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CHAPTER FIVE: I Can’t Bury My Head Under The Sand….

  Magnus

  Tiberius' Private Quarters - Next Morning

  Magnus

  blinks the sleep from his eyes, still feeling the dull throb of last

  night's drink behind his temples. The light from the window cuts

  across the apartment, gold and muted, catching on the edges of steel

  and glass. The air smells faintly of rain and the smoke from the

  night before. He rubs a hand over his face, muttering under his

  breath as he buttons the last clasp of his uniform trousers.

  When

  he steps out into the living room, the silence feels heavy; too

  heavy. Then, from the edge of his vision, something moves.

  His

  instincts tighten before his mind catches up. He turns sharply.

  Rho

  Voss stands there, half in the shadow cast by the balcony frame. Hood

  drawn. Mask up. Still as a statue. His fatigues look barely slept in,

  creases sharp, boots scuffed but clean.

  Magnus

  exhales slowly, letting the edge of his surprise fade. "You move

  like a ghost, Rho," he mutters, voice rough from the hangover.

  He gestures vaguely toward him. "Everything all right? You look

  like you have been standing there a while."

  Rho

  doesn't respond at first. The silence stretches, filled only by the

  faint hum of the apartment's ventilation. Then, finally, his voice

  emerges. Low. Dry. As if scraped across stone. "She's gone."

  Magnus

  straightens. "What?"

  "Spartan,"

  Rho says, eyes hidden beneath the hood's shadow. "She left last

  night. Didn't come back."

  The

  words land heavy, the fog of Magnus' hangover evaporating in an

  instant. He steps closer, his tone sharpening. "Left where?"

  Rho's

  gaze lifts, and for a brief moment, Magnus sees the faint reflection

  of morning light in those pale, quiet eyes.

  "The

  Forgemaster."

  Magnus

  stares at him, lips parting in disbelief. "…She went down

  there ?"

  Rho

  doesn't nod, doesn't shake his head. He just stands there, unmoving.

  The silence between them grows tense, brittle as glass.

  Magnus

  looks past him toward the balcony door, as if the answer might be out

  there in the gray dawn. Then back to Rho.

  "You

  tried to stop her?"

  Rho's

  jaw shifts beneath the mask, something between shame and restraint.

  "You don't stop her," he says finally.

  Magnus

  lets out a slow breath, muttering a curse under it. He pinches the

  bridge of his nose. "And she's been gone how long?"

  "Since

  the third hour of night."

  Magnus'

  hands drop to his sides. "Damn it."

  He

  turns away, pacing a short distance toward the window, his boots

  clicking softly against the polished floor. "Why would she go to

  the Forgemaster...?"

  Rho

  Voss does not answer him, he only stands there like a statue,

  watching, waiting.

  He

  stops pacing. The silence fills again with the low hum of the morning

  power grid outside the city. Then Magnus turns back, his expression

  carved from iron. "Come, let us go see the Forgemaster then,"

  Magnus nods, headed for the entryway.

  The

  Forge - Continuous

  The

  elevator doors hiss open with a breath of pressurized air and old

  metal. The hum of ancient machinery greets them first; a deep,

  constant vibration that thrums through the soles of their boots.

  Magnus steps out onto the narrow catwalk, the sound of its grated

  steel bending faintly beneath his weight. Rho follows close behind,

  his hood drawn low, his gaze sharp and restless beneath it.

  The

  catwalk stretches out into the cavernous dark. Below, the Forge

  breathes. Rivers of molten light pulse through channels of glass and

  steel, and the air itself glows faintly with a smoldering red haze.

  It is hot, not burning, but alive, like standing inside the chest of

  a sleeping god.

  They

  descend the final stair and approach the heart of the Forge.

  When

  the great door opens, its motion sighs like an exhalation from the

  mountain itself. The space beyond swells open; a cathedral of metal

  and flame. The Forgemaster floats where he always does, suspended in

  the air before a wall of cables, screens, and piping that rise like

  roots into the shadows above. His vast, mechanical hands move with

  impossible precision, adjusting valves and symbols across the

  floating monitors. Sparks trail from his fingertips as he works.

  He

  does not turn to greet them.

  Magnus

  and Rho advance slowly, their boots echoing on the blackened steel

  floor until they stand beside the cruciform table at the center, the

  same table upon which countless creations were given form.

  It

  is then that the Forgemaster moves. His head turns, slow, deliberate,

  white fire burning behind his eyes. He pivots in the air, descending

  until his immense form looms low enough that his gaze falls directly

  upon them.

  Only

  then do they see her.

  Beneath

  him, at the foot of the great anvil where the wolf skull rests,

  Spartan lies curled into herself. Her cloak serves as a makeshift

  blanket, one arm drawn beneath her head, her breathing soft, even.

  She looks impossibly peaceful, like a child asleep before the hearth.

  Magnus'

  shoulders ease, if only slightly.

  The

  Forgemaster's voice fills the Forge without need of volume.

  "You

  have come for her."

  Magnus

  looks up at him. "We were concerned," he says simply.

  But

  the Forgemaster's gaze drifts past him, to the figure lingering

  behind. His glowing eyes narrow, focusing with an intensity that

  borders on reverence.

  "Schmotz."

  The

  name rings through the chamber like the toll of a bell.

  Rho

  stiffens, the faint blue glow of his eyes flaring beneath the hood.

  His breath catches. The last he was addressed as such was when

  Spartan saw him for the first time without his armor, for the first

  time since they both had nearly died when they fell from orbit.

  Magnus

  looks between them, brow furrowed. "You… know him?"

  The

  Forgemaster's lips curl faintly, something between amusement and

  nostalgia.

  "Know

  him?" His tone deepens, molten iron through gravel. "I

  forged him. As I did her. You stand before two children of the old

  flame."

  Rho

  lowers his gaze again, his throat tightening beneath the mask. He has

  no answer for that, no words that fit a name that belongs to another

  life.

  Magnus

  steps forward, his voice more grounded, more human. "Then tell

  me," he says, glancing toward Spartan's still form. "What

  happened? Why is she here like this?"

  The

  Forgemaster turns slightly, his eyes flickering toward the sleeping

  figure.

  "She

  came to me burdened," he says, his tone cryptic but heavy with

  meaning. "Her faith is whole, yet her heart, fractured. The

  Venator's poison runs deep. She sought the flame not for power, but

  for peace."

  Magnus'

  expression hardens, unreadable. "And did she find it?"

  The

  Forgemaster does not answer immediately. He raises one hand, looking

  into his open palm as though studying something invisible. Then his

  voice comes quieter, if such a word could apply to a being like him.

  "For now."

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  The

  silence that follows stretches long. The glow of the Forge flickers

  and hums like the steady beat of a heart.

  The

  Forgemaster's gaze drifts once more to Spartan's sleeping form. His

  voice, when it comes, hums low through the chamber, metal

  reverberating through the bones of the room.

  "I

  have operated on her," he says, matter-of-factly. "Her jaw

  was fractured in three places, and half her teeth were beyond

  salvage. Lucia Dain's original work was… competent."

  He

  tilts his head slightly, the great cables along his back flexing like

  the wings of an angelic machine.

  "But

  I have improved upon it. These new teeth are stronger, rooted in

  alloy and grafted into the bone. Resistant to forced removal. She

  loses teeth more often than a drak'hound in rut."

  The

  corners of his mouth curve faintly, as though the comparison

  genuinely amuses him.

  Magnus

  frowns, exhaling through his nose. "I was going to have them

  replaced today," he mutters. His gaze lingers on Spartan, still

  and curled near the anvil, before lifting again to meet the

  Forgemaster's radiant eyes. "What is the price?"

  The

  Forgemaster turns his gaze toward him, light cascading from his face

  across Magnus' uniform.

  "The

  offering has already been made," he replies. "She paid…

  graciously."

  There

  is no elaboration, no hint of what that payment entailed. Magnus' jaw

  tightens, but he does not press the matter.

  The

  Forgemaster descends further, his towering frame lowering until he

  floats only a few meters above the ground. The light from the molten

  vat paints him in hues of amber and crimson. His hand extends, not to

  touch, but to gesture, palm outward toward Spartan.

  "Awaken,

  daughter of flame," he intones, voice deep and resonant, rolling

  through the chamber like a sacred command.

  The

  air seems to pulse once, a low hum echoing through the floor. Spartan

  stirs instantly. A small sound escapes her, a soft breath or sigh,

  and then her head lifts. Her hair spills forward over her shoulders

  as she sits upright, eyes blinking open beneath the dim firelight.

  The

  Forgemaster's gaze softens, just barely.

  "Your

  Master and your mate have come to collect you."

  Spartan

  blinks once more, slow, her expression drowsy but lucid. Then she

  turns her head.

  Across

  the chamber, beside the operating table, stand Magnus and Rho Voss.

  Rho's

  hood shadows most of his face, but the faint blue light beneath it

  flares when her gaze meets his. Magnus stands silent, composed,

  though his eyes betray the faint trace of relief.

  Spartan

  draws a slow breath and lowers her cloak from her shoulders, the

  heavy fabric sliding down with a soft whisper. She glances once

  toward the Forgemaster's anvil, the wolf skull still resting there,

  and then back to them.

  Spartan

  stays still for a breath, maybe two, her eyes locked on Magnus and

  Rho Voss across the chamber. Then she rises, drawing her cloak up and

  around her shoulders, fastening it with a quiet motion. The cloak's

  edge brushes against the metal floor, soft against the constant hum

  of the Forge.

  She

  crosses the space slowly, careful not to meet Magnus' eyes until

  she's standing beside him. When she finally does, she looks up,

  mismatched eyes glinting faintly in the filtered light, her

  expression uncertain. There's a hint of tension in her jaw, as if she

  expects reprimand, as if she already knows she's gone too far by

  coming here on her own.

  The

  Forgemaster rises behind her, ascending back to his normal height.

  The cables and tubing that tether him to the walls expand outward,

  forming that same haloed shape of mechanical wings. His white-glowing

  eyes shift, falling upon Rho Voss.

  "Tell

  me, General," he says, voice like metal grinding beneath a

  choir's hum, "does Schmotz require any work? It has been… far

  too long since last I saw him. I am aware of the extensive changes."

  Magnus

  glances toward Rho, who remains silent, head bowed, face unreadable

  beneath his hood. "No," Magnus replies, his tone measured.

  "He is fine. He is held together well enough."

  "A

  shame," the Forgemaster murmurs, faint amusement threading

  through his rasp. "He was one of my finer creations."

  Magnus

  inclines his head slightly, respectful but firm. "Forgemaster, I

  apologize for her intrusion. I hope she did not disturb your work."

  For

  a long moment, the Forgemaster's expression doesn't change. Then,

  softly, "It is never a disturbance when she visits."

  His

  gaze falls to Spartan once more, not fond, but reverent, as though

  addressing something sacred, something ancient.

  Magnus

  nods once, satisfied enough with the response. "Then we will

  take our leave."

  He

  places a hand on Spartan's shoulder, a silent cue. She bows her head

  toward the Forgemaster in quiet respect, then turns with Magnus and

  Rho Voss. Together, the three step toward the door.

  As

  it opens, the red light of the Forge spills briefly across their

  backs, and the humming deepens, like the Forge itself exhaling as

  they depart. Then the door seals behind them, cutting off the glow

  and the sound, leaving the Forgemaster once more alone with his

  molten vat, his anvil, and the faint echo of their footsteps fading

  into the dark.

  The

  Vardengard Barracks - Continuous

  The

  elevator hums softly as it rises, a low, mechanical sound that fills

  the silence between them. None of them speak. The only movement comes

  from the faint sway of the lift and the subtle rhythm of Spartan's

  cloak against her ankles. Rho Voss stands behind her, hands shoved

  into the pockets of his jacket, head lowered as if still in the

  Forgemaster's presence. Magnus stands nearest the door, arms crossed,

  lost in his own thoughts.

  When

  the elevator finally locks into place with a solid clunk, the doors

  slide open to reveal the dim amber lighting of the Vardengard

  Barracks. The air feels thicker here, warmer, carrying the faint

  scent of iron and bone dust.

  They

  step out together, their footsteps echoing softly on the metal floor.

  Magnus

  halts once they're clear of the lift. He turns toward Spartan and

  reaches out, one gloved hand finding her jaw. His touch is careful,

  not commanding. His thumb rests beneath her chin, tilting her face up

  toward the light. She opens her mouth instinctively, obediently, and

  he peers inside.

  The

  Forgemaster's craftsmanship is obvious. Each tooth is pristine,

  perfect. The canines gleam like polished silver, sharp and predatory,

  the rest fitted with seamless precision. The faint metallic sheen

  catches the light every time she breathes.

  Magnus

  exhales softly, lowering his hand just enough for his thumb to trace

  along her jaw and up to her cheek. His brow furrows, not in anger, in

  concern. "Why the Forgemaster?" he asks quietly. "And

  why go alone?"

  Spartan

  hesitates. Her throat works once, twice, before she manages to speak.

  "I did not want to burden you," she says, voice barely

  above a whisper. "Not anymore than I already have." She

  pauses, her mismatched eyes shifting away from his. "I needed to

  speak with someone who knew Him," she finishes. "Someone

  who remembers the Forger."

  Her

  words hang in the still air between them, quiet but heavy, echoing

  faintly down the corridor.

  They

  walk the narrow corridors in silence at first. The hum of the

  barracks fills the air, a

  faint

  mechanical thrum, low conversation from other chambers, the distant

  hiss of hydraulics. Spartan's bare feet make no sound against the

  cold floor, while Magnus' boots echo quietly beside her.

  He

  glances sidelong at her, his tone low but calm. "You know you

  could have come to me."

  Spartan

  nods once but doesn't meet his gaze. "I know."

  Magnus'

  voice softens, though it carries an edge of worry. "If you went

  to the Forgemaster seeking peace, then things are worse than I

  thought."

  She

  exhales through her nose, slow, steady. "I have known him since

  before he was the Forgemaster," she says, her voice faint but

  even. "He stood beside the Forger, as I did, when everything

  began. I thought perhaps he would remember what I have forgotten."

  Magnus

  studies her in silence. His expression doesn't shift, but his

  shoulders ease slightly. He nods for her to continue.

  "I

  asked him for a proper conversation," she goes on. "Something

  to ease the pain. He gave it. And then… he offered a solution."

  Magnus

  arches a brow. "A solution?"

  Spartan

  hesitates. Her hands grip the edges of her cloak, knuckles pale

  against the dark fabric. For a moment, she seems to debate whether to

  answer at all. But then, with a quiet breath, she parts the cloak and

  lets it fall open.

  Magnus

  stops walking.

  The

  corridor's dim amber light spills over her bare skin, her torso and

  arms a map of old pain and new devotion. Where Absjorn's burned

  script still mars her flesh, raw and angry, the Forgemaster's work

  does not erase it but reframes it.

  Elegant

  lines of black and gold run through and around the old scars, shaped

  like verses carefully etched by an artist's hand. The letters gleam

  faintly, metallic in the light, forming sacred invocations from the

  Forger's Testament.

  Across

  her ribs, curling around the base of her sternum:

  [Per

  ignem, factus sum.]

  Down

  the length of her left arm:

  [Malleus,

  percute non crudelitate sed consilio.]

  Over

  her right shoulder, looping toward her collarbone:

  [Ex

  cineribus imperfectionis, falsarius iterum respirat.]

  And

  along her abdomen, where Absjorn's cruel script once burned deepest,

  the Forgemaster's new lettering overlays the lash scars with reverent

  symmetry:

  [Dolor

  non est poena. Est creationis testimonium.]

  The

  brands are cold, deliberate, crafted, not seared. The ink shimmers

  faintly, gold dust catching in the light like a slow heartbeat

  beneath her skin.

  Magnus

  stares for a long while, saying nothing. Then, quietly, "He

  remade your scars."

  Spartan

  nods. "He said that if I am to carry what has been done to me, I

  should carry it as His work, not Absjorn's." She closes her

  cloak again, voice softer now. "He told me… it is better to

  wear sanctity than shame."

  Magnus

  looks at her then, truly looks at her, the firelight of the corridor

  reflecting faintly in his eyes. His tone comes low, thoughtful,

  almost reverent. "And you feel peace from it?"

  Her

  answer comes after a heartbeat. "Not yet," she says. "But

  I think I have begun to remember what peace was meant to feel like."

  Rho

  Voss moves behind her, silent, careful, the dim light skating over

  his dark armor. His movements are slow, deliberate. He studies the

  brands without comment, his presence grounding the air. Then, with a

  sound like metal on leather, he lifts his hand and extends a gloved

  finger.

  He

  doesn't touch immediately, just hovers a breath away from her arm, as

  if asking permission without words. When Spartan gives the faintest

  nod, he traces one of the lines across her bicep, following the loop

  of a gilded script.

  [Flamma

  devorat, attamen aes manet.]

  Rho's

  fingers linger there a moment longer, feeling the uneven texture

  of the scar beneath the ink, then he withdraws, silent still, but his

  head dips slightly, as though in respect.

  Magnus

  watches this exchange quietly. His hands, clasped behind his back,

  tense and relax again. "He has turned your suffering into

  scripture," he finally says. "And in doing so… perhaps

  reminded us both that even pain can be holy."

  Spartan

  looks up at him then, not with pride, but with quiet strength, her

  mismatched eyes shimmering beneath the flicker of the corridor

  lights. "That was his intent," she replies softly. "That

  I remember… and that I am not afraid to be seen anymore."

  Magnus

  nods slowly. There's no rebuke. Only silence, deep and heavy, the

  kind that hums with the unspoken understanding between three souls

  tempered by flame.

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