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CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE: Cross The Badlands to Rise Again

  Northern

  Cryolume Forest - Minutes Later

  The

  snow is heavy now, falling in thick, silent sheets that blur the

  horizon and swallow the forest in white. The two APCs churn through

  the drifts, engines growling low and tired. Their treads carve deep

  scars into the snow, the only sound beyond the dull wind.

  Behind

  them, Spartan and Rho Voss run, no, stagger. Each step is slower than

  the last. Spartan's blood has soaked through the black sheen of her

  Olympian armor, trailing crimson steam in the cold. Rho's left side

  glistens dark, the gaping absence of his arm still weeping sluggishly

  despite the armor's partial seals. The forest blurs around them.

  Every movement is an act of defiance.

  Then

  it happens. Spartan's leg gives out, and she collapses to one knee.

  Rho Voss catches her, but he's already stumbling himself, the weight

  of her pulling him down. The snow rushes up to meet them both, and

  they fall together, kneeling, leaning against each other for balance.

  The two Olympians, once titans of war, reduced to silhouettes against

  the endless white.

  "They've

  fallen!" a Federalist shouts from atop an APC.

  Red

  Baron slams his fist against the hull. "Reverse! Reverse! Move,

  move, move!"

  The

  two APCs grind backward, snow spraying in plumes behind their treads.

  As soon as they screech to a halt, Red Baron, Liam, and Arturo leap

  out, weapons drawn, eyes scanning the tree line for any sign of

  pursuit.

  "Get

  the medic!" Red Baron yells. "Now!"

  Their

  lone medic scrambles from the second APC, pack already half-open,

  boots sinking into the knee-deep snow as he rushes to the fallen

  Vardengard. Spartan tries to wave him off, but her arm barely lifts.

  Rho, silent as ever, pulls her up with his one good hand, holding her

  against him, his breathing ragged and mechanical through the vox

  filters.

  Red

  Baron kneels beside them, one hand on Spartan's armored shoulder.

  "Hold on, Spartan, we've got you. You're going to make it."

  Spartan's

  voice comes through her damaged helm, static-laced and faint. "No…

  no, Captain. Keep going." She coughs, and a spray of blood

  flecks her visor. "Leave us. You have to get to Karthane.

  Someone has to tell the Supreme… Absjorn is here."

  Red

  Baron shakes his head, jaw clenched. "I'm not leaving you out

  here to die in the snow."

  Spartan

  grips his forearm weakly, the gesture firm despite her fading

  strength. "You don't have a choice, Baron. The Venators are

  close. You stop now, we all die. Go."

  The

  medic looks up from Rho Voss, panic in his voice. "Captain, he's

  losing too much blood! Both of them are! We can't move them like

  this, "

  "Then

  patch what you can," Red Baron barks, though his voice cracks.

  He glances toward the forest, the shadows between the trunks look

  alive. "Make it fast."

  The

  medic works quickly, binding what he can, sealing torn armor with

  frostbite-stiff fingers. Spartan's head sags forward. Rho Voss keeps

  her upright, his good hand trembling from exhaustion.

  Finally,

  Spartan forces her head up, visor cracked and glinting faintly in the

  pale light. "Tell Magnus… tell him the wolves have crossed the

  Forge's fire."

  Then

  her arm drops. The medic checks her vitals, shaking his head. She's

  still breathing, barely.

  Red

  Baron hesitates for a long moment, staring at the two of them, the

  gods of iron and war, broken and bleeding in the snow. Then he looks

  back at his men, at the APCs, at the fading daylight.

  "Get

  them inside," he orders quietly. "If they die, they die

  with us, not here."

  The

  soldiers move to obey, but even as they lift Spartan and Rho Voss

  with all their strength, the forest behind them stirs with the

  faintest sound, hoofbeats.

  The

  snow groans beneath their boots as Red Baron takes charge again,

  voice sharp and clipped against the rising wind.

  "Marshall!

  Get over here!"

  The

  Martian, towering, broad as two men, his red visor streaked with

  frost, drops his rifle into the snow and rushes forward without a

  word. Spartan is limp now, her armor blackened and leaking hydraulic

  fluid like blood. Rho Voss, still on his knees, forces himself

  upright, swaying, his one remaining arm clamped around her shoulders.

  Rho

  Voss instinctively growls, not loosening his grip on Spartan.

  "Easy,

  big guy, I'm gonna help," Liam grunts, sliding his arms under

  Spartan's weight. Together, the two lift her, one god, one mortal,

  hauling her across the churned snow toward the idling APC. The rear

  hatch slams open, hydraulics hissing. Steam pours from the exhausts,

  mingling with the snowfall.

  The

  weight of Spartan's Olympian armor nearly collapses the ramp when

  they step onto it. The APC groans under the strain, metal flexing,

  the interior lights flickering from the sudden power draw.

  "Careful,

  careful!" Arturo calls, bracing from inside as they heave her

  in. The soldiers inside scramble to make room, hands outstretched to

  help. The air smells of oil, frost, and blood.

  "Strap

  him down!" Red Baron barks from outside. "Keep him upright

  if you can."

  Arturo

  and two others fasten the heavy restraints over Spartan's chest and

  legs, welding points anchoring her to the hull. Every breath she

  takes rattles through the interior like a dying machine.

  Meanwhile,

  Liam turns back, panting clouds into the frozen air. "What about

  him?" he asks.

  Rho

  Voss is still standing somehow, half-collapsed against the snow, his

  right shoulder spurting slow, blackened ichor where the arm used to

  be. His gaze is fixed on the forest, always watching for the shapes

  he knows are coming.

  Red

  Baron gestures. "Get him to the other APC. Now."

  Liam

  nods, looping the Vardengard's remaining arm around his neck and

  hauling him forward. Rho doesn't resist, just grits his teeth and

  keeps moving, his boots dragging furrows through the snow. They reach

  the second APC, its hatch yawning open, engine whining with strain.

  "Easy,

  big guy," Liam mutters, helping Rho climb the ramp. The soldiers

  inside pull him in, securing him beside the side wall as Liam drops

  back out, panting hard.

  Red

  Baron scans the treeline one last time. The snow seems to move

  between the trees now, shadows, shapes, things too large to be tricks

  of the light.

  He

  slams a fist against the APC's hull. "Move out! Now!"

  Engines

  roar. The two vehicles lurch forward, treads grinding through the

  snow, exhaust streaming like smoke signals into the darkening sky.

  The added weight makes them sluggish, but they push on anyway,

  straining against the terrain.

  Inside,

  the soldiers can feel every shudder of the engines, every echo of

  pursuit behind them.

  And

  as the forest fades into the white horizon, the sound of hooves

  follows, faint but relentless, like the heartbeat of something divine

  and wrathful closing in.

  Karthane,

  Arkaelus - Sometime Later

  The

  engines thunder through the cryolume forest as the walls of Karthane

  rise from the blizzard like a black monolith, carved stone and steel

  spires crowned in ice. Red Baron hangs onto the side step of the lead

  APC, one arm gripping the rail, the other waving wildly through the

  cold air.

  "Open

  the gates!" he bellows, voice cracking through the blizzard.

  "Open the damn gates!"

  From

  atop the battlements, Captain Michael Marcellus leans out over the

  rail, his crimson Praetorian cloak whipping in the wind. He peers

  down at the convoy below, the massive APCs churning up the snow,

  their sides scorched and dented, one leaking coolant and smoke like a

  wounded beast.

  Marcellus

  cups his hands around his mouth. "Baron? You're back early!

  What's the rush?!"

  Red

  Baron cups a hand to his mouth, shouting over the roar of engines and

  storm. "We found Spartan and Rho Voss! They're hurt bad!"

  His voice is hoarse, almost frantic. "I need to see the General

  Supreme. Now!"

  The

  words strike Marcellus like a bullet. For a second, he just stares

  down at the scene below, the Federalist colors, the frostbitten

  soldiers, the impossible claim. Then he turns sharply to his

  Praetorians.

  "Open

  the gate! Now! Move!"

  Chains

  rattle. Gears grind. The massive portcullis begins to rise, layer by

  layer, snow falling from its iron lattice as the counterweights drag

  it upward. The gates of Karthane part with a low, grinding roar.

  As

  soon as there's room, the two APCs rumble through, engines straining

  under the burden of their Olympian cargo. The smell of oil, blood,

  and smoke floods the air.

  Marcellus

  descends the stone stairs two at a time, his boots echoing against

  the walls. By the time he reaches the courtyard, the first APC has

  already come to a halt. Red Baron drops down from the step, stumbling

  slightly from exhaustion, frost steaming off his armor.

  Marcellus

  approaches, eyes sharp, cloak flaring behind him. "Where are

  they?"

  Red

  Baron gestures to the rear hatches. "Inside. Barely breathing."

  The

  moment the ramp hisses open, medics and engineers rush in, one of

  them shouting for reinforced stretchers, another calling for plasma

  packs. The air fills with motion, orders, urgency.

  Marcellus

  steps aside, watching as Spartan's massive form is lowered from the

  APC, armor caked in frozen blood and ice, limbs twitching faintly.

  Behind her, Rho Voss stumbles out with help, visor cracked, his

  single arm gripping the frame for balance.

  Marcellus

  turns back to Red Baron. "You did the right thing bringing them

  here."

  Red

  Baron shakes his head, voice low. "You don't understand,

  Captain. They weren't just hurt. They were hunted. Absjorn was

  there."

  Marcellus

  freezes mid-step, expression turning to cold steel. "…Absjorn?"

  Red

  Baron nods grimly. "And he's coming."

  The

  courtyard falls silent for a heartbeat, the snow falling thicker now.

  Then Marcellus straightens, jaw set.

  "Get

  them to Lucia now!" Michael's voice cuts through the courtyard

  like a crack of thunder.

  The

  medics and engineers rush to obey, working in frantic unison as they

  slide a reinforced cart beneath Spartan's massive frame. The snow

  around her is pink and steaming, her armor split and blackened in

  places where plasma had burned through. Her breathing is ragged, the

  faint hum of her Olympian systems sputtering like a dying heart.

  Michael

  kneels beside her, his gauntlet brushing against her metal-plated

  hand. He's seen her stand against legions, the Spartan of Invicta,

  the Forger's champion made flesh. But now, for the first time, she

  looks small. Fragile.

  He

  bows his head, whispering beneath the roar of engines.

  "Forger,

  temper her in your flame once more. Don't let this be the end of

  her."

  He

  doesn't expect a response. But then, her metal fingers twitch, weakly

  closing around his hand, holding him for a fleeting heartbeat. It's

  barely more than a reflex, but it's enough to make his breath hitch.

  When

  her grip fades, Michael stands sharply, emotion buried under duty.

  His fists clench tight, knuckles whitening in his gloves.

  "Move!

  Now! Get her to Lucia, go!"

  The

  engineers push the cart, the servos whining under the weight of

  Spartan's armor. Rho Voss stumbles behind them, one-armed, blood

  still leaking through the cracks in his plating. The medics flank

  him, steadying him as they hurry toward the med bay.

  The story has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.

  Michael

  watches them vanish into the inner gates, then turns on his heel.

  "Command

  room, now."

  Red

  Baron falls into step beside him, still covered in frost and grime.

  "Sir," his voice is hoarse from the cold and shouting,

  "what the hell was that out there? Spartan mentioned Venators.

  Mentioned Absjorn. I've never heard of either."

  Michael's

  jaw tightens as they stride down the narrow stone corridor, boots

  echoing on the steel floor. The fortress lights flicker in the storm.

  He

  exhales, the sound low and bitter. "They are zealots, and if

  Spartan says that name," he glances to the side, his expression

  grim, "then we're in more danger than we've ever been."

  Red

  Baron frowns. "Worse than the Eldiravan?"

  Michael

  doesn't answer immediately. He just stares ahead, past the iron doors

  of the command room, past the world he once thought he understood.

  When

  he finally speaks, his voice is quieter, but heavier. "Worse,"

  he says. "Because the Venators don't just kill you." He

  pauses, the doors hissing open before them. "They damn you."

  The

  command room doors hiss open, and the cold from outside follows

  Michael and Red Baron in like a living thing, biting, sharp, alive

  with urgency.

  They

  stride down the central aisle between rows of humming consoles.

  Officers and tacticians look up from holo-displays as the two move

  past, their boots clanging on the steel deck. No one speaks. Whatever

  they see on Michael's face, the pale fire of alarm, is enough to

  silence them.

  At

  the rear of the chamber, Michael slaps the control switch on the

  bulkhead. The reinforced door splits open with a mechanical growl,

  like jaws unhinging. He doesn't wait for it to finish before slipping

  through the gap.

  Inside,

  General Supreme Magnus Tiberius stands over the war table, its

  holographic surface flickering with continental projections and fleet

  data. His eyes rise, the faintest crease forming between his brows.

  His tone, calm but sharp, cuts the quiet.

  "Michael.

  Red Baron. You're back early."

  Michael

  doesn't answer with decorum, there's no time. He moves right up to

  the table, voice tight with restrained panic.

  "Venators.

  Absjorn. He's here. They attacked Spartan and Rho Voss."

  Magnus'

  face hardens, but his body stills. The silence stretches, a breath

  drawn through iron lungs.

  "…Venators?"

  His tone is low, measured, dangerous. "Are you certain?"

  "Red

  Baron's company saw it firsthand," Michael says quickly.

  "Spartan's too injured to speak. Rho Voss, barely standing."

  The

  color drains subtly from Magnus' face. It's not fear, it's anger,

  glacial and deep. The thought that Spartan is not here to report

  herself says everything. He exhales slowly, as if the air itself has

  turned heavier.

  "Where

  are they now?"

  "Lucia's

  medical bay," Michael answers.

  Red

  Baron steps forward then, helmet tucked under his arm, snow still

  clinging to his coat. "Sir, we found them out there, twenty

  miles north. They were fighting four of… something. They looked

  like Vardengard, but not ours. White plate. Red trim. Crosses."

  Magnus'

  gaze flicks toward him, eyes narrowing. "Absolutist heraldry."

  Red

  Baron nods, uncertain. "Didn't recognize the marks, sir. We

  pulled them out, got them back here as fast as the engines would

  run."

  Magnus

  doesn't reply. He sets his datapad down on the table, the quiet click

  loud in the tension of the room. For a moment, he stares at the

  holo-map, the shifting projection of Nirna's frozen terrain, then he

  turns sharply.

  Without

  another word, he strides toward the door.

  Michael

  and Red Baron fall in beside him immediately. Michael glances

  sideways, at the fury starting to rise in the General Supreme's eyes,

  the weight of command and vengeance coiling in his stride.

  Magnus'

  voice comes low, dark, steady, "Absjorn dares set foot on

  Nirna…"

  The

  door slides open again with a hiss of steam.

  "…then

  this world will remember what it means to forge gods in war."

  Karthane

  Medical Bay - Continous

  The

  medical bay is chaos held together by discipline, the hiss of oxygen,

  the hum of med-mech arms, the bark of Lucia's orders cutting through

  the noise like a scalpel.

  "Careful

  with that harness!" she snaps. "Don't scrape the plates,

  hang the armor on the rack and open the spinal cradle. Now!"

  Two

  engineers obey immediately, the Olympian armor of Spartan towering

  like a dark monolith once it's hung, its chest cavity yawning open,

  steam curling out like the breath of a dying machine.

  Spartan

  herself is lowered out, limp, blood streaking the inner plating. The

  medics catch her weight and guide her onto the gurney, the white

  sheets beneath her instantly turning red.

  Lucia

  is already there, scanner wand in hand, running it across Spartan's

  body. Her eyes flick from the handheld to the holoscreen as the data

  spills in: skeletal mapping, vitals, trauma patterns.

  Her

  lips press into a thin, trembling line.

  "Gods

  below…"

  She

  doesn't need the numbers. She can see it, the gash across Spartan's

  waist, deep enough to shear muscle and slice through armor. Bones

  fractured. Blood loss catastrophic. The display beside her blinks

  angry red warnings in a dozen places.

  Lucia

  curses under her breath, soft, furious, helpless. "What in the

  Forge's name did this…"

  She

  straightens, voice snapping back into command.

  "Stabilizers,

  now! Get the plasma infusion lines up, two units, maybe three! Prep a

  nanite vat for soft-tissue regen and clear Bay Three!"

  Her

  staff moves with precision, rushing to comply.

  Beside

  them, Rho Voss is being eased out of his own armor, the medics

  struggling to free the massive black plates from his frame. His left

  arm is gone clean at the shoulder; the stump still seared from

  cauterization. He refuses a stretcher, staying upright, though his

  knees tremble beneath the weight of exhaustion.

  Two

  medics catch him anyway, lowering him to a gurney beside Spartan. He

  sits on the edge, half-slumped, breathing heavy through his teeth.

  Lucia

  glances his way, scanning him quickly, then again, more carefully.

  The display flashes a full 3-D skeletal map, highlighting internal

  bleeding, blunt trauma, and the cauterized stump of his arm.

  She

  mutters another curse, sharp and venomous.

  "Fractures

  in the ribs, spine bruised… arterial tear sealed, but gods, it is a

  miracle you are alive."

  She

  turns to the staff nearest him. "Get compression foam on that

  shoulder and full analgesics. I want him sedated before he bleeds out

  standing up."

  Rho

  growls low in his throat, defiance even now, but Lucia ignores it.

  She's already moving back to Spartan's side, her hands shaking just

  enough to betray the tension in her control.

  "Stay

  with me, Spartan," she murmurs, half to herself, half to the

  broken warrior before her. "You have walked through hell before.

  You dare not stop now."

  The

  medbay whirs with renewed urgency, a symphony of metallic clatter and

  sterile light.

  Lucia's

  voice cuts through it all.

  "Prep

  the replacement matrices, I need full osteo-polymer lattice sets,

  Type-IV! Get me a Mark IX spinal graft while you are at it!"

  Engineers

  and medics rush between tables, crates opening with pneumatic hiss as

  chrome-and-carbon implants gleam under the bright surgical lights.

  New ribs, spinal braces, bone-anchored regulators, all laid out like

  instruments of war.

  "Rho

  Voss first for the arm mold," Lucia calls, glancing over her

  shoulder. "Nanite binding for the joint socket, and gods help

  you if the calibration's off by even half a millimeter."

  A

  call comes through the overhead speaker:

  "Operating

  Room One ready."

  Lucia

  doesn't waste a heartbeat. "Move her."

  The

  medics lower the rails on Spartan's gurney and wheel her through the

  sliding door, the sound of her armor's internal systems still humming

  faintly, as if refusing to let her go.

  Rho

  Voss lurches up from his gurney, instinct dragging him to follow.

  "No," Lucia says sharply, hand on his chest.

  He

  stares down at her, eyes burning, his massive frame trembling with

  fatigue and frustration.

  "You

  will have your turn," Lucia tells him, voice softening but firm.

  "You move now, you will tear what is left of you apart."

  He

  exhales, half growl, half defeat, and sits back down, the gurney

  creaking beneath his weight. His right hand clenches the edge of the

  frame hard enough to bend it.

  Lucia

  nods once, then turns. The heavy curtain slides shut between them,

  swallowing Spartan's gurney in shadow and light.

  Inside

  the surgical bay, the air turns cold, filtered and sterile. Lucia is

  already scrubbing in, gloves, mask, visor, every movement automatic,

  methodical. Her two assistants hook Spartan's vitals into the wall

  rig; screens bloom to life with glowing readouts: heart rate, neural

  pattern, blood toxicity, armor interface failure warnings.

  IV

  lines hiss softly as they connect, nanite serum and blood stabilizers

  pumping into the prone warrior's veins. The dull, rhythmic beep of

  her vitals fills the silence as Lucia steps up to the table.

  She

  stares down at Spartan, half machine, half god, all broken, and

  whispers, "Let's get you back together again."

  Lucia's

  gloved hands move with brutal precision, clamps, sutures, the hiss of

  bone-gel as it seals a fracture. The air stinks of ozone and

  sterilized iron. No anesthetic, no mercy. The Vardengard are forged,

  not comforted.

  Spartan's

  body is opened to the ribcage, internal organs exposed beneath the

  glow of surgical lamps. Her blood runs thick and dark across the

  table, steadily siphoned and filtered through tubes. Lucia works

  fast, replacing shattered bone with polished grafts, one after

  another, a grim rhythm of reconstruction.

  "Cervical

  brace, now," she snaps, never looking up. A medic slides the

  piece into her palm. "Seal the lower grafts. Stabilize the

  pelvis line."

  The

  doors hiss open behind her. The sound of heavy boots, deliberate,

  measured.

  Magnus

  steps in, the lights gleaming off his black-and-scarlet armor. Behind

  him, Michael and Red Baron follow, their presence bringing an almost

  sacred silence to the chaos.

  Across

  the room, Rho Voss sits shirtless on the edge of his gurney. His arm

  socket is a torn mess of alloy and meat; sparks flicker from exposed

  fiber bundles as engineers lock the mounting plate for his new arm

  into place. The scent of scorched flesh fills the air.

  He

  snarls when they drive a tool into the joint, teeth gritting, breath

  coming through his nose like a bull. Then, sensing a presence, he

  looks up.

  Magnus

  stands before him, hands clasped behind his back. The General

  Supreme's face softens, ever so slightly. "Rho," he says

  quietly. "You live."

  Rho

  smirks, the corner of his mouth twitching upward. He grunts and he

  raises what's left of his shoulder, then lifts his remaining hand and

  gives a slow thumbs-up.

  Magnus

  huffs through his nose, half a laugh, half exhaustion. But then he

  notices it. The subtle tremor. The faint red sheen building at the

  corners of Rho's eyes.

  The

  Vardengard blinks, and blood spills down his cheeks, twin streams

  glimmering under the medbay light. His cyan eyes blaze brighter for a

  moment, before dimming again.

  Magnus'

  expression hardens. He knows the cause. He doesn't need to say the

  word. Velmira. The substance that keeps them alive, and slowly

  destroys them.

  He

  exhales, low and heavy. "There's no getting it out of your

  veins, is there?"

  Rho

  Voss gives a wet, metallic chuckle.

  Magnus

  lets out another sigh, a flicker of sorrow passing across his eyes,

  then turns away. "You did well. Rest while you can."

  Leaving

  Rho behind, he strides toward the far end of the medbay, to the

  curtain drawn around Spartan's table.

  The

  soft hum of monitors bleeds through the partition. Magnus hesitates

  for a fraction of a second, his hand hovering over the fabric. Then,

  slowly, he pulls the curtain aside.

  Lucia

  doesn't look up. She's wrist-deep in Spartan's torso, replacing

  shattered ribs with carbon reinforcement, eyes narrow behind her

  visor. "If you are not here to help," she says coldly,

  "stay out of my light."

  Magnus

  says nothing. He simply stands there, gaze fixed on Spartan's

  half-rebuilt body, blood, metal, and resilience laid bare.

  Behind

  him, Michael and Red Baron linger near Rho Voss, both watching the

  curtain but making no move to approach. Michael knows better than to

  interrupt Lucia, or the General. He folds his arms and lowers his

  gaze, the faint hum of Rho's mechanical repair rig the only sound

  between them.

  The

  medbay hums, part forge, part cathedral, all war.

  Magnus

  steps closer, leaning slightly over Spartan without obstructing

  Lucia's meticulous lights. The hum of machines fills the medbay,

  punctuated by the rhythmic beep of Spartan's monitors.

  "How

  is she?" he asks quietly, voice low enough to carry a weight of

  concern without disturbing the procedure.

  Lucia

  doesn't pause her hands, but gestures vaguely toward the monitor, the

  glow illuminating the jagged lines of Spartan's vital signs. "Stable.

  For now. Repairs are holding," she says, her tone clinical but

  not unkind. "These grafts, the ribs, the implants, they will

  take time to integrate. Time she won't be happy sitting through."

  Magnus

  scans the data, eyes tracing the jagged red spikes and blue lines.

  Each number, each rhythm, paints the story of Spartan's body pushed

  to its absolute limits.

  The

  heart monitor beeps a little faster, a subtle rise in rate. Magnus

  notices immediately. "Her heart…" he murmurs, watching

  the tiny fluctuations. The machine almost seems to respond to him as

  much as to Spartan herself.

  Lucia

  glances up, eyebrows slightly knit. "It's not unusual," she

  says, though she keeps her hands steady. "Even unconscious, she

  reacts to familiar stimuli. Her body knows who you are."

  Magnus

  lets that hang in the air, a heavy weight between them. He watches

  the monitor again, voice softer this time. "How long?"

  The

  heart spikes again, a tiny flutter across the display. Magnus' eyes

  narrow slightly, a mixture of recognition and concern. "She

  hears me," he says quietly.

  Lucia

  shakes her head without looking away from her work. "Standard

  recovery. Full stabilization, integration of grafts, tissue healing…

  weeks at least. And knowing Spartan," she adds, a faint smirk

  tugging at the corner of her mouth, "she won't stay in the bed

  once she wakes."

  Magnus

  exhales, a low rumble against the medbay's sterile air, and allows

  himself a brief pause, taking in the stillness of Spartan lying

  there, bloodied, rebuilt, unbowed. His presence is quiet, but

  palpable, almost a tether for the Vardengard in the midst of her

  slow, painful recovery.

  Spartan's

  hands claw at the sterile sheets, jerking upward with surprising

  strength. Magnus steps back instinctively, his towering frame

  reacting to the sudden surge of energy. Lucia freezes mid-motion,

  scalpel hovering, eyes wide. The assistants leap forward, one on each

  arm, gently but firmly keeping Spartan pressed against the gurney.

  Her

  polychromatic eyes blaze as they open fully, darting around the

  medbay. Panic and confusion flash across her face for a heartbeat,

  the monitors spike, heart rate climbing in tandem with the thrumming

  tension in the room.

  Then,

  she sees Magnus, his expression calm but concerned, and the sight

  seems to anchor her. Her gaze shifts to Lucia, steady and

  professional, hands moving with quiet authority. Spartan's shoulders

  tense, then relax. The claws of panic retract. Her heart rate

  gradually settles, the beeping of the monitors smoothing back into a

  steady rhythm.

  She

  exhales sharply, a sound somewhere between a snarl and a sigh, and

  Magnus lets out a low breath he didn't realize he was holding.

  "Easy," he murmurs, almost to himself, but loud enough for

  her to hear.

  Lucia

  exchanges a quick glance with her assistants, nodding subtly. "She's

  responsive. That's… good," she says, though her voice carries

  a note of disbelief at Spartan's raw willpower even in this state.

  Spartan

  blinks once, twice, then shifts her head slightly, focusing fully on

  Magnus. Her breathing evens, and her hands curl into weak fists,

  resting on the table. The fire of her defiance hasn't dimmed, only

  tempered for the moment by recognition and trust.

  Magnus

  steps closer again, hand held out lightly, but he doesn't touch her

  yet. His voice is calm, steady. "You are safe. You are not

  leaving the medbay yet. But you are here… you are alive."

  Spartan's

  gaze lingers on him, her breathing slow but controlled, and she gives

  the faintest of nods, acknowledgment more than compliance. Her body

  may be broken, but her mind and will remain unbowed.

  Spartan's

  lips part slightly, voice hoarse and strained. "Master…"

  she rasps, barely above a whisper, but her polychromatic eyes lock

  onto his. She forces the word from her throat again, this time adding

  the name, "Absjorn…"

  Magnus

  leans closer, crouching just enough to meet her gaze. His expression

  is calm but edged with concern. "I know," he says quietly.

  "Red Baron and the others told me everything."

  Spartan's

  eyes narrow slightly, frustration and pain flaring. Her breathing is

  ragged, and she struggles to push herself upright, though her body

  resists. "What… do we… do?" she manages to choke out,

  each word costing her effort.

  Magnus

  places a steadying hand lightly near her shoulder, careful not to

  interfere with the ongoing procedures. His voice is firm, yet

  measured. "Rest," he says. "Right now, you do nothing

  but heal. I will figure out what comes next. Absjorn will not wait

  forever, but neither will we."

  Spartan's

  gaze lingers on him, searching for the fire she's always relied on in

  herself. She lets out a short, frustrated growl, then finally slumps

  back against the gurney, her strength spent, accepting, if only for

  the moment, that she must trust Magnus to act while she recovers.

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