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CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: Grabbing My Keepsakes, Leavin’ My Burdens

  The

  City of Karthane, Nirna - Morning

  The

  twin suns rise dim behind a veil of gray clouds, painting Karthane in

  a dull orange light that flickers across the frost-slick metal of the

  outpost. The air hums with the sound of labor, the rhythmic clang of

  hammers, the hiss of welding torches, the low whine of servos.

  General

  Supreme Magnus Tiberius stands near the entrance of the

  Federation-Invictan joint barracks, arms crossed, black and crimson

  Tyrannus armor glinting faintly under the floodlights. His broad

  silver pauldrons mark his rank as much as the regal, heavy cloak

  draped across his shoulders, its edge trimmed in the sigils of the

  Forger. Frost gathers along his boots as his breath clouds in the

  chill air.

  Before

  him, a tall, broad-shouldered man stalks through the half-constructed

  site, barking orders in a gravelly voice.

  "Get

  that support beam up! You think that wall's gonna stand itself? Kora,

  weld faster, you're not painting a cathedral!"

  The

  head engineer, Senior Architect Darius Venn, is as infamous as he is

  indispensable, a man of iron lungs, iron temper, and a bloodstream

  likely half coffee by now. His coveralls are stained with oil and

  soot; a pair of cracked welding goggles hang perpetually around his

  neck. Despite the exhaustion written in the heavy bags beneath his

  eyes, his voice carries like artillery.

  Magnus

  watches him work for a moment, almost amused. When Darius finally

  turns, spotting the towering form of the General Supreme, he snaps

  upright, brushing ash from his sleeves.

  "General

  Supreme," Darius says, voice rough but respectful. "Didn't

  think to see you down here with the dirt and bolts. I figured you'd

  be in the warm offices upstairs."

  Magnus

  gives a faint smile. "If I wanted to stay warm, I would have

  remained aboard the Bellator. I came to make certain the Forger's

  Will is still taking shape on the ground."

  Darius

  snorts. "Ita, well, she's taking shape, all right. Slow as cold

  iron, though, thanks to Federation bureaucracy. We've got half a

  dozen different codes to obey now. You'd think they were building

  temples instead of bunks."

  Magnus

  steps beside him, folding his hands behind his back as they walk the

  perimeter. "You've done good work, Darius. But I need a few…

  alterations made to the Vardengard quarters."

  The

  engineer frowns, rubbing his chin. "Alterations? Sir, the plans

  are already tight as it is. Space, manpower, material, "

  Magnus

  cuts him a look, calm but cutting. "Darius."

  The

  man exhales through his nose. "All right. What kind of

  alterations?"

  Magnus

  gestures toward the structure in progress, rows of metallic

  dormitories, cold and uniform, meant for efficiency above comfort.

  "The current design does not account for their… nature. The

  Vardengard are not like other soldiers. They require space to

  breathe, to move. Their quarters must match their stature and their

  function."

  Darius

  nods slowly, jotting something into a digital slate. "Bigger

  bunks, then. Taller ceilings. Reinforced load-bearing frames to

  account for their armor weight."

  "Correct,"

  Magnus says. "And more than that. A central pit, for heat, for

  gathering. Fire is important to them. It grounds them. Give them a

  place to burn their offerings, to share their meals."

  Darius

  raises a brow. "A firepit? Inside a barracks?"

  "Vented

  properly," Magnus replies smoothly. "And… a dedicated

  mess hall. Separate from the Praevectus and Federation wings. They

  will eat among themselves; it will avoid unnecessary…

  misunderstandings."

  The

  engineer sighs, glancing over the site. "You're asking for a

  luxury build, General Supreme. The men'll whine."

  Magnus

  looks out across the snow, where the hammering continues. "Let

  them. They have not seen what the Vardengard have done for this

  campaign. What they have endured." His tone deepens, cold and

  final. "They will have their space. Do this for me, Darius."

  For

  a moment, Darius studies him, the tired old man staring up at the

  living god of Invicta, all strength and iron will. Finally, he nods,

  rubbing the bridge of his nose.

  "I'll

  get it done," he says. "No sleep for me again, I suppose.

  You'll have it ready before the next snowfall."

  Magnus

  allows himself the faintest hint of a smile. "I knew I could

  rely on you."

  Darius

  chuckles dryly, already turning to shout at his workers again. "Don't

  thank me yet, my Lord. You'll see what it costs when I send the

  requisition forms."

  Magnus

  watches him storm off, his voice booming across the frozen camp once

  more.

  The

  General Supreme lingers a moment longer, gazing toward the northern

  mountains, the direction Spartan and her pack disappeared hours ago.

  The snow drifts against his boots, and his reflection shimmers

  faintly in the frost.

  "Forge

  their path true," he murmurs under his breath, the prayer

  carried off into the cold.

  Snow

  falls like pale ash, whispering across the frozen concrete. The sound

  of hammers and welding fades as Magnus turns from the construction

  site, cloak dragging faintly against the ground. His boots crunch

  through the frost, each step steady, deliberate, the measured stride

  of a man who commands worlds.

  He

  starts toward the command room, the low, fortified structure ahead

  where warmth and light seep faintly through armored glass, when

  movement on the main road draws his eye.

  A

  lone figure walks through the snowfall.

  Magnus

  halts.

  Towering,

  broad-shouldered, cloaked in black and red armor engraved with runes

  of the Forger's tongue, the figure's presence radiates something

  primal, older than even Invicta's steel. Morus.

  The

  Vardengard shaman moves with heavy grace, each step sinking into the

  powder with a muted thud. A wolf's skull crowns his helm, its long

  fangs gleaming with frost, and the beast's pelt drapes across his

  shoulders like a mantle of shadow. His war staff, a fusion of bone,

  steel, and charms, clinks and rattles softly, beads and sigils

  chiming like windbells. In the cold light, he looks more apparition

  than man.

  But

  he isn't alone.

  At

  his side walks Lucia Dain, shoulders tucked into a heavy winter coat,

  fur-lined hood drawn tight against the wind. Her once-pristine

  Fleshwright attire peeks out beneath the coat, and her boots leave

  smaller tracks beside the shaman's broad prints. Her hands are buried

  deep in her pockets, and despite the cold, there's a spark of

  mischief in her step.

  Magnus

  narrows his eyes, the faintest shadow of a smile curling across his

  lips. He strides forward, snow trailing off his cloak like falling

  ash.

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  Morus

  stops before Magnus can call out, his helm turns slightly, as though

  he feels the General Supreme's presence before seeing him. Lucia,

  noticing, halts too and turns, her smile blooming when she recognizes

  the man approaching.

  "My

  love," she says brightly, voice muffled by the wind. Her gloved

  hand lifts to steady her hood. "You look colder than usual. I

  did not think gods felt the chill."

  Magnus

  stops a few paces away, helm held beneath his arm, steam ghosting

  from his breath. His expression is hard to read. "Lucia,"

  he says evenly, "you were supposed to remain aboard the

  Bellator."

  Lucia's

  smile only widens, that infuriating mix of confidence and defiance.

  "Yes, well… the Bellator does not bleed. Your Vardengard do. I

  go where I am needed."

  Magnus

  arches a brow. "We have the Insarii Medicae for that. Their

  detachment was assigned to field care."

  Lucia

  chuckles under her breath, a hint of frost curling past her lips.

  "Field care, ita. They are fine with flesh wounds and sealing

  armor. But broken bones? Organ tears? Psychological collapse? They

  are patchers, not healers. The Vardengard deserve proper treatment,

  not field improvisation."

  Her

  tone softens, earnest beneath the edge. "I am not here to

  undermine anyone, my love. I am here because when they come back, and

  they will come back, someone needs to be ready for what they bring

  with them."

  Magnus

  studies her for a long moment, his jaw tightening, but the argument

  dies before it's born. There's no winning against her once she

  decides where she belongs. He exhales, a plume of steam escaping his

  lips.

  "…You

  are impossible," he mutters finally.

  Lucia

  grins, eyes glinting. "You have said that before. I am starting

  to think that is how you say 'I love you, too." She chuckles.

  He

  turns his gaze to Morus now, the shaman standing motionless, a statue

  of iron and bone. The wolf skull faces him without expression, the

  eye sockets dark. "And what of you?" Magnus asks. "You

  should be in the field with your pack. Why are you here?"

  Morus's

  voice is low, rumbling like distant thunder beneath the helm.

  "Because my pack bleeds still, Master. And when warriors bleed,

  the forge must wait. I am not needed in their slaughter." He

  pauses, the staff's charms clinking faintly. "I am needed in the

  silence between. The moments after. When the steel cools."

  Magnus

  tilts his head slightly, frowning. "Cryptic as ever."

  Morus

  inclines his head, faint amusement ghosting through his tone. "Plain

  words cannot temper the spirit, my lord."

  Magnus

  sighs, pinching the bridge of his nose for a moment. "The two of

  you…"

  Lucia

  laughs softly, brushing snow from her sleeve. "You will be glad

  we are here."

  Magnus

  looks between them, the ghostly shaman and the defiant surgeon, and

  shakes his head, though there's the faintest trace of warmth in his

  eyes. "The Forger help me. I already am."

  They

  stand there for a moment longer as the snow falls thicker, muting the

  distant clang of construction. The wind tugs at their cloaks and

  coats, carrying the scent of metal and frost, and somewhere beyond

  the wall, the faint echo of war drums beating from the distant front.

  Magnus'

  helm display flares red, a sharp, intrusive glow against the cool

  blue of his HUD. A notification pulses in the upper right of his

  vision, a single word flashing in jagged script:

  SOS

  ALERT , INSARII MEDICAE BEACON

  He

  turns his head slightly, eyes flicking to expand the notification.

  The tactical map unfurls before him in ghostly projection, a pulsing

  red marker blinking deep within the northern wastes. His breath

  tightens, crystallizing faintly in the air.

  Lucia

  notices the change in his expression immediately. "What is it?"

  she asks.

  Magnus

  doesn't answer right away. His voice comes low, grim. "An SOS

  beacon. Insarii frequency."

  He

  straightens, shifting his helm beneath his arm as he looks back

  toward the base. "I have to get to the command room. Now."

  Lucia

  gives him a sharp look, not of fear, but vindication. "You see

  my point yet?"

  Magnus

  doesn't respond. He's already moving.

  Lucia

  and Morus fall into stride beside him, the great shaman's staff

  clicking softly with each step. They pass through the half-built

  courtyards and into the main hall, snow melting from their armor and

  boots. Inside, the low hum of power systems and distant machinery

  fills the air.

  Halfway

  through the atrium, a soldier rushes toward them, a lean Invictan

  with frost still clinging to his greaves, clutching a datapad.

  "General Supreme!" he calls out, slowing to a halt before

  Magnus and snapping a salute. "Sir, the beacon's coordinates

  just came through. Forty miles north of Karthane. Broadcasting from

  an Insarii unit."

  Magnus

  takes the datapad with a curt nod. The red marker blinks again on the

  holographic display, the words LIFE SIGNAL: NULL flashing underneath.

  His jaw tightens. He hands the pad back to the soldier and continues

  forward without breaking stride.

  They

  enter the command room, a vast space of dark steel and cold light. At

  the far end, the war table glows with tactical overlays and regional

  scans. Magnus strides up to it, helm under one arm, cloak trailing

  behind him like a banner of blood and shadow. Lucia and Morus flank

  him on either side.

  He

  opens a channel on his internal comms, the frequency encrypted to the

  Vardengard network. "Spartan," he calls, voice echoing low

  through the chamber.

  No

  response. Just static.

  Magnus

  narrows his eyes, repeating more firmly, "Spartan. Respond."

  A

  moment of silence, and then...

  "This

  is Spartan." Her voice comes through at last, filtered and

  distorted through the armor's vox, deepened to a harsh masculine

  rasp.

  Magnus

  leans over the table, one hand braced on its edge. "Your Insarii

  beacon is active," he says. "What happened?"

  A

  pause follows, brief, heavy. Then Spartan answers, "One of the

  Insarii succumbed to his wounds. We were ambushed by a pack of

  bonejackals."

  Lucia

  stiffens slightly beside him, eyes darting to the tactical

  projection.

  Magnus's

  tone sharpens. "Casualties?"

  "Minimal,"

  Spartan replies. "One dead, one… missing an arm. The rest

  still capable of combat. We've secured the site and are continuing

  north. Mission remains underway. We're making better ground than

  expected, given the conditions."

  Magnus

  exhales, the sound low and heavy, but his expression remains

  unreadable. "Understood," he says after a beat. "I

  will send a recovery team for the fallen Insarii. The beacon will

  guide them in."

  "Acknowledged."

  The

  line goes silent again, leaving only the faint hum of machinery and

  the flicker of blue light over their faces.

  Magnus

  shuts the comms and straightens, the faintest sigh escaping him, the

  kind only men like him ever let out when no one's meant to hear.

  Lucia

  folds her arms, looking up at him with something between sympathy and

  accusation. "This is exactly what I meant, Magnus. You cannot

  expect field medics to handle this alone. They need proper care,

  proper recovery. You need me down here."

  Magnus

  doesn't look at her. His gaze remains fixed on the red marker pulsing

  forty miles north.

  "I

  know," he murmurs.

  Behind

  them, Morus stands silent, the charms on his staff clicking faintly

  in the hush. When he finally speaks, his voice is low, heavy with the

  cadence of old ritual.

  "The

  Forge claims its due, even from the strong," he says. "But

  every flame needs a keeper to tend the embers when the battle ends."

  Magnus

  turns just slightly, meeting the wolf skull's hollow gaze.

  "Then

  we will make sure there is something left to tend," he replies.

  Magnus

  watches the red pulse on the tactical table fade into a steady,

  static marker.

  He

  turns to Morus, his voice firm, commanding.

  "You

  will lead the recovery detail," he says. "Take a skimmer

  and two squads of Praevectus. Bring the body back intact. Burn

  anything that gets in your way."

  Morus

  gives a slow, solemn nod. The wolf skull dips slightly, its hollow

  sockets catching the cold light. "It will be done, Master."

  Lucia

  folds her arms, watching the exchange. "I will have the medical

  bay prepared," she says, her tone brisk but touched with quiet

  pride. "When Spartan returns, the injured Insarii will be

  treated immediately. I will see to it personally."

  Magnus

  inclines his head in acknowledgment. "Good."

  Morus

  brings his fist to his chest, the Invictan salute, the charms of his

  staff rattling softly. "Then I'll make ready. I will wait at the

  gate."

  Magnus

  watches him go, the towering figure fading into the hall's shadowed

  light until only the whisper of bone and metal remains.

  The

  moment the heavy door closes behind him, the silence shifts. The air

  feels warmer.

  Lucia

  steps closer, her gloved hands slipping into her coat pockets, her

  breath visible in the cold air. "You know," she says

  lightly, "there is one small detail you seem to have overlooked,

  my love."

  He

  turns his head slightly, one brow lifting. "And what is that?"

  She

  tilts her head, eyes glinting. "I do not have quarters down

  here."

  He

  studies her for a long moment. Her tone is unmistakable, soft,

  teasing, threaded with something that cuts through the iron weight of

  command. He exhales, low through his nose, as if debating the wisdom

  of what he already knows he'll say.

  "My

  quarters," he says at last. "They are yours until new ones

  are assigned."

  Lucia

  smiles, slow and knowing, the kind of smile that could warm

  froststeel. "Generous of you, General Supreme."

  Magnus's

  gaze lingers on her, a flicker of something human breaking through

  the mask of discipline. "Just do not make a mess of the place."

  She

  chuckles quietly, stepping just close enough that her shoulder grazes

  his arm as she passes. "I will try not to," she murmurs.

  Then, glancing back over her shoulder, she adds, voice a velvet

  promise: "Let us hope nothing interrupts us tonight."

  Magnus

  doesn't answer, but the faintest curve of a smile ghosts across his

  lips as he turns back toward the war table.

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