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CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT: The Faithful Now Hateful As Divinity Drowns In Its Rot

  The Pit Exterior

  Outside, the night presses

  thick and starless, a black shroud over the rolling hills beyond the

  Pit’s outer perimeter. Wind carries the faint metallic tang of

  blood and smoke from miles away, but here the air is colder, cleaner,

  almost mocking in its clarity.

  A

  lone figure moves down the well-worn path: dirt and trampled grass

  underfoot, the trail worn smooth by countless boots before his. He

  wears a heavy cloak of dark wool, hood drawn low against the chill,

  the fabric swallowing what little moonlight leaks through the clouds.

  In his right hand he carries a torch, flame furious, spitting sparks

  that whip away on the breeze like dying stars. The firelight carves

  harsh shadows across his jaw, the only part of his face visible

  beneath the hood.

  He

  reaches the crest of a low rise and stops beside another man already

  waiting there. This second figure stands motionless, shoulders

  squared, dusting pale ash and soot from his gloved hands with slow,

  deliberate motions. At his feet sprawls a massive shadowed mound,

  indiscernible in the dark, just a bulk of shapes and stillness

  against the grass.

  The

  torch-bearer speaks first, voice low, rough from smoke or grief or

  both.

  “That

  all of them?”

  The

  other man nods once. His frown is visible even in the faint glow,

  deep lines etched around mouth and eyes.

  “That’s

  all there is.”

  A

  beat of silence. The wind keens softly through the grass.

  The

  torch-bearer exhales once, sharp, final, then lowers the flame.

  He

  touches the torch to the base of the pile.

  Fire

  leaps.

  It

  spreads with cruel speed, hungry and bright. Orange tongues lick

  upward, crackling over fabric, flesh, bone. The mound reveals itself

  in stages as the blaze climbs: limbs tangled in unnatural angles,

  torsos slumped together, faces frozen in the last expressions they

  wore, shock, pain, emptiness. Most are stripped bare, skin already

  blistered and splitting in the heat. A few still wear the tattered

  remnants of uniforms, scorched cloth clinging to charred muscle.

  Fewer still bear scraps of armor: a dented vambrace here, a cracked

  breastplate there, metal glowing dull red before it warps and

  blackens.

  The

  flames climb higher, roaring now, a furnace wind that forces both men

  to step back a pace. Light washes across the pyre, merciless,

  illuminating faces that once answered to names.

  Marcus

  lies near the edge, eyes wide open, staring at nothing, the neat hole

  in his forehead crusted black with old blood. Decimus sprawls half

  atop him, one arm flung out as though still reaching for a weapon

  that isn’t there, ribs caved inward from the final blow that ended

  him. Deeper in the stack, Tiber’s body curls fetal, burn scars from

  the simulated fire mission still raw across his back, now overlaid

  with fresher wounds from the Pit. And Arruns, Arruns, who never even

  made it out of that extraction operation, his corpse dragged here

  anyway, face mercifully turned away from the light.

  Stolen novel; please report.

  The

  torch-bearer watches without blinking. The firelight dances in his

  eyes, reflecting nothing human.

  The

  second man speaks quietly, almost to himself.

  “They

  were good cadets.” A pause. “Once.”

  The

  torch-bearer says nothing. He simply stands as the pyre roars louder,

  consuming what remains of the squad that once fought beside Lucille

  and Cain. Smoke rises in thick black columns, blotting out what few

  stars dare show themselves. The heat washes over them in waves,

  carrying the sick-sweet stench of burning hair, fat, cloth.

  The

  pyre roars higher, a living thing fed on flesh and regret. Flames

  twist into columns that claw at the starless sky, throwing heat in

  punishing waves. The stench rolls outward, sweet rot of hair giving

  way to the heavier, choking reek of fat rendering, muscle charring,

  bone cracking open like dry wood. Sparks spiral upward, briefly

  mimicking constellations before winking out.

  The

  torch-bearer stands motionless, the torch now lowered to his side,

  flame guttering low but steady. His hood has slipped back enough to

  reveal the hard lines of a face carved by too many years in the

  Order’s service, scar tissue pulling one corner of his mouth into a

  perpetual grimace. He speaks without looking away from the blaze,

  voice rough as gravel dragged across steel.

  “Three

  hundred and twelve,” he says. “Twenty-one years old. Final Exam.

  Supposed to walk out as men and women of the Order. Supposed to carry

  the banner into the next generation.” A bitter laugh escapes him,

  short and mirthless. “Instead we burn them like refuse. You think

  Caelum Prime watches this? You think the God Supreme sees His own

  children fed to the fire and does nothing?”

  The

  other man, older, broader, shoulders bowed under the weight of things

  he cannot unsee, keeps his gaze fixed on the pyre. Marcus’s face is

  visible for a moment longer before the flames claim it entirely; the

  skin bubbles, splits, peels back to reveal the white gleam of skull

  beneath. Decimus’ arm twitches once, residual nerve spasm, then

  stills forever. Tiber’s scarred back curls inward as heat contracts

  the muscle. Arruns, collapses inward like wet clay.

  The

  older man’s frown deepens into something permanent.

  “I

  don’t know if He watches,” he says quietly. “I don’t know if

  He cares. But this…” He gestures once at the inferno. “This

  never should have happened. Not like this. Never like this.” His

  voice cracks on the last word, barely audible over the crackle of

  burning bone. “All for what? What could the purpose possibly have

  been? A test? A cull? Some experiment the brass buried in redacted

  files?”

  The

  torch-bearer exhales through his nose, smoke curling from his

  nostrils as though he too is part of the pyre.

  “As

  far as anyone’s told me, no one survived the Final Exam. Not one.

  The Pit took them all, chewed them up, spat out corpses. If there was

  a purpose, it died with them.” He pauses, staring into the heart of

  the flames where the bodies have begun to slump together in a single

  blackened mass. “All we can do now is pray. Pray Caelum Prime is

  merciful. Pray He doesn’t rain hell down on the ones who signed the

  orders. Pray He doesn’t look at what we’ve become and decide the

  Order itself needs burning.”

  A

  long silence stretches between them. The wind shifts, carrying ash

  across their faces like gray snow. The older man lifts a gloved hand,

  wipes at his eyes, whether from smoke or something else, neither

  acknowledges.

  “They

  were children,” he says at last, almost too soft to hear. “Children

  playing at being soldiers. And we sent them into the dark knowing

  most wouldn’t come back.”

  The

  torch-bearer nods once, slow, final.

  “Then

  let the fire take the evidence,” he mutters. “Let it take the

  shame. Let Caelum Prime decide what’s left when the ashes cool.”

  The

  pyre answers with a fresh surge of flame, as though the god Himself

  has leaned close to listen. Bodies collapse inward; armor pops and

  splits; the last recognizable features vanish beneath a tide of

  orange and black.

  The

  two men stand vigil until the roar begins to fade to a steady

  crackle, until the mound is no longer bodies but a single glowing

  ember-heart slowly eating itself.

  They

  do not speak again.

  There

  is nothing left worth saying.

  Only

  the night, the wind, and the distant, unanswering silence of the

  gods.

  TO BE CONTINUED....

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