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CHAPTER ELEVEN: Let The Blade Drop

  Civitas

  Keep - Late Night

  Klaxons

  blare through the marble corridors of the Civitas Keep; deep,

  droning, and absolute. The alarms pulse through every wall and floor,

  reverberating like the heartbeat of a wounded titan.

  Spartan

  storms into the War Room first, her Olympian armor gleaming in the

  crimson emergency lights. Rho Voss and Naburiel follow close behind,

  the metallic thud of their boots matching the rhythm of the sirens.

  At the war table, the Lieutenant in charge fumbles at the console,

  trying to keep up with the flood of data pouring across the screens.

  "Report!"

  Spartan barks.

  The

  Lieutenant turns, pale and frantic, before quickly stepping aside as

  she approaches. "Ma'am, satellite alerts from the Northern

  Sector, multiple colonies under siege, fleet reports, "

  "Move."

  Spartan pushes past him, planting her gauntleted hands on the table's

  edge. Her helmet clatters down beside her as she taps the console.

  The holodisplay blooms to life, a sprawling three-dimensional map of

  the Northern Sector. Entire systems burn red.

  The

  hum of the table is drowned by the chorus of alarms. Dozens of icons

  flash crimson; ships lost, colonies dark, distress beacons flaring

  one after another.

  Naburiel's

  voice trembles, though not from fear, rage. "Nirna… Valis

  Prime… Oros IV… Gods, it's the entire border. Every station,

  every fleet."

  The

  footage flickers overhead. Satellite feeds, grainy, cut through with

  static, show the truth. Massive, sleek vessels of black metal and

  searing gold pour through the void. Eldiravan ships. Their hulls

  shimmer like burning glass, each movement methodical, surgical.

  Civitas patrol fleets scatter before them, annihilated in seconds.

  "Guarding

  fleets are gone," Rho Voss growls, leaning forward. "No

  signals. Not even distress pings."

  Spartan's

  eyes widen as the reports stack faster than the display can render.

  Civilian transports, entire convoys, erased. Communications from the

  colonies come in fragments: screams, static, then silence.

  "Shut

  it down," Spartan snaps suddenly.

  Naburiel

  looks over, startled. "What?"

  "The

  communications. Block them. Now."

  "Spartan---"

  "If

  the public sees this, it's over. We'll have riots from Anicarro to

  the Reach. Seal the feeds, redirect them through Command approval

  only!"

  The

  Lieutenant hesitates for half a second, then obeys, typing furiously.

  Rho

  Voss steps closer, his voice low but sharp. "This is an

  invasion."

  Spartan

  stares at the glowing red border, the massive spread of hostile

  fleets pressing deeper into their territory. Her expression hardens,

  voice cutting through the noise.

  "No,"

  she says. "This is war."

  The

  holodisplay pulses once, another planet flashes red. Another fleet

  lost. Another silence in the void.

  The

  great doors to the War Room hiss open, the heavy steel groaning as

  they slide apart.

  Magnus

  strides in. His hair is unkempt, his expression set like iron. The

  sirens paint his face in flashes of red light as he crosses the floor

  with a long, urgent stride.

  "Report,"

  he commands, voice cutting through the noise like a drawn blade.

  Spartan

  straightens immediately, snapping a salute before she speaks.

  "Eldiravan fleets, Master. Multiple incursions across the

  Northern Sector; confirmed planetary invasions. Guard fleets are

  gone. Civilian convoys destroyed. Communications restricted under my

  authority."

  Before

  Magnus can respond, the doors open again, this time with a clang of

  hurried boots and echoing voices. Varric, Lucian, and Tarsa rush in

  behind him, all of them half-dressed and visibly unprepared. Not one

  wears their dress regalia. Black and grey fatigues cling to them, the

  remnants of sleep still in their faces. Varric's hair is mussed and

  wild. Tarsa's sleeves are rolled halfway, her wrist display still

  flashing incoming alerts.

  "What

  the hell is happening?" Varric demands, crossing the floor

  quickly.

  Lucian

  doesn't even wait, he stops beside Rho Voss and looks up at the

  burning holodisplay. His jaw tightens. "By the Forge…"

  Tarsa

  moves to the other side of the table, eyes darting across the flood

  of reports. "This cannott be real. We were just meeting with

  them!"

  Magnus

  slams a hand on the table's edge, the impact echoing through the

  chamber. "It is real."

  The

  room stills.

  The

  blue light of the holomap ripples across their faces, worlds in

  flame, red icons spreading like infection. Magnus leans forward,

  bracing both hands on the display. His voice is low, measured, every

  word heavy.

  "They

  have moved faster than I expected." He looks to Spartan. "You

  did right locking communications. Panic is our enemy now."

  Spartan

  nods silently.

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  Naburiel

  pulls up a side-screen, data scrolling fast. "Our Northern

  fleets are crippled. No reinforcements can arrive in time; travel

  corridors are being jammed or obliterated."

  Tarsa

  slams her palm against the railing. "Then we hit back! We cannot

  just sit here while they carve through us, "

  Magnus

  cuts her off sharply. "We will respond. But not blindly."

  He

  straightens, his shadow cast long over the holomap. "They have

  declared war on humanity. On Civitas Invicta. We will answer in

  kind."

  The

  klaxons still blare, yet the sound feels distant, muted beneath the

  weight of what's spoken.

  Magnus

  turns his gaze to the red tide advancing across the stars. His voice

  drops, colder now.

  "Ready

  every ship in the First Fleet. Mobilize our forces. Wake the generals

  who still sleep."

  He

  pauses, eyes narrowing.

  "The

  Forge has been lit."

  Varric's

  face is pale beneath the red flashes of the alarm. He stares at the

  holodisplay, then at Magnus, disbelief and fury clashing in his eyes.

  "They are everywhere, Magnus. We cannot hold that line, half

  those systems were not even fortified yet!"

  Lucian

  slams a fist against the table, his voice a growl. "Then we

  fortify them now. I will wake the 9th and 12th. We can have them in

  orbit within six hours if the dockyards move fast."

  Tarsa

  shakes her head sharply, pulling up another feed on the side display.

  "We do not have six hours. The Eldiravan are cutting through the

  Varn Corridor; we will lose half the Northern Sector before dawn if

  we do not act now."

  Magnus

  doesn't look up. His hands move across the console, fingers tapping

  in rapid sequence. "Spartan, deploy the 3rd and 4th Legions to

  Nirna and Xyrel. I want the 7th Praetorian detachment with them. They

  will hold the planetside fronts."

  "Yes,

  sir," Spartan answers, already keying in the commands. "What

  about the 2nd and 6th?"

  "They

  reinforce the line at the Phara Belt. If we lose that, the invasion

  runs straight through to Anicarro itself."

  The

  holographic map updates as she works, units flashing blue as they

  deploy to red zones.

  Naburiel's

  voice cuts through the din. "We will need orbital reinforcements

  to cover the northern vectors. If we shift too much ground power, the

  skies will open up."

  Magnus

  nods once. "Then the 8th and 10th fleets stay in orbit. Set a

  rotation schedule, three hours combat, one hour refuel and reload.

  Keep the line alive."

  Varric

  snaps to attention, fire returning to his eyes. "I will ready

  the 9th myself."

  Lucian

  turns, already halfway to the door. "I will see the 12th moving

  before the hour is out."

  Tarsa

  pauses only long enough to salute sharply. "The 2nd is yours

  within the hour."

  Magnus

  gives a curt nod. "Go. Move."

  The

  three Generals rush out, their voices echoing down the corridor as

  the heavy doors seal shut behind them. The sound fades, leaving only

  the hum of the holo-projectors and the low thrum of the Keep's

  engines.

  Magnus

  leans forward again, the weight of the stars reflected in his eyes.

  Spartan continues issuing orders, her voice crisp, mechanical,

  precise. Naburiel mutters coordinates, running logistics through the

  console.

  And

  then, softly, almost lost beneath the thrum of the holoprojectors,

  comes a hiss.

  Loki

  lifts his head, scales catching the cold blue light. The small,

  pearlescent serpent shifts where he lies coiled around Spartan's

  armored neck, his green eyes reflecting the stars on the holodisplay.

  His tongue flicks lazily, tasting the tension in the air.

  "You

  were warned," he murmurs, voice low but clear enough to cut

  through the hum. "Again and again. The end comes for those who

  do not listen."

  Spartan's

  jaw clenches. She lifts a gloved hand and flicks him sharply on the

  snout. The snake jerks back, hissing in surprise, a quick, serpentine

  tsk of indignation, as his head bobs once, twice, shaking off the

  sting.

  "I

  don't want to hear that," she snaps. "War doesn't mean the

  end of existence."

  Loki

  recoils slightly, coiling tighter against her collar. "Not

  always," he admits, his voice like wind through glass. "But

  this time… I see too much blood, too many burning worlds. Humanity

  is not ready for the war it has called upon itself."

  Spartan's

  teeth bare for a moment, not in anger but defiance. "Then shut

  up," she growls, eyes never leaving the red-lit stars on the

  display. "Unless you have something useful to say."

  Loki

  studies her for a moment longer, his tongue flicking once more, slow

  and deliberate. Then he settles back against her neck with a faint

  rattle of scales, muttering softly, "You'll find I am often

  useful, just not in the ways you wish."

  The

  war room breathes again; orders barked, data streaming, panic held at

  bay by duty. Outside, the alarms keep screaming, and somewhere above

  the planet's shrouded sky, the Eldiravan fleets draw closer, like a

  storm too vast to see, yet too near to escape.

  Spartan's

  eyes fix on the holomap. The northern sector burns in a sea of red,

  but her focus narrows, drawn to a single glowing world pulsing with

  enemy signals.

  Nirna.

  The

  name alone tightens something in her chest. The feeds report orbital

  sieges, broken patrols, planetary defenses overwhelmed. Her breath

  hitches once, imperceptibly beneath her helm's collar. She knows

  who's there. Michael. Victoria. Both stationed to oversee evacuation

  protocols; non-combatants, transports, children, the wounded. And

  now, Nirna is burning.

  "Your

  focus wanes," comes Loki's quiet murmur against her throat. His

  tongue flicks once, tasting the spike in her pulse.

  Her

  growl is low, guttural. "Quiet."

  Magnus

  is still speaking with Naburiel about defensive rotations when

  Spartan's head snaps toward him. "Permission to go to Nirna,"

  she says abruptly. Her voice cuts through the room like a blade.

  The

  table goes silent. Naburiel looks up first, brow furrowed. Even Rho

  Voss turns slightly, the red lights of the holomap reflected across

  his visor. Magnus lifts his gaze to her, disbelief in his expression.

  "No,"

  he says flatly. "Request denied."

  "Master,

  "

  "I

  have already deployed two Tiberian Legions," Magnus interrupts,

  his tone brooking no argument. "They will hold the line until

  reinforcements arrive. You are needed here."

  Spartan's

  jaw flexes beneath the dim light. "There are civilians on that

  planet. And you have sent soldiers, not gods."

  Magnus

  fixes her with that cold, commanding stare. "Those soldiers have

  their own Vardengard with them. That is enough."

  Loki

  stirs again, the coils around her neck shifting as he lifts his head.

  "It would be wise," he says softly, voice serpentine and

  deliberate. "Nirna is more vital than you believe. Lose it, and

  you lose the corridor to your eastern systems. You lose the heart of

  your empire."

  Magnus

  glances sidelong at the snake, the faintest irritation flickering in

  his eyes. "You meddle too much."

  "I

  observe," Loki replies, his head tilting. "And what I

  observe is collapse."

  Then

  Spartan does it; that look. The subtle softening of the eyes, the

  faint downturn of her mouth, the quiet defiance that tugs at whatever

  remains human in Magnus's steel-bound resolve.

  He

  exhales heavily, a sound caught somewhere between a sigh and a growl.

  "Damn you, woman," he mutters.

  Naburiel

  glances between them, sensing the decision before it's even spoken.

  Magnus

  straightens, his tone snapping back into command. "Very well.

  Not just you. All of us. We go to Nirna together."

  Spartan

  blinks, surprised. "Master?"

  "If

  the Eldiravan wish to make their presence known," Magnus says,

  turning toward the war table's holomap, "then we will greet them

  properly, face to face."

  Rho

  Voss nods once. Naburiel grins faintly, a grim kind of anticipation

  crossing his features.

  Loki's

  tongue flicks once more, the faintest hiss of satisfaction escaping

  him. "Now," he whispers, "you begin to move as gods

  should."

  The

  alarms outside the war room swell again, echoing through the halls of

  the Civitas Keep as the first orders go out. Within minutes, the

  steel heart of Civitas Invicta begins to beat faster; mobilizing for

  war.

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