan’s hand brushing the hilt of her sword, Rho Voss

  straightening to his full height.

  It

  isn’t Magnus

  who emerges from the dark, but Arturo

  and Liam,

  bundled in their Federalist coats and carrying metal trays that steam

  in the cold air.

  Both

  men slow when they see who they’ve approached, the Vardengard,

  standing tall and silent, outlined against the frozen wastes.

  Arturo

  clears his throat first, offering a tentative smile. “Uh… we

  didn’t see you two in the mess hall.” His voice trembles just

  slightly. “Figured maybe you were out here starving to death.”

  Liam

  adds, nodding toward the trays, “We grabbed some extra from the

  kitchen. Stew and bread. It’s actually hot.”

  Spartan

  and Rho exchange a glance, her pale features lit faintly by the

  aurora, his visor blank and unreadable.

  Spartan’s

  lips twitch into the faintest smile. “That was thoughtful,” she

  says softly. “But unnecessary.”

  Arturo

  blinks, confused. “Unnecessary?”

  Rho

  Voss taps his notepad. The faint glow of his writing reads: [We

  can’t.]

  Spartan

  nods. “It isn’t permitted,” she explains gently. “That’s

  Praevecti food. Vardengard are not allowed to eat it.”

  Liam

  frowns. “Why not? It’s just food.”

  “Not

  to us,” she replies. “We have our own sustenance, forged and

  consecrated from the Forger’s flame. It binds us to the Forge, not

  to flesh.” Her eyes soften a little as she looks at the two young

  men. “But you should eat. Both of you. Especially if you were

  granted seconds.”

  Arturo

  looks down at the tray, still steaming, then back at her, uncertain.

  “You sure? It feels… wrong. You’ve been fighting nonstop for

  days.”

  Spartan

  smirks faintly. “And yet I’m still standing.”

  Rho

  Voss writes something again and turns the pad toward them: [Eat.

  Before it freezes.]

  That

  gets a nervous chuckle out of Liam, who shrugs and sits down nearby,

  setting his tray on a rock. “Guess we’ll take that as a

  blessing.”

  Arturo

  nods hesitantly and joins him, though his gaze keeps flicking toward

  Spartan and Rho, two towering figures haloed in frost and pale light,

  silent and still as statues.

  Spartan

  turns back toward the mountains once more, listening again to that

  faint, ghostly howling that threads through the wind.

  Liam

  leans forward on his knees, blowing on his stew. “So uh… if you

  don’t mind me asking, why’s he always writing?” he nods toward

  Rho Voss,

  whose visor is turned toward the horizon. “He doesn’t talk?”

  Spartan

  looks at him from the corner of her eye. “No,” she says simply.

  “He’s not much of a talker. Never has been.”

  Liam

  blinks. “Never?”

  Her

  lips quirk faintly. “Never.”

  Arturo,

  spoon halfway to his mouth, clears his throat. “What about the

  Venators then? I mean… I’ve heard of them. Absolutists,

  right? The zealots with the white armor?” He glances between

  Spartan and Rho. “Never seen one in person though. Didn’t think

  they really, ”

  Spartan’s

  head lifts abruptly. Her body stiffens.

  Rho

  Voss turns as well, his head snapping toward the far end of the

  plateau.

  Something

  has shifted in the air, subtle, but sharp. A new scent carried on the

  wind.

  Spartan

  breathes in through her nose, and her expression hardens. “Samayel,”

  she says flatly. Then her brow furrows. She inhales again, eyes

  narrowing. “Smells like a Venator, too.”

  Rho

  Voss straightens, already stepping forward.

  Spartan’s

  voice drops low. “Come on.”

  Without

  another word, she strides toward the encampment’s far side, Rho

  keeping close. Liam and Arturo scramble up, abandoning their trays,

  snow crunching beneath their boots as they hurry after.

  They

  weave through the rows of mobile tents and vehicles, the low hum of

  generators and the flicker of campfires painting the night in orange

  and steel. Soldiers glance up as the Vardengard pass, then quickly

  look away.

  At

  the entrance to the plateau, they see him.

  Samayel.

  The

  man’s silhouette stands out even in the dim light, tall, sharp,

  draped in his tattered Invictan coat. But what draws every eye is the

  figure he drags behind him.

  A

  Venator.

  Not

  just any Venator, an Inquisitor,

  bound and restrained. His arms are wrenched cruelly behind his back,

  metal cord biting through white armor. A muzzle of black iron is

  strapped over his mouth, a rope threaded through it like a leash.

  Samayel

  gives the rope a sharp tug, forcing the captive to stumble and kneel.

  Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.

  When

  he spots Spartan and Rho Voss, he grins wide and waves with his free

  hand. “Ah! There you are!” His voice rings out, chipper and cold

  all at once. “Brought you a gift!”

  He

  yanks the leash again, dragging the Inquisitor forward and throwing

  him down at Spartan’s

  feet.

  The

  Venator grunts through the muzzle, his helmet cracked, golden light

  bleeding faintly from the fracture lines across his faceplate.

  Samayel

  dusts his hands off with satisfaction. “Caught him trailing me

  through the pass. Thought he’d get the drop on me. But,” he

  gestures to the kneeling Inquisitor with mock pride “looks like I

  got the drop on him.”

  He

  smirks. “They always have something to tell, don’t they?”

  Spartan

  stares down at the prisoner. The faintest, sickly grin curls at the

  corner of her mouth.

  She

  looks back at Samayel, her voice low and edged with a grim

  satisfaction. “Then let’s take him somewhere private.”

  Her

  gaze cuts to Arturo and Liam, who both look pale under the camp

  lights. “Fetch the General

  Supreme,” she orders quietly.

  They

  hesitate only for a heartbeat before nodding and running off through

  the snow.

  Spartan

  turns back to the bound Inquisitor. The wind hisses through the

  plateau, carrying with it the faint echo of that same distant

  howling, as if the mountains themselves are watching.

  A

  Private Room in the Encampment – Continuous

  The

  room is cold and silent save for the hum of the base’s generator

  far beyond the steel walls. It’s one of the armory storage cells,

  small, unlit, reeking faintly of oil and iron. Ammunition crates are

  stacked to the ceiling, rows of metallic shells glinting under a

  single flickering strip of light.

  Samayel

  shoves the door open with his boot and drags the Inquisitor

  in by the leash. His movements are casual, almost playful, though his

  expression is anything but.

  He

  gives one last pull, then releases the rope. The Venator collapses to

  the floor in a heavy clatter of white and red armor.

  The

  sound echoes.

  Spartan

  steps inside next, her shadow swallowing the light from the doorway

  as Rho Voss follows, sealing the door behind them.

  Samayel

  circles the prisoner once, grinning faintly. “Thought he’d make

  it to your lines,” he says. “Guess he forgot what happens when

  you stalk a hunter.” He leans back against a crate, arms crossed.

  Spartan

  walks forward, slow and deliberate. She crouches before the

  Inquisitor and grips the muzzle with one hand. The Venator’s eyes,

  pale and burning faintly beneath the cracked lenses, track her every

  move.

  With

  a sharp pull, she

  tears the muzzle and mask away.

  Metal snaps and falls to the floor with a clang.

  The

  Inquisitor gasps as the cold air hits his skin, blood streaking one

  corner of his mouth. His face is lean, the pallor of it almost

  luminous in the dim light.

  Samayel

  chuckles lowly. “You know what he is?”

  Spartan

  doesn’t answer, she studies the man’s face as though cataloguing

  him.

  Samayel

  goes on, tone darkly amused. “Inquisitor.

  They’re called Vardengard

  Hunters.” He lets the

  words hang in the air. “They specialize in breaking our kind.

  Interrogation, psychological vivisection… all the fun little tricks

  the Absolutists like.”

  Spartan

  straightens slowly, turning her attention fully to the captive. A

  grin creeps across her lips, sharp and humorless.

  “Then

  you won’t be speaking by conventional means,” she says softly.

  “That’s fine.” She takes a step closer, voice dipping to a near

  whisper. “Vardengard like to play with their food.”

  The

  Inquisitor glares up at her, trembling slightly but defiant. His

  voice rasps, harsh and proud:

  “You

  will achieve nothing,

  heathen.” He spits the words through blood. “The Absolute shields

  His servants. Your blasphemies end in fire.”

  Spartan’s

  grin widens, though there’s no mirth in it. “Then by all means,”

  she murmurs, crouching low so her blue and green glowing eyes meet

  his directly. “Try to keep your oath.”

  The

  light flickers overhead once, twice, before dying completely, leaving

  only the faint azure gleam from her eyes to illuminate the darkness.

  Magnus’

  Location – Continuous

  The

  mobile command center hums with faint light and the soft, rhythmic

  flicker of holo-maps. Screens display the northern ridges, troop

  positions, and the faint blue outlines of Venator signal pings long

  since gone dark.

  Magnus

  stands alone at the war table, hands clasped behind his back,

  studying the glowing projection. The flicker of the holo reflects

  across his armor, ghostly against the crimson trim.

  The

  door slides open behind him. Arturo and Liam rush in, breath fogging

  in the cold air. They stop short when they see him, posture

  stiffening under his gaze.

  Magnus

  doesn’t speak. He simply turns his head slightly, waiting.

  Arturo

  swallows as he salutes, a straight hand at the corner of the brow.

  “Sir, General Supreme, uh… Samayel brought something in. A

  Venator.”

  Magnus

  straightens. “A Venator?”

  Arturo

  nods quickly. “An Inquisitor. Spartan told us to come find you. She

  said to tell you they were taking him somewhere… private.”

  Magnus

  is silent for a long moment. Then he gives a slow, deliberate nod.

  “And you don’t know where.”

  Liam

  shakes his head. “No, sir. She didn’t say.”

  Magnus

  exhales softly through his nose. “Very well.”

  They

  leave the command center together, boots crunching through the

  frostbitten snow outside. The air bites colder than before, a

  creeping wind whispering through the metal scaffolding of the

  encampment.

  They

  pass through lines of sleeping soldiers and the glow of portable

  heaters. Near one of the larger fires, Magnus spots Morus, curled in

  his greatcoat beside a pile of ash and steel, his helmet resting near

  his feet, breath puffing steadily in sleep.

  Magnus

  approaches and stops beside him. “Morus,” he says evenly.

  The

  old Vardengard stirs, mumbling before sitting up halfway. “Mm?

  Master?”

  “Where

  did Spartan go?”

  Morus

  blinks, rubbing his eyes. “Munitions… storehouse,” he mutters

  sleepily. “Took Rho Voss and… Samayel with her.”

  Magnus

  nods once, satisfied. “Go back to sleep.”

  He

  turns to Arturo and Liam. “You two, stay here. You are not needed

  any longer.”

  They

  exchange a nervous look but obey instantly, stepping back as Magnus

  strides away into the shadows.

  The

  sound of his boots grows quieter the farther he moves from campfire

  light. The air gets colder. The metallic tang of something else

  begins to mix with the frost, the scent of blood, sharp and heavy,

  drifting through the night.

  He

  stops before the munitions store, a tall structure of reinforced

  plating and narrow slits of dim yellow light. For a moment, he

  listens. Nothing but the distant hum of power cells. Then he presses

  the door release.

  The

  door slides open.

  The

  light spills out in a thin band across the snow.

  Inside,

  silence.

  The

  Inquisitor lies on the cold floor, surrounded by streaks and

  splatters of red that stain the steel. The muzzle is gone. The

  bindings are discarded. His arms hang at wrong angles, twisted and

  limp.

  He

  is barely conscious, lips moving as if in prayer. Words tumble out,

  broken and trembling, praises and pleas to the Absolute, slipping

  between shuddered breaths.

  Magnus

  steps inside. The door seals behind him with a hiss, shutting out the

  light from the camp.

  The

  room is dark. Cold. The hum of the encampment’s generators echoes

  faintly through the steel walls, a dull heartbeat beneath the

  silence. The lights above flicker, casting long shadows over the

  figures within.

  The

  Inquisitor’s breathing is ragged, wet, uneven. Every inhale

  trembles; every exhale comes as a low groan. Blood streaks the

  concrete floor, smeared by bootprints, old and new. The smell of iron

  and oil has become heavy enough to taste.

  Spartan

  stands motionless for a moment, visor dim, helm in her hand. Her

  knuckles are slick with crimson, but her posture is composed,

  deliberate. Rho Voss looms beside her, silent and statuesque, the

  edges of his armor glinting faintly. Samayel crouches near the

  prisoner, rolling his shoulders, head cocked slightly as though

  studying a specimen.

  There’s

  no sound save the distant wind and the faint clicking of Samayel’s

  gauntlets.

  The

  door hisses open.

  Light

  floods the room briefly as Magnus steps through. The shadows scatter

  around him like frightened birds. His eyes take in the scene, the

  three Vardengard, the ruined figure on the floor, the metallic tang

  in the air.

  He

  doesn’t recoil. Instead, a small, grim smile touches his face.

  “I

  see you didn’t wait,” Magnus says quietly, voice steady. His

  hands rest easily behind his back as he walks forward, boots

  splashing through the faint puddle near the Inquisitor’s knees.

  “Efficient as always.”

  Spartan

  looks up, visor faintly reflecting the light. “He’s strong,”

  she says simply. “He’s been trained to withstand far worse than

  this.”

  Magnus

  nods once. “Then he’ll tell us something worth hearing.”

  Samayel

  rises, still grinning, the faintest twitch in his jaw betraying his

  excitement. Rho Voss stands aside, letting the General Supreme

  approach.

  Magnus

  kneels before the Inquisitor, studies the man’s battered face for a

  long, uncomfortable moment. His tone remains calm when he speaks.

  “You have come a long way, Inquisitor,” he says softly. “Through

  snow and fire and death, just to find us. I imagine you have

  something to say.”

  The

  Inquisitor stirs, eyes flickering up at him, defiance barely holding.

  His lips part, a rasp of breath, a whisper of prayer.

  Magnus

  only smiles faintly and glances at Spartan. “Good,” he says.

  “Then we will continue.”

  He

  rises to his full height, and with a subtle motion of his hand, the

  lights seem to dim further, the world shrinking to shadow and breath,

  the promise of more to come.

  Magnus

  stands above the broken man, his shadow cast long across the walls.

  The dull hum of the lamps fades until the only sound is the

  Inquisitor’s unsteady breathing.

  He

  draws a long knife from his belt, nothing ornate, just a soldier’s

  tool. He studies its edge in the half-light, as though checking for

  imperfections. Then he crouches again, level with the Inquisitor’s

  face.

  “Your

  kind are difficult to silence,” he murmurs, tone almost gentle.

  “But I have always admired your devotion.”

  The

  Inquisitor trembles, a bead of blood rolling from his split lip. His

  eyes are wide, yet proud. He whispers, hoarse and shaking, “The

  Absolute… protects…”

  Magnus’

  expression doesn’t change. He sets the knife down for a moment and

  brushes the man’s hair back from his face, almost tenderly. “Then

  let Him protect you now.”

  He

  drives the knife downward, digging into the Inquisitor’s thigh.

  The

  sound isn’t loud, a muffled gasp, a sharp intake of air. The

  Inquisitor convulses, breath hissing between clenched teeth. His head

  jerks, eyes rolling white as the pain blooms.

  Spartan

  watches from the shadows, arms crossed, her expression unreadable but

  her jaw tight. Rho Voss looms beside her, silent as ever, his hand

  resting against the pommel of his sword. Samayel grins faintly in the

  dark, a predator watching another at work.

  Magnus

  withdraws the knife, wipes it clean on his glove, and nods once.

  “Again,” he says.

  The

  others move as if guided by instinct. A sound, the crash of metal, a

  choked cry, the scrape of boots. The room fills with motion but no

  words. The Inquisitor’s defiance bleeds away by degrees, replaced

  by ragged, broken breathing.

  Finally,

  after several minutes, Magnus raises a hand, and silence falls.

  The

  Inquisitor slumps, trembling, his eyes glassy with pain. It takes him

  several attempts before he can speak, his words rasping through blood

  and air.

  “Eldiravan…”

  he gasps. “Ten miles… northeast… marching west.”

  Magnus

  leans closer. “How many?”

  “Hundreds,”

  the Inquisitor breathes. “Maybe more… under a banner of flame and

  stone…”

  Spartan

  tilts her head. “The Seraphen?”

  The

  Inquisitor nods weakly. “Maybe… they burn the sky red where they

  pass.”

  Magnus

  studies him a moment longer. “Venator detachments?”

  The

  man’s eyes flutter. “Scattered… regrouping east… Absjorn-”

  He coughs hard, a spatter of blood marking the floor. “Absjorn…

  was meant to drive north. Draw you out… before the Eldiravan

  descended.”

  Magnus’

  jaw tightens. “So the Venators intended to use us.”

  The

  Inquisitor doesn’t answer, but his silence says enough.

  Magnus

  straightens. “That will do.”

  Spartan

  steps forward, her expression still hard, but there’s no

  satisfaction in it now, only exhaustion, the sharp edge of purpose

  dulled by reality.

  Rho

  Voss reaches down, seizing the Inquisitor by the collar, forcing him

  upright to meet Magnus’ gaze one last time.

  Magnus

  leans close enough that only the Inquisitor can hear him. “Tell

  your Absolute,” he whispers, “the Forger answers in kind.”

  Then

  he steps back. Magnus turns back towards the door as the sounds of

  snapping bones and squelching flesh echo across the room.

  Outside

  the Munitions Storage – Continuous

  Magnus

  stands motionless outside the munitions building, the cold biting at

  his exposed face. Snow drifts lazily across the plateau, but his gaze

  is locked far beyond it, into the distant mountains where the

  serpentine skeleton curves along the ridge like a colossal fossilized

  god.

  Under

  the lingering influence of the wyrmglass, the world still shifts at

  the edges. The bones of the serpent seem to writhe, and the mountains

  blur into the shapes of hollowed, ancient human forms, legions of

  corpses half-buried in the stone, arms reaching upward, mouths open

  in silent appeal to a god who never answered.

  Magnus

  inhales slowly, the cold air slicing through his lungs.

  Heavy

  footsteps behind him.

  Spartan

  steps out into the cold. She leaves the door open behind her; a line

  of faint, deep red trails from within to the threshold. Her helmet is

  clipped to her belt, her face pale from the cold and the sting of

  wyrmglass visions, but her posture remains iron-straight.

  She

  joins him at his side without a word, looking out into the same

  distant mountains. When she speaks, her voice is quiet but carries

  the weight of command.

  “We’ll

  take the body back to Absjorn,” she says. “Rho, Samayel, and I.

  Leave it at his feet. Let him see what’s become of his Inquisitor.”

  Magnus

  doesn’t look at her, but he hears everything.

  “We’ll

  keep them weak,” she continues. “Keep pressure on them. They’ll

  be limping when the Eldiravan arrive.”

  Magnus

  nods once, a slow, deliberate motion. “That’s acceptable,” he

  says. “And perhaps… Absjorn will see reason. See that fighting us

  is a mistake when far greater threats close in from every side.”

  Spartan

  doesn’t hesitate. “Absjorn won’t see anything but vengeance.

  Especially now.” Her jaw tightens. “I killed a Priest, and not

  just any Priest. His Cassiel, they had a strong bond. He’ll rain

  hellfire down on us until he gets what he wants.”

  Magnus

  finally turns his head slightly, just enough to meet her eyes.

  “Absjorn lost more in that battle than he ever has,” he says.

  “And he’s about to lose more.” His gaze shifts back to the

  corpse-mountain horizon. “He will burn in his own fire, Zorya. And

  we will be there to watch.”

  Footsteps

  echo softly behind them.

  Rho

  Voss emerges from the doorway. Rho’s gauntlets drip blood that

  steams faintly in the cold air.

  Magnus

  turns to them. “I’m returning to command,” he says. “I need

  to check on the other units. Prepare yourselves.” No further words.

  He steps away into the snow, his silhouette shrinking into the dim

  winter light until the Vardengard stand alone together on the edge of

  the plateau.

  The

  door behind them remains open, the darkness inside swallowing the

  last metallic glint of the Inquisitor’s blood.

  Spartan

  doesn’t speak. She doesn’t need to, Rho Voss and Samayel heard

  every word exchanged between her and Magnus; Vardengard senses leave

  little room for secrets.

  Instead,

  her attention settles on the dark, wet sheen coating Rho Voss’

  gauntlets.

  Fresh

  blood. Still warm.

  She

  steps closer, the metal of her boots crunching softly through the

  thin crust of snow. Rho lifts his hands slightly, instinctively, as

  if to hide them but Spartan catches one before he can. She cradles

  his massive, clawed gauntlet between her own, lifting it with a

  tenderness that looks almost impossible given the size and brutality

  of the armor they wear.

  She

  brings the back of his blood-slick finger to her lips and drags her

  tongue slowly across the ridge of metal, tasting the copper tang

  beneath the cold. A low, involuntary purr rumbles from her throat.

  Rho

  Voss freezes.

  His

  entire body locks in place, shoulders rising subtly, breath halting.

  His fingers twitch beneath her grip. Even behind the featureless

  vantablack helm, she can feel the shock radiating off him, the

  intensity, the restraint, the force of emotion he never speaks aloud.

  A

  moment passes. Then another.

  He

  grips her hand, not forcefully, but with a firm, grounding claim.

  Slowly, he leans down, the towering mass of his armor folding with

  surprising grace, and presses the sculpted, unbroken line of the

  helm’s faux mouth against her forehead.

  A

  silent vow.

  A silent comfort.

  A silent answer.

  The

  wind howls over the plateau, carrying with it the distant, ghostly

  song Spartan has been hearing for days. But for this breath, for this

  one still moment, the world narrows to two armored silhouettes locked

  together in a quiet, wordless exchange beneath the dying light.

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