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CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN: A Child Born To Set The World Ablaze

  The

  Infirmary Tent - Continuous

  The

  infirmary tent smells of blood, antiseptic, and sweat. Cadets groan

  in the background, the low hum of pain and frustration threading

  through the air. Some are guided out, limping or staggering, given

  directions to head to the location of the next phase of the Final

  Exam.

  Lucille sits on the gurney,

  still armored in her exoskeleton. Her helmet rests beside her, her

  longsword and diamond-shaped shield lying quietly on the gurney. She

  watches the nurse work, listening to the faint prick of the needle

  and the sliding thread of the sutures closing the wound along her

  side. Despite the numbing agent, every touch presses sharp against

  her nerves. She grips the edge of the gurney, knuckles white, teeth

  clenched.

  The nurse mutters softly

  under her breath, focused on stitching the deep gouge. Around them,

  life in the infirmary moves in rhythm with pain and survival.

  The tent flap shifts. A

  familiar presence. Lucille’s gaze lifts, catching movement through

  the chaos. Cain steps inside, scanning frantically. His silvery-blue

  eyes light up when they find her, relief and something softer mixed

  in his expression. He smiles, a small, patient smile that carries

  warmth and steadiness, even amid the blood and exhaustion of the

  tent.

  He is still in his

  exoskeleton, the helmet clipped to his hip, sword sheathed, standing

  at ease yet ready for any threat. Each step toward her is measured,

  careful, yet purposeful.

  Lucille’s attention

  shifts from the pain in her side to him, and the rest of the world

  narrows. She notices how the armor fits his frame, the subtle

  strength it amplifies, the quiet power in the way he moves. Her pulse

  quickens, not from the fight anymore, but from the sight of him.

  He kneels beside the

  gurney, close enough for her to feel his presence radiating

  reassurance. His eyes sparkle in that soft way, the kind that seems

  to wash away the misery, the loneliness, the raw ache she had been

  carrying since she first arrived at the Academy. She hasn’t seen

  him since his duel, and though only an hour or so has passed, it

  feels like an eternity to her.

  Lucille exhales slowly, the

  taut edge of tension in her shoulders softening slightly. The world,

  the pain, the blood, the battlefield, fades at the edges. For just a

  moment, she allows herself to simply be.

  Cain’s hand hovers near

  hers, hesitating only a breath before brushing it lightly. She

  doesn’t pull away. Her fingers twitch toward his, almost

  instinctively, a quiet acknowledgment of presence, of comfort.

  The nurse continues

  stitching, unaware of the subtle human moment beside her. The tent

  hums with life and pain, but in that small corner, Lucille and Cain

  exist almost outside it, two soldiers amid chaos, finding a heartbeat

  of peace.

  Cain’s

  smile never falters, even as his eyes keep drifting back to the wound

  at her side, to the needle drawing thread through torn flesh.

  “You fought well,” he

  says quietly, voice steady, warm. “Really well.” A pause, just

  long enough to give him away. “Still… I wish you wouldn’t take

  hits like that.”

  He glances at the stitching

  again, jaw tightening. Then he adds, lighter, teasing, almost joking.

  “Maybe you’ve learned your lesson now that one of them actually

  got through.”

  Lucille looks up at him,

  unfazed. She smiles, small but certain. “It won me the fight.”

  Cain exhales softly,

  something in his expression giving way. The confidence in her answer

  doesn’t frustrate him, it scares him. His smile fades into

  something gentler, more vulnerable. Without thinking, he reaches out

  and grabs the back of her hand, squeezing it firmly.

  “I’m just glad you’re

  okay,” he says.

  Heat rushes to Lucille’s

  face. She looks down quickly, hiding the blush beneath loose strands

  of hair, but the smile stays. She turns her hand in his, threading

  her fingers through his and holding on.

  The nurse keeps stitching.

  Somewhere nearby, a cadet groans. Blood, antiseptic, and pain fill

  the air.

  But for Lucille, the world

  narrows to the warmth of Cain’s hand in hers, and for the first

  time since the duel, the fire inside her quiets just a little.

  Advanced Military

  Survival & Reconnaissance Field – Continuous

  The

  field stretches wide and uneven, grass trampled thin by boots and

  drills. Scattered workbenches sit half-sunk into the earth, scarred

  by blades and burns. Kaelis Dravon himself occupies one of them,

  seated with the casual authority of someone who does not need to

  stand to command respect. His exoskeleton is partially disengaged,

  helmet resting at his side. A datapad glows faintly in his hand as he

  scrolls, attention split, reading, listening, watching.

  Thirty

  cadets filter into the field in uneven waves.

  Some

  walk in under their own power. Others limp. A few have bloodstained

  bandages hastily wrapped over armor seams. Every few minutes, another

  figure arrives from the distant direction of the Martyr’s Ring, the

  noise of that place long faded but its consequences written plainly

  on their bodies.

  The

  cadets cluster in loose groups, sitting in the grass or leaning

  against benches. Low conversation hums through the air, nervous

  laughter, bragging, grim recounting of blows taken and dealt. Hunger

  asserts itself now that adrenaline has bled away. Foil packets are

  torn open. MREs are eaten cold and fast.

  Lucille

  and Cain enter the field together.

  They

  stop at the supply crate first. The lid is already open. A fresh box

  of MREs sits inside, only a handful taken. Two empty crates are

  stacked beside it, mute evidence of how long the day has already

  been.

  Neither

  of them bothers to look at the labels. Cain reaches in, grabs two at

  random, hands one to Lucille. She takes it without comment. Survival

  food is survival food.

  As

  they turn away, a voice cuts across the field.

  “Cain!

  Lucille!”

  Decimus

  is already on his feet, springing up from the grass where he had been

  sitting with a small group of cadets. He waves both arms over his

  head, utterly unconcerned with dignity, a wide grin splitting his

  face. Relief and excitement are written all over him as he calls out

  again, beckoning them over.

  For

  a moment, amid the ache, the blood, and the waiting dread of the next

  phase, the field feels almost, briefly, alive.

  Lucille

  and Cain cross the field and join Decimus near its center.

  Decimus grins like a child

  who has been waiting too long for friends to arrive, all teeth and

  bright eyes despite the grime streaked across his armor. “Finally,”

  he says, breathless with relief. “I was starting to think you two

  died over there.”

  He reaches out and pats

  Cain’s shoulder, a quick, familiar gesture. “So?” he asks,

  lowering his voice just enough to feel conspiratorial. “How’d

  Lucille’s fight go?”

  The narrative has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.

  Cain exhales through his

  nose. “It was a fight.”

  Lucille can’t help the

  grin that tugs at her mouth. She feels it before she can kill it. She

  turns away before either of them can comment, drops to a knee in the

  grass, and focuses on the MRE instead. She tears the packet open,

  fingers working the heating element with practiced efficiency. Steam

  begins to creep from the seam.

  Decimus chuckles under his

  breath, then leans in closer, his tone shifting. “Word is, we don’t

  get long,” he says. “Dravon said to rest and eat while we can.”

  Cain frowns. “That’s

  it? He didn’t say what’s next?”

  Decimus shakes his head.

  “Nope. Just that.”

  Lucille listens in silence,

  staring down at the warming ration. If they’re with Dravon now,

  that narrows it. His classes never stay contained. Survival,

  endurance, adaptation. And even then, survival could mean a hundred

  different hells depending on his mood.

  She exhales slowly.

  The three of them settle

  into the grass, armor creaking as they sit. Decimus fills the quiet

  with easy, polite chatter, small things, jokes that don’t quite

  land, observations about who looks worse coming in from the ring.

  It’s the kind of conversation meant to keep the edge at bay.

  For now, they eat. For now,

  they rest. And nearby, Centurion Kaelis Dravon watches, datapad idle

  in his hand, waiting for the moment to begin.

  Advanced Military

  Survival & Reconnaissance Field – Dusk

  Dusk

  bleeds across the Academy grounds, turning the grass to bruised gold

  and shadow.

  Centurion Dravon finally

  rises from the workbench.

  The simple motion is

  enough.

  Conversation cuts off

  mid-word. Nearly sixty cadets lift their heads as one, bodies

  stiffening despite the exhaustion that weighs on them. Armor creaks.

  Someone swallows too loudly.

  Decimus mutters under his

  breath, “Finally.”

  Marcus elbows him in the

  arm without looking, a sharp, silent warning.

  Dravon steps forward into

  the open ground. He doesn’t shout. He never does. He lets his gaze

  move over them instead, slow and deliberate, measuring each cadet

  like a piece of equipment that may or may not fail when needed most.

  He lets the silence stretch until it starts to hurt.

  Then he speaks. No flare.

  No dramatics.

  “Phase Two begins now.”

  The words settle heavy.

  “You will be conducting a

  multi-day live-fire operation.”

  A ripple runs through the

  field. A few cadets straighten, spines snapping rigid despite

  exhaustion. Others go very still, as if any movement might draw

  attention they cannot afford.

  Dravon’s gaze sweeps them

  again. “You will form teams. Two, if you insist.” A pause, thin

  and deliberate. “I advise against it. Four is preferred. Six is the

  maximum. Any more and you become slow. Any less and you become dead.”

  The cadeys are silent, but

  eyes shift.

  “Each team will receive a

  mission dossier.” He turns slightly, indicating the stacked folders

  behind him. “Inside is your assignment. You will be given a VIP

  target. Your objective is to locate them, secure them, and extract

  from the field.”

  His eyes harden. “Alive.”

  Another pause. Longer this

  time.

  “Failure is not

  theoretical,” Dravon continues. “If you fail to locate your

  target, if you fail to extract, or if you allow them to be killed,

  that failure will be recorded. Permanently.”

  A few cadets swallow.

  “You will be issued

  coordinates,” he says. “General location only. No exact

  positions. You will search, you will adapt, and you will make

  decisions without guidance.”

  He gestures with one gloved

  hand as he speaks, precise and economical. First toward the armored

  vehicles lined along one edge of the field, dark shapes waiting in

  silence. Then toward the horses tied to posts on the opposite side,

  shifting and snorting in the gloom. Finally, he lifts his hand toward

  the open land beyond the Academy walls, already sinking into shadow.

  “You may choose your

  method of insertion. Vehicle. Mount. Or on foot.”

  His hand drops.

  “And understand this,”

  Dravon adds, voice flattening. “You will not be alone out there.

  Other cadet teams will be assigned overlapping mission zones. Your

  objectives may intersect. Your routes may cross.”

  He lets that sink in before

  finishing, “How you handle those encounters is up to you.”

  Silence grips the field

  again, heavier now, sharpened by implication.

  “Choose your teams,”

  Dravon says at last. “Choose wisely.”

  Dravon turns away, already

  done speaking. He moves toward the workbenches where thick folders

  wait, mission dossiers stacked with precise indifference. He waves

  once to the other instructors, his assistants, and they begin hauling

  forward rucksacks already packed and waiting.

  The field explodes into

  motion.

  Cadets stand, call out

  names, drift and collide as groups form with hurried certainty or

  quiet calculation.

  Marcus and Decimus exchange

  a grin and look to Cain and Lucille. There’s no discussion needed.

  Or so they think.

  Two figures break from

  another cluster and approach.

  Tiber Tiber walks at the

  front, posture relaxed, expression open. Arruns Bato follows half a

  step behind, broader, quieter, eyes constantly tracking the movement

  around them.

  They stop in front of the

  group.

  Tiber’s gaze flicks to

  Lucille, and for a moment the noise of the field seems to fall away.

  He smiles at her, genuine, almost warm. “Hell of a fight,” he

  says. “Julianus never saw it coming. Congratulations.”

  The unspoken question hangs

  in the air between them.

  Marcus

  steps into the gap at Lucille’s side, broad frame angling subtly in

  front of her. His arms cross over his chest as he looks down at

  Tiber, eyes narrowed, measuring. “Our team’s full,” Marcus says

  flatly.

  Arruns

  scoffs, already shaking his head. “It’s four,” he shoots back.

  “Six is better than four. Dravon even said so.”

  Marcus

  doesn’t even look at Arruns. His attention stays locked on Tiber.

  “I know what you’ve done,” he says, voice low, edged. “I’ve

  seen you in the halls. Picking fights with her.” A nod toward

  Lucille, brief but unmistakable. “So tell me why in the hells we’d

  want you on the same team.”

  Tiber

  stiffens. For a moment, he looks like he might snap back. Then he

  stops. The tension drains from his shoulders as understanding finally

  clicks into place.

  “That

  was years ago,” he says slowly. He clears his throat, gaze dropping

  before lifting again, not to Marcus, but to Lucille. He steps forward

  and extends a hand toward her, open, unarmed.

  “I

  was a dumbass,” Tiber says. “An idiot.” A crooked, humorless

  breath escapes him. “I sided with someone I liked instead of doing

  the right thing. I took it out on you when I shouldn’t have. That’s

  on me.”

  He

  meets her eyes. “I’m sorry. Properly sorry.”

  Lucille

  doesn’t take his hand.

  She

  hesitates, heart ticking faster. Trust does not come easily to her,

  not here, not after everything. Her gaze drifts to Cain, searching

  his face as if he might hold the answer she cannot find.

  Cain

  only smiles at her. Soft. Steady. Unafraid.

  Lucille

  looks back to Tiber. She thinks of his scores, of what she’s seen

  of him in training. He is

  good. Reliable in the field, if not always in temperament. The

  apology feels real, but feeling real doesn’t mean it is.

  Slowly,

  she reaches out and takes his hand.

  “Alright,”

  Lucille says quietly.

  Tiber

  exhales, relief flickering across his face as he gives her hand a

  brief squeeze before letting go.

  Lucille

  straightens, looking at the group now. Cain. Marcus. Decimus. She

  knows, deep down, that if Tiber intends anything underhanded, it

  won’t go unnoticed. Sabotage would be stupidity of the highest

  order, no one passes this exam alone, no matter how much they might

  want to.

  “Six

  is better than four,” she adds at last.

  Marcus

  grunts, clearly unconvinced, but he steps back into place.

  The

  team is set.

  Dravon’s

  voice cuts across the field, sharp and unmistakable, calling out Cain

  and Lucille’s team by name.

  They

  rise together and move as one, crossing the grass toward the line of

  workbenches where several instructors wait. The benches are stacked

  high with packed rucksacks, uniform, heavy, already marked with unit

  codes and serial numbers. One by one, the instructors shove a pack

  into each cadet’s hands.

  The

  weight is immediate.

  Dravon

  passes Cain a thick folder, its edges worn and stained. The dossier.

  He taps it once with a gloved finger. “Your mission,” he says.

  “You’ll read it after you’re armed.” Then he nods toward the

  next workbench over.

  Weapons.

  Standard-issue

  rifles line the rack in neat rows, matte black and impersonal. SMGs

  and shotguns rest beneath them. Crates of utility gear sit open,

  grenades, flashbangs, smoke canisters, sensor spikes, breaching

  charges. Tools meant for problems that bleed.

  The

  team fans out, slinging rucksacks over armored shoulders.

  Cain

  takes a standard rifle without hesitation. Lucille mirrors him,

  checking the weight, the balance, the familiar feel of the grip in

  her hands. Tiber and Arruns both follow suit, rifles locked and

  shouldered with practiced motions.

  Marcus

  reaches past the rifles and pulls a shotgun from the rack, testing

  the action with a solid clack.

  Decimus selects a DMR, already checking the optic and the integrity

  of the barrel.

  They

  gather utility items with quiet efficiency, each choosing according

  to habit and instinct.

  As

  they work, Tiber glances up. “So,” he says, “have we decided on

  mounts?”

  Lucille

  answers before anyone else can. “Horses.”

  Arruns

  snorts. “Truck,” he counters immediately. “Faster. Less time

  exposed.”

  “They’ll

  bog down in the mountains,” Lucille replies, not missing a beat.

  “Narrow passes, bad terrain. Horses can go where trucks can’t,

  and they’re quieter.”

  Cain

  nods once. “She’s right.”

  That’s

  all it takes.

  Arruns

  exhales through his nose, rolling his shoulders. Marcus shrugs.

  Decimus simply adjusts the sling on his rifle. No one argues further.

  Horses

  it is.

  Lucille

  secures her rifle, tightening the strap across her chest. The

  decision settles over the team like a final lock snapping into place.

  They’re

  moving soon.

  Into

  the dark.

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