The
Vardengard Barracks - Later
The
firepit burns low, its orange light licking across the walls of the
new Vardengard Barracks. The warmth pools in the vast steel chamber,
dancing off armor plates and tool racks, softening the cold edges of
iron and stone.
Around
the pit, the Vardengard sit like giants at rest, the warrior-gods of
Invicta stripped of their armor and flame.
Morus
and Spartan sit side by side on the floor, backs against a low bench.
Morus works with quiet focus, grinding a dark mixture in the hollow
of a wolf's skull, the pestle scraping against bone. The scent of
metal and ash mixes with the sharp tang of herbs. Beside him, Spartan
scrapes the last sinew and muscle from the bonejackal skull resting
across her knees, the knife whispering against bone. The skull's
teeth glint in the firelight like frozen lightning.
Rho
Voss sits on her other side, stirring the cast-iron pot hanging over
the fire. Steam rolls from it in slow, savory curls. His normally
rigid expression is soft in the glow, the lines of command eased by
warmth and fatigue.
Across
the room, Samayel and Belqartis stand at one of the workbenches,
sleeves rolled up, blood staining their gloves and the steel beneath.
The two of them work methodically, skinning and processing the two
bonejackals they'd brought in, one headless, its skull now in
Spartan's lap. Every motion is precise, efficient, familiar.
Ashurdan
and Naburiel sit opposite them near the fire, their weapons across
their laps being honed and polished. They clean and oil them, the
smell of solvent faintly mixing with the stew's aroma.
The
room hums with an easy calm. Quiet laughter. The low murmur of
voices. The occasional metallic click of armor parts cooling on the
racks.
Morus
tips a small jar toward the firelight, the liquid inside catching the
glow like a ruby. It's thick, viscous, the color of fresh blood.
"You
said this came from a hive?"
Naburiel
chuckles, leaning back on one arm. "Ita. Me and Belqartis
stumbled across it east of here two days ago. Thought it was just a
rocky rise at first, until the damn thing started moving."
Belqartis
grins from the workbench, knife flashing. "Vanyr hive. Not like
any I've seen. Fleshy. Breathing. The walls pulsed when the wind hit
them."
Ashurdan
makes a face. "Sounds like something from the pit."
"Might
as well have been," Naburiel says, shaking his head. "We
didn't even make it close before the vanyr came swarming out, big
things, all wings and teeth, diving straight at us. One got its
stinger stuck in my shoulder plate."
Spartan
laughs from the fire, not looking up from the skull. "And you
ran, I assume."
"Of
course we ran," Belqartis answers, mock-offended. "We're
not suicidal." He wipes his hands on a cloth, smirking. "We
only stayed long enough for Naburiel here to snatch that jar from one
of the combs."
Morus
dips a fingertip into the jar, studies the texture as it stretches
like blood-thick syrup.
"And
the smell… metallic. Sharp. Definitely blood in it. Probably
hemolymph mixed with resin."
Spartan
glances up from the skull she's cleaning. "You intend to use
that in your mixture?"
Morus
nods, tapping the side of the skull with his pestle. "Ita. I'm
thinking of a fortifying draught, one to bolster healing. Might even
amplify resonance."
Naburiel
laughs. "You'll have us all drinking insect blood before long."
"Better
that than Federation brew," Samayel rumbles without looking up.
The
remark earns a round of chuckles. Even Spartan smiles faintly,
setting the cleaned skull aside with care.
"If
it works," she says, "we'll bottle it. Name it after you,
Naburiel."
"Vanyr
Honey," Belqartis adds with a grin. "Sweet death in a jar."
Ashurdan
smirks, raising his claymore to see the edge glint in the firelight.
"That should be our pack's motto."
The
laughter ripples again, warm and easy. It doesn't sound like the
cold, unstoppable killers they are. It sounds almost human.
For
a long moment, the only sound is the fire, the low crackle, the soft
hiss of fat in the pot. The air is heavy with the smell of cooking
meat, metal, and smoke.
Rho
leans forward, tasting the stew with a carved bone spoon. He nods
once.
Morus
finishes grinding his concoction, sets the skull aside, and
stretches, shoulders cracking.
"Then
let's eat before Spartan decides we should train instead."
Spartan's
tone is cool, teasing just beneath the steel. "Eat first. Train
after."
Groans
fill the air, mock protests, but no one disobeys.
They
settle in, each finding a seat around the fire as Rho ladles out
portions. The firelight glows off their faces, the warmth catching in
their eyes. For all their brutality, for all the blood they've
spilled, here, for a fleeting moment, they are simply soldiers
sharing a meal, the Forge's chosen resting between wars.
Then,
a faint flutter.
A
small black bird swoops down from the open vent near the roof. It
circles the fire once, its wings whispering against the warm air
before settling behind Spartan. Belqartis notices first, his brow
knitting. Naburiel follows his gaze.
"...Spartan,"
Naburiel mutters, low.
Spartan
pauses mid-motion, glancing back over her shoulder.
The
hearthbird trembles, its form melting, the feathers unraveling into
smoke and shadow. The mass grows, spreading across the floor, black
as pitch and shifting like liquid night. It coalesces, the air
dimming with a low hum of power.
A
shape takes form.
A
wolf, massive and silent, fur black as the void, eyes glowing like
two emerald shards. Its paws leave frost where they touch the floor.
It shakes once, scattering snow and shadow alike.
The
Vardengard stir, hands instinctively brushing weapons, but Spartan
raises a hand in calm.
"Stand
down," she says evenly. Her voice carries both recognition and
weary resignation.
"Loki."
The
wolf's mouth curves, not quite a smile, but close enough. His voice,
when it comes, is smooth and deep, like wind through old caverns.
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"Still
as composed as ever, Zorya."
He
pads closer, the firelight bending around him, and sits between
Spartan and Morus. The others stare, silent, as if unsure whether to
treat him as spirit, animal, or apparition.
"It's
colder than I remembered," Loki mutters, shaking again, the
faint scent of frost following him. "I've always hated Nirna.
Reminds me of home, those winters that tried to break the bones from
under our flesh."
Spartan
eyes him. "You should have stayed where it's warm then."
A
low, rumbling chuckle. "You know I never could. Not when you
call."
"I
didn't call."
"You
always call," Loki says softly, glancing toward the flames.
"Every time you try to drown yourself in duty."
Spartan
exhales, shaking her head. She picks up a spare bowl and ladles out
stew, offering it to him. "Eat before you start your sermons."
Loki
huffs a laugh but leans forward, the great black muzzle lowering. He
licks at the stew once, twice, the heat fogging the air around him.
"Mortals
and their kindness," he murmurs. "You keep trying to feed
shadows."
"It's
worked before."
"Perhaps,"
he concedes, finishing the bowl with a single gulp. "But I
didn't come for pleasantries. You know that."
The
others have gone still, listening in quiet awe. Even Morus' pestle
has stilled in the wolf's presence.
"Then
get to it," Spartan says, tone flat.
"You
waste yourself here," Loki says, voice deepening. "Tending
wounds, fighting ghosts, chasing a war that isn't yours to win. You
were forged for more than this."
"This
is my purpose," Spartan answers. "There's a fortress in the
north, crawling with eldiravan. I mean to take it before the month is
through."
Loki
tilts his head, those green eyes narrowing like twin blades.
"And
what then? Another fortress? Another army? You'll drown in this cycle
of blood and frost. Humanity cannot stand against the ascended.
You've seen it, these eldiravan will not be broken by mortal steel."
"We've
heard that before," Spartan says sharply. "And we're still
here."
"For
now." Loki's voice lowers, almost mournful. "They are what
you were meant to become, Zorya. Not your enemies, your reflection.
Every war you fight is proof that your kind still looks up instead of
within."
Spartan's
jaw tightens, her hand curling into a fist. "You want me to
abandon my post for philosophy?"
"I
want you to ascend," Loki growls, shadows rippling across his
fur. "To remember what was burned into your soul in the Forge.
There is power in you that even the Forger did not intend to tame.
You are wasting it here, fighting the battles of men."
The
barracks has gone utterly silent, fire snapping softly, the weight of
his words pressing heavy against the steel walls.
Spartan
stares into the fire for a long time before answering, voice low. "If
this 'ascension' of yours doesn't help me end the eldiravan, then
it's useless to me."
"You
think too small," Loki murmurs. "The eldiravan are a
symptom, not the sickness. The sickness is the limit you've
accepted."
"And
yet that limit keeps us human."
For
a moment, neither speaks. The fire pops. The wolf watches her with
eyes that seem older than the mountains outside.
Finally,
Loki exhales, a soft sound like a sigh of winter wind.
"Perhaps,"
he says quietly. "But even the strongest steel rusts if left too
long in the snow."
He
rises then, stretching, the shadows pooling once more beneath him.
"You'll
see, Zorya. When the time comes, you'll have to choose between duty
and destiny."
The
barracks has gone utterly silent, the fire snapping softly, the
weight of Loki's words pressing heavy against the steel walls.
Spartan
stares into the fire for a long time before answering, voice low.
"If
this 'ascension' of yours doesn't help me end the eldiravan, then
it's useless to me."
"You
think too small," Loki murmurs. "The eldiravan are a
symptom, not the sickness. The sickness is the limit you've
accepted."
"And
yet that limit keeps us human."
For
a moment, neither speaks. The fire pops. The wolf watches her with
eyes that seem older than the mountains outside.
Finally,
Loki exhales, a soft sound like a sigh of winter wind.
"Perhaps,"
he says quietly. "But even the strongest steel rusts if left too
long in the snow." He rises then, stretching, the shadows
pooling once more beneath him. "You'll see, Zorya. When the time
comes, you'll have to choose between duty and destiny."
A
long silence follows. The fire hisses as a pocket of fat bursts in
the stewpot.
"Perhaps,"
Naburiel says dryly, breaking the stillness, "if Loki wasn't so
cryptic, we could actually make better plans."
Ashurdan
snorts, sheathing his knife. "Agreed. What's the point of
guiding anyone if you speak in riddles and vanishing acts?"
Loki
turns his head slightly, one glowing eye sliding toward them. The air
trembles faintly with his exhale. "Do you think I enjoy riddles,
iron-born? I speak as clearly as I am allowed."
"Allowed?"
Naburiel arches a brow. "By who?"
Loki's
ears flick. "By the order of things. There are threads too fine
for even your hands to grasp. Tug too hard, and the whole weave
unravels."
"That's
convenient," Ashurdan mutters. "Hide behind fate, sound
mysterious, vanish in smoke."
A
low growl hums in Loki's throat, not anger, but warning. "Mock
me if you wish. There are greater things at play than your wars and
your Forger's forge. Things delicate, ancient. Things that watch when
I speak too freely."
The
fire dims briefly, the shadows bending toward him like drawn breath.
Before
Spartan can cut in, a sharp ping flashes across her HUD, her visor
lighting faintly with a pulsing blue icon.
Incoming
Message: Magnus Tiberius
Her
focus shifts instantly. Her eyes flicker and the message unfolds
across her vision:
[Spartan,
report to the command room immediately. Priority Sigma-One.]
Spartan's
expression hardens. "That's our cue," she says. "Stay
on standby until I return."
She
crosses to the armor rack, her Olympian plate gleaming in the
firelight. Each segment seals into place with a hiss and lock,
systems coming online with a muted hum.
Loki
watches her, his form already beginning to blur at the edges.
"Called
again to duty," he says softly. "One day, Zorya, that call
will cost you the chance to answer destiny."
"Then
destiny will have to wait," Spartan replies, voice filtered
through her helm. She steps past him. The great wolf lowers his head
slightly, as if in reluctant respect.
Then
she pushes open the barracks door, the cold air rushing in around
her. The steel slams shut behind her with a heavy clang, leaving the
others staring at the space where Loki lingers, half-shadow,
half-memory, until he fades entirely.
Outside,
Spartan marches through the snow toward Command, her armor leaving
deep prints that the storm begins to swallow almost immediately.
The
Command Room - Continuous
The
command room hums with quiet intensity, screens flickering, comms
officers murmuring into headsets, the low vibration of generators
beneath the floor. Spartan steps in from the busy main hall, the hiss
of the outer door sealing behind her. The air here feels colder, more
sterile.
Magnus
stands at the war table, his great form cast in the ghostly light of
the holographic map hovering above the surface. Arkaelus sprawls
across it, the jagged white of its mountains, the deep blue veins of
rivers frozen half-solid, the red and gold icons marking Vardengard
and enemy positions.
He
doesn't look up when she enters. "You came quickly," he
says, his tone even but carrying weight.
"You
said 'priority,'" Spartan replies, stepping closer, helmet
tucked beneath her arm. The table's light reflects off her armor in
cold blues. "What has happened?"
Magnus
gestures to the map, zooming in with a swipe of his gauntleted hand.
The view tightens on the northern front.
"Kaedor
and his pack reported movement four hours ago," he says. "A
battalion-sized Eldiravan column, moving southwest from the Nareth
Expanse. Infantry, armored crawlers, and," he pauses, tapping a
rune, "possible aerial support."
Spartan
leans forward, eyes tracing the faint red markers. "They are
heading for the trenches we took when we first landed."
"Correct,"
Magnus confirms. "They will reach them within twenty hours."
She
notices the smaller sigils blinking to the west; Apathor, Tharn, and
Kaelus.
"They're
already engaging?"
"Preparing
to," Magnus says. "The western front is holding, for now.
But Kaedor's group is pinned; they cannot intercept the column moving
on us."
Spartan
exhales slowly through her nose. "So it is us, then."
Magnus
nods. "You and your pack will take point. Red Baron's company
will reinforce, but his vehicles will struggle on the northern ridge.
You will be faster."
Spartan
studies the topography overlay, jagged mountains, narrow valleys,
thick snow. The approach is brutal. "If they reach those
trenches, we will lose more than ground. That is our lifeline to the
supply line south."
"I
am aware," Magnus says quietly. He finally looks up at her. "I
would not ask if there were another option."
Spartan
straightens, eyes fixed on the glowing red line creeping southward.
"We will intercept them before they hit the valley."
"Good."
Magnus taps a sequence into the console, locking her pack's
coordinates onto the map. "Take what you need from the armory. I
want you moving before dawn."
"Understood."
She
turns to go, but Magnus stops her.
"Zorya."
She
pauses at the threshold, half-turned, the glow from the map
reflecting off her pauldrons.
"You
have done well," Magnus says, his voice low, carrying the weight
of command and something older beneath it. "What you saw in the
north, the fortress, it changes things. The Eldiravan are not just
testing us. They are fortifying. Preparing."
Spartan's
eyes narrow slightly. "Then so will we."
Magnus
nods, though there's a flicker of unease in his gaze. "Go. And
Zorya," he adds quietly, "be careful. Whatever is driving
them… it is not just war."
Spartan
gives a short, sharp nod, then steps back into the corridor, the cold
light fading behind her as the command room door hisses shut.

