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CHAPTER SIX: Rip My World Apart

  The

  Blood Pit, Civitas Keep - Continuous

  Down

  in the Blood Pits of Civitas Keep, the air vibrates with the roar of

  clashing steel and the low, rhythmic chanting of Vardengard gathered

  along the stands. The pit's sands are darkened with old blood and

  sweat, illuminated by shafts of pale light streaming through the iron

  grates above. The scent of metal and oil hangs heavy in the

  subterranean air.

  Spartan

  lounges in her private booth; a half-enclosed perch of shadow and

  stone overlooking the arena. She sits in Rho Voss' lap, her back

  reclined comfortably against his chest. His arms rest across her

  frame, massive and still, while her fingers idly feed him a sliver of

  offal from the iron bowl on the low table beside them. His jaw moves

  in slow, mechanical rhythm; the dull gleam of his teeth flashes each

  time he bites down.

  Samayel

  sits opposite them in Rho's usual chair, one leg hooked over the

  other, boots dusty from the morning's drills. His eyes flick from the

  fight below to Spartan and back again, his usual sharp grin tempered

  into quiet observation. The low growl of the arena fills the silence

  between them.

  Down

  below, Ashurdan and Belqartis circle two other Vardengard; both

  broad-shouldered, both bearing the unmistakable markings of Tiberian

  descent. The first, Agnar, wields a long-handled flail whose head

  hums with kinetic charge; the second, Skeggi, grips a short spear and

  a wide-edged seax, his movements coiled and precise.

  Ashurdan

  lunges first, a great sweeping strike with his claymore that kicks

  dust up in a wide arc. Skeggi deflects the blow with the shaft of his

  spear, the shock reverberating up his arms, and Belqartis charges in

  on his left, axes whirling. The sound of metal on flesh echoes, quick

  and rhythmic, a deadly dance, yet no killing intent behind it.

  Rho

  Voss watches in silence, his black eyes following every shift, every

  feint. The muscle in his jaw tightens with each impact, as though

  instinctively reacting to blows he no longer needs to deliver

  himself. Spartan leans forward slightly, resting her arms on her

  knees, watching with the analytical patience of a wolf measuring her

  pack.

  Samayel

  tilts his head, eyes narrowing on the Tiberians. "Don't

  recognize those two," he mutters. "New blood?"

  Spartan

  doesn't look away from the fight. "Tiberians," she answers

  simply. "Agnar and Skeggi. They came in two seasons ago."

  He

  hums, nodding once as Cassian narrowly ducks a two-handed swing from

  Ashurdan, the flail snapping out to strike Belqartis' shoulder. The

  big man grins through the pain, grabs the chain, and yanks Cassian

  forward into a knee to the ribs.

  "Good

  kids," Spartan adds, voice low, faintly approving. "Fast,

  disciplined. They don't waste motion."

  Samayel

  glances at her, then back down. "They look it. Not afraid to

  bleed either."

  Rho

  Voss' hand moves, tracing absentminded circles against Spartan's hip,

  not distracting, just steady, grounding. His gaze never leaves the

  pit.

  "They'll

  make fine killers," Spartan continues softly, tone somewhere

  between praise and prophecy. "The kind Master would call

  efficient."

  Samayel

  smirks faintly. "Efficient's a polite word for it."

  Below,

  the spar crescendos, Ashurdan drives Skeggi back, sword pressing

  spear, while Belqartis catches Agnar's flail with a cross of his axes

  and locks it. For a few breaths, the four Vardengard hold, muscle

  straining, sand scattering, growls filling the air, before they all

  break apart, panting, grinning through blood and sweat.

  Spartan

  picks up her datapad from the arm of the chair, thumb smudged with

  grease and ash. She leans back against Rho's chest, the slow rhythm

  of his breathing steady behind her as she wakes the screen. The

  fighting below continues, grunts, impact, sand kicked high into the

  air, but her focus drifts. Duty always claws back sooner or later.

  Her

  thumb scrolls through the morning's reports: requisition orders,

  Vardengard casualty summaries, a maintenance ticket backlog from the

  Forge Ward. All routine. All noise. Rho's hand moves idly, tracing

  the contour of her bare

  waist.

  Samayel

  speaks up again, voice cutting through the dull hum. "Agnar's

  getting too confident," he says. "He's winding that flail

  too early."

  "Mm."

  Spartan's eyes don't lift from her screen.

  "He'll

  lose the arm if he keeps that up."

  "Mm."

  Samayel

  gives a low chuckle, leaning back in his chair. "You're not

  listening to me, are you?"

  Spartan's

  lip quirks faintly, but she doesn't answer. She flicks through

  another page of reports, supply manifests, encrypted communiqués

  from the upper decks. The constant red-blue glow of her HUD reflects

  faintly in her mismatched eyes.

  Then,

  a flicker.

  A

  new icon pulses in the corner of her vision, bright amber. Urgent. A

  breaking transmission. The same alert flashes across the datapad,

  overriding everything else.

  Spartan

  stills.

  The

  fighting below fades into background noise as her gaze sharpens on

  the notification banner. Breaking Report , Priority Channel: Civitas

  Command.

  Rho

  notices the shift immediately. His hand stops moving, fingers tensing

  against her side.

  Samayel

  catches the sudden stillness and leans forward. "What is it?"

  Spartan

  doesn't answer yet. Her thumb taps the alert, and the datapad's

  screen expands with a soft chime. The report loads, but even before

  the full image resolves, the headline alone makes her brow tighten.

  Her

  voice, low and even, carries a weight that silences both men.

  "…Something's

  happened."

  Spartan

  opens the notification. The datapad hums softly in her hand as the

  Invictan News Broadcast fills the screen. A silver-haired anchorwoman

  appears, calm, rehearsed, but there's tension in her voice, the kind

  that only follows true upheaval.

  "Breaking

  news from the Federation's Outer Reach Initiative, expeditionary

  forces operating beyond Invicta's northern border have reported a

  groundbreaking discovery in the uncharted Persean Expanse. Initial

  data confirms the presence of a life-sustaining world, rich in oxygen

  and complex biosystems. Designated Eldira-VII."

  Spartan's

  brow creases. The name alone is enough to make Rho's eyes flick

  toward the screen.

  "While

  the discovery of habitable planets has become more common in recent

  cycles," the anchorwoman continues, "what distinguishes

  Eldira-VII from all others is not its composition… but its

  inhabitants."

  The

  feed shifts. Grainy helmet-cam footage replaces the anchorwoman,

  stamped with a Federation insignia, voice chatter overlaid in Terran

  dialects. The camera lurches through dense forest, bright green

  leaves shuddering against carbon armor. Then, the trees part.

  What

  the scouts find is no simple settlement. It's a citadel, massive,

  radiant in the daylight. Towering walls of amber stone and metal.

  Banners of orange and gold catch the wind, each marked with the

  symbol of a blazing bird rising skyward. Beyond the gates, spires

  gleam, and there's motion, countless figures, too distant to

  identify, moving with mechanical precision.

  "Xeno

  architecture," the anchor murmurs offscreen. "Military

  analysts describe the design as hyper-efficiency meshed with

  artistry… suggesting a civilization operating beyond Type-1

  capacity."

  The

  soldiers in the footage whisper among themselves. One shouts a

  greeting, his voice tinny through the helmet speakers. Another raises

  a hand, gesturing for calm.

  From

  atop the walls, shapes appear, armored sentinels in deep orange plate

  traced with molten gold, helms like crested birds. One of them lifts

  a long rifle, its barrel humming faintly with blue-white energy.

  A

  voice crackles:

  "Command,

  this is Scout Unit Delta-Nine. We've made contact. Unknown life

  forms; humanoid configuration. Markings are, hold on, one of them is

  aiming someth-- "

  The

  sound that follows is indescribable. A resonant thrum, like a chord

  struck through metal and light. Then everything tears apart.

  The

  world becomes white fire.

  The

  camera spasms, static screaming across the feed. Through the blur,

  for half a heartbeat, there's a glimpse of something, an expanding

  arc of plasma light that does not explode outward, but folds space

  inward, bending the treeline like gravity itself had flinched. The

  scouts don't even have time to scream. The feed dies.

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  Silence

  follows in the booth. The hum of the blood pit below seems impossibly

  distant.

  The

  anchor's voice returns, subdued but trembling beneath its composure.

  "Contact

  was lost immediately following the energy discharge. Federation

  analysts believe the weapon used may exceed known plasma-fusion or

  rail-magnetic technologies, its signature suggests gravitational or

  photonic compression. The Federation Council has declared full alert

  for all exploration crews in the sector. Further contact with

  Eldira-VII has been suspended."

  Spartan

  lowers the datapad slightly. The light still flickers across her

  face, but her expression is cold, calculating.

  Samayel

  leans forward, forearms on his knees. "That wasn't human tech."

  Rho's

  voice comes low, rough from disuse. "No." His eyes narrow.

  "And not Praevectus either."

  Spartan

  exhales slowly, the muscles in her jaw tight. "Then what in the

  name of the Forger did we just see?"

  More

  notifications begin flashing across Spartan's datapad, red, urgent,

  cascading one after another. Each with the same header: "PRIORITY

  ALERT: NORTHERN SECTOR, CONTACT REPORT."

  Her

  posture snaps rigid. The datapad trembles faintly in her grip before

  she shuts it off with a decisive flick. She's already on her feet,

  the chair scraping lightly against the stone.

  "Rho."

  Her tone is sharp, immediate. "We have to go. Now."

  Rho's

  head lifts, eyes flaring faint blue beneath the hood. He doesn't

  question her. The moment she starts moving, he's already on his feet

  behind her, pulling his hood back into place and grabbing his cloak

  from the armrest.

  Samayel

  looks up, startled by the sudden urgency. "What happened?"

  Spartan's

  boots strike the metal floor of the booth as she passes him.

  "Federation contact," she answers briskly. "They've

  made a discovery beyond the border, something big. We're reporting to

  the War Room."

  He

  blinks, half-rising. "Do you need me?"

  She

  pauses only long enough to glance back at him, already halfway down

  the steps. "Not yet. Just stay here, keep your comm open. I'll

  call once I've spoken to the Supreme."

  Then

  she's gone, cloak flaring as she rounds the corridor's corner, Rho

  right behind her.

  The

  sound of their boots echoes through the Blood Pit's underhalls,

  stone, iron, and the faint roar of sparring far below. They move

  fast, cutting through corridors lined with training rooms and armory

  vaults. Every few steps, new alerts flash across Spartan's HUD,

  Federation broadcasts, early military responses, orbital surveillance

  markers shifting north.

  Rho

  doesn't speak, but his presence stays close, silent, watchful.

  By

  the time they reach the lift that will take them to the War Room

  level, Spartan's breathing has steadied into a soldier's rhythm. She

  slaps her palm against the lift's console, doors sliding open with a

  hiss.

  As

  they step inside, the steel doors shut, sealing them in reflected

  quiet. Spartan finally exhales.

  "Whatever

  this is," she mutters, gaze fixed on the lift's readout, "it's

  already moving fast."

  Rho's

  voice comes low from behind her. "You think it's war?"

  Spartan

  doesn't answer immediately. Her reflection in the steel wall stares

  back at her, calm, grim, unblinking.

  "I

  think," she says finally, "we're about to find out."

  Lucia

  Dain's Laboratory, Dain Industries Headquarters - Continuous

  Lucia

  works in practiced silence for a time, her gloved hands steady, the

  faint hum of the grafting tool filling the sterile quiet. The clinic

  lights cast everything in cool white; clean, clinical, but softened

  by the faint perfume of incense burning in a corner dish. Naburiel

  sits still on the edge of the operating table, bare skin taut with

  strain as Lucia seals another graft over the brutal lattice of lash

  marks. His datapad hums faintly, screen alive with anatomical

  schematics, spinal reinforcement models, musculature arrays, augmetic

  overlays. He scrolls through absently, as if studying anything but

  his own pain.

  Magnus

  stands across from them, arms folded over his chest, his black

  uniform immaculate even in this informal setting. His presence seems

  to fill the small space, composed, but unmistakably restless.

  Lucia

  breaks the silence first, her voice soft but edged. "You never

  did make up that dinner."

  Magnus

  lifts a brow. "Dinner?"

  She

  doesn't look up from her work, sealing another graft with clinical

  precision. "The one you cancelled. Three weeks ago. You were

  supposed to meet me at the Skybridge. You sent a message an hour

  before to say Rauvis needed you."

  He

  exhales through his nose, the faintest hint of guilt in his tone.

  "Rauvis did need me. You know how it goes, Lucia. Duty first."

  Lucia

  finally looks up, her crimson eyes catching the light. "Duty

  always first," she says, half-smiling, half-resentful. "You

  sound like you are still in the Academy, giving speeches to cadets."

  Magnus

  smirks faintly. "And you sound like one of them, still waiting

  outside the hall for me to finish."

  She

  hums at that, turning back to her patient, but the smile lingers.

  "You could remedy that, you know."

  "Remedy?"

  he echoes.

  Lucia's

  tone turns light, teasing, though there's truth beneath it. "I

  am a Fleshwright. I could serve aboard the Imperator Bellator. Your

  medical bay could use a better hand than those terrified interns you

  keep dragging into the field."

  Magnus'

  smirk fades. He straightens slightly, arms tightening. "Lucia…"

  "I

  am serious," she cuts in, still focused on Naburiel's back. "You

  would not have to cancel on me again. I could be there. Where duty

  calls."

  Magnus'

  jaw tightens. "Where duty calls is often the center of a

  battlefield. The Bellator is not a safe harbor, it is a front-line

  ship. You would be under fire as often as I am."

  Lucia

  glances over her shoulder, eyes glinting. "You think I am

  fragile?"

  "I

  think," Magnus answers evenly, "you are irreplaceable."

  That

  earns a pause. For a heartbeat, even the hum of the grafting tool

  feels quieter.

  Lucia

  sets the instrument aside, removing her gloves, and turns fully

  toward him. "You always say that when you are trying to sound

  noble," she says softly. "But what you mean is you are

  afraid."

  Magnus

  doesn't deny it. He meets her gaze squarely, his expression

  unreadable.

  Across

  the room, Naburiel flips to the next holographic diagram, half an

  ear, a set of lungs, a ribcage lattice. "For the record,"

  he mutters without looking up, "I'd vote in favor of her coming

  aboard. The medbay could use the improvement."

  Lucia's

  lips curl into a quiet smirk. "See? The wolf agrees."

  Magnus

  finally exhales, slow and deep, the edge of a weary smile breaking

  through. "Of course he does. He is not the one I would have to

  worry about losing."

  Lucia

  studies him for a long moment, the flirtation dimming into something

  more genuine, more solemn. "Then you will just have to make sure

  I do not."

  Magnus

  stands frozen halfway through his sentence, mid-apology to Lucia. The

  faint glow of his HUD flickers against the inside of his visor, and

  his tone hardens the moment he hears her voice.

  SPARTAN:

  [Have

  you seen the broadcast?]

  MAGNUS:

  [No.

  I've been with Lucia. What's happened?]

  SPARTAN:

  [I'm

  forwarding it now. You need to see this immediately.]

  A

  pulsing icon appears in the corner of his vision, then expands into a

  feed. The Invictan broadcast begins to play before his eyes. The

  sterile hum of the lab fades beneath the faint tremor of the

  anchorwoman's voice.

  "And

  upon exploration of the newly designated world, contact was made with

  what appears to be an advanced, organized civilization, "

  The

  clip cuts to helmet-cam footage. Magnus' expression tightens. Lucia,

  noticing his sudden stillness, pauses her work. The light wand in her

  hand dims, a note of worry edging her voice.

  "Magnus?"

  He

  doesn't respond. His eyes narrow as the footage continues: the

  Federation scouts breaching dense alien forests, coming upon vast

  walls shimmering with golden sigils. Orange and yellow banners ripple

  in the wind, and the bird, that burning bird, rises high upon them

  like a herald of fire.

  Then

  the sound. A single resonant tone, followed by the flash. The entire

  squad disintegrates into cascading light. The feed cuts to static.

  Magnus

  exhales slowly through his nose. The silence that follows is heavy,

  so heavy Lucia lowers her gaze and continues the grafts in silence,

  her earlier teasing forgotten.

  SPARTAN:

  [Reports

  are pouring in now. Civil panic across Federation colonies and along

  our northern border. We don't know what they are, but the Federation

  claims a Type Two civ-level presence. They're calling themselves the

  Eldiravan.]

  Magnus'

  jaw flexes, eyes still fixed on the blank holographic feed.

  MAGNUS:

  [The

  Federation discovered them?]

  SPARTAN:

  [If

  you can call it that. They were found by them. The soldiers never

  made it back.]

  Magnus

  rubs a gloved hand down his chin, the faint rasp of metal across

  stubble. He takes a moment before replying, his voice low and

  deliberate.

  SPARTAN:

  [Permission

  to activate the Forger's pre-determined xeno-protocol. It'll help

  contain the panic before it spreads too far.]

  Magnus

  looks away from the holographic broadcast to Lucia. Her golden eyes

  are fixed on him, silently questioning. He turns his gaze back to the

  feed overlay, his mind already racing ahead, containment,

  mobilization, the Senate's inevitable uproar, the Federation's pride.

  His

  voice, when he finally answers, carries the weight of command:

  MAGNUS:

  [Activate

  it.]

  He

  lowers his hand, ending the call. The light of the HUD fades.

  Lucia

  studies him quietly from across the table, a thin graft still

  suspended in her tweezers. "Something serious," she

  murmurs.

  Magnus'

  eyes drift toward the window beyond the lab, a panoramic view of Nova

  Roma bathed in the burnished light of dusk. "Yes," he says

  quietly. "Something very serious." Then, softer, almost to

  himself, "The galaxy just got smaller."

  Magnus

  remains standing there for a long while, the fading holographic light

  of the broadcast still reflecting faintly in his eyes. The silence

  that hangs in the clinic now feels sharper, like a blade suspended in

  the air.

  Finally,

  he looks over to Lucia and Naburiel. His voice is steady, calm, but

  carries a buried urgency.

  "Lucia.

  Naburiel. We have to go. Now."

  Lucia

  glances up from her work, frowning as she seals the last of the

  grafts across Naburiel's back. "We?" she echoes. "If

  you mean him, he is not going anywhere. Not until I have had time to

  attach the replacements. His new parts should be arriving any

  minute."

  Naburiel

  looks between them, the datapad dimming in his hand. He's already

  sitting upright, reading Magnus's expression. "Something's

  wrong," he says, low.

  Lucia

  straightens, her tone sharp with that particular brand of authority

  she reserves only for Magnus. "What is going on, Magnus?"

  He

  exhales through his nose, rubbing at the bridge of it briefly, an old

  habit when weighing what not to say. "Something's come up,"

  he answers finally. "I need to return to the Keep immediately."

  Lucia

  studies him, searching his face for the rest of the answer he won't

  give. Her brows draw together, softening only after a long moment.

  "You are not going to tell me what it is, are you?"

  Magnus

  meets her gaze. "Not yet."

  She

  sighs, long, quiet, resigned. "Of course not." Then,

  turning back to Naburiel, she gestures sharply. "You are staying

  here. I will have your replacements fitted and tuned before dusk.

  Once that is done, I will bring you to him myself."

  Magnus

  nods once. "Good. Do that."

  Lucia

  steps closer, resting her hands on her hips as she tilts her head up

  at him. "You always say good right before you run off into

  something stupid."

  A

  flicker of a smirk crosses his face, brief but real. "Then let

  us hope I am consistent."

  Lucia

  shakes her head, but the concern in her eyes lingers. "Be

  careful, Magnus."

  He

  doesn't promise her that, he never does. He only gives a small nod,

  turns, and steps toward the door. His boots echo across the sterile

  tile, the faint hum of his armor following him out.

  When

  the door hisses shut behind him, Lucia stands for a long moment,

  silent. Then she turns to Naburiel, muttering under her breath,

  "Every time he says something has come up, half a world ends up

  burning."

  Naburiel

  huffs a quiet laugh, wincing as the new graft stretches across his

  shoulder. "Then I'd better heal fast."

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