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CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN: I Got A Legion, The Battle Is Mine

  Northern

  Cryolume Forest - Three Weeks Later

  The

  wind howls like a living thing over the ridge. Snow swirls in sheets

  of silver and white, the air sharp enough to cut the lungs. Beneath

  the storm, an army breathes, rows upon rows of Invictan soldiers

  arrayed in perfect formation, their armor black and crimson under the

  dim sun. Banners of House Tiberius whip in the gale, their crimson

  sigils stark against the pale world.

  Magnus

  Tiberius sits astride his steed, Ferrum Rex, a towering mechanical

  warhorse of obsidian alloy and crimson-plated joints. The machine's

  breath vents in steaming bursts, its eyes two burning red apertures

  scanning the horizon. Every twitch and stomp feels alive, yet its

  heartbeat is an engine's thrum, steady, precise, and purposeful.

  Beside

  him rides Aulus Balbus, his own steed, Sablemane, shimmering with

  etched sigils of the Forger. The two machines stamp at the frozen

  ridge, the snow hissing under their weight.

  Below,

  tens of thousands of Invictan troops stand at parade rest; Colossus

  Rexes, Gladiator MK-IIs, Ares' Fists, and Vulcan's Thunders, and

  their armored divisions. The valley beyond crawls with motion as

  soldiers and the heavy machinery move into place.

  "Reports

  from the eastern corridor came in this morning," Aulus says,

  visor flickering with scrolling data. "Eldiravan detachments hit

  the Twelfth and the Forty-Second. Entire companies lost. Three

  hundred and twelve souls gone in the span of a single hour."

  Magnus'

  gaze doesn't waver from the horizon. His helm is off, the wind

  catching in his dark hair, streaked faintly with grey. His voice

  comes low, measured. "And yet they bought us time. Every

  Eldiravan dead in the east is one less to harry the flanks. Let them

  bleed each other dry."

  Ferrum

  Rex shifts its weight with a hydraulic groan, head dipping as if in

  agreement.

  Aulus

  glances at him. "So you still think it wise, to leave the

  Eldiravan unchallenged, to let them tear through the Venators first?"

  "The

  enemy of our enemy is a weapon," Magnus answers. "The

  Venators are dug in. Fanatics with faith thick enough to choke on. If

  the xenos wish to cut them down, let them."

  Aulus

  smirks faintly, though it doesn't reach his eyes. "You sound

  almost like Faustus."

  Magnus'

  mouth curves in a ghost of a grin. "Faustus would say the Forger

  himself cast the Eldiravan to test our steel."

  "He

  would

  drink to that, too," Aulus replies dryly.

  They

  both fall silent for a moment, watching the snowstorm sweep over the

  far mountains. The skeletal curve of the serpentine bones looms

  faintly in the mist, half buried, half alive, glowing with a dim

  inner light.

  "Samayel's

  last report?" Magnus asks finally.

  "He's

  still watching Absjorn's encampment. Says the Venators have fortified

  deeper into the valley, triple walls, trench lines, sanctified

  pylons. Their priests work day and night, singing into the storm."

  Magnus'

  expression hardens. "Then Absjorn is hurting. He's praying

  because he's afraid."

  Aulus's

  visor tilts toward the east. "He will

  need those prayers. The Eldiravan push harder each night. If our

  scouts are right, there are three Eldiravan detachments carving

  through his outer defenses. The Venators' dead are feeding the snow."

  Magnus

  hums softly. "Then perhaps the Forger's anvil is hotter than I

  thought."

  Aulus

  scrolls through his wrist console, frowning. "Still… our own

  are not untouched. The wildlife up here grows bolder. Skyforge drakes

  took out a column of Colossus Rexes yesterday. Tore through armor

  plating like paper. The beasts do not

  seem to fear machines anymore."

  "They

  adapt," Magnus says. "Everything does, given enough blood

  and time."

  "Even

  us?"

  Magnus

  looks down at the army below, his army, his House, the might of

  Invicta made flesh and machine. "Especially us."

  The

  wind picks up again, carrying the faint sound of distant thunder, or

  perhaps artillery fire echoing across the mountains. Aulus turns

  slightly in his saddle, scanning the white horizon.

  "What's

  next?" he asks.

  Magnus'

  eyes narrow, the glow of Ferrum Rex's optics reflecting faintly

  against his armor.

  "Next,

  we remind Absjorn who forges war on Nirna."

  He

  taps a control on his gauntlet, and the warhorse releases a resonant

  metallic bellow, a sound like thunder striking iron. Across the

  ridge, the legions stir. Engines roar. Artillery mounts pivot toward

  the east.

  "Keep

  the Legion on standby," Magnus commands. "We move as soon

  as we have Spartan's word."

  The

  command ridge sits in stillness, the wind slicing through banners of

  black and crimson. Below, the legions wait in formation, steel ranks

  gleaming beneath a cold, pale sun. The Vulcan’s Thunders loom

  behind them, their rail cannons trained downrange, cross hairs fixed

  on the distant valley. Each engine hums at idle, restrained thunder

  waiting for the word.

  “Still

  nothing,” Aulus says. “No visual, no transmission. Spartan’s

  signal should have come through by now.”

  Magnus’

  jaw tightens beneath his helm. “She will come through,” he says,

  though his voice is more an act of faith than certainty. “She

  always does.”

  The

  comms unit on his gauntlet chimes, a low, private tone. A single

  encrypted channel opening.

  He glances down at the identifier.

  Naburiel.

  He

  accepts the transmission. “What is it?”

  The

  reply is immediate, tense. “You need to see this, Master.”

  Naburiel’s voice crackles through static, layered with faint

  background wind and distortion. “Sending live feed now.”

  Magnus

  opens the link. The holographic projection flickers to life before

  him, a direct view from Naburiel’s helm.

  Snow

  fills the image, whirling past the lens in thick, angry gusts.

  Ashurdan walks a few meters ahead, his armor smeared with frost and

  soot, the faint blue glow of his optics cutting through the storm.

  Around them, the landscape is ruin.

  Magnus

  leans forward slightly in his saddle. “Report.”

  “Eastern

  front,” Naburiel says. “Sector Seventeen. We lost contact with a

  battalion stationed here three hours ago. Eight hundred strong. We

  found them.”

  The

  snow crunches under Naburiel's boots as the feed jitters slightly,

  static crawling along the edges of the image. Ashurdan's armor gleams

  dully beneath the gray sky, its plating flecked with soot and the

  bloodless frost of battle aftermath. The wind howls across the open

  gulley, carrying the metallic scent of ozone and charred metal.

  "Single

  entity," Naburiel mutters through the feed. His voice is flat,

  the tone of a man forced to accept something he doesn't yet

  understand. "Not a platoon. Not even a squad. One."

  Magnus

  sits silent atop his mechanical steed, eyes fixed on the holographic

  projection hovering before him. The image reflects in his visor like

  a ghost. Around him, the command staff are hushed, Aulus, the

  adjutants, the mech pilots. Only the wind and the distant pulse of

  the Colossus Rex engines dare to move.

  "Confirm

  signature," Magnus orders. His voice is low, deliberate.

  Ashurdan's

  gauntlet flares blue as he scans the print. "Composition matches

  Eldiravan physiology. Trace residue suggests harmonic discharge.

  Frequencies off the chart."

  Naburiel

  angles his helm toward the shattered stone bridge. "He didn't

  just cross here," he says. "He made it."

  The

  feed pans up, showing the unnatural formation arcing across the

  gulley. A smooth, continuous bridge of black basalt, still steaming,

  veins of molten light glowing faintly through the cracks. Like a scar

  the earth hasn't finished healing.

  Magnus

  leans forward in his saddle, watching as Ashurdan lifts the corpse of

  a Praevecti

  Sergeant,

  his

  armor warped inward, chestplate folded like paper. "Internal

  collapse," Ashurdan reports. "Auditory or vibrational

  weaponry. No scorch, no penetration. They were crushed from the

  inside."

  The

  feed distorts again, briefly, a sharp harmonic tremor passing through

  the signal. Magnus narrows his eyes. "You are

  close to a residual field," he says. "Back off twenty

  meters."

  The

  two Vardengard

  obey, retreating through the ruins. The feed clears. Naburiel tilts

  his helm slightly, scanning the distance. "There's something

  else," he says. "The air... it's still singing."

  Magnus

  hears it too, faint even through the filtered channel, like the ghost

  of a choir caught in the static, a low, resonant hum beneath the

  wind.

  "Which

  one?" Magnus asks quietly. "Which of their soldiers

  did this?"

  Ashurdan

  doesn't answer at first. He kneels again, brushing snow from a

  crushed insignia. The mark of the House Tiberius, a

  forward facing wolf’s head,

  twisted and shattered. "This isn't one of the lower choirs,"

  he says finally. "This… this is a high resonance."

  Aulus

  exhales beside Magnus, the sound sharp over comms. "Then they

  are

  moving west. Toward the Venators."

  Magnus

  nods once. "Let them."

  He

  dismisses the feed, the projection collapsing into a thin line of

  light before fading completely. For a long moment, the only sound is

  the metallic breath of his warhorse, the faint clatter of armor

  plates shifting in the wind.

  Then,

  quietly, he speaks, more to himself than to anyone else.

  "Let

  the beasts devour each other."

  He

  turns his gaze east, where the artillery stands in perfect, cold

  silence, Vulcan's Thunders arrayed like titans at rest, their barrels

  glowing faintly from recent calibration. "When the ash settles,"

  he continues, "we forge anew. Iron upon iron. Until only Invicta

  remains."

  Aulus

  nods, solemn. "And Spartan?"

  Magnus

  looks toward the horizon, where the clouds roll like smoke over the

  mountains.

  "She

  will

  signal soon," he says. "And when she does," He raises

  a hand. Across the ridge, a dozen Garm units stir from their crouched

  positions, eyes burning cold white as they link to their masters. The

  air hums with synchronized readiness. "We

  strike as one."

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss’ Position – Continuous

  Snow

  explodes beneath their boots. The mountains roar with the echo of

  pursuit, engines, shouting, the war-cries of the faithful.

  Spartan

  runs first, Rho Voss a shadow beside her, both moving with predatory

  speed. Their Olympian armor thrums with kinetic fury, jetpacks

  flaring in short, controlled bursts to leap across fractured ledges

  and sheer drops. Behind them, Red Baron and his Federalists fight to

  keep up, Arturo, Liam, and Dace staggering, slipping, gasping in the

  thin air.

  The

  air burns white with cold. The wind carries the sound of metal

  striking metal, hoofbeats.

  Spartan

  risks a glance back. A hundred Venators surge through the snow below,

  a flood of black and crimson banners snapping in the gale. At the

  head of the pack run four Hounds, steel muzzles torn open to reveal

  gnashing jaws. Behind them, the armored giants, Tzurinn, Akriel,

  Malchiel, and Vaedran, their blades lit by the reflection of their

  own pursuit.

  And

  towering over them all: two mounted figures.

  Absjorn

  and Cassiel.

  Their

  titansteeds are living fortresses of flesh and plate, each stride

  breaking the crusted snow beneath iron hooves.

  Tracer

  fire spits across the ravine walls as rail bolts scream past

  Spartan’s shoulder. She ducks, curses, slides down a slope of ice

  and stone, grabs Red Baron by the arm, and throws him the

  last few meters to a ledge below.

  “Decem

  diaboli!” she snarls, teeth bared behind her visor. “We

  should be killing them, not running like prey!”

  Rho

  Voss lands beside her, silent, the snow steaming where his boots hit.

  He doesn’t answer. He just turns, firing a pulse from his

  shoulder-mounted cannon into the slope behind them, the blast

  collapses a ledge, slowing the Venators by a heartbeat.

  It

  isn’t enough.

  The

  Federalists are panting hard now. Dace trips, slides into a drift,

  and Liam hauls him up with a grunt, cursing. Their armor is good,

  Federation-grade, but it was never built for this kind of terrain,

  never built for Invictan pace.

  Arturo

  shouts, “They’re closing! They’re right behind---”

  A

  rail-round hisses past, slicing clean through his shoulder plating.

  He spins, half-falls, blood splattering the snow. Spartan grabs him

  by the collar and throws him forward, hard.

  “Move!”

  This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.

  Her

  visor flares. Terrain map flickers in her HUD, they’re less than

  two hundred meters from the ravine. If they can reach it, she can

  signal Magnus and the Vulcan’s Thunders will do the rest.

  “Rho!”

  she barks. “Ravine ahead. Get the Feds across. I’ll cover.”

  He

  gives a single nod, vaults forward, grabs Dace by the harness, and

  drags him like a child through the snow.

  Behind

  them, the thunder of pursuit grows. The Hounds are leaping now,

  bounding over ridges, howling metallic shrieks that echo across the

  mountains. The Vardengard follow close, and behind them, the mounted

  Venators fan out, Velox Steeds weaving between ridges to flank.

  They

  run hard. The snow whips past like shards of glass in the wind, the

  storm roaring down the ravine walls. Ahead, a jagged monolith juts

  from the ground, black stone glazed with ice, ancient and sharp as a

  broken blade.

  Spartan

  skids to a halt beneath it, boots carving furrows through the frost.

  She grabs Arturo by the back of his armor and throws him

  upward, hurling him over the incline toward the next ridge. He hits

  the snow with a grunt but keeps moving. Rho Voss blurs past her with

  the remaining three, his new arm thrumming, servos whining.

  She

  turns, reaching for Red Baron, and a shadow drops.

  Not

  a leap. A descent. A shape of iron and scripture crashes

  down on her with the force of an artillery shell. The impact sends

  her sprawling back into the monolith, metal shrieking against stone.

  Red Baron is flung aside, vanishing into a cloud of white powder.

  The

  Inquisitor lands astride her, blade already drawn. His armor gleams

  like burnished bone, lean, ceremonial, engraved with a thousand

  verses that glow faintly beneath the frost. His mask is carved into a

  faceless visage of judgment, a single vertical slit blazing with gold

  light.

  He

  wastes no breath on words. The Sigil Blade drives down. Crack! It

  punches through the plating at her back, into one of the powercells.

  Sparks erupt in a geyser of blue-white fire, the hiss of venting fuel

  shrieking between them. The smell of burning ozone floods the air.

  Spartan

  roars and thrashes, one arm shooting up to grab his forearm. The

  Inquisitor moves with a mechanical precision, bracing his boot on her

  chestplate to stay atop her. He forces her down, gauntlet gripping

  her helmet, pressing her head into the snow and stone.

  The

  Sigil Blade hums, its inscriptions ignite, the heat radiating enough

  to melt a halo in the snow around them.

  Then

  Rho Voss appears, silent, furious motion, slamming into the

  Inquisitor from the flank.

  The

  blow sends the three of them sliding through the snow, metal

  shrieking on metal. Spartan tears herself free, coughing from the

  smoke venting through her damaged cell. The Inquisitor twists with

  unnatural balance, landing in a crouch. His blade snaps up, not to

  strike, but to the side of Spartan’s neck.

  A

  single, white-hot line hovers there, so close the heat chars the

  paint from her helm. The hum of it fills the silence between

  heartbeats.

  Rho

  Voss freezes, servos whining low.

  The

  Inquisitor straightens slowly, still holding Spartan by the helm, the

  blade poised at her throat. His armor, ceremonial and cruelly

  efficient, reflects the white light from the leaking powercell.

  The

  air crackles. The snow between them steams.

  It’s

  a stalemate, one forged in holy steel.

  He

  doesn’t speak, but his intent is written in the fire of his weapon:

  Yield, or burn.

  The

  Vardengard have seen many enemies, Eldiravan, Venators, aberrants,

  but only Inquisitors can hold their own gods at bay.

  And

  this one means to hold them long enough for the rest of the Venators

  to arrive.

  Rho

  Voss moves before thought, a blur of black iron and rage. His

  zweihander ignites, blade singing as it carves through the blizzard.

  He brings it down in a full arc, a strike meant to cleave tanks, not

  men.

  The

  Inquisitor twists aside at the last instant, the blade missing him by

  inches, the shockwave alone hurling snow into the air like a

  detonation. He slides backward, boots digging into the ice, his Sigil

  Blade crackling as scripture burns along its length.

  Spartan

  rolls to her feet in the same motion, molten fuel still venting from

  the punctured cell at her side. The snow hisses where it lands.

  The

  Inquisitor pivots, poised between them, a serpent of light and

  discipline, and then the storm breaks open.

  Figures

  crash through the whiteout in a blur of motion and metal. Malchiel.

  Vaedran. Akriel. Tzurinn.

  Four

  titans of the Venator order, clad in their sanctified warplate.

  They

  slam into the fight like meteors.

  Tzurinn

  hits first, his hammer roaring with sanctified energy as he drives it

  straight at Rho Voss. The impact ripples through the ice, snow

  erupting in a geyser. Rho meets it with a parry, the zweihander

  catching the hammer’s haft mid-swing, sparks scattering like embers

  in the storm.

  Spartan

  throws herself at Malchiel, meeting blade for blade. Their strikes

  are thunderclaps, each impact sending concentric waves through the

  ground. Akriel flanks, his twin blades cutting arcs of blinding

  white; Spartan pivots, shoulder-checking him, kicking him down the

  slope before Vaedran blindsides her from behind.

  She

  stumbles forward, takes the hit on her vambrace, then headbutts him

  hard enough to dent his mask.

  For

  a moment, the battlefield dissolves into chaos, five Venators versus

  two Invictans. Iron against faith. Flesh against fire.

  Every

  blow lands like artillery, sending shockwaves that tear through the

  snowpack and roll down the mountain.

  Nearby,

  Red Baron groans, pulling himself upright with Dace’s help. The air

  is alive with sound, metal screaming, thunder rolling, voxlines

  crackling with distorted inhuman

  growls and snarls.

  Red

  Baron staggers forward, half-blinded by the snow. “Holy hells…”

  Dace

  grips his arm, eyes wide as the giants clash before them. “We

  can’t, ”

  “We

  can,” Red Baron snarls, scanning the wreckage. He spots Spartan’s

  rifle half-buried in the snow where it was thrown clear in the chaos.

  “Get me that rifle.”

  Dace

  hesitates. “Sir, that thing’ll melt us alive if, ”

  “Get

  it!” Red Baron snaps.

  Above

  them, Spartan and Rho fight like two wolves against a pride of lions.

  Spartan seizes Akriel by the neck and throws him through a

  broken column of ice; Rho blocks another hammer swing, takes it to

  the shoulder, and keeps fighting through the impact.

  The

  Inquisitor watches for an opening, calculating, patient.

  He

  moves like lightning. A feint, a step, and his Sigil Blade carves a

  burning line across Spartan’s pauldron, through the exposed joint

  at her neck. Sparks and blood hiss out together.

  Spartan

  staggers, Rho roars, and Red Baron, crouched behind a shattered

  ridge, charges the rail rifle.

  The

  weapon howls to life, blue light washing over the snow.

  He

  grips it tight, waiting for his moment.

  He

  can’t win this fight, but he can damn well buy them time.

  Spartan

  rips Malchiel off Rho’s back, armor screeching against armor, and

  hurls him through the air. He smashes into the snow just meters from

  Red Baron and Dace, ice exploding outward like shrapnel.

  Rho

  reels, blood trailing from a deep gash in his side. Spartan barely

  turns before she raises her shield to meet Akriel’s twin blades,

  the impact throwing sparks in a blinding arc. The Inquisitor seizes

  the opening, his Sigil Blade burns white as it bites through Rho’s

  thigh plating, nearly taking the leg. Rho drops to one knee with a

  guttural roar, slamming his sword into the snow to stay upright.

  Spartan

  pivots, fury burning through the pain. She catches a downward strike

  meant for her throat, but the edge still skims past, slicing deep

  across her shoulder. The smell of scorched blood and melting steel

  floods the air.

  Malchiel

  staggers back to his feet near Red Baron and Dace. His visor is

  cracked, breath ragged, steam pouring from his armor vents. Red Baron

  doesn’t think, he just raises the rifle and fires.

  The

  rail rifle screams. A sonic boom cracks through the air as the

  projectile hits Malchiel square in the chest, tearing through armor

  and throwing him backward.

  But

  he doesn’t fall.

  He

  turns.

  The

  impact only enrages him. The armor on his chest glows red-hot where

  it was struck, the sigils etched across it pulsing like veins of

  molten gold. He steps forward, impossibly fast for his size.

  Red

  Baron fires again, a miss. Dace charges, shouting, too close, too

  fast. Malchiel grabs him by the back of the head, lifting him

  effortlessly off the ground. Dace thrashes, boots kicking, hands

  clawing at the giant’s wrist.

  “Let

  him go!” Red Baron roars, firing again, the shot hits Malchiel’s

  pauldron, blasting off a chunk of it, but it’s not enough.

  Spartan

  turns, sees it happen through the storm, Dace hanging there,

  helpless.

  She

  starts forward...

  And

  Malchiel squeezes.

  The

  sound is wet and final. A sharp red mist explodes outward. Dace’s

  body goes limp, dropping to the snow like a discarded doll.

  Red

  Baron screams.

  Spartan

  stops moving for just a second, just enough for everything to

  collapse inward. The world narrows to a tunnel of white and blood.

  Then

  she charges.

  She

  hits Malchiel like a meteor, slamming into him hard enough to shatter

  the ice beneath them. They tumble through the snow, rolling, tearing,

  snarling, armor grinding, fists hammering. Spartan’s helmet cracks

  against his, once, twice, she grabs the edge of his breastplate and

  rips, tearing loose a venting cable.

  Malchiel

  headbutts her back, driving her into the ground, snow erupting around

  them. He swings, misses, she catches his arm, twists, and brings her

  knee up into his chest. The impact caves the metal inward.

  Rho,

  still standing despite his wounds, turns to cover her flank, cleaving

  Akriel’s arm from his body before the Inquisitor slashes across his

  back again.

  The

  battlefield is pure chaos now, fire, snow, blood, and blinding light.

  Spartan

  pins Malchiel beneath her, pressing her shield against his throat as

  he claws for her helmet. “You,” she snarls through the vocoder,

  voice fractured with static, “you dare harm mine?”

  Malchiel

  only laughs, a harsh, metallic rasp through his broken vox. “The

  Forger’s hound learns to feel?”

  She

  drives her blade through his throat before he can speak again.

  The

  snow turns red.

  The

  sound of hooves reaches her first. Deep. Rhythmic. Hundreds of them.

  The cavalry. Their time is gone. If they’re caught here, everything

  fails, the convoy, the escape, the mission. She exhales, visor

  fogging from inside, and listens to the wind. It carries the scent of

  oiled leather, burning incense, horse sweat. The Venators are close

  enough to taste.

  Spartan

  grabs two grenades from her belt, smooth, heavy spheres that hum

  faintly with charge, one black, one white. The cold bites at the gaps

  in her armor, air sharp enough to cut, but she barely feels it over

  the rush of battle still roaring in her blood.

  “Rho!”

  she barks, voice cutting through the snow like a whipcrack.

  He

  glances back, half crouched, sword raised, his vantablack armor

  trembling with exhaust heat. Spartan doesn’t need to speak. He

  knows the signal.

  She

  arms the grenades, two quick presses, mechanical chirps, then throws

  them underhand toward him. They hit the snow with twin metallic

  thuds, rolling to his boots.

  “Down!”

  she growls, already turning away.

  The

  smoke swallows the clearing in a living, choking wave; light

  collapses into a single, bright, ringing point that snaps the eyes

  shut and makes the teeth ache. For a heartbeat there is nothing but

  sound, a high, glassy keening, and then the flash dies and the smoke

  remains, thick and buzzing at the edges like a hive of angry insects.

  Spartan

  moves in that blind, hot second. She yanks Red Baron up by the scruff

  of his armor, feeling his weight, feeling him go slack and then

  steady in her grip. She throws, a clean, practiced toss, and Liam

  catches him without missing a beat, hands like clamps. Liam hauls Red

  Baron the rest of the way, dragging him toward the distant ravine

  where the natural stone walls promise cover.

  Rho

  stumbles, boots slipping in the churned snow, one of his knees

  buckling. Spartan clamps an arm under his and locks him to her

  shoulder like a harness. The armor hisses, servos whining as she

  takes his weight and they stagger forward through the smoke. The

  world smells of ozone, hot metal, and the copper-sweet tang of blood.

  They

  hit the jetpacks in the same instant. The thrust is a violent,

  stomach-dropping yank, snow blowing upward in a screaming spray as

  they launch. Spartan’s gauntlet digs into Rho’s side to keep him

  pinned as they surge up the bank. The wind tries to steal their

  breath, but the armor’s seals hold.

  They

  clear the ridge and sprint, jetpacks tucked to bleed speed and not

  altitude. The ravine is a dark mouth ahead, jagged stone and a ribbon

  of black between the snow. Spartan slams a boot into the lip and

  skids, shoulders pivoting, dragging Rho with her. He coughs, spitting

  froth, but his hand clamps down on her forearm and refuses to let go.

  Behind

  them the cavalry hits the smoke and the sound changes, horses

  screaming, harsher, metallic cries as Venator trumpets bite through

  the fog. A line of white-and-red armor flares like blood through the

  mist, the Inquisitor’s silhouette visible a second, impossibly

  tall, then gone again as smoke swirls.

  Spartan

  doesn’t look back. She plants her feet at the ravine’s edge,

  drops her shoulder, and pushes Rho forward. They slide, ice rasping

  against armor, then they drop together into the ragged cavern mouth.

  For one breathless second they are falling in a tunnel of stone and

  frozen air, then their jetpacks catch and steady them, muffled

  throttle notes like distant thunder.

  They

  land on the far lip in a spray of snow. Spartan helps Rho upright.

  His vantablack plates are streaked with blood; his one remaining hand

  curls into a fist that shakes. He looks to her, no words, only that

  old, raw look that means: still alive.

  Above,

  the Venators reach the ridge. A dozen helmets break the horizon,

  riders pounding the snow, swords raised. The Inquisitor doesn’t

  hesitate; he slams his sigil blade downward once, twice, a flashing

  promise. But the gap is closed. Spartan turns, breath fogging, then

  tucks her chin and bolts into the ravine’s shadow with Rho at her

  shoulder. Behind them the snow roars as the pursuit begins, the enemy

  falling into motion like blood into the teeth of a machine.

  They

  run. The ravine swallows their prints.

  Rho

  Voss limps but never falters, the servos in his leg whining with

  every step. The damage is bad, the armor’s stabilizer brace crushed

  inward from the Inquisitor’s strike, yet he still moves, each

  stride hammering into the snow like a drumbeat.

  Spartan

  stays beside him, her arm locked around his waist to keep them both

  upright. Every motion sends a hiss of strain through her Olympian

  armor. Without both powercells, the plates drag heavier with every

  heartbeat. The system compensates, reroutes, burns through what

  little energy remains, but it’s not enough.

  Her

  breath rasps in her helmet. “Keep moving,” she mutters.

  Rho

  grunts, dry, mechanical from his mask.

  Ahead

  of them, the remaining Federalists, Red Baron, Liam, and Arturo, push

  through the snow, running in a half-stumble, half-sprint. They keep

  glancing back over their shoulders, watching for the two giants

  behind them, refusing to break formation despite their exhaustion.

  Spartan

  and Rho move as one shape, two shadows merged by necessity. They

  don’t let go of each other, because alone, they’d collapse.

  Together, they’re still fast enough.

  The

  land begins to dip, the white plain cracking open into a narrow

  ravine. Its mouth yawns before them, rimmed by jagged cliffs like

  broken teeth.

  “Here,”

  Spartan rasps.

  They

  break into the valley and the wind dies all at once, silence

  swallowing the world. The snow drifts down in lazy spirals, muffling

  their footsteps. The air feels too still, too heavy.

  To

  the Federalists, it’s nothing but ice and rock and shadow. But to

  Spartan and Rho, still poisoned by the wyrmglass, the world bends and

  writhes.

  The

  cliffs are not stone. They are bodies. Colossal human

  shapes, hollow and frozen, reaching upward in eternal agony. Eye

  sockets empty. Mouths open in silent screams. Snow mingles with ash

  that clings to their feet, to their armor, like the residue of a

  thousand burned souls.

  Behind

  them, the ground trembles. The sound rolls down the mountains, a

  hundred hooves striking stone, accompanied by the metallic chorus of

  Venator hymns.

  The

  cavalry is close. The Venator Vardengard closer still.

  Rho

  looks to Spartan. She meets his gaze through their visors. No words

  needed. They both know: this is where they make their stand.

  The

  Venators - Continuous

  The

  Venator cavalry comes to a halt in a thundering of hooves and a

  settling of snow. Their breaths plume in great clouds, horses

  stamping and snorting steam. The mouth of the ravine looms before

  the, dark, narrow, silent. The sound of the wind fades into nothing,

  as though the world itself holds its breath.

  At

  the head of the column, Absjorn reins in Balthamar, his

  titansteed pawing restlessly at the frozen ground. The beast’s

  great chest is latticed with burn scars, the left eye sealed shut by

  melted flesh and time. Its remaining eye gleams dully in the dark.

  Beside

  him rides Cassiel,

  armor white and red under the dusting snow, his own steed stamping

  nervously. They stare into the ravine’s black mouth, a throat

  waiting to swallow them.

  “This

  reeks of ambush,” Cassiel murmurs. His voice is steady, but his

  hand rests tight on his spear. “The Vardengard flee into such a

  place only when there’s death waiting within.”

  Absjorn’s

  helm tilts slightly, the crimson glass reflecting nothing. “Or when

  there’s nowhere else left to run.”

  The

  Inquisitor approaches on his velox,

  smaller, sleeker than the titansteeds, its gait low and

  predator-smooth. His robes whisper in the wind, the sigil etched

  across his chestplate pulsing faintly with inner light.

  “They

  are weakened,” the Inquisitor reports, voice calm, deliberate. “Rho

  Voss limps from a shattered leg actuator. Spartan’s armor runs on

  half its cells. Her power will not last the hour.”

  A

  grin flickers across Absjorn’s face beneath the helm. “Then the

  wolves bleed.”

  “Cornered

  wolves bite hardest,” Cassiel says softly.

  Before

  more can be said, Vaedran steps forward, towering even among the

  Vardengard, frost hissing off his armor’s vents. His voice booms

  across the silence.

  “She

  killed Malchiel.” His gauntlet clenches around the haft of his

  war-axe. “I will bring her back to you, Master.

  Alive or not, her blood will answer his.”

  Akriel

  and Tzurinn nod beside him, eager, restless, the scent of vengeance

  thick on them. Their armor hums with rising power, the snow at their

  feet vaporizing from the heat.

  Absjorn’s

  eyes flick toward them, then toward the ravine. He does not hesitate.

  “Go, then. Bring her back. I want her kneeling before the

  Absolute’s banner before dawn.”

  The

  three Vardengard bow in unison, then move, titans in motion, charging

  into the ravine’s shadow, the snow exploding under their feet.

  Absjorn

  raises a gauntleted hand, signaling to the ranks behind. “First

  Cavalry, advance. Support them. Footmen, follow.”

  The

  order ripples down the line. Horns blare once, deep and mournful. The

  cavalry surge forward, the sound of their charge echoing like thunder

  between the cliffs.

  Cassiel

  watches them vanish into the dark, his breath slow, his eyes hard.

  “We should not have sent them blind,” he mutters, lowering his

  staff in reverence.

  He

  bows his head, whispering into the frozen air. “Absolute, guide

  them through the valley of shadow. Let Your angels walk beside them.

  Let Your flame purge the unworthy and deliver Your faithful unto

  victory.”

  His

  prayer carries on the wind, following the hooves into the waiting

  dark, where Spartan and Rho Voss prepare their stand.

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