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CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR: I Got This Hunger Inside Of Me, A Vicious Vendetta

  Medical

  Bay, Karthane - The Next Morning

  The

  lights hum softly in the quiet of the early hour, a pale amber glow

  tracing the steel edges of the room. Magnus sits between the two

  gurneys, the weight of command and care etched into the hard lines of

  his face. His armor almost gleams in the pale, overhead lights. In

  his hands rests a worn book, The Forger's Testament, the metal

  corners polished by years of touch.

  He

  reads in a low, even tone, his voice deep enough to fill the air

  without disturbing it.

  "Strike

  not to end, but to begin anew. For every blow that shatters makes

  ready the mold, and every scar that burns the flesh tempers the will.

  The weak seek comfort in the flame's light, the strong become the

  flame itself. So spoke the Forger, whose hammer knows no mercy, yet

  whose hand shapes gods from what others would discard."

  Magnus

  pauses there, looking from Rho Voss to Spartan. Both sleep still,

  their breathing slow and even, faint glints of metal visible beneath

  sheets where the new grafts meet flesh.

  He

  closes the book softly, thumb resting on the page as though marking

  it for later. "You will rise again," he murmurs quietly.

  "Stronger than before. You always do."

  The

  curtain shifts slightly, and Lucia slips in, her movements light and

  deliberate. She glances at the two Vardengard, scanning their

  monitors. Then her gaze moves to Magnus, and she gives him a small

  nod of acknowledgment, reassurance that they're holding steady.

  He

  nods back in silence, placing the Testament on the small table

  between the beds. The sound of the machines, the rhythmic pulse of

  hearts that refuse to quit, fills the room as the forge of Invicta's

  chosen continues its quiet work.

  Lucia

  moves with that quiet, practiced grace of someone long used to the

  rhythm of crisis. She finishes her check on Rho's vitals, then on

  Spartan's, before glancing over her shoulder at Magnus. A faint smirk

  tugs at the corner of her mouth.

  "You

  treat them like your children," she says softly, keeping her

  voice low so as not to wake either of the two Vardengard. "The

  way you watch over them, the way you read to them. You worry like my

  father used to, pacing the floor whenever one of us so much as

  coughed."

  Magnus

  glances up from where he sits between the two gurneys. The faintest

  hint of a grin breaks through his otherwise iron composure.

  "Children?" he echoes quietly, looking toward Spartan's

  resting form. "They are older than both of us combined, Lucia."

  "That

  doesn't mean you don't care for them like they were," she

  replies, stepping closer until she's standing beside him, arms

  folded. "And I don't think that's a bad thing."

  Magnus

  huffs a small laugh, shaking his head. "Perhaps not. But even

  children eventually outgrow their father's hand." His eyes drift

  briefly toward Spartan, the heart monitor's slow pulse reflecting in

  his gaze. "These two have earned their freedom a thousand times

  over. Yet here they are, still bleeding for me."

  Lucia

  leans against the table beside him, her expression shifting from

  amusement to worry. "Magnus… the Venators." Her voice

  lowers, more serious now. "I have never seen them myself, but I

  have seen the aftermath. Rauvis. I thought we had left those zealots

  behind."

  Magnus'

  expression hardens. "So did I." He exhales through his

  nose, a heavy sound. "But Absjorn is not a fool. He will not

  attack Karthane directly. He will bide his time, test our strength.

  And once he sees what the Eldiravan are capable of, he will realize

  his holy war is better aimed at them."

  Lucia

  studies him, unconvinced. "You really believe that?"

  Magnus

  hesitates, eyes fixed on Spartan's motionless form. "He targets

  the Vardengard," he says at last, voice quiet. "He is

  obsessed with her. With Spartan."

  Lucia's

  brows knit together. "Then he will not stop," she says,

  almost under her breath. "Not until he gets what he wants. And

  if that is true…"

  Magnus

  looks up at her then, his face still, unreadable save for the faint

  twitch at his jaw.

  Lucia

  folds her arms tighter. "If that is true," she continues,

  "then no wall, no distance, and no logic is going to stop him."

  Magnus

  looks back at Spartan. "I know," he says. "And that is

  what worries me most."

  Spartan

  stirs first with a faint groan, a twitch of her fingers as the metal

  digits curl weakly. The quiet conversation between Lucia and Magnus

  falls still as the Vardengard shifts on the gurney. The hydraulic

  hiss of her chest echoes softly as she draws in a deep, ragged

  breath.

  Her

  eyes flicker open, polychromatic, blue and green. She blinks against

  the light and slowly props herself up on one elbow. Every motion

  looks like it costs her.

  "...Master,"

  she rasps, voice hoarse and dry.

  Both

  Lucia and Magnus turn toward her. Lucia instinctively moves closer,

  ready to help, but Magnus stands first.

  "I

  am here," Magnus says, stepping forward to her side.

  Spartan's

  eyes find him, unfocused but determined. "If it comes down to

  it," she says slowly, "I will go to him."

  Magnus

  frowns, the lines in his brow tightening. "Go to who?"

  "Absjorn."

  Her gaze hardens, even through exhaustion. "If that is what it

  takes to end this… I will go to him. I will do what must be done to

  secure our victory against the Eldiravan. Humanity must overcome the

  xenos above all else."

  Magnus'

  expression darkens, the calm veneer giving way to sharp disapproval.

  "No," he says flatly, his voice iron. "You will do no

  such thing."

  "Master-"

  He

  cuts her off, stepping closer, tone rising. "I will not allow

  you to sacrifice yourself for this war. Not like that."

  Spartan

  meets his glare without flinching. "That sacrifice," she

  says, "is exactly why the Vardengard exist. To bleed, to burn,

  to die so that humanity does not have to. That is our purpose."

  Magnus

  leans forward, the quiet fury of command behind his words. "Your

  purpose," he says, "is to live. Do you hear me? You will

  not throw yourself away."

  For

  a long, tense moment, neither speaks. The monitors hum. The low thrum

  of distant machinery fills the silence.

  Then

  Spartan slowly pushes herself upright, ignoring the cables that tug

  at her arms and chest. She swings her legs over the side of the

  gurney, her bare feet finding the floor.

  Lucia,

  startled, rushes forward. "Absolutely not, lay back down. You

  are still half in recovery, you need rest."

  Spartan

  shakes her head, wincing as she steadies herself. "I am awake,"

  she says quietly. "I am ready."

  "Ready

  for what?" Lucia presses. "Where could you possibly have to

  go right now?"

  Spartan

  turns her head toward Magnus, the lights catching the glint in her

  eyes.

  She

  doesn't need to say it.

  Magnus

  knows.

  And

  he looks back at her in grim silence, because deep down, he already

  understands exactly what she intends.

  Lucia

  sighs softly, stepping back as she sees the silent understanding pass

  between Spartan and Magnus. There's no stopping her now, the spark of

  command and purpose is already alive again in those strange,

  prismatic eyes. Lucia folds her arms and shakes her head, muttering

  under her breath, "The curse of your kind… never knowing

  rest."

  Spartan

  swings her legs off the gurney completely and stands, wincing but

  steady. Behind Magnus, she grabs her black Invictan jacket from the

  table, the heavy, weatherproof material lined with crimson stitching.

  As she zips it up, the soft rasp of the zipper echoes in the quiet.

  On

  the other bed, Rho Voss stirs. His eyes snap open, burning cyan, his

  frame rigid and alert even before full consciousness returns. He

  doesn't speak, but his gaze follows Spartan as if drawn by instinct.

  When she reaches for her gloves, he throws his blanket aside and gets

  up, his movements slow but deliberate. He reaches for his own jacket

  from the chair beside the bed.

  Spartan

  glances over her shoulder at Magnus. "I need to contact the

  others," she says, her voice still gravelly but strong. "They

  need to know the Venators are here. We have to find Absjorn's

  encampment."

  Magnus

  straightens, arms crossed, his presence still commanding even in

  silence. "Already done," he says. "I have sent word to

  the rest of the Vardengard. Scouts are deployed across the northern

  ridge and the tundral expanse. If Absjorn has camped anywhere near

  the Cryolume, we will know soon."

  Spartan's

  jaw sets, but she nods in appreciation. "Good. Then Rho and I

  will gather our gear and head back out immediately."

  She

  grabs the curtain and pulls it aside with a metallic hiss. Rho

  follows close behind, tugging his mask up over his face, a worn, dark

  fabric that hides his expression entirely, and drawing his hood to

  shield against the cold already seeping through the corridors. The

  faint whir of new mechanical joints hums softly beneath his cloak as

  he moves.

  Magnus

  falls in step behind them, his steps slow, deliberate, echoing down

  the reinforced hall. They emerge into the broader bay where the

  Olympian armor sets stand upon their racks, vast silhouettes of iron

  and glass, restored, recharged, ready. The armor looms like two

  dormant titans waiting for their masters to wake them.

  As

  Spartan pulls the lever to open her armor, Magnus speaks. "I

  will be joining you this time," he says evenly. "And I am

  bringing a battalion."

  Spartan

  pauses mid-motion, her fingers gripping the lever. "With

  respect, Master, that's premature. We don't have enough intelligence

  on their position. If you march a battalion out there blind, you

  could walk straight into a Venator trap."

  Magnus

  raises a brow. "And if I send only two wounded Vardengard, I

  risk losing my finest weapons."

  She

  meets his gaze over her shoulder, unflinching. "We've fought the

  Venators before. We know their patterns. You send a battalion, and

  Absjorn will see it coming before we even reach the frostline."

  Before

  Magnus can respond, the door slides open with a pressurized hiss.

  Captain Michael Marcellus and Captain Red Baron step through, bundled

  against the cold, their breath visible in the chilled air.

  Both

  men come to a halt at the sight before them, the Vardengard already

  suited and ready for deployment. Spartan's armor plates lock into

  place with a sharp hiss of pneumatics, and she pulls her helmet on.

  Rho stands beside her, silent as a ghost, his own armor humming

  faintly with charge.

  "Spartan,"

  Michael says, surprise cutting through his tone. "You are

  already up?"

  "Work

  never ends," Spartan replies simply, sealing the last latch on

  her vambrace.

  Magnus

  turns toward the captains, his voice carrying the weight of finality.

  "We are moving out. The Venators are in the region, Absjorn's

  forces are establishing a foothold north of the Cryolume."

  Red

  Baron exchanges a look with Michael before stepping forward.

  "Permission to have my company accompany the Vardengard, sir. My

  men are rested and ready."

  Magnus

  studies him for a long moment, unreadable, then gives a curt nod.

  "Granted. You will form the forward line. Spartan will lead the

  reconnaissance."

  "Yes,

  sir," Red Baron says, squaring his shoulders.

  The

  storm outside claws against the steel as the hangar lights flicker to

  crimson standby. The air fills with the low mechanical thrum of power

  cores awakening, the prelude to war.

  The

  Cryolume Forest, North of Karthane - Two Hours Later

  Red

  Baron rides in the lead APC, the vehicle's massive treads crushing

  through snow and ice, its headlights cutting pale beams through the

  frozen mist. Another APC follows close behind, its hull shuddering

  with every bump in the uneven tundra. Behind them, Magnus rides in

  the third, the insignia of Civitas Invicta painted stark and black

  against the armored plates. The rest of the battalion trails in

  formation, their convoy stretching like an iron serpent across the

  barren wastes.

  Inside

  the lead vehicle, Red Baron leans forward in his seat, one gloved

  hand braced against the vibrating frame. The cold bleeds through even

  the reinforced hull, a constant reminder of the world's hostility.

  Across from him sit the Federalists, weary, hard-eyed soldiers, and

  beside them, the Insarii Medicae team: Decimus, Spurius, Sisenna, and

  Auria. Their kits hang from the walls, filled with instruments that

  glint faintly under the cabin lights, ready for whatever the

  Vardengard's campaign brings.

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  But

  Spartan and Rho Voss are not among them.

  They

  move on foot far ahead of the convoy, several leagues ahead, moving

  with inhuman speed across the frostbitten plains. Their armor leaves

  deep, rhythmic impressions in the ice, steam venting softly from

  their joints as they run.

  Spartan

  halts suddenly. The wind howls around her, carrying flakes of

  glittering snow that cling to the edges of her armor. She tilts her

  head back and howls, a low, resonant sound that rolls across the

  frozen horizon like a beast's call. It echoes, fades.

  And

  then, moments later, a distant reply.

  Naburiel.

  Another

  follows, from the opposite ridge, Belqartis, the tone distinct, the

  echo rougher, closer.

  Spartan

  lowers her head, the faintest glint of satisfaction behind her visor.

  The pack still lives, still hunts.

  To

  the far northwest, before the convoy ever left Karthane, Samayel had

  already found the Venators, or at least, what passed for their

  encampment. He had sent coordinates through encoded bursts. Now,

  Spartan and Rho Voss lead the Invictan convoy toward that direction,

  not to strike immediately, but to establish ground, to dig their own

  foothold into the frost.

  They

  will be days from Karthane before the forward base is operational,

  exposed, surrounded by storm and ice, but close enough to keep the

  Venators within reach.

  Over

  comms, Naburiel's voice cuts through the static: "Found the

  site. Plateau ahead, wind-sheltered, iron-rich. Should hold a base."

  Spartan

  glances at Rho, who gives a brief nod.

  "Then

  that's where we make our stand," she mutters, her voice a low

  growl beneath her helmet.

  And

  with that, the two Vardengard continue forward, phantoms of iron and

  fire, carving the path through the storm for the army that follows.

  Invictan

  FOB - Two Days Later

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss move swiftly through the snow, their armored forms

  cutting clean lines through the blizzard haze. Their pace is

  relentless, each stride a low thud that reverberates beneath the

  frost. Unlike the APCs crawling somewhere miles behind, they do not

  slow for the terrain.

  Where

  the ground fractures into yawning crevasses, they leap. Where jagged

  ridges rise from the ice, they climb. The Olympian armor groans and

  hums with every movement, servos tightening, recalibrating, the faint

  exhale of steam marking their trail. The convoy will have to take the

  long way around, winding through safer passes, but Spartan and Rho

  Voss are built for direct paths.

  It

  is well past midday when they crest the last ridge. Below, a faint

  glow winks through the storm. The plateau stretches out before them;

  wide, flat, and surprisingly open, a rare space of stability amid the

  northern chaos.

  Naburiel

  waits at its center. His massive frame looms by a half-built bonfire,

  armor dusted in snow. Two others stand with him, Morus and Ashurdan.

  Together, they have raised a rough encampment: piles of scavenged

  timber, ration crates, and crude signal pylons spiking up from the

  frost.

  The

  moment Spartan and Rho Voss approach, Naburiel lifts his head. His

  helm's vox crackles, his voice a low rumble.

  "Spartan.

  Rho. You made good time."

  "Convoy's

  still hours out," Spartan replies. "They'll need clear

  passage. There are cracks about five clicks southeast, tell Master to

  reroute before they hit them."

  Naburiel

  nods once, tapping the side of his helmet to transmit the data.

  Behind him, Morus tends to the growing fire, the orange light licking

  against the black armor, casting their silhouettes into something

  ancient and beastlike.

  The

  plateau itself is a fortress waiting to be claimed. The ground here

  is layered stone and ice, stable enough to anchor heavy machinery.

  The storm walls, built by the mountains' natural curvature, shield it

  from the worst of the northern winds.

  But

  what catches Spartan's eye most are the stones.

  They

  rise around the plateau in a broken crown, colossal monoliths jutting

  from the frost, some shattered, others eroded to their roots. One

  remains standing tall at full height, a pillar of pale granite veined

  with black mineral. The rest have long since fallen, half-buried

  under centuries of ice.

  And

  farther out, arching shapes curve from the ground, forming enormous

  spines that loop into the foothills. They're massive, wide enough for

  a man to walk along their lengths, their surfaces worn smooth as

  bone. The pattern of them suggests a rhythm, a body once whole: the

  remnants of something titanic.

  Ashurdan

  follows Spartan's gaze. "The locals called them the bones of the

  old gods," he says, voice gravel-rough through his helm. "Say

  they stretched all the way into the Cryolume forest. I thought it

  superstition."

  Spartan

  studies one of the nearest arches, frost hissing against her armor's

  heat vents. "Superstition," she mutters, "has a way of

  surviving for a reason."

  Rho

  Voss grunts in agreement, kneeling near the fire.

  Naburiel

  tosses another log onto the flames, the sparks rising high against

  the pale sky. "This will serve," he says. "The

  ground's good. The mountains will shield the north, the bones the

  west. We can fortify by nightfall."

  Spartan

  nods once. "Good. Then we make this our forward bastion."

  The

  fire roars, casting long shadows over the stones, shadows that seem

  almost to move, to coil, to breathe, as if something ancient still

  lingers beneath the ice.

  Invictan

  Forward Operating Base - Hours Later

  By

  the time the storm begins to thin, the rumble of engines rolls across

  the mountains. The first of the APCs crest the rise, snow churning

  beneath their treads as they grind onto the plateau. The banners of

  Civitas Invicta snap against the wind, crimson and black streaks

  amidst the pale white. A convoy of iron and willpower, Magnus'

  battalion, has arrived.

  At

  the lead, Red Baron's APC halts in a hiss of hydraulics, followed by

  the lumbering transport carrying the rest of his company, thirty-nine

  Federalist soldiers, weary but alive. The doors open and they spill

  out into the cold, weapons slung, eyes sharp as they take in the

  plateau's eerie beauty. Behind them, the Invictan engineers fan out

  in formation, already unloading crates and modular panels. The sky is

  streaked with bruised orange light, the fading sun glinting off armor

  and metal alike.

  By

  the bonfire, the Vardengard await. Naburiel stands like an obsidian

  monolith, his massive frame barely touched by the cold. Ashurdan and

  Belqartis are nearby, overseeing the perimeter. Morus sits

  cross-legged by the flames, warstaff resting against his shoulder,

  his head bowed, audibly snoring through his helm's vox filter.

  Samayel

  crouches near Rho Voss, a jagged grin cutting through his faceplate's

  glow. "That a new arm I see?" he jests, gesturing to the

  polished mechanical limb glinting faintly beneath Rho's vantablack

  plating. "Looks a bit too shiny for you, brother. You planning

  to start reflecting light now?"

  Rho

  Voss doesn't answer, at least not verbally. His gauntlet flickers

  with soft blue light as a message pings across the Vardengard's

  internal channel.

  Rho

  Voss: [Says the one who still hasn't fixed his coolant leak. Smells

  like rusted piss every time you move.]

  Samayel

  barks out a laugh, the sound harsh and metallic. "Fair. I'll

  give you that one."

  Spartan

  glances back at them, the faintest curve tugging at her lips. "Master

  is here," she says.

  Sure

  enough, the third APC grinds to a halt near the ridge, its rear ramp

  unfolding with a pneumatic sigh. Magnus descends first, his cloak

  snapping in the mountain wind. Captains Red Baron, Arruns Hortensius,

  and Canus Ravilla follow in his wake, their helms gleaming beneath

  the pale light. Behind them come Captains

  Casiar, Aulus Balbus, and Tertius Crispian, all battle-scarred and

  hard-eyed.

  The

  engineers continue their work in the background, locking modular

  walls into place with bursts of flame and plasma drills. The

  structures rise swiftly, black and silver skeletons taking form in

  minutes, roofs snapping into place under the hum of powered jetpacks.

  Magnus

  approaches the Vardengard line, his gaze sweeping across them. As he

  does so, the Vardengard all take a knee and bow their heads.

  "Spartan.

  Report."

  Spartan

  looks up at Magnus. Her armor is still dark with frost and soot, her

  voice calm but carrying the weight of command. "We have

  confirmed Absjorn's encampment to the northwest, roughly fifty miles

  beyond the Cryolume's edge. Samayel scouted the perimeter earlier

  this morning. They are fortified, but mobile. Standard Venator

  structure, tent basilica, concentric perimeter walls, turrets."

  That

  gets a quiet murmur from the Federalist officers. Magnus folds his

  arms. "And the Eldiravan?"

  Belqartis

  answers this time, voice low and rough. "They have pulled back

  from the Cryolume. Possibly consolidating. We think they are

  preparing for another push, maybe even toward the Venators instead of

  us."

  Magnus

  nods slowly. "So they know of each other's presence."

  "They

  will," Spartan says. "Soon enough."

  Magnus

  steps closer to the bonfire, its light catching across his massive

  silver pauldrons like molten gold. "Then we act before they do.

  We cannot allow either to gain ground. We will establish a forward

  bastion here, hold position, gather intelligence, and strike when the

  moment's right."

  Red

  Baron, standing at his side, glances toward Spartan. "Permission

  for my company to join your scouts, sir. We have been running recon

  since we landed planetside, we can keep pace with them."

  Magnus

  inclines his head. "Granted. Pair your men with the Vardengard

  as they see fit. But you follow their lead, Captain. Understood?"

  Red

  Baron nods crisply. "Understood, General Supreme."

  The

  fire crackles. Sparks rise into the dimming sky like fleeting souls.

  Around them, the encampment grows, steel and light taking shape

  against the ancient bones jutting from the earth.

  Magnus

  turns his gaze back to Spartan. "Tonight we plan. At dawn, we

  move."

  Spartan

  nods once. "Understood, Master."

  The

  Vardengard bow their heads in unison, a silent vow forged beneath the

  mountains' gaze, their shadows flickering against the fire like

  ghosts preparing for war.

  Invictan

  FOB, Mobile Command Room - That Night

  The

  war table hums acid-blue, the map's light scouring every face. The

  room tightens, metal, breath, the smell of heated oil, as the

  officers trade glances that mean different things: fear, hunger,

  calculation.

  Magnus

  cuts the pause with a cold, measured question. "Which threat do

  we prioritize: the fortress that can forge entire armies, or the

  Venators who would burn the world for a god?"

  What

  follows is not a council so much as a clash of doctrine.

  Arruns

  Hortensius slams a gauntleted hand on the table so hard the

  projection ripples. "The fortress is the spine," he says.

  "Strike the spine and the body collapses. We hammer the north

  with everything, rail batteries, orbital interdiction, a rolling

  barrage to flush their maestros out. You let me mass firepower and I

  will break them." His jaw is iron. He points to the northeast

  cluster on the map. "You do that wrong and the Eldiravan will

  sing us into the ground. You do it right and they cannot

  orchestrate."

  Canus

  Ravilla counters, voice taut as drawn wire: "Mass bombardment

  alerts Absjorn. It scorches the land and leaves refugees for the

  Venators to butcher. And orbital strikes? Our AA in that valley would

  eat the payload before it lands. We do not need blind thunder; we

  need precise knives. Small teams, Insarii support, surgical takedowns

  of maestro nodes. Remove the maestros, the rest fractures. Less

  collateral, more effect."

  Aulus

  Balbus leans forward, rubbing his temple. "You both make good

  points, but logistics bind us. We do not have enough precision teams

  for both the valley and the Venator pockets. Our battalion is here

  now; we can push hardened lines, but not hold all possible fronts. We

  should fortify the FOB and strike where we are assured of success. Do

  not gamble the battalion on vengeance."

  Tertius

  Crispian's face goes hard. "Fortify all you like; war favors

  movement. Let the Vardengard cut the Venator hunting parties. Draw

  Absjorn into terrain that favors us. He is a fanatic, he will chase a

  ghost of us. When he reveals himself, we close. No siege; no wasted

  munitions."

  Casiar,

  fingers tapping a restless rhythm, snarls softly. "Guerrilla.

  Silence the pylons, blind their sentries, snipe the scouts. Venators

  depend on ritual and spectacle. Remove the stage and you remove the

  performance. Let the Vardengard be spear and the Praevectus be the

  net."

  Red

  Baron's voice, rough with fatigue and new steel resolve, cuts

  through: "My company will go with them. We're light, we know how

  to move. If the Vardengard need an anchor, we provide it. Let them

  show us the fight. I volunteer my men." He looks straight at

  Magnus. "I'm not asking permission to die. I'm offering to be

  useful."

  The

  room erupts. Spartan's visor catches the light; she does not speak

  immediately. Her silence is pressure. When she does, it's low and

  brutal: "Absjorn hunts me because I live. You will not drag

  civilians into his worship. If the Venators hold sway here, Karthane

  starves while they argue about doctrine. I will draw him. You will

  not throw a battalion away for my blood. But if you must strike the

  fortress, do it after the Venators' attention is occupied. I will not

  die as bait."

  Magnus'

  eyes are black glass. "You will not be bait alone," he

  says, flat. Then, louder: "No rash orders. We have men, but we

  have a future to hold. Decide."

  An

  argumentative chorus swells. Arruns demands massing artillery now.

  Canus shoots back that massing will waste lives and wake Absjorn.

  Aulus insists on fortification; Tertius wants to press the

  counterattack; Casiar urges sabotage. The voices build to a fever

  pitch, centuries of doctrine, personal pride, tactical doctrine,

  until Magnus' gloved palm slams the table and silence rips the air.

  "Enough,"

  he says. Slowly. "We will not fracture ourselves. We will not

  trade one apocalypse for another."

  He

  draws a breath and lays out the plan, surgical and savage and

  balanced on a razor.

  Magnus

  leans forward, palms flat on the war table so the holo ripples under

  his hands. His voice is flat and too calm for the storm in the room.

  "We will not scatter ourselves. We will not trade a fortress for

  a city. I propose one controlled line of action, containment, bait,

  and precise surgical strikes. Hear me."

  Aulus

  Balbus snorts. "Words are cheap. What does that mean on the

  ground?"

  Magnus

  meets him. "We fortify the plateau and the southern approaches.

  Two rings: an outer listening and interdiction belt to detect and

  delay, an inner mobile reserve ready to respond. Engineers emplace

  anti-air nets, decoy pylons, and AA field masking overnight. No wide

  battalion march into unknown ground."

  Arruns

  slams a fist on the table. "Hold and bait? That plays into the

  Eldiravan's hands. Their maestros will keep us deafened until we

  break."

  "Not

  if we break them first," Canus Ravilla says, voice sharp. "We

  do not need thunder from orbit to punch holes in the valley, we need

  knives. Small, stealth teams. Insarii embedded. We cut maestro nodes

  and the rest unravels."

  Magnus

  nods, eyes never leaving Canus. "Exactly. While Absjorn chases a

  provocation, three precision strike cells, Canus will lead them,

  infiltrate the valley. They carry dampening charges and conduit

  disruptors. No mass bombardment unless we have a clear fire

  corridor."

  Tertius

  leans in, skeptical. "You rely on timing. One slip and your

  strike teams are stranded."

  Casiar

  answers before Magnus can: "Then we buy them time. Spartan and

  Rho Voss take the spearpoint. Controlled harassment of Venator

  patrols. Rapid raids, false retreats. Force Absjorn into predictable

  routes, make him show his hand. Red Baron's company rides with that

  element as extraction and light support."

  Red

  Baron's jaw tightens. "My men hold the bolt line and pull bodies

  if needed. We'll do the dirty work that keeps your god-killers free

  to do the big cuts."

  Arruns

  bristles. "You are gambling the battalion's secrecy on two

  hunters and an infantry company. If Absjorn smells a trap, he

  scatters and his units die alone."

  Magnus'

  voice drops to steel. "The battalion stays concealed but mobile.

  If Absjorn commits his main body, I close with the battalion,

  supported by artillery and the Mastodons. If the Eldiravan recover

  cohesion instead, the battalion pivots to reinforce the maestro

  teams. We keep our options."

  Aulus

  exhales. "So: hold, bait, strike, and reserve. Who runs the med

  and evac?"

  Decimus,

  when asked, Decimus' name is met with a curt nod from Magnus, steps

  forward. "I set a forward triage node with rapid evac corridors.

  Insarii and Federalist med evac shuttles on rotation. No exceptions

  for Vardengard. Extraction priority is extraction priority. No

  needless heroics."

  Naburiel,

  half-hidden by a hood in the dim light, mutters, "And the

  Venator beacons? Their signals will give them sight into our

  movement."

  Casiar

  already has that calculated. "Sabotage teams and long-range

  scouts blackout Venator beacons and map their rotation schedules.

  Electronic and harmonic surveillance feed the strike teams. If a

  maestro node is located, we take it first. No theatrics."

  A

  tense silence follows. Arruns chews his lower lip, then gives a curt

  nod. "I can hold the outer ring. Do not put my artillery on a

  parade ground; keep it reserved for when we see openings."

  Canus

  rubs his temple. "I will take the maestro teams. I want three

  more medicae attached and a contingency exfil route. If my teams do

  not get out on schedule, I will need suppression."

  Tertius

  grunts in approval of the mobility and exploitation clause. Red Baron

  simply says, "We move when Spartan says. We protect her and the

  other Vardengard like we protect one another."

  Magnus

  lets their responses gather into the plan he wanted. "Containment

  here," he says, tapping the plateau on the holo. "Bait and

  harassment there. Precision Maestro strikes in the valley timed to

  that harassment. Battalion stays as a concealed reserve with

  authority to close. Med and extraction channels open now. Sabotage

  and scouts run continuous. No orbital thunder without a confirmed

  safe corridor."

  Spartan's

  visor tilts to him. Her voice is low, a rasp smoothed by hard

  experience. "If Absjorn shows himself, I will not be bait to

  die. I will be the lure that kills him, with extraction ready at all

  times."

  Magnus

  answers with quiet finality. "You will have support and an

  extraction window. You do not go alone to die on a pyre. We will not

  let you."

  The

  officers exchange looks, wary, determined, tightly contained fury,

  and the war room breaks into movement. Orders ripple outward like a

  blade's echo: engineers mobilize, medicae double their kits, scouts

  load, Red Baron tightens his men, Spartan and Rho test blades and

  backs.

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