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CHAPTER NINETEEN: I’ll Be The Limit of Your Light Again

  Karthane

  Barracks, Federation Wing - Sometime Later

  The

  Federation wing of the Karthane barracks hums faintly with the cold

  groan of its metal bones. The walls are lined with Invictan banners,

  the Hammer and Flame, as if the very walls were claiming the space

  for the Forge. The heat is uneven, the vents clanking to life only to

  sigh and fade again.

  Most

  of the Federalists are still gone, chasing warmth and drink in the

  mess hall. Their bunks stand empty, blankets rumpled, helmets resting

  on rifles at the foot of beds.

  But

  in the far corner, the wolves have made their den.

  Spartan's

  packs, three of them, twelve Vardengard in all, have turned that

  section into their own camp. Cots and footlockers form a rough

  circle, blankets hung from bunks behind them like walls. Olympian

  armor lines the far wall, suspended from hooks and straps, great,

  silent giants, their visors black, their surfaces scarred and dulled

  from battle.

  In

  the center, they sit together.

  Spartan

  leans against Rho Voss's shoulder, and he against hers. The warmth

  between them is quiet, unspoken.

  Rho's

  hood is still up, scarf still drawn high. His gloved hand moves

  occasionally over a small, weathered notepad balanced on his knee,

  his voice on paper, where it has lived for years.

  Around

  them sit Ashurdan, Samayel, Belqartis, Naburiel, Kaelus, Tharn,

  Verrun, Apathor, and Meleth. Some sit cross-legged on the floor,

  others on the edges of cots or footlockers. A small pile of rations

  sits in the middle, dried meats, flatbread, a dented flask

  half-filled with spirits. They pass the food and drink around,

  sharing without measure.

  The

  air smells faintly of oil, leather, and smoke.

  Spartan

  works in silence, a strip of rough cord and the horn of an Eldiravan

  Kairn-Vohr in her lap, two feet long, yellowed and ridged, its base

  jagged where it snapped free. She carves shallow notches along its

  length with a small knife, careful and deliberate, each line clean

  and straight.

  Ashurdan

  watches her from across the circle.

  "A

  fine trophy," he says, voice low.

  Spartan's

  lips twitch faintly.

  "A

  reminder," she replies, not looking up. "Of the one who

  thought himself my better."

  Belqartis

  smirks, taking a pull from the flask before tossing it to Naburiel.

  "A

  Kairn-Vohr, then?"

  Spartan

  nods, turning the horn in her hand. The candlelight catches the pale

  curve of it.

  "His

  song nearly cracked my visor. He was strong, until I broke him."

  A

  few of them chuckle at that, short, rough sounds, the laughter of

  soldiers who understand.

  Samayel

  grins.

  "Maybe

  hang it over your bunk, eh? Let the Federalists see what kind of

  lullabies we prefer."

  That

  draws louder laughter, even from Spartan, brief but warm.

  Rho

  doesn't laugh, but his shoulder shifts slightly, just enough that she

  feels the silent amusement through his gesture. He scribbles

  something in the notepad and tilts it for her to see.

  [Make

  sure it doesn't whistle when you walk.]

  She

  exhales a laugh through her nose, shaking her head.

  "I'll

  make certain it doesn't," she says quietly, setting her knife

  aside. "Last thing I need is to sound like a flute every time I

  move."

  Naburiel

  leans back on his palms. "Would still be more musical than the

  Eldiravan."

  Apathor

  chuckles from the corner. "Ita. At least she'd be in tune."

  The

  conversation drifts easily after that. Stories pass between them,

  brief, unpolished fragments of the past days' fight. They speak of

  shattered formations, of chemical rain falling from orbit, of the

  eerie silence when the Eldiravan songs died. Each voice joins the

  circle like the heat of a small flame shared among them.

  Outside,

  the storm presses against the walls, a constant, dull roar. But in

  here, there's something close to peace.

  Spartan

  ties off the rope through the horn's notches, testing the strength of

  each knot. The horn will hang from her armor, a mark of victory and

  warning both.

  She

  holds it up once, admiring the craftsmanship.

  Then

  she looks around the circle, her packs, her brothers. The last of the

  Vardengard on this frozen world.

  "Rest

  while you can," she says finally, her tone settling the air.

  "When the Supreme calls, we move."

  One

  by one, they nod. Some continue eating; others stretch out on their

  cots. The laughter fades into quiet murmurs, then into silence.

  Spartan

  rests the horn across her lap. Rho's shoulder remains firm against

  hers.

  For

  a while, they simply sit, two shadows amid the warmth, the sound of

  their comrades breathing steady around them, the storm still raging

  just beyond the walls.

  The

  storm's voice outside is a low, constant moan, but inside the

  barracks the warmth of camaraderie endures, laughter, the rattle of

  tin cups, the rustle of fatigues.

  Kaedor

  sits cross-legged near the footlockers, a broad-shouldered giant with

  his hair cropped to stubble and a scar tracing from his temple to his

  collar. He's quieter than most, but when he does speak, it's always

  to stoke mischief.

  "Tharn,"

  Kaedor says suddenly, tossing a half-eaten strip of dried meat across

  the circle, "you eat like a starving dog."

  Tharn

  catches it, glares at him, and grins. "At least I eat, old man.

  You chew like you're afraid of the food fighting back."

  That

  earns a low roar of laughter. Samayel throws an empty ration tin that

  clinks off Tharn's shoulder. "Settle it properly then. First one

  to tap out owes the other a flask when we're back on the Bellator."

  That's

  all the invitation they need.

  Tharn

  lunges, Kaedor braces, and in seconds the two are locked in a

  half-serious grapple, boots scraping against the metal floor, breath

  misting in the cold air. The others holler encouragement, banging

  fists on lockers and bunks in rhythm.

  Belqartis,

  still nursing a flask, shakes his head with mock disapproval.

  "Children," he mutters, "all of you."

  "Old

  man," Naburiel counters with a grin.

  "Veteran,"

  Belqartis corrects, taking another drink.

  Laughter

  rolls again, easy, warm, human.

  Spartan

  doesn't look up from her work. The knife makes its final stroke along

  the horn, carving one last notch before she threads the cord through

  it and tightens the knot with a sharp pull. The Kairn-Vohr's horn is

  finished now, pale, ridged, still carrying faint traces of the

  enemy's heat-scarring along its base.

  Just

  as she turns it in her hands, a flicker of blue light pulses in her

  HUD, a coded message from Magnus.

  Report

  to command. Immediately.

  Her

  lips tighten slightly. She leans toward Rho and whispers so only he

  can hear. "The Supreme calls."

  Rho

  stirs beside her instantly, setting his notepad aside and starting to

  rise, but she stops him with a hand on his shoulder.

  "Stay,"

  she says softly. "Stay warm."

  He

  hesitates, then nods once. Spartan brushes her hand along his jaw,

  rough from stubble and cold, before pressing a brief kiss to his

  cheek. The gesture draws a faint warmth to his eyes, though he says

  nothing.

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  She

  stands, tall and silent, the commander once more.

  Moving

  to her armor, she fastens the Eldiravan horn at the Olympian's waist,

  where the cord hangs firm against the steel plating. The horn catches

  the low light, gleaming like a captured relic.

  Kaedor,

  watching her, smirks.

  "Rho's

  a lucky man," he says under his breath.

  Samayel

  snorts. "Lucky? He hasn't said more than ten words since we

  landed."

  "Doesn't

  have to," Kaedor says, deadpan. "Apparently it works for

  him."

  That

  sets them all off again, rough, rolling laughter echoing through the

  metal barracks. Rho only lowers his head slightly, pretending not to

  notice, though the faintest curve of a smile ghosts beneath his

  scarf.

  Spartan,

  half inside her armor now, catches the noise and shakes her head with

  a quiet chuckle. The armor seals around her in a series of hydraulic

  clicks, the Olympian coming alive with a low hum of energy. She lifts

  her helm, slips it on, and the world narrows to the red glow of her

  visor.

  That's

  when the door opens.

  Cold

  air sweeps in, along with a burst of noise and voices, the

  Federalists returning. Their boots stamp across the metal floor,

  their laughter fading to stunned silence as they spot the Invictan

  giants occupying their wing.

  The

  first few soldiers walk past without noticing, too tired, too full

  from the mess hall, but then others slow, staring openly. Their eyes

  widen as they take in the sight: eleven Vardengard in fatigues,

  Olympian armor lined along the wall, their corner marked by the

  black-and-red banner of Civitas Invicta.

  Even

  hardened men falter under that sight.

  Among

  them are Arturo Phillips and Liam Marshall, mid-conversation until

  they nearly walk straight into Spartan.

  They

  stop short.

  Arturo

  looks up, and up again, his mouth half open. "Holy hell…"

  Liam

  elbows him, muttering, "Don't stare, man."

  Spartan

  looks down at them, visor flaring with reflected light. For a moment,

  neither soldier breathes. Then she steps aside, silent and towering,

  and they hurry past, their heads ducked as they move toward their

  bunks.

  The

  rest of the Federalists murmur among themselves, voices hushed but

  tinged with awe. They all know the legends, the gods of war in flesh

  and steel, but none ever expected to share a roof with them.

  Spartan

  pauses at the threshold. She glances once back toward the circle, the

  laughter still echoing faintly, Rho sitting quietly with the notepad

  still in his lap, before stepping out into the corridor.

  The

  door closes behind her with a heavy thud.

  The

  Command Room, Karthane - Continuous

  The

  door hisses open with a pressurized sigh. Cold wind snakes in around

  Spartan's armor before it seals shut behind her. The shift from the

  howling dark outside to the electric hum of the command building is

  immediate, warmth, static, and motion. Dozens of figures move about,

  their breath fogging slightly despite the heat vents thrumming

  overhead.

  Federalists

  and Invictans mingle uneasily but efficiently; soldiers and

  Praetorians shoulder to shoulder around consoles, holo-screens, and

  scattered piles of data-sheets. The Invictans' deep, metallic accents

  cut through the softer Federalist voices. Status reports, supply

  tallies, unit rotations. The rhythmic beep of comms traffic fills the

  air.

  Spartan's

  armor, black pearlescent plates traced in dark red, draws eyes as she

  moves through the hall. Her footfalls resonate in measured, heavy

  beats. Frost still clings to her pauldrons, a glittering crust that

  melts into streaks under the indoor heat. No one stops her; they

  simply part as she passes.

  She

  reaches the reinforced door at the rear of the building. A Praetorian

  guard recognizes her, steps aside, and keys the panel. The door

  unlocks with a low tone. Spartan steps through.

  The

  war room is dimmer than the rest, lit mostly by the ghostly glow of

  the holographic table in the center. The map of Nirna stretches

  across it in swirling blues and whites, shifting as reports update.

  Red and green icons mark armies, fortifications, and trench lines,

  flickering occasionally with distortion from the constant storms in

  orbit.

  Magnus

  stands at the head of the table, his Tyrannus armor shedding faint

  vapor from the vents along his spine. His helmet rests on the table

  beside a datapad, its surface etched with Invictan sigils. He's

  unhelmed, his face taut and shadowed, eyes burning with restrained

  energy as he listens.

  To

  his right is Captain Michael Marcellus, stoic as ever, the silver

  trim of his Praetorian armor reflecting the projection's light.

  Across from him leans Red Baron, his dark Federation armor no longer

  crowned in snow and frost, one gloved hand planted on the table as he

  argues over terrain data.

  Two

  other Invictan captains, Cassian Varrus, lean and hawk-eyed, and

  Elyon Kaedric, broad-shouldered with a roughness that marks him as a

  frontliner, stand nearby, each with their own datapads open.

  Their

  voices rise and overlap in Latin:

  "If

  they had a base in the mountains, we'd have picked up heat signatures

  by now, "

  "Unless

  they're using the terrain to mask them, Kaedric. The Eldiravan sing

  their way into the earth itself."

  "Speculation.

  Nothing but speculation. We need confirmation before moving another

  battalion into that range."

  "And

  lose another line while we wait for confirmation?"

  Magnus

  lifts a hand, just slightly, but the entire room stills. His presence

  does that.

  He

  turns his gaze to Spartan as she approaches, his tone even but edged

  with weight even in English, "Shield of Invicta. You received my

  summons."

  Spartan

  nods. The horn trophy at her hip sways slightly with her movement,

  its surface catching the blue holographic light.

  "Of

  course, Master," she says, her voice filtered through the

  vocoder.

  Magnus

  studies her for a beat, then gestures toward the table.

  "Good.

  You will want to see this."

  The

  hologram shifts, zooming in on a section of the northern hemisphere.

  Jagged white peaks and a deep, serpentine valley appear.

  Kaedric

  leans in, frowning. "We intercepted another transmission from

  that sector two hours ago. No visuals, just resonance data,

  frequencies unlike anything Federation tech emits."

  Red

  Baron crosses his arms. "And you think that means the Eldiravan

  are singin' down there."

  "Not

  think," Cassian Varrus corrects quietly. "Know."

  Magnus'

  gaze moves over the projection, then back to Spartan.

  "We

  may have found their stronghold, or at least one of them. I am

  sending a recon force north within the hour."

  The

  air shifts. Spartan straightens slightly.

  "A

  recon?" she asks. "Or an assault?"

  Magnus'

  mouth hardens into a line.

  "That

  depends on what they find."

  The

  war table hums quietly as the holo-map rotates. Blue light spills

  across Spartan's black armor as she leans forward, helmet fixed on

  the projection. The terrain lines ripple with topographic detail;

  ridges, valleys, frozen rivers cutting across Nirna's northern

  mountains.

  Cassian

  and Kaedric are at it again.

  "If

  the readings are real, they are deep in the range, further north than

  any of our drones can maintain signal."

  "Or

  your data is faulty," Kaedric snaps back. "Half those

  transmissions are just atmospheric distortion. You are chasing

  ghosts."

  Marcellus

  exhales through his nose, arms folding over his chest. "You two

  argue like you are married."

  Cassian

  doesn't look up. "At least I would be right half the time."

  Kaedric

  glares. "Not this half."

  The

  jab earns a muted chuckle from Red Baron, but Magnus doesn't join in.

  His eyes never leave Spartan. He's patient. Watching. Waiting for her

  to speak.

  Spartan

  studies the map in silence for another moment. Then, in that soft,

  southern lilt; the faintest trace of her place of birth buried under

  the clipped Invictan cadence, her voice filters through her helmet

  speakers.

  "When

  the Eldiravan pulled back from the trenches," she begins, slow,

  measured, "they didn't scatter. They moved north. Every unit we

  engaged 'long the line retreated the same way."

  Her

  gloved finger taps the map, enlarging a swath of white ridges marked

  with faint red energy traces.

  "If

  you're gettin' frequencies from the mountains, that ain't

  coincidence. It's coordination. A song needs a source and the north's

  singin' loudest right now."

  Her

  visor turns toward Magnus.

  "But

  you didn't call me in here just to confirm what they already

  guessed."

  Magnus'

  mouth tugs faintly at one corner. A near-smile, gone before it can

  form.

  "No,"

  he says, tone even. "I would not waste your time with theories."

  He

  gestures to the mountains on the projection.

  "I

  want you to take your pack at dawn and scout it out. No large

  detachment. Stealth and speed. I trust your judgment on the ground."

  Before

  Spartan can respond, a voice cuts through the low hum.

  "Then

  we'll go with him."

  Every

  head turns. Red Baron stands straight, his coat settling around his

  armor, the firelight from the table catching the silver trim at his

  collar.

  The

  silence that follows is sharp enough to hear the holo emitters buzz.

  Spartan's

  helmet tilts toward him. "Negative," she says flatly.

  "Federalists'll only slow us down that far north."

  Magnus'

  gaze flicks to Red Baron. "You understand what the Vardengard

  are?" he asks, tone carefully neutral. "Few can keep pace

  with them and fewer survive trying."

  Red

  Baron meets his stare without flinching.

  "I'm

  aware," he answers. "But if the Eldiravan have a base out

  there, I want my men to see it with their own eyes. My Company's

  already bled for this ground. We'll keep up."

  A

  quiet beat passes. Even Marcellus looks mildly surprised.

  Spartan

  takes a step forward, voice edged with restrained irritation.

  "With

  all due respect, sir, I don't need to babysit a pack of worn-out

  Federalists."

  Magnus

  raises his hand. The air stills. Spartan stops mid-step.

  He

  regards both of them, expression unreadable, then says simply,

  "He

  goes."

  Spartan's

  jaw tightens beneath her helmet. She growls low, mechanical through

  the filter, half frustration, half reluctant acceptance.

  "As

  you wish, Master" she mutters. "We'll move at first light."

  Red

  Baron inclines his head once. "We'll be ready."

  Magnus

  nods. "Good. Dismissed."

  Michael

  pauses by the door, one hand on the frame. The others, Kaedric,

  Cassian, Red Baron, file out, the murmuring of their conversation

  fading into the cold hum of the command building beyond. When the

  door shuts, the war table's light paints the room in quiet blue

  again.

  Michael

  glances over his shoulder at Spartan, the faintest smirk tugging at

  his mouth.

  "Never

  heard you speak English before," he says, switching smoothly to

  Latin now that the Federalist captain is gone. "You sound like

  you are from Terra."

  Spartan

  lets out a short, amused snort through her helmet's filter. "That's

  because I am," she replies, her drawl soft but noticeable.

  Michael's

  grin widens. "Figures. I knew there was a bit of old Earth left

  in you somewhere."

  Across

  the table, Magnus is still standing, arms folded, his expression

  unreadable except for the small, amused glint in his eyes. Spartan's

  visor tilts toward him.

  "Why

  have the Federalists join us?" she asks flatly. "We could

  scout the range in a day. With them, it will take a week."

  Magnus

  nods once, slow and deliberate. "It is inconvenient," he

  admits. "But good for them, and perhaps good for you and your

  pack as well."

  Spartan

  shifts, her armored boots clinking faintly on the metal floor.

  "We

  do not need a reminder of what we are fighting for, Master," she

  says. "We need efficiency. You will send Insarii with us, will

  you not? That will drag us down enough as it is."

  Magnus

  straightens, tone firm. "That's enough," he says, not

  raising his voice but slicing the air with command all the same. "Red

  Baron's Company is going with you. End of discussion."

  A

  low growl reverberates from Spartan's helmet, more instinct than

  defiance. She scoffs, visor turning away.

  Magnus

  lets it linger for a moment before his voice softens. "Have you

  eaten?"

  She

  exhales slowly. "We have. Dried goods we made on Rauvis."

  Magnus

  sighs, rubbing the bridge of his nose. "Of course you did."

  He looks up again, tone shifting toward weary fondness. "You

  will have a proper mess hall tomorrow. I will see to it when the

  engineers arrive."

  Spartan's

  visor lifts slightly, a flicker of acknowledgment in her posture.

  "Understood."

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