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CHAPTER TWELVE: Heavy When You Fall And You Hit The Ground

  The

  Imperator Bellator - Next Morning

  The

  corridors hum with life. Deep within the spine of the Imperator

  Bellator, light flickers along the burnished steel walls, reflecting

  off the armor of three figures moving in step.

  Magnus

  leads the way, silent and sure, the weight of command heavy on his

  shoulders. His black and crimson Tyrannus armor gleams with the muted

  light of passing luminescence panels. His helmet hangs at his hip,

  the marks of battle etched across its surface like scars.

  Behind

  him, Spartan follows, her Olympian armor catching the light in

  pearlescent blacks and reds. The warship seems to bow around her

  presence, even in silence, she carries the gravity of a storm. Rho

  Voss trails beside her, silent as always, his armor a shade of pure

  void, the vantablack absorbing light and shape alike. His helmet is

  sealed, expression unseen.

  None

  of them speak. The tension of the night still lingers, ghosts of maps

  and alarms and blood-red skies playing behind their eyes.

  After

  a stretch of corridor, Magnus finally breaks the silence.

  "I

  will take the translator implants to medical," he says, voice

  low but firm. "They should be examined for replication. If they

  can be reproduced, we will need them ready before we set down."

  Spartan

  nods. "Agreed. The sooner we can bridge the tongue, the fewer

  misunderstandings. Not everyone has Loki whispering in their ear."

  Magnus

  exhales through his nose, something between amusement and disbelief.

  "No. Fortunately."

  At

  the next junction, Magnus turns left while Spartan and Rho continue

  straight. "Do not burn anything down before I get back," he

  calls without looking over his shoulder.

  Spartan

  smirks faintly. "No promises."

  The

  med-bay doors part with a hiss. Magnus steps inside expecting the

  familiar, organized chaos of preparation, rows of medics loading

  supplies, data screens scrolling casualty projections, the head

  physician barking orders over the noise.

  But

  this… this is something else entirely.

  The

  wing has become a battlefield of its own. Crates are stacked in new

  configurations. Screens have been re-routed, trays relabeled, the

  surgical stations rearranged in some efficient yet utterly foreign

  order. The medics rush past with nervous urgency, and at the center

  of it all, like a queen in command of her hive, stands Lucia Dain.

  Her

  white coat is rolled at the sleeves, streaked with antiseptic and

  soot. Her golden blond hair is pulled back hastily, a few strands

  falling loose against her cheek. She's halfway through reassigning

  two bewildered surgeons when she spots him.

  Magnus

  stops dead in the doorway. His brow furrows.

  "Lucia."

  She

  turns at once, her face brightening in a grin that's equal parts

  triumph and mischief.

  "Magnus!"

  He

  looks around, then back at her. "You are supposed to be in Nova

  Roma."

  She

  plants a hand on her hip, the other still holding a data-slate. "And

  yet, here I am. You told me to stay put. I told you I do not take

  orders well."

  "Lucia."

  He gestures broadly to the chaos. "You commandeered my medical

  wing."

  "I

  optimized your medical wing," she corrects, tapping the slate.

  "Your staff had their stations arranged inefficiently. I just

  saved you ten minutes per triage, and probably a few hundred lives

  while I am at it."

  Magnus

  exhales slowly, as if fighting between frustration and reluctant

  admiration. "You stowed away."

  She

  flashes him a bright, unrepentant smile. "You did not think I

  would let you march into a war without me, did you?"

  He

  steps closer, towering over her, but Lucia doesn't flinch. "You

  realize I could have you escorted back to Nova Roma in chains for

  this."

  "I

  do," she says sweetly. "But you will not. Because you need

  me. And because deep down," her grin widens, "you know I am

  right."

  Magnus's

  jaw tightens. "You are impossible."

  "Efficient,

  my love," she says. "Now, let us see what we are working

  with."

  Magnus

  exhales through his nose, steadying the frustration that has no place

  here.

  From

  under his arm, he unclips a small reinforced box, matte black with a

  sealed clasp and the insignia of the Infernacian Forge engraved

  faintly on its lid.

  "I

  did not come empty-handed," he says, setting it down on the

  nearest table. "Translator implants. I would like to have them

  replicated and distributed. Keep one aside for me."

  Lucia's

  eyes light up with curiosity. She wipes her hands on her coat, flips

  open the latch, and peers inside. The glimmer of the implants catches

  the med-bay's cool light; organic, metallic, something between muscle

  fiber and alloy. She plucks one up delicately with gloved fingers,

  turning it in the light.

  "These

  came from the xenos, did they not?" she says flatly.

  Magnus

  nods once. "They were gifted to us by the IGA a few days ago.

  Spartan had them inspected."

  Lucia

  narrows her eyes. "You are not having one of these in your skull

  until I have looked at it myself."

  Magnus

  raises an eyebrow. "I assumed that was implied."

  "Not

  strongly enough." She snaps the lid closed and tucks the box

  under her arm, motioning for him to follow. "Come on, I will set

  up a sterile environment. No one touches these until I say so."

  Magnus

  falls into step beside her as she navigates the reorganized chaos,

  medics stepping aside without question. She stops at her main

  station, a repurposed diagnostics table flooded with light,

  holoscreens already alive with biological readings.

  Lucia

  sets the box down and opens it again, scanning the contents with a

  clinical eye.

  "Spartan

  should have brought these straight to me," she mutters, more to

  herself than to him. "Of course she did not. She probably had

  Engineering poking at them like it is a toy."

  "She

  already implanted one," Magnus says.

  Lucia

  freezes. "She what?"

  He

  folds his arms. "She has already tested it. It functions. That

  is how we are communicating with them now."

  Lucia's

  hands go to her temples. "Of course she did. Gods, that woman, "

  She lets out a harsh breath. "She should have known better. They

  are bio-synthetic, Magnus. Who knows what neural damage or

  contamination she could have, " She stops herself, gritting her

  teeth. "Never mind. It is done."

  She

  exhales through her nose, the tension in her shoulders still visible.

  "I suppose I should have expected that. The Vardengard cannot

  even walk into Nova Roma without a leash, can they? A silly rule,

  really. Outdated."

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  Magnus

  gives a low hum of agreement. "Maybe. But that rule exists for a

  reason." He glances at her. "Just as you were meant to stay

  in the city."

  Lucia

  looks up at him, unbothered, one eyebrow arched. "Oh, not this

  again."

  "This

  is not a vacation, Lucia," he says, voice hardening slightly.

  "This is war. I cannot guarantee your safety out here."

  She

  folds her arms, chin tilted defiantly. "I am not asking you to.

  I am an adult, Magnus. I know what I am doing. And I am far more

  useful here than sitting alone lightyears away, worrying myself

  sick."

  Magnus'

  jaw tightens. He looks down at her, frustration flickering behind his

  eyes, but something softer beneath it. "You think this is about

  loneliness?"

  She

  shrugs. "Partly. Why should I be the abandoned spouse while you

  get to play the noble commander? I am a Fleshwright, remember?

  Perfectly capable of mending, designing, and," she gestures

  vaguely toward the implants, "deciphering alien biotech."

  Magnus

  exhales, the faintest ghost of a smile at the corner of his mouth.

  "You truly are impossible."

  Lucia

  grins. "Efficient." She turns back to the workstation,

  already pulling up the scanning array. "Now, if you are done

  lecturing me, let us see what secrets your little trinkets are

  hiding."

  The

  Imperator Bellator - Night

  Mud

  sprays into the air as two titans crash together, shockwaves rippling

  through the air. The ground sinks beneath the weight of their blows.

  Thunder rolls overhead, deafening, and the sky burns a dull red as if

  some unseen god is stoking a forge above them.

  Magnus

  drives forward, Tyrannus armor hissing with strain, servos whining as

  he slams his blade into Spartan's shield. The impact detonates in a

  flash of light, spraying molten mud. The force sends him staggering

  back three steps before he can brace his stance again.

  Spartan

  doesn't move.

  Her

  Olympian Armor gleams in the stormlight, black and red, immaculate,

  divine. She stands taller somehow, her presence oppressive. When she

  steps, the air itself recoils.

  Magnus

  adjusts his footing, blood dripping from the corner of his mouth

  inside the helmet. He circles, sword held low, cape torn and filthy.

  His breathing rasps through the vox, thunder-synced.

  Then

  she moves.

  No

  warning, just a flicker, a blur of motion that rips through the mud

  with impossible speed. Her blade finds his guard before he can think.

  Sparks cascade as he parries, only for her shield to slam into his

  side. The blow sends him spinning, crashing through a wall of arena

  barricade. His armor rings like a struck anvil.

  He

  roars and forces himself upright. The HUD flickers, systems warning,

  fractures in the left pauldron. He charges.

  She's

  waiting.

  Her

  sword arcs, blindingly fast, catching his strike and rolling it

  aside. She pivots around him, elegant and merciless, and drives her

  shield into the back of his knee. His armor absorbs the hit but his

  balance breaks, he falls to one knee in the mud.

  Before

  he can rise, she's there again.

  Steel

  glances across his helmet, enough to make his ears ring even through

  the dampeners. She doesn't follow through, she pulls back, letting

  him recover. Watching him. Testing him.

  Magnus

  snarls.

  She

  gives only a tilt of her head, that same quiet, almost curious

  gesture he's seen a hundred times before, but this one feels mocking.

  He

  lunges again. Every fiber of his being strains; his armor's power

  output spikes red. Their swords meet mid-swing, the energy fields

  screaming against each other. For an instant, he thinks he has her,

  his blade slips past her guard and strikes her side. The hit

  lands...and she takes it deliberately.

  The

  counter comes instantly. Her sword slams into his chestplate with a

  crack that makes the world quake with static and artifacts. He flies

  backward, hits the ground so hard his vision floods white.

  He

  inhales sharply through the pain of broken ribs.

  He

  lies there for a moment, gasping, staring at the stormlit sky

  projected above. Then, laughter, low, harsh, disbelieving, rattles

  through his vox.

  "Of

  course," he mutters between breaths. "Of course you would

  let me hit you just to break me worse."

  For

  the first time, the simulated Spartan moves differently. Her head

  tilts again, but the gesture lingers, wrong, almost thoughtful. Then

  she straightens.

  "End

  simulation," she says.

  The

  words are hers, but the tone is not. It's real.

  The

  world shatters.

  The

  crimson sky fractures into hexagonal shards; the mud, the thunder,

  the burning air all dissolve into light and collapse into the floor.

  The echo of battle fades, leaving only the steady hum of ship

  machinery and the faint hiss of pressurized vents.

  Magnus

  blinks hard against the sudden white. His armor, once drenched in

  mud, is immaculate again. He's still on his back, sprawled across the

  smooth, sterile deck of the officer's simulation chamber. The stench

  of ozone lingers.

  Where

  the other Spartan stood, a humanoid training construct stands now;

  metal skeleton, featureless face, joints smoking from overuse. It

  slumps, inert, its servos ticking as it cools.

  Across

  the room, the real Spartan and Rho Voss step from the observation

  alcove, Olympian Armor gleaming under the white lights.

  "End

  it?" Magnus growls through his vox, dragging himself upright. "I

  was not finished."

  Spartan

  strides forward, helmet clipped to her hip. Her expression is tight,

  controlled, but her frown deepens when she sees the dented plating

  along his ribs.

  "You

  were finished," she says flatly. Then, crouching beside him, her

  voice softens just slightly. "I told you that difficulty level

  was too much. No Praevectus, God or not, can win against that."

  Magnus

  grits his teeth and looks away, his gauntleted hand clenching against

  the floor. "That is the point," he rasps. "How else am

  I supposed to learn?"

  Spartan

  exhales through her nose, a quiet sigh edged with irritation and...

  respect. She stands again, glancing to Rho, who watches silently,

  arms folded, his massive form blocking half the chamber's light.

  "Rho

  and I," she says, "are the worst Vardengard to train

  against. You know that. We weren't forged for balance or restraint."

  Magnus

  finally gets to his feet, joints creaking in protest. He unseals his

  helmet and pulls it free. Steam rolls out, followed by a ragged

  breath. Sweat mats his hair, his face slick and streaked with grime

  and blood from a split lip.

  He

  looks from the training dummy to Spartan, then Rho.

  "Then

  I will keep training against you," he says quietly. "Until

  I stop losing."

  Rho

  chuckles, a deep metallic sound that echoes in the room. "You'll

  be dead before that happens."

  Magnus

  wipes the blood from his chin with the back of his hand. "Then

  you will have to tell the Forger I died trying."

  Spartan

  studies him for a moment, expression unreadable, the faintest flicker

  of something in her eyes. Pride, maybe. Or pity.

  "Next

  time," she says, "we lower the difficulty."

  Magnus

  gives a slow shake of his head, lips curling into a faint, defiant

  smile.

  "Next

  time," he answers, "we do not stop until I win."

  The

  simulation chamber hums back to life around them, awaiting command.

  For a long moment, none of them move. The lights buzz faintly, the

  silence between them sharp and heavy, the kind of silence that only

  exists between warriors who have both seen and tested death.

  The

  hum of the chamber deepens. Magnus still stands at the center, chest

  heaving, armor gleaming in the sterile white. Steam curls from the

  vents of his pauldrons.

  Rho

  Voss breaks the silence first. His voice is low, steady, carrying

  that gravel-rough weight that always sounds halfway between a

  question and a challenge.

  "Tell

  me, Master," he says, "why this obsession? Why must you

  match a Vardengard? You command us already. You lead. That should be

  enough."

  Magnus

  doesn't answer right away. His head lowers slightly, his gaze fixed

  on the inactive training construct before him, the hollow shell that

  moments ago had beaten him senseless.

  "Because,"

  he says finally, voice quiet but edged, "I am a god, Rho, but in

  battle, they make me feel mortal. I want to know what that means."

  The words hang in the air, electric.

  Rho's

  expression hardens, unreadable behind the glow of his visor.

  Spartan's jaw flexes; she looks at him for a long moment, then shakes

  her head.

  "You'll

  never stand toe to toe with a Vardengard," she says. "Not

  without the augmentations that make us what we are. You weren't

  forged for it. No Praevectus was."

  Magnus

  turns his head toward her. "Then I'll get the augmentations I

  need."

  The

  reply is so calm, so simple, that it takes Spartan a heartbeat too

  long to react. Her eyes narrow.

  "You

  have no idea what you're saying," she tells him, voice low,

  almost warning. "The Forge remakes more than flesh. It breaks

  the soul. Even I, " she stops herself, shakes her head again.

  "Even I don't know if you'd survive it."

  Magnus

  wipes a smear of dried blood from his lip, meeting her gaze with that

  same relentless steadiness.

  "Then

  I'll find out."

  Rho

  exhales through the vox, the sound a metallic growl of disapproval,

  or amusement, it's hard to tell.

  "You

  Praevectus chase death like it's a lover," he mutters.

  Spartan

  sighs, her expression softening just slightly. "Enough."

  She gestures toward the robotic construct, still frozen mid-motion,

  its blank face turned toward them like a silent judge. "If you

  want to learn, then learn with us. Not against us."

  She

  straightens, snapping her helmet back into place. Her voice

  amplifies, commanding and clear:

  "Computer,

  initiate simulation protocol Valiant-Abr-12.

  Scenario: joint engagement. Opposing entity, Venator Captain,

  designation Absjorn."

  The

  chamber darkens instantly.

  Light

  drains from the walls as the white floor dissolves beneath them. The

  air thickens, the scent of ozone and rain flooding back. A heartbeat

  later, the world returns; mud, thunder, the dull-red sky.

  The

  robotic dummy shudders to life, its body morphing as hard-light

  plating cascades over its frame. In seconds it towers above them,

  twelve feet of fury clad in red-trimmed white armor. The simulation

  finishes rendering, and Captain Absjorn stands before them, his

  double-headed electrified axe sparking blue arcs through the storm.

  Magnus

  squares his stance beside Spartan and Rho. The mud splashes around

  their boots.

  Spartan's

  voice comes through the vox, calm and sharp.

  "Fight

  with us, Master. Listen. Move when we move. Trust the rhythm."

  Rho

  Voss raises his zweihander and laughs, the sound like thunder

  answering thunder.

  "And

  pray he doesn't split you in half before you learn the first step."

  The

  Venator Captain roars, a sound like metal being torn apart. Lightning

  flashes.

  Magnus

  grips his sword, every nerve alive, every breath ready.

  "Let's

  begin."

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