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CHAPTER TWO: I’ve Felt The Chains of the Condemned

  Magnus

  Tiberius' Private Quarters - Hours Later

  The

  halls of the Officer's Wing hum faintly with the night's low

  resonance, the quiet, distant murmur of the Keep's systems

  breathing. Magnus walks at a leisurely pace, for once without the

  ironclad stride of command. His shoulders hang loose; his head

  slightly dipped. The psychoactive liquor from dinner still courses

  through his blood. His pulse is calm, his thoughts quieted, the world

  softened into muted edges and warm haze.

  It's

  an alien feeling for him; carelessness.

  And

  yet he welcomes it.

  He

  moves like a man half-submerged in memory, boots echoing lightly on

  the marble as his mind replays the earlier conversation with Spartan.

  Their virtues are both their strengths and their weaknesses… Her

  words stir something within him, a rare agreement, a recognition of

  truth from someone whose instincts are as lethal as her hands. He

  considers the Venators' faith: how ritual can be turned into rhythm,

  how rhythm can become vulnerability. Psychological warfare,

  attrition, and the inevitable collapse of conviction, that is how

  she hunts. And perhaps, how they must.

  He

  smiles faintly to himself at the thought, though the motion feels

  strange on his face.

  Halfway

  down the corridor, the silence breaks.

  "Magnus?"

  The

  voice comes from behind, sharp, familiar. He turns, just slightly off

  balance. Varric stands outside his quarters, leaning against the door

  frame, and beside him, Lucian Dain, massive, silent, arms crossed.

  The contrast is stark: Varric's half-dressed casualness beside Dain's

  soldierly stillness.

  Both

  stare as Magnus turns fully toward them.

  He

  sways just enough for it to be noticed. His fatigues, simple black

  and grey, make him look more like a field officer than the General

  Supreme of Civitas. It's not how they usually see him.

  Varric

  is the first to speak, his tone a mixture of surprise and amusement.

  "By

  the stars, it's been years since I've seen that look on your face."

  Lucian

  narrows his eyes slightly. The faint scent hits him first, strong

  alcohol, Vardengard incense, and something deeper beneath: that

  sharp, earthy bite of the psychoactive drink. "Magnus… you are

  drunk."

  Magnus

  blinks at him, then smiles again, faint, harmless. "Observant as

  ever, Lucian."

  Varric

  laughs, low and genuine. "Drunk. You. Gods, Magnus, I think the

  last time was," he squints, "your twenty-second birthday.

  When Cassius nearly had you court-martialed for singing war hymns

  naked on the officer's balcony."

  Magnus'

  expression doesn't change, though his eyes flick toward him with mild

  irritation. "An exaggeration."

  Lucian

  glances to Varric, then back to Magnus. "What's the occasion

  then?"

  Magnus'

  tone is composed, even. "Dinner."

  Varric

  raises a brow. "Dinner? You missed our

  
dinner."

  "I

  had one already," Magnus replies, the faintest smirk breaking

  through. "With my Varden."

  Varric

  laughs again, shaking his head. "Of course you did. The great

  General Supreme, dining with his dogs instead of his generals."

  He looks him over, grinning. "And look where that got you.

  Reeking of incense and regret."

  Magnus'

  gaze slides past them, toward the faint shimmer of the corridor's

  end. "Regret?" he repeats, the word softened by the

  alcohol's edge. "No. Reflection."

  Lucian

  studies him more closely now. Despite the drink, Magnus' eyes are

  clear, steady, calculating, the way they always are. But there's a

  looseness to him. A dangerous calm.

  Varric

  crosses his arms, still amused. "You planning to stumble into

  bed, or should we call the Foundry to retemper you first?"

  Magnus

  gives him a faint, weary smirk. "If I needed tempering, Varric…

  the Forger would have broken me long ago."

  Varric

  bursts out laughing again, while Lucian's stern expression wavers,

  the faintest smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.

  Lucian's

  silence holds for a moment longer before his lips curve into

  something sharp. "You are

  starting to sound like Faustus," he says, voice low, biting.

  "Fighting with your dogs. Eating with them. Now drinking with

  them too. You even smell like them."

  Magnus

  doesn't answer. He turns toward his door, the panels sliding open

  with a hiss.

  "Lucian,"

  Varric mutters, tone warning.

  Lucian

  only shrugs, following Magnus in. "Just an observation."

  Inside,

  the lights bloom to life automatically, warm and clean, casting along

  polished steel and stone. The quarters are immaculate, arranged with

  precision: shelves lined with medals and ancient blades, a wall of

  holographic charts and star maps, a faint trace of smoke from the

  evening's incense lingering in the air. At the center, an L-shaped

  sectional couch faces the fireplace with a television over the

  mantle.

  Magnus

  drops into the corner of the couch, elbows on knees, rubbing at his

  face. "Sit," he mutters.

  Varric

  takes one end, Lucian the other, leaning back with his usual swagger.

  Magnus

  looks up at Varric first. "How did the battle go? The

  Tatrasiel?"

  Varric

  exhales, rubbing the back of his neck. "Standard engagement at

  first. Absjorn's fleet was tight, formation disciplined. We caught

  them in orbit, pinched them between our forward line and your fleet.

  Should have been clean."

  He

  pauses, expression darkening.

  "But

  those Protectors…" He shakes his head. "Six of them. They

  fly like bodyguards, separate from their own shielding nets.

  Hardlight arrays layered over each other, mobile walls. You cannot

  flank them, cannot

  pin them, every time we tried to break through, they rotated,

  protecting the Tatrasiel like a damn fortress in motion."

  Lucian's

  brow furrows slightly. "So how did

  you breach?"

  "We

  did not,"

  Varric answers flatly. "We just kept hammering. Kinetic, plasma,

  even the rail cannons, eventually, we scorched one of their shields

  enough to punch through and graze the Tatrasiel. That is

  when it happened."

  Magnus

  leans forward slightly, his voice low. "What?"

  "They

  vanished."

  Lucian

  straightens. "Vanished how?"

  Varric

  gestures vaguely with a hand. "Like smoke. No warp signature, no

  thermal trace, no debris. Just gone. One moment six ships and the

  Tatrasiel are taking hits, the next, " he snaps his fingers,

  "Nothing.

  My engineers are still combing sensor data. Nothing matches a warp

  pattern or a cloaking pulse. It is

  like they blinked out of existence."

  Magnus'

  gaze sharpens even through the haze of alcohol. "Disappeared

  without warp…" he murmurs, the strategist's mind already

  turning over possibilities; experimental drive systems, occult

  technology, or something far worse.

  Lucian

  huffs softly, crossing his arms. "Maybe your dogs on Rauvis

  scared them into the void."

  Varric

  glances between them, tension flickering.

  Magnus

  only hums in quiet thought, gaze distant toward the balcony windows.

  Varric

  leans back into the couch, arms folded across his chest. "Ships

  in orbit are one thing," he says. "But you," he tilts

  his chin toward Magnus, "you went down there yourself. How was

  it? Captain Absjorn; is he the type to sit safe behind the line, or

  did he actually meet you face to face?"

  The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.

  Magnus

  exhales, slow, the breath heavy with the scent of iron and liquor.

  "He led from the front," he says finally. "Always from

  the front."

  Varric

  raises a brow. "That so?"

  Magnus

  nods once, his eyes unfocused, not from confusion, but recollection.

  "Absjorn's a challenge," he admits. "Unafraid of

  anything. The kind of man who looks at death and sees a promise

  kept." He pauses, rolling the words like stones in his mouth.

  "He believes he is

  chosen by the Absolute, sent to raze and conquer in His name."

  Lucian

  and Varric trade a glance. The air shifts.

  "Chosen?"

  Lucian mutters. "That is a dangerous kind of madness."

  "It

  is the worst kind," Varric adds quietly. "The kind that

  spreads."

  Magnus

  gives a slow nod. "Delusion, faith, they blur together when

  they're strong enough. But belief like his…" He shakes his

  head. "It makes him hard to kill."

  For

  a moment, the only sound is the faint hum of the Keep's environmental

  systems.

  Then

  Magnus continues, his tone turning technical. "The armor he

  wears, both him and the priest, Cassiel; it's something else. Akin to

  Olympian make, but heavier. Denser. Like wearing a fortress.

  Everything we threw at it, kinetic, even concentrated artillery, it

  might as well have been pebbles against castle walls."

  Lucian

  leans forward. "You are saying they have matched our

  engineering?"

  Magnus

  lifts a hand, wavering slightly, as if weighing the thought. "Not

  matched. Rivaled. They've built something obscene. Rho Voss managed

  to break through the outer layers, his blade's designed for ship

  hulls. Even then, it took him three clean strikes. Rail cannon fire

  managed to scar it, but nothing more."

  Varric

  whistles softly. "That is… terrifying."

  Magnus

  smirks faintly. "It's impressive." He sits back, eyes

  half-lidded, the psychoactive's weight dragging on his voice. "The

  design, the composition, whoever forged it understands war down to

  the atom."

  Varric

  studies him carefully. "You sound almost admiring."

  "I

  admire good work," Magnus says simply. "Even when it's

  wielded by zealots."

  For

  a fleeting moment, the words seem harmless, but then his expression

  shifts. Something cold flickers behind his eyes. His gaze drops to

  the floor, jaw tightening as if a thought cuts through the haze.

  Lucian

  notices. "What?"

  Magnus

  doesn't answer. He stares ahead at nothing, the muscles in his face

  drawn taut, remembering, not speaking.

  The

  mention of Absjorn. The battle. The moment Spartan disappeared

  beneath Venator hands.

  His

  fingers flex unconsciously, knuckles whitening.

  Lucian

  frowns, about to speak again, but Varric shakes his head once, silent

  warning.

  The

  quiet stretches.

  Then

  Magnus exhales through his nose, the tension easing only slightly.

  "Absjorn's faith gives him purpose," he says finally,

  quieter now. "But that same faith blinds him. It makes him

  predictable."

  He

  doesn't elaborate. Not yet.

  The

  room stays still; heavy, humming with things left unsaid.

  Lucian

  leans back into the couch, the leather creaking under his weight. "We

  have fought Absolutists before," he says, his tone dark but

  distant. "But lately…" He gestures vaguely, searching for

  words. "The Order is losing what little sense it had. This new

  religion of theirs; it's spreading like plague."

  Varric

  glances his way. "You mean the cult of the Absolute?"

  Lucian

  nods. "Ita. The old altars, those to their Pagan Gods, they are

  being defaced. Statues smashed. Shrines burned. I have seen it

  myself. Their own people turning on their own icons, saying they were

  false idols all along." He exhales sharply through his nose. "It

  is all the same faith in new robes. They fight no differently, only

  shout louder while they kill."

  His

  words hang for a moment, the hum of the lights filling the quiet.

  Varric

  turns his gaze back to Magnus. The General Supreme sits half-slouched

  on the couch, eyes shadowed, the psychoactive softening his edges but

  not his unease. Varric knows that look, the silence that grips a man

  after battle, when his armor no longer hides the weight of what he's

  seen.

  "Magnus,"

  Varric says softly, leaning forward, elbows on his knees. "What

  happened down there?"

  Magnus

  doesn't answer at first. His eyes remain on the floor, as if the

  answer were written there in the grain of the steel tiles. He lifts

  his head just enough to meet Varric's gaze, then looks away again.

  Varric

  doesn't press, not yet. But his silence is insistent. They have

  known each other too long for Magnus to hide behind rank.

  Finally,

  Magnus exhales. "Naburiel and Spartan were captured," he

  says, the words slow, heavy.

  That

  pulls both men upright.

  Lucian's

  eyes narrow. "Captured?"

  Magnus

  nods once. "Absjorn took them. Held them for three days before

  we broke through his encampment." His voice grows quieter.

  "Three days."

  The

  pause that follows is suffocating.

  Lucian

  sits back, frowning, while Varric watches Magnus closely. "And?"

  he asks gently.

  Magnus

  hesitates, his jaw tightening. "Naburiel was lashed," he

  says finally. "Castrated." His tone doesn't waver, but the

  words drag across the room like grinding stone. "If Spartan

  hadn't caught Absjorn's eye, I suspect he'd have done worse to the

  boy."

  Lucian

  mutters a curse under his breath, but Magnus isn't done.

  "As

  for her…" He trails off, brow furrowing, the memory crawling

  to the surface whether he wants it or not. "She wasn't tortured

  in the same way. It was…" He struggles for the right word, and

  that alone unsettles them. "It was ritual. He was trying to

  convert her. To cleanse her, he called it. To make her 'pure.'"

  The

  word tastes wrong in his mouth.

  Silence

  bleeds out again. The hum of the lights seems louder now, almost

  alive.

  Varric's

  voice cuts through it, soft, almost reverent. "And now? How are

  they?"

  Before

  Magnus can answer, Lucian scoffs, breaking the stillness like a

  hammer to glass. "Does it matter?"

  Both

  men turn toward him.

  Lucian

  waves a dismissive hand. "They are Vardengard. Tools. As long as

  they are breathing and remember who commands them, that is all that

  matters."

  "Lucian,"

  Varric warns.

  But

  Lucian doesn't stop. "You are both getting sentimental over

  dogs. They are made to fight, to suffer, to die. That is what they

  were built for. Do not start weeping like women over it."

  Magnus

  looks up slowly. His gaze meets Lucian's, steady, unreadable, but

  there's a pressure behind his eyes, something buried and sharp that

  makes the younger man falter just long enough to realize he's gone

  too far.

  The

  air between them tightens like a wire drawn to breaking.

  Varric

  exhales through his nose, glancing between them. "Lucian, do

  not."

  But

  Lucian's pride won't let him stop. "What? I am only saying what

  we all know to be true. They are beasts forged for war. That is what

  The Forger made them for, is it not?" His tone is mocking,

  reverent and blasphemous in the same breath. "You keep them

  leashed, you reward obedience, and when they bite, you put them down.

  Nothing more."

  Magnus

  scratches his beard slow, his hand soon falling to his lap.

  "You

  misunderstand the Forger's work," he says, voice quiet but

  heavy. "The Forger never shaped them to be slaves. He made them

  to endure. To outlast men like us. To carry our wars when our bones

  would shatter beneath the weight of them. They are His finest

  creation, not His failed one."

  Lucian

  scoffs, his smirk widening. "You have been spending too much

  time among them, brother. Starting to sound like one of your pets.

  Next you will be growling and snapping at me."

  "Careful,"

  Magnus murmurs. The tone isn't angry, it's distant, almost

  thoughtful. But there's something in it that sets Lucian's teeth on

  edge, like a low rumble before thunder.

  "I

  am only saying," Lucian goes on, though more measured now, "that

  empathy dulls the blade. You keep thinking of them as people, and one

  day you will forget what they are for."

  Magnus

  tilts his head slightly, the faintest hint of amusement twisting

  through his exhaustion. "And what are they

  for, then, Lucian? To send them to die for wars we start and cannot

  end? To call them beasts while we burn the stars for our own pride?"

  Lucian's

  smile fades. His fingers drum once against his knee, his jaw

  tightening as if to speak, but the words never come.

  Varric

  steps in before it can break. "Enough." His voice cuts

  through the tension like steel. "We are brothers, there is no

  need to start a new war in here."

  Silence

  lingers. The three of them sit in it, the firelight shifting across

  their faces.

  Magnus

  leans back slowly, eyes distant again. The psychoactive haze makes

  him seem almost adrift, his thoughts wandering somewhere far beyond

  the room. "Respect, Lucian," he mutters at last. "Even

  the Forger demanded that. You can hate the beast, but never forget

  who tempered its steel."

  Lucian

  watches him for a long moment, then looks away, swallowing the retort

  that almost escapes.

  Varric

  leans back in his seat. His eyes flick between Magnus and Lucian,

  gauging how far things have gone before he decides to intervene.

  "Well," he drawls, the edge of a grin curling at his lip,

  "if I ever need someone to kick a pack of wolves, I will be sure

  to call you first, Lucian. You have got the temperament for it."

  Lucian

  turns his head sharply, the faintest flicker of irritation breaking

  through his calm.

  Varric

  smirks wider. "Course, I would keep your hands clear of their

  teeth. I have seen what happens to men who mistake discipline for

  cruelty. They tend to bleed a lot more than the wolves do."

  Lucian

  stares at him for a beat, long enough to make the silence

  uncomfortable, then scoffs, pushing away from the table. "You

  two can drown in your sentiment," he says, turning toward the

  door. "I will save my pity for the men who actually matter."

  The

  door seals behind him with a low hiss. The room exhales.

  For

  a while, only the low hum of the ventilation fills the silence.

  Magnus stands, the motion slow and deliberate, and drifts toward the

  television. The screen is black, glossy, reflecting the room behind

  him, the glow of the fire, the empty glasses, the spot on the couch

  Lucian vacated. His face looks ghosted in the reflection, distant and

  older.

  Varric

  sighs and sets his glass down. "He is an ass," he says

  softly. "I will apologize on his behalf. And for myself. I

  should not have brought him into this."

  Magnus

  doesn't answer right away. He stares at the dark screen like it might

  speak back to him.

  When

  he finally does, his voice is quieter than before. "I believe

  I've grown tired of him."

  Varric

  raises a brow. "Lucian is

  still one of the best generals Invicta has. You know that."

  Magnus

  turns his head slightly, just enough for the firelight to catch the

  faint crease between his brows. "One of the best generals who

  nearly wiped out half his own fleet in an obvious Tiamat trap."

  Varric

  spreads his hands in a small shrug. "Everyone makes mistakes.

  Even you."

  Magnus

  lets out a faint, humorless chuckle. "Perhaps. But when I make

  them, I bleed for them." He pauses, looking back at the dark

  reflection again. "Lucian makes them and expects others to clean

  up the ash."

  Varric

  doesn't answer. He knows better than to argue when Magnus' tone turns

  like that, measured, detached, and cold as metal cooling in water.

  Magnus

  reaches for his drink, swirls it once, then sets it down untouched.

  "I'll do nothing to him," he says at last. "But I'll

  not be there to save him from his own folly again. The House of Dain

  can burn for all I care."

  The

  fire crackles. The reflection in the black screen flickers.

  Varric

  studies him quietly, then murmurs, "You do not mean that."

  Magnus

  doesn't answer. He just keeps watching the ghost of himself on the

  glass, as though waiting to see if it agrees.

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