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CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE: Watch Me As I Touch The Sky

  Invictan

  FOB - Later That Night

  Wind

  whispers through the scaffolded towers and half-built emplacements,

  carrying the tang of burnt ozone and oil. Generators hum in the

  distance, the rhythmic thunk-thunk of the forge engines echoing

  across the plateau.

  By

  the central bonfire, the Vardengard sit in a circle of dull gold and

  flickering amber. Their armor catches the flame like molten glass,

  Olympian plate dulled by ash, scored by the day's engagements.

  Helmets lie beside them, impassive steel visages staring blankly into

  the dirt.

  Morus

  works methodically, the mortar of a wolf skull between his knees. He

  grinds the powdered remnants of Eldiravan bones into a paste, slow

  and deliberate, the sound like bone breaking under weight. The smell

  of iron and fungus hangs thick. Beside him, small vials of blood

  honey catch the firelight like molten rubies.

  "Still

  brewing death in a bowl, Morus?" Ashurdan's voice is a rasp,

  half-amused, half-wary.

  "Not

  death," Morus mutters. "Clarity."

  He

  lifts the pestle, smearing the glistening mixture against the rim. "I

  call it Wyrmglass. It cuts the noise. Sharpens the pulse. Like

  standing in the breath of a god."

  Rho

  Voss snorts. "You said that last time. Then vomited black bile

  for an hour."

  "Refinement,"

  Morus replies. "Every blade dulls before it's tempered."

  They

  chuckle, low and tired, the kind of laughter soldiers make to keep

  from feeling the silence closing in. Naburiel leans back, staring

  into the fire. The flames dance in the mirrored plates of his armor.

  "Venators,"

  he says finally. "Didn't think they'd crawl this far from their

  spires."

  Samayel

  spits into the dirt. "Not when the Eldiravan are bleeding us dry

  elsewhere. What do they even want here? Sanctity?"

  "Or

  trophies," Belqartis murmurs. "They've always loved those."

  A

  quiet settles. The kind that breathes between the crackle of flame

  and the distant hum of fortifications. The bonfire hisses as resin

  pops in the wood.

  Then,

  a shadow lengthens across the light.

  Magnus

  Tiberius approaches from the edge of the ring, helmet under one arm,

  the other resting loosely on the hilt of his blade. The embers paint

  his armor in shades of red and bronze. His eyes, the same molten blue

  hue that marks the bloodline of the Forger, catch the fire.

  The

  Vardengard straighten instinctively. Not out of fear, but reflex, the

  body recognizing hierarchy even before the mind does.

  "At

  ease," Magnus says, voice low, even. "I didn't come to

  count your posture."

  He

  steps closer, setting his helmet beside Rho's. The fire glints off

  its faceplate, the carved sigil of the Forger etched deep into the

  brow.

  For

  a moment, none of them speak. The wind presses at the perimeter

  walls. Somewhere, a watchman calls a report over the radio.

  Magnus

  lowers himself onto a crate near the fire. The light makes his

  features seem older than they are.

  "You're

  right," he says quietly, as if continuing their conversation

  without hearing it. "The Venators weren't supposed to be here.

  Which means they've broken their silence."

  He

  glances around the circle. "And if they've broken silence…

  something's coming."

  The

  wind moans across the plateau like a wounded thing. It snakes through

  the broken crown of monoliths, whistling low between the bones of the

  old gods, scattering embers from the Vardengard's fire into the dark.

  Magnus

  sits with them now, silent for a long while. The firelight dances

  across his armor, tracing scars in the alloy, glinting in his eyes

  like twin embers caught in the hollow of a forge. The others wait,

  Rho sharpening a knife against his thigh plate, Morus stirring his

  brew, Naburiel hunched forward, hands clasped.

  Finally,

  Magnus speaks.

  "We've

  all seen what comes of facing the Venators unprepared," he says,

  his voice low, steady, carrying just enough to cut through the

  crackle of the fire. "Rauvis was proof enough of that."

  The

  name alone draws a silence tighter than the cold. Rho's jaw flexes.

  Naburiel looks down at the flames. Even Morus stops stirring.

  Magnus

  glances between them, then fixes his gaze on Spartan.

  "I

  won't see it repeated," he says. "Not Rauvis. Not the

  capture. Not the… aftermath."

  The

  word hangs, heavy with unspoken memory.

  Spartan's

  eyes, burnished iron under the firelight, hold his. "It won't,"

  she says simply.

  "You

  can't promise that."

  "No,"

  she admits, tone level. "But I can promise that it won't be for

  lack of will."

  Magnus

  exhales slowly, his armor plates sighing with him. "You told me,

  the night before the council, that if the Venators came again, you'd

  give yourself to Absjorn if it meant ending the war."

  The

  circle stills. Naburiel's head lifts, frowning. Rho looks sharply

  toward her.

  Spartan

  doesn't flinch. "I said I'd do what's required."

  Magnus

  leans forward, elbows on his knees, eyes burning with quiet anger.

  "You

  will not martyr yourself, Spartan. I will not allow it."

  "You

  don't command my soul, Master."

  "No,"

  he says softly. "But I command the field, and the line between

  sacrifice and waste is drawn there."

  A

  silence stretches again, broken only by the hiss of frost melting

  near the fire.

  Naburiel

  leans back, his voice a rough calm. "We've bled too long beside

  her to think she'd go quietly into his hands again. None of us

  would."

  [Ita,]

  Rho's message pops up on all of their HUDS. [Absjorn wants revenge.

  We'll give him ashes instead.]

  Belqartis

  snorts, the sound almost a laugh. "Let them come. The Eldiravan,

  the Venators, hell, the gods themselves. The Vardengard were forged

  for this."

  Spartan

  rises slightly, her silhouette framed in flame and snowlight.

  "He's

  right," she says. "We were not made for retreat or

  surrender. We are the hammer of Invicta. As long as we stand on the

  front line, there is no defeat, only endurance. We are the flame that

  endures the forge."

  Her

  words settle into the circle like a weight and a vow. Even Magnus,

  for a moment, lets the tension ease from his jaw.

  He

  looks at each of them in turn, his chosen, his iron circle, the

  living embodiments of Invicta's will, and finally nods.

  "Then

  we endure," he murmurs. "But not blindly. The Venators will

  come in silence, cloaked in sanctity. We will meet them with the

  patience of iron. Every inch of this plateau, every stone and bone

  and trench, will serve as their pyre."

  Spartan

  studies Magnus through the heat shimmer of the fire. The flames paint

  shifting light across his armor, the brass edges of his pauldrons

  glowing like they've just left the forge. There's something in his

  stillness, something too deliberate.

  "You're

  afraid," she says quietly.

  The

  others turn toward her, Rho's brow furrows, Naburiel's expression

  hardens, but Magnus doesn't answer. He doesn't even look up. His gaze

  remains fixed on the fire, the reflection of it burning in his eyes.

  When

  he finally speaks, his voice is low, careful, measured as if each

  word must be drawn from molten metal and shaped into meaning.

  "When

  you and Rho were dragged back to Karthane," he says, "you

  were half dead. Rho missing an arm, you nearly cut in half. You

  shouldn't have lived, either of you."

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  The

  fire cracks. Frost shifts against steel.

  "If

  that's the mark Absjorn leaves when he fails," Magnus continues,

  "then yes. I am afraid. Because I know what he wants, and he

  won't stop until he has it."

  Silence

  follows, dense and brittle, like the air before a storm.

  Ashurdan

  leans forward, elbows resting on his knees, his eyes lit amber by the

  flames.

  "He's

  right," he says. "Absjorn doesn't stop. Doesn't yield. All

  our lives, we watched him climb over bodies to reach whatever throne

  he dreamed was his. Every loss only carved him sharper."

  Belqartis

  nods grimly. "He calls it faith. Says the Absolute tests him

  through our suffering."

  Naburiel

  spits into the fire. "Then the Absolute must be deaf, because I

  never heard Him answer."

  Samayel

  chuckles without humor. "Absjorn doesn't need answers. He only

  needs witnesses. And we all were."

  Magnus

  listens, unmoving. The firelight plays across his faceplate where it

  rests at his feet, its etched sigil gleaming faintly in the dark.

  Then

  Morus shifts. The pestle stills. He lifts the wolf skull from the

  ground, now full of the black, viscous mixture that glints like oil

  under the flames.

  "Then

  let the gods watch this instead," he mutters. He raises the

  skull, the scent sharp and metallic, almost sweet. "Wyrmglass.

  It burns fear out of the blood."

  He

  holds it toward Spartan.

  She

  doesn't hesitate. Her gauntlet closes around the skull, the faint

  hiss of her armor's vents audible as she lifts it to her lips. The

  liquid slides down like molten glass. She winces, exhales smoke.

  "Tastes

  like victory," she says.

  She

  passes it to Rho Voss, who grins and drinks deep, wiping his mouth

  with the back of his hand before sending it on.

  One

  by one, the skull makes its rounds, Ashurdan, Naburiel, Belqartis,

  Samayel. Each drinks, grimaces, and laughs under their breath as if

  defying the taste, the memory, the dread itself.

  When

  it reaches Samayel, he holds it a moment, gazing into the hollow eyes

  of the skull, then extends it toward Magnus.

  The

  General Supreme looks at it for a long moment. The fire dances across

  the bone, the dark mixture swirling inside like liquid night.

  Around

  him, the Vardengard watch in silence. The storm whispers against the

  plateau walls. The bones of the old gods rise around them like

  sentinels.

  Magnus

  reaches out, takes the skull in his hand.

  The

  flames bend slightly, as if drawn toward him.

  Magnus

  turns the skull in his hand, the firelight sliding across its curved

  surface. The stench of the wyrmglass cuts through the smoke and

  frost, sweet, metallic, and faintly fungal. It singes his nostrils

  like molten iron.

  He's

  had Velmira before, the Vardengard's old ritual draught, meant for

  vision and unity before great campaigns. It had been wild and

  ecstatic, a rush of sound and color, half pain, half clarity. But

  this… this feels alive. It hums faintly in his palm, a vibration

  that seems to echo through his bones.

  He

  glances up.

  The

  others are already gone.

  Samayel

  and Belqartis sit transfixed, faces lit in gold and crimson, eyes

  wide and glassy as they stare into the flames. The fire's dance seems

  to answer them, coiling higher, shifting shape, whispering in tongues

  only they can hear. Naburiel and Ashurdan gaze into the distance,

  past the fire and the dark, toward the massive stone arches that

  climb into the mountains. Their pupils are dilated to black wells,

  reflecting the bone-white silhouettes against the sky.

  Even

  Spartan sits still as a statue, her eyes half-lidded, breathing slow,

  her face turned toward the bones that stretch into the storm.

  Only

  Morus remains himself. He sits cross-legged, elbows on his knees, the

  glow of the fire painting his features in half-shadow. His grin is

  knowing.

  He

  leans forward, his voice a low rasp.

  "Careful,

  General. This one's not Velmira. Velmira shows you the world's

  breath. Wyrmglass shows you its teeth."

  Magnus

  looks down at the skull. The liquid within ripples as if disturbed by

  something unseen.

  Morus

  tilts his head, grin widening.

  "Addictive,

  too. Once you drink, the silence will never satisfy you again."

  Magnus'

  jaw tightens. He glances once more at his Vardengard, his iron

  circle, now staring through worlds unseen. He breathes out, slow,

  controlled, and lifts the skull.

  The

  liquid touches his tongue. It burns. Bitter, copper-thick, earthy

  like old blood. His throat convulses, but he forces it down. The

  taste lingers, ancient and metallic, like the smell before lightning

  strikes.

  He

  lowers the skull, passes it back to Morus, his expression unreadable.

  "Satisfied?"

  he mutters.

  Morus

  chuckles, voice soft, almost kind. "Don't panic when you open

  your eyes."

  Magnus

  frowns. "What, "

  The

  world tilts.

  The

  fire surges in his vision, a molten sun that consumes everything. The

  sound of crackling wood stretches into a low, resonant hum that fills

  the air, the ground, his chest. The plateau melts into gold and

  shadow. He blinks, but when he opens his eyes again...

  The

  bones of the old gods are moving.

  They

  shift under the moonlight, their spines rippling like something

  breathing beneath the earth. The air itself vibrates, alive with a

  thousand whispers that sound like his own name spoken in different

  tongues.

  He

  gasps, but the sound doesn't leave his throat. The flames pulse in

  rhythm with his heartbeat. The wind hums like a choir through the

  arches.

  The

  sky is no longer black. It glows faintly red, as though the Forge

  itself burns behind the clouds.

  The

  wyrmglass burns slow through Magnus' veins, settling in his chest

  like molten iron cooling to form.

  The

  fire before him quivers, elongates, becomes something else, a pulsing

  wound of light and shadow breathing in rhythm with his own heart.

  The

  plateau shifts.

  The

  ground exhales.

  Stone

  turns to something living, a coral mass of ridged, spiraling growth

  that seems half-mineral, half-flesh. The shapes pulse faintly beneath

  the thin crust of ice, translucent veins running through the rock,

  glowing with dull red light like buried embers. Magnus blinks, but

  the vision holds, the whole world humming, resonating in some dark

  key beneath creation.

  The

  monoliths around the plateau are no longer stones. They are forms,

  towering human silhouettes, twisted and fused together, faces

  stretched into silent screams, mouths open but empty, eyes hollow and

  blind. Some reach toward the sky, others seem to claw their way out

  of the ground, their hands petrified in desperation.

  The

  air reeks of copper and dust. The snow underfoot is ash now,

  weightless and dry, sifting between the seams of his armor.

  Magnus

  slowly turns his head, every motion echoing as though underwater.

  The

  great serpent-bones that loop into the mountains are moving. The

  massive ridges undulate like breath, as if something buried beneath

  Nirna stirs, restless and ancient. The polished surface ripples, not

  smooth now but layered in scales that flex like muscle.

  A

  whisper runs through the wind, thousands of voices murmuring all at

  once, dissonant and overlapping, forming not words but sensation. It

  crawls along his skin like frostbite.

  He

  breathes in through his teeth.

  "Morus…"

  The

  shaman sits a few paces away, shadowed, calm amid the nightmare. His

  grin remains, faintly illuminated by the ghostly glow of the

  wyrmglass burning through his veins.

  Magnus'

  voice is quiet, almost reverent. "You said this world had

  teeth."

  Morus

  chuckles, hoarse and distant. "Ita. You're standing in its

  mouth."

  Magnus'

  hand flexes against his knee. The coral-flesh ground pulses faintly

  beneath his touch.

  "How

  long does it last?"

  Morus

  glances down at the skull in his lap, swirls what remains of the

  draught, and lifts it to his lips. The liquid reflects the world as a

  black mirror.

  "Not

  sure," he says between slow swallows. "Longer than Velmira,

  before it fades. We have not tested it that far. Only the third time

  we've drank it." He trails off, expression half amusement, half

  warning.

  Magnus

  looks away.

  The

  shapes on the horizon twitch and shift, the towering forms of the old

  gods' bones writhing as if caught in some slow, silent agony. The sky

  above bleeds between colors, rust, violet, ember-orange, clouds

  coiling like smoke over a dying forge.

  In

  the periphery of his vision, he can see his Vardengard, statues of

  flesh and armor, each lost to their own communion. Spartan stands at

  the fire's edge, motionless, her face lifted toward the writhing

  horizon. Naburiel murmurs something, words too faint to discern, his

  voice thick with awe.

  Magnus

  swallows hard. The wyrmglass hums in his blood like the heartbeat of

  a planet.

  "You've

  brought us into the bones of something older than gods," he

  mutters.

  Morus

  only smiles, watching as a flake of ash drifts past his face and

  dissolves midair.

  "Older

  than memory," he corrects. "Older than the Forger's first

  spark."

  The

  wind carries a low, hollow moan through the arches, neither storm nor

  spirit, but something in between, something aware.

  And

  Magnus, for the first time, begins to wonder if the world they've

  built their empire upon is still asleep.

  The

  air stills.

  Spartan's

  head snaps to the north, the motion sharp and immediate, almost

  mechanical. At the same instant, Morus' gaze jerks in the same

  direction, his blue-lit eyes wide and fixed on the far mountains

  where the serpentine bones vanish into the shroud of ash and snow.

  Magnus

  catches the movement, straightens. The sound reaches him a heartbeat

  later.

  A

  howl; long, drawn, mournful. It rolls through the air like thunder

  through a hollowed lung. It isn't Vardengard. It isn't wolf. It isn't

  anything he's ever heard. The note drags through the marrow of the

  world, layered and low, trembling with something that feels half

  grief, half hunger.

  The

  others don't react; they sit still, lost in their visions, oblivious.

  Only the three of them; Magnus, Spartan, Morus, seem to hear it.

  Spartan

  rises. Her movements are calm but too fluid, as though some invisible

  thread pulls her toward the sound. The firelight streaks across her

  armor, dimmed now in this grey-red world.

  "Spartan."

  She

  doesn't respond. She walks straight for the northern edge of the

  plateau, her gait even, her breath slow.

  Morus

  doesn't move. His staff lies across his knees, both hands gripping it

  tight. The faint veins of wyrmglass glow through his flesh, pulsing

  with the same rhythm as the distant call. His voice comes low, almost

  a murmur:

  "Don't

  wake it. Not yet…"

  Magnus

  glances between them, the entranced, the watcher, and then he's

  moving too. His feet drag through ash where snow should be, every

  step vibrating through the coral-like stone beneath. The air tastes

  like old copper and smoke.

  The

  howl comes again, closer this time, resonating through the bones of

  the mountains. A low chorus follows it, whispers, or echoes, or

  something alive inside the wind.

  By

  the time Magnus reaches the edge, Spartan is already there. She

  stands tall and still, armor rimed in faint frost and drifting ash.

  Below, the world is a blur of skeletal ridges and half-buried shapes;

  it feels like looking down into the ribs of a dead titan.

  Magnus

  stops beside her. The pull in his chest grows stronger, like gravity

  reversed, dragging his heart toward the sound.

  "Spartan,"

  he says, steady but low.

  She

  tilts her head, her eyes still locked on the distant ridge line where

  the serpent's bones vanish into the storm. The air there glows

  faintly blue, just enough to suggest movement.

  Her

  voice comes quiet, barely above a whisper. "You hear it, too?"

  Magnus'

  throat feels dry. "I do."

  "What

  is it?"

  He

  looks out into the storm. The glow pulses once, faint, distant, like

  breath caught beneath the snow. Then silence. Only the wind, the

  endless gray, the endless whispering of the world's dead stone.

  "I

  don't know," he says.

  Her

  fingers flex at her side, the sound of metal brushing against metal.

  "Nor

  do I," she breathes.

  The

  last of the howl fades into nothing, and yet it leaves a resonance,

  an echo under their skin, as if the sound has lodged itself inside

  their bones.

  Behind

  them, Morus watches from by the fire, his blue-lit eyes narrow and

  unblinking. He murmurs to himself, almost inaudible,

  "It

  knows we're listening."

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