The
Trenches North of Karthane - Continuous
The
world hums, rather screams beneath Spartan's feet.
The
ground trembles in rhythm with the Veyr'Kael's song, a harmony that
feels like the bones of the world being ground into dust.
He
stands across from her, a colossus of molten armor and living
resonance, the air around him warping with each breath. His mouth
opens and the sound that emerges isn't a voice, it's a command.
"Kneel,
flesh-born."
Spartan
doesn't. She charges.
The
impact cracks the air itself. Her blade meets his, metal against pure
vibration, sparks flare, and the snow beneath their feet melts. The
Veyr'Kael moves with inhuman precision, each swing of his arm
carrying the gravity of a collapsing mountain. Spartan barely dodges
one strike, parries another, returns two more, her every move a
product of muscle memory carved by endless war.
She
adapts fast, reading the rhythm of his steps, but his music changes
key mid-fight, shifting the beat to disorient her balance. It's not a
duel. It's a song, and she's forced to dance to his tune.
He
steps forward, voice rising, his sword now glowing with concentric
rings of vibrating light.
"Do
you hear the truth of the world, little human?"
The
harmonic blade slashes. Air tears apart.
Spartan's
armor splits across the chestplate, clean, surgical. The edge never
touches her, but the vibration does, carving through alloy and skin
like silk.
Spartan
roars, pain and rage fusing into one raw, primal note. She lunges,
her sword a streak of light, driving forward with impossible
strength. The Veyr'Kael blocks, barely, and her strike still sends a
shockwave that cracks the nearby wall of petrified flesh.
But
he's smiling. Or something close to it.
The
Veyr'Kael lowers his tone. The world around her responds.
The
sound isn't heard, it's felt. It crawls into her armor, her mind, her
muscles.
Her
hand trembles. Her breathing stutters. Her heart begins to skip in
time with his song.
Then,
without meaning to, Spartan drives her sword down, into the earth.
Her
own motion. Her own strength. Not her own will.
The
blade sinks deep. The sound of metal piercing frozen dirt rings out
like a funeral bell.
She
strains, every muscle screaming, trying to pull free, but the
Veyr'Kael's voice holds her still, shaping her like a puppet of
sound.
"There
is no will beneath the song," he murmurs. "Only silence
waiting to be sung again."
Her
helmet trembles as she resists, growling, teeth bared, tendons
bulging. The Eldiravan raises his harmonic blade high, its edge
vibrating at a frequency that makes the hallucinated sky crack open.
He
steps closer.
"Kneel,
Vaer'Naskha."
And
her knees start to buckle.
But
before the final note strikes, before that shimmering edge can fall,
a bellow rips through the chaos.
A
sound more primal than any song.
The
wall explodes.
Petrified
hands and frozen torsos shatter like glass as Rho Voss bursts
through, covered in mud and blood and spectral light, his armor
swallowing the surrounding light.
He
charges like a meteor, his zweihander trailing arcs of molten energy,
and hits the Veyr'Kael square in the chest.
The
impact sends shockwaves through the hallucinated realm.
Bodies
embedded in stone scream silently as they're pulverized into dust.
The
Veyr'Kael is thrown backward, hard, slamming into another wall of
flesh-stone with enough force to crater it.
Rho
Voss roars, voice a guttural snarl filtered through vox distortion.
Spartan
rips her sword from the earth, gasping, shaking, vision swimming with
color and static. The song around her wavers, falters for the first
time.
The
Veyr'Kael staggers upright, body cracked, his glow dimming. His voice
trembles with disbelief.
"Two
hearts beating against the chord…"
Rho
Voss lifts his zweihander again, blade humming, and snarls through
his helm.
The
two of them, Spartan and Rho, stand side by side now, the
hallucinated world bleeding, unraveling around them. The Veyr'Kael's
tone climbs, desperate and furious, summoning its twin's aid.
Naburiel
and Ashurdan's Position - Continuous
The
world trembles like a struck drum.
Naburiel
and Ashurdan move through snow that's become ash, the air thick with
vibrating pressure. The second Veyr'Kael looms before them, its armor
a mirror of molten bronze and shifting sigils that crawl and breathe
with each note it sings.
Every
motion it makes carries sound. Each swing of its weapon, a glaive
made of pure resonance, sends a ripple through the earth that buckles
their knees and rattles the teeth behind their helmets.
Ashurdan
charges first, claymore raised high. His roar is swallowed by the
harmonic gale that rolls off the eldiravan like thunder.
The
Veyr'Kael barely moves, just tilts its head, a low hum vibrating the
air.
Ashurdan's
blade stops mid-swing.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to Royal Road for the genuine story.
His
limbs seize. His visor flickers.
"Ashurdan!"
Naburiel bellows, rushing in. His shield intercepts the counterstroke
that would've taken Ashurdan's head clean off. The impact sends him
skidding back several meters, boots gouging trenches in the frozen
mud.
The
Veyr'Kael steps forward, song deepening, its voice now layered,
harmonic, a chord of impossible precision. The sound warps the world
around them, bending their vision into spirals of color and static.
Then,
Ashurdan moves.
His
body jerks like a marionette yanked by invisible strings. His
claymore swings, not at the enemy, but at Naburiel.
The
massive blade crashes into Naburiel's shield, sparks scattering in
the warped air. He stumbles, caught off guard, bracing as the force
presses him down to one knee.
"Ashurdan!
It's me!" he shouts, his voice cutting through vox distortion.
Ashurdan's
movements are rigid, unnatural.
The
Veyr'Kael hums again, raising one hand, conducting the motion like a
cruel maestro.
Naburiel
grunts, his muscles screaming as Ashurdan brings the sword down
again, harder this time. The impact shakes his bones.
He
has no choice. He pivots, slams his shield forward, and bashes
Ashurdan in the chest.
The
blow knocks Ashurdan flat, sending him sprawling through a snowbank.
The song falters for a heartbeat.
Ashurdan
blinks. "What...what happened?"
"You
swung at me, brother," Naburiel snarls. "Now stay down."
The
Veyr'Kael tilts its head, voice shifting to a new tone, something
sharp and gloating. The very air seems to twist, preparing for
another manipulation.
But
Naburiel's already moving. He yanks a small, spherical device from
his belt, thumb flicking the pin loose.
"Let's
see how you like this." He rolls the flash grenade at the
Veyr'Kael's feet.
The
Eldiravan glances down, just as it detonates.
A
searing white light erupts, burning through the hallucinated sky. The
explosion produces a crack like the scream of a star, a frequency so
violent it rips the harmonics apart for several seconds.
All
three collapse, disoriented, deafened. The Veyr'Kael's song cuts out,
its balance broken. Naburiel's ears ring like sirens, his HUD
glitching and flaring, but he can still move.
He
lunges.
Slamming
his shield forward, he crashes into the Veyr'Kael's chest, driving it
back. The creature reels, and Ashurdan, groggy, furious, rises again.
"My
turn."
With
a howl, Ashurdan swings his claymore in a brutal, two-handed arc, the
blade biting deep into the Veyr'Kael's shoulder joint. The strike
sprays molten light and sound, discordant notes scattering into the
wind.
The
Eldiravan screams, its voice no longer music but static. It stumbles,
its harmonics collapsing into chaos.
Naburiel
slams his mace down, once, twice, three times, each hit a resounding
crack that drowns the creature's dying melody.
When
the Veyr'Kael finally falls, its body flickers between real and
unreal, between the hallucinated petrified flesh and the shining
alien armor.
Naburiel
leans on his shield, chest heaving.
Ashurdan
wipes his blade, the tremor still in his hand.
"If
you ever swing at me again," Naburiel growls, "I'll make
sure the Forger Himself hears about it."
Ashurdan
lets out a rough laugh. "Next time, brother, you can swing
first."
They
both glance toward the distorted horizon, toward the place where
Spartan and Rho Voss' fight still rages. The Veyr'Kael's death hasn't
changed the tide yet. There are more coming.
"We're
not done," Naburiel mutters, tightening his grip on his mace.
"Not even close."
The
Trenches, Red Baron's Company - Continuous
Red
Baron's APC screeches to a halt, the metal behemoth grinding through
churned soil and bodies alike. The rear hatch slams open, and
forty-nine Federalist soldiers spill out in disciplined chaos, rifles
braced, visors flaring as targeting optics ignite. The roar of the
battlefield swallows them whole, thunder of railfire, the deep, alien
resonance of harmonic energy, the screams of men and stone alike.
"Form
up! Cover the trench line!" Red Baron bellows, his voice cutting
through the din, modulated by his helmet. "Medicae, with me,
priority target is the Vardengard! Move, move, move!"
The
four Insarii Medicae leap from the last APC, pale robes fluttering
beneath Invictan-marked armor. Each bears the crimson insignia of
their order, hands already glowing faintly from the field-stims and
nanite packs pulsing along their gauntlets. They move with grim
precision, their purpose clear, they're not here for the soldiers.
They're here for the gods in flesh.
Ahead,
the earth is alive. Jagged ridges pulse as if breathing, and from
those wounds in the soil the Eldiravan emerge, colossal figures
wreathed in shimmer and echo, every motion a chord that bends the
air. Their harmonic chants ripple across the field, distorting sound,
light, even gravity in brief spasms of madness.
"Push
that flank!" Red Baron roars, motioning to the rightmost squad.
"Suppressive fire on that harmonic surge, I want silence!"
The
Federalists surge forward. Railfire screams through the haze, streaks
of blue-white slashing across the chaos. Invictan soldiers,
entrenched, bloodied, desperate, shout with renewed fury as
reinforcement arrives.
Then
Red Baron sees it, through the roiling dust, through the fracture of
terrain and sound, a lone figure in shattered Olympian armor, spear
in one hand, fighting like a cornered beast.
Samayel.
He's
alone against a Kairn-Vohr, the creature's crystalline body warping
the air with each swing of its blade. Every strike shatters sound
itself. The Vardengard's armor flares with impacts that would turn
tanks inside out.
"On
him!" Red Baron barks. "All fire, now!"
Dozens
of rifles pivot, target locks chiming. The air tears apart as
concentrated fire slams into the Kairn-Vohr, kinetic bursts and
energy bolts exploding against its carapace. The Eldiravan staggers,
screeching in tones that crack glass and burst eardrums. Samayel
takes the opening, lunging forward in a blur, spear driving deep into
the thing's chest.
It
spasms, the harmonic field collapsing in on itself, shrieking down
into a deafening silence.
The
Federalists hold their breath.
Then
Samayel turns toward them, armor fractured, one arm limp, the other
still gripping his blade, and without a word, he nods once.
Behind
him, the walls still stand. The others, Spartan, Rho Voss, Naburiel,
Ashurdan, Belqartis, Morus, are somewhere beyond those earthen
monoliths, locked in their own hells.
Red
Baron knows it. He feels it in his chest.
He
signals the Medicae forward. "Get him stabilized. Then we breach
those walls."
The
Medicae sprint, their gauntlets already flickering with restorative
blue light as they reach Samayel.
Red
Baron turns to his men, smoke curling around the edges of his helmet.
"You wanted gods?" he mutters. "Welcome to their war."
Samayel's
breaths come ragged, sharp and metallic through his helm. The
Kairn-Vohr's corpse still hums faintly behind him, harmonic echoes
rattling the fillings in his teeth. He turns toward the wall of
earth, no, not earth. Not to his eyes.
It
writhes.
A
mass of figures, half-formed and screaming, their faces molten and
hollow, hands clawing out from the dirt as if trying to drag him
under. Their mouths gape in perfect silence, yet he hears them,
pleading, wailing, accusing. The air around them smells of rust and
blood.
Samayel
charges forward, spear crackling with static, and drives it into the
wall. It splinters dirt and stone, but it's not enough. He slams his
armored fist next, again and again, denting the surface, screaming
wordlessly at the unyielding barrier.
"Samayel!
Stop!" one of the Insarii Medicae shouts, closing in with a
med-pack flaring blue. "You are bleeding out, your vitals are
collapsing!"
Two
of them latch onto him, nanite tendrils weaving through fractured
armor, but Samayel twists violently, throwing one off. "My
pack!" he snarls, voice animal and distorted. "They're
right there I can hear them!"
The
Medicae exchange a glance. To them, it's only a mound of churned soil
and rock, dense but climbable. "Then we go over," one says,
voice steady. "The wall is not that high, your jump packs can
clear it!"
Samayel
freezes, helm turning to the impossible wall again. The figures seem
to stare back, mouthing something just out of hearing. For a moment,
he hesitates, the hallucination pressing claws into his mind.
Then
a gauntleted hand lands on his shoulder, one of the Medicae, firm and
grounding. "They need you," she says softly. "Go."
He
exhales once, long and shaky. The zerkers in his veins burn like
wildfire. "Fine."
He
crouches, power cells whining as he primes the thrusters. The Medicae
follow his lead. In a flash of searing blue light, they leap, the
jump jets scream, dust explodes beneath them, and the world tilts.
They
crest the wall.
The
vision shifts mid-air, the screaming forms drop away, dissolving into
haze, and the reality below comes into brutal clarity.
Naburiel
and Ashurdan are locked in a desperate melee with a Veyr'Kael. The
Eldiravan moves like liquid fire, each gesture a chord that rends the
air. Harmonic blades bloom and vanish around him, carving shockwaves
that slice through armor plating. Naburiel's shield trembles under
the pressure, metal glowing from the heat of the sound alone.
Ashurdan's claymore meets every strike with thunderous clangs, sparks
cascading like meteors.
Samayel
lands hard, sliding into cover beside a toppled Invictan barricade,
the Medicae dropping in after him. Dust billows.
He
grips his spear tighter, eyes fixed on the duel ahead.
"Gods
below," one of the Medicae murmurs. "That's no soldier."
"No,"
Samayel rasps, the edge of a snarl beneath the word. "That's a
song."
And
with that, he surges forward.

