The
Trenches, After the Battle - Continuous
The
storm of war fades to a low, ghostly hum. Smoke drifts in slow
spirals from the ruptured ground, curling around the bodies of the
fallen. The once deafening harmonics of the eldiravan are gone,
replaced by the whispering wind and the crackle of distant fires. The
field is quiet now, save for the hiss of cooling armor and the groans
of wounded men being carried back toward the trenches.
The
Invictan soldiers limp homeward, bloodied, soot-streaked, their armor
dented and cracked. Even Red Baron's Company, once the sharp edge of
the Federalist intervention, moves like shades of themselves, rifles
slung, eyes hollow from the killing.
Atop
the shallow ridge, the Vardengard stand apart from the rest. Spartan
sits on a broken slab of ferrocrete while the Insarii Medicae finish
sealing the rents in her abdomen. The others stand nearby, their
wounds similarly patched and armor fused back together in places.
Beside her feet rests the severed head of the Veyr'Kael, wrapped in a
torn standard.
Red
Baron approaches with Arturo and Liam close behind him. His long coat
is slashed from shrapnel, his left pauldron missing. Still, he
carries himself with the crisp posture of a veteran officer. He stops
a few meters from the pack and takes off his helmet, letting the cold
air touch his sweat-streaked face.
"Five
more gone," he says, voice low and even, the exhaustion creeping
through anyway. "Forty-three left under my command. Could've
been worse, but it still stings." He exhales hard, scanning the
horizon where the eldiravan had vanished moments earlier. "They're
gone for now. Vanished over the rise like ghosts. My men are heading
back to the trenches. We'll hold there until we get new orders."
Spartan
stands as the Medicae step away, her armor still oozing faint trails
of sealant. She looks every bit the weapon she was made to be, tall,
scarred, the golden light of the sinking sun reflecting off her
cracked visor.
Red
Baron studies her for a long moment before asking, "What's the
plan now, Spartan? Haven't heard from the General Supreme. I assume
we're headed back to Karthane?"
Her
answer is calm, but carries the weight of certainty. "No,"
she says. "You and your men return, rest. Tend to your wounded
and your dead. We'll move elsewhere."
"Elsewhere?"
Red Baron frowns. "Orders from the Supreme?"
Spartan's
visor tilts slightly, the faintest shake of her head. "No word
from him. None expected. The Forger's hand moves where it must."
Her tone is clipped, final. "There are other sightings. More
eldiravan on the move. We'll find them."
Arturo
and Liam exchange a glance, both standing just behind their captain.
Liam scratches his neck awkwardly before muttering under his breath,
"Of course you will."
Red
Baron crosses his arms, squinting at her. "You don't rest much,
do you?"
"Rest?"
Spartan repeats, as though testing the word. "There is work yet
to be done." She looks past him, toward the horizon where the
alien armies had vanished. "Every note of their song must be
silenced before it reaches the Forge."
The
wind picks up, tugging at the tattered banners and the smoke still
curling from the battlefield. The Insarii finish their work, packing
their equipment and preparing to leave with the Federalists.
Red
Baron gives one last look at the Vardengard, Spartan with her grisly
trophy, Rho Voss silent as a statue, Samayel with the curved horn
strapped to his belt, Naburiel and Ashurdan standing
shoulder-to-shoulder like twin sentinels.
"You're
all something else," he murmurs finally. "If hell has
soldiers, it's you lot."
Spartan
gives a faint nod, no pride or humor in it, just acknowledgment. "We
are the hammer," she says, turning from him. "And the
hammer does not rest."
Red
Baron, Arturo, and Liam watch as the Vardengard gather their gear and
begin their slow, deliberate march eastward, toward the blood-red
horizon, toward whatever new symphony of death awaited them beyond
the ridge.
Behind
them, the trenches fill again with weary Federalists and the whisper
of prayers carried on the wind.
Red
Baron's Company - Four Weeks Later
The
air is smoke and static. Tracer fire screams through the dusk,
ripping molten streaks across the gray sky. Plasma bolts tear through
ruined APCs and burning snow. The ground is littered with brass
casings, broken bodies, and the echo of thunder.
Red
Baron ducks behind the charred husk of an APC, rifle kicking in his
hands as he fires into the haze. His voice booms through comms, raw
and sharp: "Flank right! Keep those heavy repeaters fed! Move,
damn you!"
Beside
him, Lieutenant Casiar of the Invictan Praevectus bellows orders in
hard, clipped Latin, his voice like a blade cutting through the
chaos. His words overlap Red Baron's, the two languages forming a
desperate chorus of command.
"Sinistra!
Tene lineam! Keep that formation steady!"
The
field around them is a shattered graveyard of steel. Five APCs, once
proud Invictan carriers, lie torn open and aflame, their armored
hulls now nothing more than makeshift barricades. The snow hisses
where molten fragments fall, black smoke rising in oily columns that
turn the daylight to ash.
Red
Baron slams a fresh mag into his rifle and slides against the
vehicle, checking his line. Thirty-nine left in his company. That
number gnaws at him. He started this war with a hundred. He knows
each name he's lost.
"Arturo!"
he roars over the gunfire. "Get that launcher up on the ridge!
We need that nest gone!"
Arturo,
his arm bandaged from a previous hit, nods sharply and dashes across
open ground, sliding behind a collapsed wall. Liam covers him, his
machine gun rattling in bursts. "They're pushing hard left!"
he shouts.
"Then
make them regret it!" Red Baron barks back, peeking around the
corner to fire again. The plasma discharge from his rifle lights his
face blue-white for half a heartbeat before he ducks back.
Across
the field, the eldiravan advance in waves, armored silhouettes
gliding through the smoke, their resonant weapons singing like warped
choral bells. Each shot hums, reverberates, crawls along the bones.
Even through the roar of artillery, their harmonics bleed through,
unearthly, rhythmic, and merciless.
Casiar's
remaining soldiers, twelve Invictans reduced from an entire
battalion, are entrenched behind what's left of their vehicles. Their
white armor is cracked and scorched, the sigils of the Forger
blackened with soot. Five of them barely stand; their injuries
wrapped in torn bandages, trembling with exhaustion. Yet none
retreat.
Casiar
grabs Red Baron's shoulder mid-barrage, shouting over the firestorm.
"They've brought resonant cannons! We can't stay pinned!"
"I
know!" Red Baron snaps. "We're trying to pull you out, not
bury you here!"
"Then
move!"
As
if on cue, the ridge ahead explodes in a shockwave of orange flame,
Arturo's launcher finding its mark. The resonance fades for a breath,
and Red Baron seizes it.
"Now!
Push forward! All units, covering fire!"
The
Federalists surge up from their cover, advancing through the ruins.
The air fills with their rifles' song, harsh, mechanical, human.
The
eldiravan answer with a harmony that splits the air like lightning.
One of Red Baron's soldiers is thrown backward, armor cracking, body
trembling as the sonic wave tears through his chest.
"Medic!"
Red Baron growls through gritted teeth, but even as he calls it, he
knows the man is gone.
The
Invictan Lieutenant snarls, raises his blade-attachment, and rallies
his squad. "Ad frontem! Ferro et flamma!"
They
charge through the smoke beside the Federalists, two armies of
different worlds united under sheer survival.
Red
Baron's voice cuts through the madness again: "Fall back to the
transports! Form up around the APCs! We'll use their armor to punch
through!"
A
plasma bolt streaks by, scorching the side of his helmet. He
flinches, then grabs Casiar by the pauldron.
"We
don't hold here another five minutes. Either we break through now, or
we die in the dirt!"
Casiar's
golden eyes burn behind his visor. "Then we break through,"
he hisses.
Together,
the Federalists and the Invictans rise again into the storm, the
battlefield erupting in a chaotic inferno of song, fire, and steel.
They
fight like men with no future. For five minutes, then ten, then
shards of time that stretch into an eternity. The smoke takes the
sky; the snow hisses where it meets falling plasma. Every step
forward chews at a man's strength like teeth. Red Baron's throat is
raw from shouting, his hands blistered from recoil and winter. His
HUD counts nothing that truly matters, only the names he'll have to
say later. Thirty-nine. Thirty-eight. Thirty-seven.
The
eldiravan do not ebb. They come in cadence, a relentless tide of
bodies and song that folds the world into sound. Their harmonics
hammer the field, a pressure that makes lungs ache, that makes lids
flutter and instruments of metal sing in protest. For every head the
Federalists cut down, two more step into the hollow. The Praevectus
around them burn like torches, their armor bright against the ashen
snow, but they cannot outshine the swarm.
Arturo
slides behind a scorched slab and lays down three careful shots, each
one a small miracle. He clips a charging Rahn-Vaen across the chest;
it collapses and keeps singing, mouth working useless vowels. A
splatter of yellow blood paints the snow. He tastes iron in his mouth
and does not remember when he last slept. Liam's gun stutters and
then roars again, long, hungry bursts that chew through Eldiravan
ranks, forcing a few to tumble, but the sound that answers is not
retreat. It is a chorus. The ground around them pulses; the frequency
scratches at bone.
Captain
Casiar slams his fist on a ruined console and snaps an order in Latin
that leaves no room for argument. "Hold! When the window opens,
we run for the transports. We hold this point to the last man!"
His jaw flexes. Five of his dozen cannot stand without support; their
breath fogs in ragged pulls.
Red
Baron's next command is a rasp of iron. "Ammo conservation.
Target the cantus carriers if you can. Meds on the dead last. Keep
moving when I say move." He glances down the line, a blurred sea
of faces, some young enough to be sons, some old enough to be ghosts.
He remembers faces now by the cadence of their footsteps. He does not
let himself think of their mothers.
Time
compresses. A plasma volley hits a collapsed APC with a scream that
is more animal than metal; it implodes inward, a bell of white-hot
pain. Five men go down in that flare, two Federalists, three
Invictans, bodies flung like rag dolls into the smoke. Red Baron's
voice cracks for a second that might be forever. "Medic! Now!
Cover the extraction!" But his call is swallowed by a harmonic
that feels like ice behind the ribs.
The
Medics move with a machine-like grace, syringes and folding patches
out, but even they have limits. Their gauntlets glow red as they
shove nanofibers and pumps into torn flesh. They call triage names in
clipped tones. "Stabilize. Evacuate. Stop the hemorrhage."
Each order is a prayer.
A
Kairn-Vohr surges over the ruined ridge and plows through a
Federalist squad like a blade through melted wax. The soldier's
helmet springs open; his visor flies off and skitters in the snow,
revealing a face that never had time to harden into fearlessness.
Liam screams, and for a breath Red Baron is not a captain but a man
with hands that cannot mend his own failings.
Help support creative writers by finding and reading their stories on the original site.
They
press. They push. Arturo hauls a recoilless line up onto his shoulder
with a wheeze and fires a shot that vaporizes an Eldiravan's throat.
The beast collapses, and for a second a silence drops over that
little square of ground, a holy, impossible hush. Men look at each
other like shipwreck survivors seeing a sliver of shore. Hope flares
in fists tightening on rifles.
Then
the chorus swells again. The Veyr'Kael's choirs find a new harmony;
the earth itself answers their call, buckling seams of frozen ground
into jagged teeth that split men's footing. An entire squad slides
into a newly-formed fissure and is crushed in half before they can
scream. The world smells of burned oil and boiled blood.
Red
Baron checks his watch though the numbers mean nothing now, they are
on him, the schedule of doom. He sets a five-minute window and counts
down not in idle superstition but in command. "Five minutes,"
he tells Casiar. "We open, you lead south flank, I cover rear.
Move like hell when the dust falls." The Captain nods, eyes
black with the same tiredness.
They
mark time with breath and shots. A minute bleeds into another. Men
fall. Names vanish from the list. Arturo's shoulders shake as he
reloads. Liam's jaw is white-boned with the effort of pointing his
gun and keeping his hands from shaking. They look older than their
tags say they are.
Somewhere
past the burning APCs, the Insarii call for a lift: a tether secured,
a triage pack thrown into a clearing. An injured Invictan soldier is
hooked and hauled, his face slack with pain. The helix of the
extraction burst screams above them, drawing a brief, violent
attention that leaves them all exposed, and then the song returns
with fresh teeth.
Red
Baron feels the cadence of doom fold inward. The eldiravan press the
line from both flanks like a vice. Suppressive fire grows thinner;
ammunition belts grow thin. "Check ammo!" he snaps. Men
pass magazines hand-to-hand, grim and wordless. A corporal screams
that he's out; his hands go empty and he stares at them like a boy
who dropped his last piece of bread.
Three
minutes.
The
ground gives a wet groan as a resonant pulse warps the field. One of
the medics goes still, his gauntlet clattering to the snow. Decay in
an instant, then medical rigs around him sparking and going dark. Men
lower their heads, and for a moment nobody dares to breathe. Every
heartbeat is a hammer.
Two
minutes.
A
fresh volley explodes a shallow crater a few meters from Red Baron.
Snow and bone-laced shrapnel slap across his faceplate. A man beside
him disappears beneath a wave of sound and soil. Red Baron tastes
copper on his tongue, smells smoke, hears, not hears, feels, the rip
of a throat as another Federalist falls. He presses his shoulder into
his rifle like a man trying to hold back the tide with his hands.
One
minute.
They
are a dead thing walking forward, intent on dying properly. They will
not run. To run is to die with terror in the throat; to hold is to
die with steel in the hands. Red Baron makes a decision he will carry
forever: if they go, they go together, with rifles and with songs for
the boys left behind. He slams his palm down, hard. "On my
mark," he says, the voice a blade. "Three. Two. One.
Break."
They
surge.
For
an instant the field tilts, a brief, beautiful rush that carries them
toward the APCs and toward the fragile promise of armor, and then the
horizon closes like a fist. A harmonic blow, a coordinated chorus,
falls across them; it is not a wall but a cleaving, and the sky
itself seems to tear. Men are thrown face-first into the stinging
snow. A squad leader goes quiet mid-command and never finishes his
sentence. A medic clutches his chest and collapses, eyes wide and
empty.
The
scene freezes, not with slow motion but with a dread so complete it
feels like drowning on dry land. Smoke veils everything. The APCs are
a half-step closer; the transports' engines are screaming. But
between them and those metal bastions is a wall of sound and bodies
and ruin, a living, singing thing that will not be parted by bayonet
or prayer.
Red
Baron scrabbles for purchase, his fingers finding frozen metal that
is slick with blood. He looks up once and sees the faces of his men,
the ones who remain, and he knows the truth like an icicle down his
spine: this is not a battlefield that favors retreat. The flank is
closing. The eldiravan are inexhaustible.
He
opens his mouth to give the order to fall back, to form for one last
bayonet dash, to do anything that keeps a spine of soldiers
breathing. But the words choke where they are born.
The
world narrows to the thud of feet, the grind of idling APCs, the
metal scent of blood, and the impossible chorus that will not abate.
And
then, the moment hangs like an arrow.
They
are five minutes out. They are one hundred paces from salvation. They
are about to be erased. The horizon leans in.
The
end appears certain; the sky seems to gleam with the hinges of fate.
Red
Baron steadies his rifle and breathes in the cold, tasting the last
of something he thought he'd be spared: pure, unyielding fear. The
field waits with him, and for a heart-clenching second, everything
holds its breath.
CHAPTER
THIRTY: Down Is Where You Should Not Be Looking
Red
Baron's Company - Continuous
The
battlefield freezes for half a heartbeat, then splits open like the
earth itself has drawn breath.
A
deep, guttural howl.
It
cuts through the storm and the fire like a blade through silk, a
sound of such primal resonance that it shatters the Eldiravan's
harmonic in mid-note. The song wavers, stutters, then falters
altogether into a discordant screech. Men look up from their rifles.
Even the dying pause.
Red
Baron blinks against the burning snow. That sound. He hasn't heard it
in four weeks, not since the trenches. It hits like memory, half
fear, half salvation. "You hear that?" he rasps.
Captain
Casiar already knows. His eyes widen, and in his own tongue he
murmurs a single word that every Invictan nearby understands:
"Vardengard."
The
air itself seems to grow heavier. The eldiravan ranks shift uneasily,
their advance hesitating as if the song they follow has suddenly lost
its rhythm.
Then,
a second, deeper howl answers the first.
From
the far flank, the snow bank ruptures in a geyser of ice and debris.
Two immense figures burst forth, their armor gleaming like living
night, one pearlescent black with a crimson comb glinting like fresh
blood, the other vantablack and colossal, light bending off its
surface like it refuses to be seen at all.
Spartan
and Rho Voss.
They
descend on the flank with the force of an orbital strike. The impact
alone rattles the APCs where Red Baron's men shelter. Shockwaves roll
across the field, hurling snow and ash and dismembered song alike.
"Saints
preserve us," Liam breathes. "They... they howled."
"They
always howl," Arturo mutters, eyes wide. "But I thought, "
"Keep
your heads down!" Red Baron barks, voice suddenly alive again.
"That's not for us."
The
Vardengard are no rescue squad. They are the storm given shape, and
the eldiravan know it. Their formation shatters as the first of
Spartan's strikes lands, her Olympian armor slamming through the line
like a battering ram of gods. Her sword cleaves through a Rahn-Vaen,
bisecting it from shoulder to hip; the harmonic song it was carrying
collapses into a raw, wordless scream.
Beside
her, Rho Voss wields his war-hammer like it weighs nothing, each
swing detonating the ground. The vantablack Olympian crushes through
ranks with inhuman precision, his blows silent, almost reverent.
Where Spartan fights like fire, Rho fights like gravity, inevitable,
unstoppable.
The
Veyr'Kael leading this Eldiravan host turns at last, its gilded armor
flashing under the stormlight. Its claws sing against its weapon as
it prepares to meet them. But it is too late. Spartan is already upon
him, head crowned by the skull of another Veyr'Kael, horns decorated
with the trophies of her last conquest.
Her
voice booms across the plain, carried by the Olympian's speakers,
rough and resonant: "Forge's flame takes you, beast!"
The
Veyr'Kael's roar answers her, a harmonic strong enough to shake the
teeth in men's skulls, yet Spartan doesn't slow. She drives forward,
shoulder-checking through its bodyguard and locking weapons with the
creature in a burst of plasma and snow.
Behind
her, Rho Voss slams into another Eldiravan Karin-Vohr, shattering its
resonance mid-chant. The air ripples, the harmonic dies, and silence,
terrible, absolute silence, spreads outward in the wake of his
zweihander.
The
Invictans and Federalists barely dare to move. Some stare. Some
reload in numb awe. The hopelessness that had sunk like lead in their
chests is gone, replaced by the violent, fragile spark of belief.
Casiar
exhales through gritted teeth, the Latin word slipping out like a
prayer: "Salvatio."
Red
Baron doesn't answer. He just watches the two Olympians carve through
the flank, the impossible becoming real again. His pulse steadies,
the fear in his gut shifting into something else, resolve.
"Alright,"
he growls finally, slamming a fresh magazine into his rifle. "You
heard him. They're buying us time, let's make it damn worth it."
And
so the battered survivors rise again, rifles lifted, voices cracking
the static-filled comms. They fire not because they believe they'll
win, but because the impossible has arrived in armor and bone and
howling flame.
Above
them, the chorus of war shifts once more. The Eldiravan song turns
defensive, chaotic, panicked, and in the middle of it, Spartan and
Rho Voss cut their way toward the Veyr'Kael like executioners through
scripture.
The
tide has turned. And for the first time in days, the Federalists and
Invictans feel what it's like to breathe.
The
ground trembles as Spartan and Rho Voss crash into the Veyr'Kael's
guard like twin meteors.
The
eldiravan captain is colossal, twice Spartan's height, its armor a
lattice of molten gold and dark obsidian scales, its voice a weapon
in itself. Every time it roars, the air vibrates; every harmonic
pulse reshapes the earth beneath their feet.
The
terrain heaves. Spears of stone erupt upward, slicing through the
snow like jagged glass. The Veyr'Kael's song bends the field to his
will, dragging the battlefield into a living storm that wants the two
Vardengard dead.
Spartan
and Rho Voss move in perfect counterpoint. Her sword arcs through the
falling snow, intercepting a strike meant to crush him. His
zweihander crashes down, shattering the ground that tries to swallow
her. The two of them fight not as individuals, but as rhythm and
counter-rhythm, unstoppable, relentless.
Every
step they take is measured in thunder. Every strike echoes with the
weight of gods.
Across
the field, Casiar sees his chance. "Now!" he bellows in
Invictan Latin.
Red
Baron doesn't need a translation. "Flank them! Push their line!"
The
surviving Federalists and Invictans surge forward, taking advantage
of the chaos. They move like a second tide sweeping in behind the
first, rifles and plasma bursts cracking through the haze. The
eldiravan turn, too slow, too fractured. Their harmonies are breaking
apart, their rhythm faltering. The Federalists' volley cuts through
their flanks, tearing down Rahn-Vaen who no longer have a song to
follow.
The
Veyr'Kael fights harder, faster. His claws rake through the snow, his
weapon a blur of golden flame as it collides with Spartan's sword.
Sparks scatter like embers in the storm. The impact sends both of
them skidding backward, armor screaming in protest.
Then,
the Veyr'Kael straightens.
For
the first time, his voice carries words, not song. His tone is deep,
resonant, and knowing. "Spartan," he says. Not a question.
A recognition.
She
hesitates for half a breath, long enough for Rho Voss to step forward
and drive his zweihander straight into the Veyr'Kael's chest. The
ground caves beneath the force. The eldiravan's body folds, but it
still stands, its eyes locking on Spartan. It reaches one clawed hand
toward her and her sword pierces through its neck.
The
blade hums as it severs flesh, armor, and song alike. The Veyr'Kael's
harmonic dies with a final, dissonant note that collapses into
silence. The massive form slumps to the earth, lifeless, the golden
glow in its veins dimming out.
Spartan
and Rho Voss stand over the corpse, both breathing heavily, armor
slick with yellow blood. For a long moment, there is nothing but the
sound of wind and the distant cries of dying eldiravan.
Then
the song breaks.
All
at once, the harmonic thread that had held the Rahn-Vaen together
snaps. Their movements falter; their coordination disintegrates. Some
turn to flee, others thrash in blind fury.
The
Federalists and Invictans take advantage. Casiar's soldiers advance,
disciplined bursts of rail rifles cutting through the chaos. Red
Baron's company fans out wide, picking off the retreating eldiravan
with precise, methodical fire.
Rho
Voss wipes his blade clean across the snow, and Spartan wrenches her
sword free from the Veyr'Kael's corpse. Around them, the battlefield
collapses into quiet death.
No
victory cries rise from the human ranks, only the sharp rhythm of
breathing, the static hiss of comms, the crunch of boots over snow
and corpses.
When
Spartan finally looks toward Red Baron and Casiar, the faint light
from her visor flickers as she tilts her head. A nod. A wordless
signal.
The
Vardengard have done what they came to do.
The
Veyr'Kael is dead.
And
the tide of the eldiravan breaks beneath their feet.
Spartan
stands motionless, her armor steaming in the cold air, flecks of
yellow eldiravan blood drying against her chestplate.
They
survey the field together, what was once a storm of sound and fury is
now a graveyard of broken bodies and silence. The Veyr'Kael lies
half-buried in the frost, its massive frame twisted, golden ichor
pooling beneath it.
Rho
Voss steps forward and kneels. Without hesitation, he grips the
creature's horn and with a single, brutal motion, drives his
zweihander through its neck. The head rolls free, still dripping
warmth into the snow. He grips it by the horn, raises it once to
inspect the kill, then begins stripping the helm away, first the
upper plate, then the jaw clasp. The armor falls away with a hiss of
released pressure, revealing the scaled, reptilian face beneath.
Spartan
watches him, her visor cracked from the earlier blows, a faint
shimmer of crimson light leaking through the fracture. "It knew
my name," she says finally, her voice low, almost uncertain
beneath the modulation of her helm.
Rho
Voss looks up, silent as stone. He gives no answer, only a low growl,
the sound reverberating through his armor like distant thunder. Then,
as if that suffices, he shrugs once and returns to cleaning the
blade.
Across
the field, Red Baron stands beside Casiar, the smoke of battle still
thick around them. He lowers his rifle, watching as the two Olympian
figures stand amid the carnage like statues.
"Spartan!"
he calls out, raising his voice over the wind.
She
doesn't turn. Neither of them do. Spartan simply tilts her head
toward Rho Voss, a silent signal, and together they begin to walk,
slow, heavy steps through the snow, leaving a trail of crushed frost
and eldiravan blood behind them.
"Spartan!"
Red Baron calls again, starting forward, confusion and frustration
mixing in his tone.
But
a hand grips his shoulder, halting him. Casiar.
"Don't,"
Casiar says simply. His voice is tired but firm. "If you're not
their mission, you're nothing to them."
Red
Baron frowns. "I've worked with them before. They know me."
Casiar
lets out a dry, humorless laugh. "They knew you then because you
were the mission. You're not now." He gestures toward the
retreating Vardengard, their black and crimson armor vanishing into
the storm. "You could walk beside them for a week, share their
fire, bleed in the same mud… it wouldn't matter. When their purpose
shifts, so do they."
Baron
shakes his head, eyes following Spartan's fading silhouette. "They're
still human."
Casiar's
laugh softens, almost bitter. "Are they?" He glances down,
adjusting the strap on his rifle. "Spartan saved my father's
life once. Saved one of my brothers too. She didn't even speak to
them after. Didn't ask for thanks, didn't wait for orders. Just
walked away. Always does."
The
wind cuts across the ruined field, carrying with it the faint,
metallic hum of the departing Vardengard's engines.
"They're
not here for glory," Casiar finishes quietly. "They're here
for the Forge. For the suffering. That's their worship."
Red
Baron looks away, silent for a long moment. In the distance, the last
trace of Spartan and Rho Voss vanishes beyond the ridge, swallowed by
snow and silence.
The
field falls quiet again. Only the wind and the slow creak of cooling
metal remain.

