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CHAPTER FORTY-TWO: Hello, Darkness, My Old Friend

  Magnus

  Tiberius’ Encampment – Some Time Later

  The

  war table hums. A cold blue light washes over Magnus Tiberius’

  scarred face as he stands alone in the mobile command sanctum, hands

  braced against the holotable’s edge. The room sways gently with the

  wind battering the metal hull from outside, but Magnus doesn’t

  waver. His eyes, glowing blue, sleepless, relentless, scan the

  shifting holographic map.

  Every

  unit. Every squad. Every life under his command. All of it pulses

  beneath his fingertips.

  The

  Venators’ battle, far to the northwest, nearly two hundred miles,

  flares like a red wound on the map. Dozens of markers flicker as

  units clash, rotate, fall back, surge forward again. The eldiravan

  icons swirl like a stormfront around them, singing their war-songs

  Magnus can almost feel, even through silent projection.

  Sixty

  miles south of that, the Venator encampment glows a steady amber. A

  hornet’s nest, shaken but not yet ruptured.

  Magnus

  zooms in with a gesture. Three blue markers move in tight proximity

  on a sheer mountainside.

  SPARTAN

  – RHO VOSS – SAMAYEL

  Alive.

  Mobile. Undetected.

  Good.

  Nearby

  blink the three smaller green signatures of the Federalists:

  RED

  BARON – ARTURO – LIAM

  huddled

  close like sparks protected by larger flames.

  Magnus

  exhales slowly through his nose. Relief? Not quite. Relief is a

  luxury he fed to the war long ago. But he notes their survival, and

  that is enough.

  To

  the east, multiple flashing zones mark engagements with the Eldiravan

  vanguard. Fire-teams advance, retreat, reposition, adapt. Every

  minute yields dead on both sides.

  Beyond

  that frontline, three lone markers sweep through the terrain like

  knives:

  NABURIEL

  – ASHURDAN – BELQARTIS

  Running

  constant scouting sweeps, updating terrain mapping, identifying

  Eldiravan chokepoints, weaknesses, supply trails. Their efficiency

  shows. The eastern battlefield has begun to shift, not toward

  victory, but toward equilibrium.

  For

  now, that is the closest thing to a miracle.

  Magnus

  reaches for the console, enlarging the heat map of casualties. The

  patterns are improving. His soldiers are improving. He sees it in

  their formations, tighter than before. He sees it in their

  engagements, more controlled, less reckless. He sees it in the way

  they counter Eldiravan songcasting now, despite having no song of

  their own.

  They

  are learning. Every death has taught them something. Every fallen

  Invictan has sharpened the ones who survive.

  Magnus

  straightens, folding his hands behind his back. His armor plates

  shift softly with the motion. His gaze stays locked on the shimmering

  map, on the threads of battle weaving across the continent.

  There

  is hope. Small, fragile, faint as the last coal in a dying furnace.

  But hope nonetheless.

  If

  they hold the line…

  If

  the Praevectus continue to grow…

  If

  humanity can survive its own fractures long enough to rise together…

  They

  can win this planet back.

  And

  Magnus Tiberius knows as surely as he knows the weight of every

  soldier’s life in his ledger, if

  Nirna

  can be reclaimed, then so can the galaxy.

  One

  war at a time. One battlefield at a time. One hard, merciless victory

  at a time.

  Then

  Spartan’s voice comes in over his radio, “Master, do you copy?”

  A

  flicker of Magnus’ eyes opens his microphone implant, “I copy you

  loud and clear, Spartan.”

  “Master,”

  she reports, breath steady, “Venators

  and eldiravan are still tearing into each other. Looks like the

  Venators finally learned something, either that or the ravens

  got sloppy. Hard to tell. Absjorn’s forces are hurting, though.

  Priest Thaneus is leading this battalion.”

  Magnus

  narrows his eyes, adjusting the northwest projection. Thaneus. A

  zealot, but a competent one. Dangerous in a different way from

  Absjorn.

  His

  voice comes low, gravel-lined. “And

  Absjorn himself?”

  A

  brief crackle. Then Spartan again, curt and certain, “Negative.

  No sign of him. Samayel says Absjorn and Benedan were at the

  encampment when the Inquisitor’s body was discovered. They haven’t

  moved since. If you want, we can send Samayel back, see what the

  clergy are plotting.”

  Magnus

  doesn’t hesitate. “Do

  it. Keep eyes on Absjorn. If he starts moving, I want to know before

  he takes his second step.”

  “Understood.”

  Static

  hums. Then Spartan’s tone shifts, lighter, but edged.

  “Master…

  any more sightings of that black eldiravan? The one on my trail.”

  Magnus’

  fingers still over the controls.

  He

  forces the maps eastward, enlarging a cluster of white heat

  signatures, cold spots among the wreckage. Naburiel’s last report

  scrolls across the side panel.

  Another

  patrol, butchered. Bodies twisted. Armor carved open with precision.

  No footprints. No tracks. Just the kill.

  He

  answers. “Naburiel’s

  team found another Eldiravan patrol torn apart by a lone assailant.

  Same patterns. Same brutality.” He

  pauses, not for dramatic effect, but because he hates the next words.

  “We cannot confirm

  it’s the one hunting you. But it fits.”

  A

  long silence presses through the comm line.

  Spartan

  breaks it first, dry, wry, unflinchingly fearless. “…Figures.”

  But

  beneath the joke he hears the tension.

  He

  hears the calculation.

  He

  hears the readiness for a fight she knows she might not win.

  Magnus’

  jaw tightens. “Stay

  sharp, Spartan. That thing is not a common soldier. If it engages

  you, call for extraction. I don’t want you fighting it alone.”

  A

  quiet chuckle answers him. “Master…

  it might not give me a choice.”

  The

  line goes dead.

  Magnus

  stares at her fading marker on the map.

  A

  storm is forming on multiple fronts. And one shadow is hunting his

  best warrior.

  He

  straightens, expression carved from iron. If the black eldiravan

  wants Spartan, then Magnus will be ready for it.

  “Master…

  permission to hunt the black one. If I track its—”

  Magnus

  exhales through his nose, already forming the answer, firm,

  unyielding, absolute.

  “No.

  You will not—” But he never finishes.

  Spartan

  never finishes.

  The

  universe finishes for both of them.

  A

  voice bursts through Spartan’s armor mic, distant, muffled,

  frantic: “LOOK OUT!”

  Arturo’s voice.

  Magnus

  doesn’t even hear the breath before Spartan’s roar tears through

  the implant, loud enough to rattle his teeth: “DOWN!”

  Then

  the world detonates.

  A

  deafening crack. A warping screech of compressed audio. The pop of

  the radio overloading. And then a rushing, monstrous sound like the

  entire mountain inhaled.

  Static.

  White noise. The cold.

  Magnus

  leans in, voice sharp and authoritative, “Spartan.

  Report. Spartan, status. Now.”

  Nothing.

  The

  feed jitters, black bars slicing across the screen.

  Her

  voice returns in fragments, battered and breathless:

  “…weren’t…

  aiming at us…” Another distortion, she’s

  shouting again, voice strained, panicked, “—RHO!”

  Magnus’

  fingers fly across the war-table. Spartan’s visor feed blooms open

  on the holoscreen just in time for him to watch hell swallow them.

  A

  wave of white collapses beneath her feet, snow, ice, crushing force.

  The horizon tilts violently. The view tumbles, spinning, collapsing.

  Spartan drops fifty feet down a sheer slope, her armor screaming

  alarms, the audio a violent blur of scraping metal, shattering ice,

  and her own ragged breathing.

  But

  she never stops looking. She never stops fighting. She spots her

  trajectory, sees the rocks they’re heading toward, sees the bodies

  tumbling with her. Arturo is ahead of her, sliding uncontrollably.

  She

  lunges through the chaos, armored fingers locking around the back of

  his suit. She drags him toward her, anchoring him.

  She

  reaches for Liam. Her gauntlet stretches. The snow roars louder. Liam

  is just out of range.

  Just...Too...Far….

  The

  feed shakes violently as the avalanche hurls all three into another

  drop.

  Magnus

  stands frozen, jaw tight, eyes burning into the holoscreen. It is all

  he can do not to scream her name.

  Spartan’s

  Position – Continuous

  Spartan

  blinks through the cold snow on her visor, chest heaving beneath her

  armor, gloved fingers tightening around Arturo’s arm to steady him.

  She exhales a gust of white mist and mutters under her breath,

  cursing the damned radio, every time she reaches out to Magnus,

  calamity follows. The thought makes her smirk, bitter, despite the

  ache in her muscles.

  Arturo

  shakes off the snow, brushing icy flakes from his shoulders,

  murmuring a quiet, embarrassed thanks. Spartan merely grunts, letting

  him right himself. Liam groans next to them, pain etched into every

  movement, half-buried in the drifts. He scrambles to his feet,

  brushing snow from his hair and clothes, eyes scanning the

  surrounding peaks.

  And

  then, Spartan sees them.

  The

  grey dapple of massive hooves against the snow. The glint of polished

  armor and banners snapping in the wind. The unmistakable figure of

  Priest Thaneus, sitting high on his titansteed, calm, collected, yet

  radiating authority. He holds his staff loosely in one hand, the

  golden cross atop it catching the dim sunlight, glinting like

  judgment itself. Around him, his battalion forms a rigid semicircle,

  Lieutenants and Venators in perfect order, cavalry units fanning

  outward, sealing Spartan’s flank, cutting off escape.

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  Spartan

  rises to a crouch, visor fogged with breath, and tilts her head back

  slightly to meet Thaneus’ gaze. He leans forward, removing his

  helmet with a slow, deliberate motion, placing it carefully in his

  lap. His expression is one of cold pride, almost a predator surveying

  a wounded pack.

  “Ah,”

  he begins, voice smooth, measured, dangerous. “The Vardengard comes

  to us at last. And with her pets, no less.” He gestures casually to

  Arturo and Liam, the sound of his staff scraping the snow punctuating

  his words. “How… entertaining.”

  Spartan

  says nothing. She tilts her visor to narrow her eyes, scanning the

  battalion around him, noting formations, distances, and potential

  weaknesses, her body tense, every muscle coiled.

  Thaneus’

  gaze sweeps over her, assessing, weighing. “I could end this now,”

  he continues, voice low and deliberate, “and yet I find… mercy

  more compelling.” He taps his staff against his boot, snow

  scattering. “You stand here, armored, proud, and yet trapped,

  caught by my kindness, by the mercy of your enemies. Tell me,

  Spartan, how does it feel to be at the mercy of a Priest?”

  The

  wind howls, carrying the cries of battle from below, yet around this

  small plateau, the world seems to shrink, focused entirely on the two

  of them. Spartan exhales slowly, the snow crunching beneath her

  boots, her fingers brushing her weapon instinctively, knowing that

  mercy here is merely a prelude to judgment.

  Arturo

  and Liam stiffen behind her, instinctively forming a small shield

  around her. But Spartan shifts slightly, just enough for her presence

  to loom larger than theirs.

  Spartan’s

  visor angles up, the cold wind hissing across the faceplate. Her body

  relaxes, not in surrender, but in coiled challenge. Her voice lowers

  to something colder than the mountain air, something carved from iron

  and violence. “Mercy?” she echoes. “Cassiel thought the same

  once.” A beat. “I tore his head off.”

  The

  words drop like a blade. Thaneus stiffens, only slightly, but it’s

  enough. The edges of his calm crack, disbelief and insult warring

  behind his eyes. Cassiel? Dead? And by her hand? Absurd.

  Impossible. An affront to everything he believes a Priest to be.

  But

  before he can decide whether to laugh or smite her, the ridge above

  them erupts.

  Two

  Olympian suits drop from the cliff in a thunder of snow and metal,

  slamming into the ground with bone-rattling force. Snow explodes

  outward in a blinding wave. The landing shakes the frozen earth.

  Samayel lands first, Red Baron curled protectively in one arm; he

  releases the young man the instant they steady. Rho Voss hits a

  heartbeat later, his armor’s mass cracking the ice beneath his

  boots.

  The

  Venator battalion recoils in two neat steps, weapons raised. The

  titansteed rears and shrieks.

  Spartan

  doesn’t flinch.

  Thaneus

  keeps his composure better than his men, but his eyes narrow. He had

  not expected reinforcements this quickly.

  He

  finally gathers enough disbelief to scoff, an indignant exhale, the

  beginnings of a laugh edged with righteous anger.

  “You?

  Tear off the head of Priest Cassiel?” His tone rides the line

  between mocking and offended. “Childish boasting. Cassiel was

  chosen, blessed. A mortal girl in a machine could no more

  kill him than she could kill the Absolute Himself.”

  Arturo

  steps forward. Too far forward.

  Spartan’s

  arm snaps out to stop him, but he twists free, just enough to break

  her grip. He pushes ahead of her, boots crunching through the snow,

  his breath fogging in uneven bursts.

  “Wait—”

  Spartan mutters, knowing this is a mistake, reaching for him again.

  Too late.

  “Priest

  Thaneus!” Arturo calls out. His voice cracks, but the boy stands

  his ground. “Do you speak English?”

  Thaneus

  pauses. The titansteed beneath him shifts, snorting plumes of white.

  The priest studies Arturo, a flicker of confusion, then interest,

  then something colder. After a long moment, he inclines his head.

  “…I

  do.”

  That’s

  all Arturo needs.

  “Then

  listen to me,” he says, louder now. “You don’t have to fight

  us. Any of us. The Eldiravan, they are the enemy. They

  burned your cities same as ours. If humanity doesn’t stand

  together, we’re all going to die. All our nations, all our faiths,

  everything we’ve built; gone. You have to see that!”

  Spartan

  fights the urge to drag him backward. Even Samayel shifts uneasily.

  Rho Voss stays absolutely still, his visor fixed on Thaneus.

  Thaneus

  stares down at Arturo the way one might study an animal that

  wandered, trembling, out of the woods.

  A

  lamb. Lost. Bleating at shadows it can’t comprehend.

  “Boy…”

  Thaneus says softly, almost pityingly. “This is not a fable told

  before bedtime. Nor is it a story where all men join hands to triumph

  over a common foe.” He leans forward slightly, eyes hard as glacier

  stone. “You play at war. You grasp at heaven and earth, but

  understand neither.”

  Arturo’s

  jaw tightens.

  Thaneus

  continues, voice dripping with cold certainty, “This is not a

  children’s fairy tale. This is judgment.”

  Arturo

  doesn’t back down. His breath quakes in the frozen air, but he

  lifts his chin.

  “There

  is a scripture you follow that calls for unity,” he says.

  “Peace among brethren. Mercy before judgment. The Absolute

  teaches—”

  Thaneus

  shifts. Only slightly, but it is enough to say he is listening.

  Encouraged,

  Arturo continues, words tumbling out in a rush of faith and

  desperation.

  “I’ve

  talked to the Vardengard. I’ve read what little your texts share

  with ours. You speak of the First Covenant, of man standing together

  under the gaze of the Absolute. In my faith, too, we’re taught that

  divided kingdoms fall. That brothers who turn their swords on each

  other invite their downfall. You know this. You know unity

  is the will of God, of the Absolute. So why are we fighting each

  other when the Eldiravan are slaughtering us all?”

  A

  ripple of surprise passes through Thaneus’ expression, quick,

  almost imperceptible. The battalion murmurs behind him. Even the

  titansteed flicks an ear, sensing a shift in its rider.

  Then

  Thaneus laughs. A low, disbelieving rumble that builds, rolling out

  across the snow.

  “You

  speak of the Covenant?” he says, amusement curling his lips. “You

  quote our scriptures back to me?” He tilts his head,

  studying Arturo again, this time with a strange, almost appreciative

  scrutiny. “Tell me, boy… are you a warrior-priest among your

  people?”

  Arturo

  swallows. “No. I’m not. But I’m a believer. A devout one.”

  “That,”

  Thaneus replies, “is what surprises me most.”

  His

  tone shifts, soft, almost gentle. Dangerously gentle. “You waste

  your devotion here. Waste it on these…” He gestures at Spartan

  with the faintest tap of his staff. “…heretics. These forged

  demons wearing skin of man.”

  Samayel

  stiffens. Rho Voss’ gauntlet twitches toward his weapon. Spartan

  remains motionless, visor locked on Thaneus.

  Thaneus

  leans forward slightly in the saddle, voice lowering with solemn

  conviction.

  “Boy,”

  he says, as though speaking a sacred truth, “you are kind.

  Merciful. You have been misled, but your heart is good. The Absolute

  cherishes hearts like yours.”

  Arturo

  takes a step back. Just one.

  Thaneus

  extends a hand, not reaching, but offering.

  “Leave

  them,” he says. “Leave these heathens behind. Ignore their

  whispers, their corruption, their lies. Walk with us. With the

  Venators. With me. You will be welcomed. Cherished.

  Protected. Given purpose under the true banner of man.”

  The

  snow falls in absolute silence. The Vardengard freeze. Even Spartan’s

  breath seems to stop.

  Thaneus

  smiles. “Turn now, boy,” he finishes softly. “Before their

  darkness consumes you as well.”

  Arturo’s

  breath trembles in the frozen air. He looks at Thaneus, towering,

  radiant in his own terrible way. He looks back at Spartan, scarred

  metal, hard lines, a figure shaped by war and survival.

  A

  heartbeat. Two. Three….

  There

  is a part of him, deep, buried, old as faith, that wants to

  step toward Thaneus. Toward the hymns he half-recognizes. Toward the

  order that feels like a reflection of stories he grew up with.

  But

  then he remembers Spartan’s words, heavy and ancient: “Don’t

  mistake resemblance for kinship.”

  He

  remembers Samayel’s blunt certainty. He remembers the way Spartan

  threw herself over him in the avalanche without hesitation. He

  remembers that these people, whatever they are, have saved his life

  more times than he can count.

  Arturo

  steps back. Shaking his head. “I can’t,” he says quietly. “I

  won’t. I’m not leaving anyone behind.”

  Thaneus

  studies him, expression unreadable beneath the snow-dusted light.

  Arturo takes another step back, standing firmly between Spartan’s

  group and the Venators’ encirclement.

  “You

  want me to walk away,” Arturo continues, “but you’re not

  offering peace. You’re offering surrender. You’re offering me a

  place while planning to slaughter the others.”

  Thaneus

  laughs, rich and cold and almost pitying.

  “Oh,

  child,” he says. “You think you understand our purpose?” He

  shakes his head slowly, tightening his grip on the golden

  cross-topped staff. “We

  do not aim to kill the Vardengard,” he says. “We aim to

  save them.”

  Snow

  swirls between them like drifting ash.

  “We

  see their affliction. Their corruption. The demons inside their

  flesh.” His eyes flick briefly toward Samayel, then Rho Voss, then

  Spartan, his expression softening into something disturbingly

  compassionate. “We do not wish harm upon them. No… far from it.

  We wish only to bring them back into the Light of the Absolute.”

  Samayel

  snorts. Rho Voss’ fingers flex. Spartan remains utterly still.

  Thaneus

  goes on as though he hasn’t noticed.

  “And

  the Federation?” Another soft smile. “Your people are misguided,

  but not beyond redemption. It is the duty of all Praevectus to guide

  humanity, to shepherd it. To correct its course.” His eyes harden,

  just slightly. “But we cannot heal the flock while the wolves stand

  among them.”

  Arturo’s

  jaw tightens. “You mean them,” he says, nodding back toward

  Spartan, Rho, Samayel.

  Thaneus

  inclines his head. “They are not wolves by choice,” he says

  gently. “They are wolves because demons have made them so. Their

  souls…” A breath.“…cry out for liberation.”

  Arturo

  feels a chill crawl down his spine that has nothing to do with the

  cold. He turns slightly, enough to catch Spartan’s visor. Enough to

  see Rho Voss shift his footing. Enough to feel Samayel’s silent,

  bracing presence.

  Then

  he looks back at Thaneus, voice steadier than he feels. “You’re

  wrong,” Arturo says. “They’re not demons. They’re not

  possessed. They’re not monsters.”

  Thaneus’

  smile is soft. “Child,” he says, “that is exactly what someone

  possessed would say.”

  The

  entire battalion shifts as one, shields bracing, weapons lowering,

  not attacking yet, but ready.

  Around

  them the mountains fall into breathless silence.

  And

  in that silence, Spartan’s gauntlet closes slowly, inch by inch,

  around the grip of her weapon.

  Samayel

  steps forward before Spartan can speak, before she can even shift her

  weight. His voice cuts the cold like a blade dragged over stone.

  “Don’t listen to him, Arturo,” Samayel snaps. “All they do is

  lie. Twist the world to fit their scripture. Fabricate whatever makes

  them feel righteous. They’ll call themselves heroes while they

  butcher you in the snow.”

  Thaneus

  tilts his head, studying Samayel as though peering through fog. Then

  recognition.

  A

  slow smile spreads across his face. “…Samayel?”

  Samayel’s

  shoulders go rigid.

  Thaneus

  breathes a soft laugh, almost delighted. “So it is you.”

  He leans forward slightly atop his titansteed, eyes brightening.

  “Alive. After all this time. My favorite little Vardengard… I

  mourned you, you know. I thought Absjorn had truly lost you.”

  Samayel

  growls, a low, animal sound vibrating through the air.

  Thaneus

  continues, amusement warming his voice. “And if you’re alive…

  then the rest of your pack must be as well. Which means…” He

  chuckles. “Naburiel lied to Absjorn. How bold of him. I should

  congratulate him.”

  Samayel

  steps forward another pace, teeth bared behind the mask of his hood

  and armor. “I’m not going back,” he snarls. “None of us are.

  You’ll never touch another Vardengard again.”

  Thaneus

  simply laughs. A deep, rolling sound that echoes off the icy cliffs.

  “Oh, Samayel. You always were dramatic.” He lifts his staff,

  slow, ceremonial, its golden cross glittering even in the dim light.

  “All

  units!” Thaneus calls, voice ringing like a cathedral bell through

  the snow. “Seize them. All of them.”

  A

  hundred boots shift. Shields lock. Spears lower. Cavalry tightens its

  noose around the ridge.

  Spartan’s

  visor lowers. Rho Voss slides one foot back, weight dropping into a

  predatory stance. Red Baron grabs Liam by the shoulder, dragging him

  behind a jut of frozen stone. Arturo’s breath catches in his

  throat, but he stands his ground.

  And

  Samayel… Samayel smiles. A thin, feral thing. Because if Thaneus

  wants his “favorite little Vardengard,” he’s about to learn

  exactly what Samayel has become.

  Samayel

  breaks. There is no warning, no shout, no breath drawn, no glance

  traded. Just the sound of something snapping inside him.

  He

  moves. Faster than the Federalists can register. Faster than Spartan

  can intercept. Arturo reflexively steps aside as a blur of shimmering

  black tears past him, the snow erupting in a gust.

  Samayel

  is gone, hurtling across the plateau, spear in hand, every ounce of

  caged terror and rage twisted into momentum.

  “Samayel!”

  Spartan lunges after him, too slow by a heartbeat, fingers closing on

  empty air.

  Rho

  Voss swears under his breath. The Venators react instantly. Shields

  raise. Spears pivot. Cavalry braces. But Samayel isn’t aiming for

  them. He’s aiming for one man.

  Priest

  Thaneus.

  The

  titansteed senses the killing intent before its rider does. It

  screams, rears high, iron spikes along its hooves glinting wickedly.

  Snowflakes freeze midair as the beast’s front legs crash down.

  Samayel slips beneath them with a speed that defies even

  Venator-trained eyes.

  Thaneus’

  laughter booms across the ridge.

  Samayel’s

  spear thrusts forward, straight for the priest’s breastplate and

  Thaneus catches the blade between two fingers. Effortless.

  “Samayel,”

  Thaneus chides, voice warm as a teacher correcting a child’s grip,

  “who do you think taught you to wield this weapon?”

  Samayel

  snarls, bracing, trying to wrench the spear free. Thaneus doesn’t

  budge. Not an inch. With a smooth twist of his wrist, he rips the

  spear from Samayel’s grasp.

  The

  titansteed pivots sharply, its flank slamming into Samayel, turning

  its body with primitive, brutal efficiency. A rear leg kicks out. The

  hoof slams into Samayel’s chestplate, hard enough to bend

  titanium.

  The

  impact sounds like a car crash muffled under snow.

  Samayel

  flies backward, tumbling across the ice, carving a trench in the

  drift before finally skidding to a stop, coughing, armor dented

  inward, breath stolen from his lungs.

  Arturo

  shouts his name. Rho Voss lowers into a ready stance. Spartan’s

  hands curl into fists.

  Thaneus

  spins the captured spear once, testing its balance, smiling like a

  father reclaiming a lost toy.

  “Come

  now,” he calls out, voice ringing with amusement and cruel

  fondness. “Let’s not make this harder than it must be.”

  Spartan

  breaks into a sprint, boots carving trenches through the snow, breath

  steaming through her helm as a string of coarse curses slips out.

  “Should’ve

  listened,

  Arturo!” she snaps, voice sharp as steel striking steel. “Now go,

  help him before he freezes to death!”

  Red

  Baron and Liam don’t wait. They rush to Samayel’s crumpled form,

  snow spraying behind them. Arturo lingers, jaw tight, glaring at

  Spartan as if she’s somehow to blame for the man who launched

  himself at a mounted war-giant. But even he yields, turning on his

  heel and retreating toward the others.

  Spartan’s

  blade is out in the same breath, cold metal, matte black, hungry.

  Rho

  Voss steps up beside her, massive as a siege tower, his zweihander

  resting on one broad shoulder like it weighs nothing.

  “On

  me,” Spartan growls.

  They

  charge.

  The

  world becomes thunder, boots pounding, wind howling, Thaneus’

  titansteed screaming as it pivots to meet them. Snow blasts upward

  under its claws.

  They

  split at the last second, Spartan veering left, Rho Voss right, their

  shadows slicing through the storm. They move fast, trained, lethal.

  But

  Thaneus moves faster.

  He

  turns in the saddle as though the world is turning with him, cloak

  whipping, helm gleaming like obsidian carved into a skull. One

  gauntleted hand drags the seized spear behind him like a trophy. The

  titansteed shifts its weight, muscles coiling under plated hide.

  Spartan

  swings, clean, precise, aiming for the gap between saddle and armpit.

  Thaneus

  leans back just enough, her blade carving a spark along the edge of

  his armor. At the same instant he snaps his reins, and the titansteed

  lunges sideways.

  Rho

  Voss’ zweihander whistles through the air only to meet nothing but

  snow and wind.

  Thaneus

  laughs, deep and thunderous, a sound that rolls across the frozen

  field like an avalanche.

  They

  attacked together. They attacked well. But Thaneus moves as if he

  already knows every strike before they make it. And he is better, far

  better, than they ever dared imagine.

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