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CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE: There’s a Darkness Up Ahead

  Northern

  Cryolume Forest - Five Weeks Later

  The

  cryolume forest hums faintly around them, an endless cathedral of

  glass-white trunks and bioluminescent frost that pulses softly in the

  stillness. The air is brittle, dry, and cold enough to sting the

  lungs with every breath. Their boots crunch through the snow, sending

  quiet shockwaves through the crystalline undergrowth.

  Spartan

  walks ahead, her black and crimson armor faintly glimmering in the

  pale cyan light. Beside her, towering and broad, Rho Voss trudges

  with heavy steps. His armor is darker still, vantablack plates

  swallowing the reflected light entirely. A massive pelt is thrown

  over his shoulders, frost already clinging to the fur.

  Spartan

  speaks through their encrypted link, her voice a steady pulse against

  the white noise of the forest. "We'll link up with the others at

  camp. Belqartis killed a hornbeast earlier." She glances

  sidelong at him. "If we're lucky, it's still fresh."

  Rho

  grunts, a low, wordless sound of approval that vibrates through the

  comms.

  "It's

  been weeks since we've all been in the same place," Spartan

  continues, her breath fogging faintly against her cracked visor. "I

  think they've all forgotten what a proper fire looks like. Even

  Naburiel's been quiet. Probably sulking somewhere under a glacier."

  Rho

  gives another grunt, this one almost a laugh.

  Spartan

  smirks. "Yeah, I know. You hate the cold more than he does.

  We're almost there."

  Then,

  ping.

  A

  small, bright notification flashes in the corner of her HUD. The

  glyph of the General Supreme burns briefly, then resolves into text:

  New message from Magnus Tiberius.

  Spartan

  opens it mid-stride.

  MAGNUS:

  [A

  transmission came in from Lucius. Forwarding to you now. Take your

  time with it.]

  Spartan's

  brow furrows slightly. She slows, the crunch of snow beneath her

  boots the only sound.

  The

  video opens automatically, taking up a quarter of her vision,

  semi-transparent, floating against the forest's pallid backdrop. The

  image stabilizes on Lucius Marcellus. He sits alone at his desk, the

  dim lighting carving tired lines across his face. The usual poise in

  his posture is gone; his eyes are shadowed, expression solemn.

  "Spartan,

  Supreme," he begins quietly, voice rough from lack of sleep.

  "I'll start with some good news."

  He

  leans forward, fingers steepled beneath his chin.

  "Michael

  Junior is set to graduate from the Academy in a few weeks. Twenty-one

  years old now. He'll be a Praetorian soon, just like the rest of us

  were." A faint smile crosses his lips, but it doesn't reach his

  eyes. "He's earned it."

  Spartan

  keeps walking, gaze flicking between the holo-feed and the frozen

  terrain ahead. Rho Voss says nothing, only glancing briefly at her

  through his tinted visor.

  Lucius's

  voice grows quieter. "As for the rest…"

  He

  exhales slowly.

  "It's

  a shame Father won't be there to see it. The Prefect passed away a

  few weeks ago."

  Spartan

  stops walking.

  The

  wind sighs through the frozen canopy, whispering against the metallic

  plates of her armor. Rho halts beside her, silent, the faint blue

  light of the cryolume trees reflecting across his faceplate.

  Lucius

  continues. "The funeral was yesterday. He held on longer than

  any of us expected. Cyber rejection… it comes for everyone

  eventually. But I'd hoped it would come later."

  He

  glances down, the weight in his tone unmistakable. "Before he

  passed, he named me Prefect. I didn't want it this way." There's

  a pause. A long one. Then, softer, "He spoke of you, Spartan.

  Said he wished he could see you one last time. But he knew why you

  couldn't come home. Said you were fighting for our peace, and that

  you should keep doing so. Not to mourn what was inevitable."

  Spartan's

  gloved hand tightens into a fist at her side. Her breath fogs the

  inside of her helmet. Rho watches, still silent, his presence the

  quiet, immovable kind she doesn't need to explain herself to.

  Lucius

  steadies himself again, switching tone as he moves to the next point.

  "Magnus," he says, eyes lifting to the camera. "There's

  unrest. Tarsians and Solisians on Anicarro have begun rioting. It's

  small now, but spreading. The tension's been simmering since you left

  for Nirna. I'll uphold our agreements. I'll keep it under control. We

  can't afford another fracture."

  The

  feed flickers, static, then stabilizes again as Lucius leans back in

  his chair, exhaustion catching up to him. "Tell Spartan… tell

  her Father was proud."

  The

  transmission ends.

  For

  a moment, nothing moves.

  Spartan

  stands still, watching the snow drift between the cryolume trees. The

  faint hum of the forest fills the silence again, soft and hollow.

  She

  finally lowers her head. "…Old bastard," she murmurs

  beneath her breath, voice barely audible even through her own comms.

  Rho

  Voss looks to her, then to the northern horizon where their campfire

  glows faintly in the distance through the pale forest haze. He lets

  out a slow exhale, the sound low and grounding.

  Spartan

  inhales, straightens, and starts walking again. "Come on,"

  she says quietly. "The others are waiting."

  The

  frost whispers against their armor as Spartan and Rho Voss continue

  through the cryolume forest. The silence between them is not

  uncomfortable, it never has been, but this one feels heavier, like

  the forest itself is holding its breath.

  Rho

  reaches out and touches her shoulder, an armored gauntlet against the

  carbon-steel plate. The weight is solid, grounding.

  Spartan

  glances over her shoulder, visor tilting slightly. "I'm all

  right," she says quietly. Her tone isn't defensive, just tired.

  "Truly."

  She

  exhales, vapor curling from the vents near her helmet's jawline.

  "Junior'll be as old as his father by the time we return."

  The corner of her mouth lifts with a humorless chuckle. "Breaks

  my heart… and makes me laugh all the same."

  Her

  pace slows, boots crunching through the glittering snow. "Part

  of me's grateful we can't have children," she murmurs.

  "Families. Leaving them behind, watching them age from

  light-years away, it's…" She trails off, shakes her head. "I

  don't envy Michael and Victoria."

  Rho

  makes a low sound, almost a growl but softer, agreement, empathy, or

  both.

  Then,

  something shifts in the air.

  Spartan

  stops mid-step, head turning slightly. A faint current, a scent

  riding the wind, metal, oil, and the unmistakable tang of blood

  sanctified. Her HUD pings an unidentified chemical trace, but she

  doesn't need sensors to recognize that.

  Her

  voice drops to a whisper. "Do you smell that?"

  Rho

  inhales deeply through his helmet's vents. The sound is quiet but

  sharp, precise. His shoulders stiffen. A small, almost imperceptible

  nod.

  Spartan's

  hand drops to her sword hilt. "I know that scent," she

  murmurs. "But… it's impossible."

  The

  snow crunches ahead of them.

  Both

  warriors freeze.

  Then,

  another crunch behind them.

  Spartan's

  muscles tense instantly. She turns slightly, blade half-drawn,

  scanning the gleaming white forest. Between the cryolume trunks,

  faint silhouettes begin to form, tall, broad, purposeful.

  The

  first two step forward, white-and-crimson Gilgamesh plate glinting

  beneath the frozen glow. Their armor is trimmed in gold filigree,

  each pauldron engraved with the unmistakable sigil of the Venators'

  Cross.

  Spartan's

  heart lurches. No.

  "Vardengard,"

  she breathes.

  But

  not theirs.

  These

  are holy ones.

  Tzurinn

  and Akriel, Venator Vardengard, Captain Absjorn's chosen hunters.

  Each bears a different weapon: Tzurinn wields a halberd wreathed in

  faint harmonic light; Akriel, twin glaives that hum with resonant

  energy.

  Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.

  They

  are laughing, low, eager, like wolves scenting blood.

  And

  as they circle, two more emerge from the pale, heavy-footed, armored

  in the same sanctified red-white plate. One carries a chain-axe slung

  over his shoulder, his name etched into his breastplate: Malchiel.

  The other is leaner, faster, holding an ion sabre and smirking behind

  his visor: Vaedran.

  Four

  Venator Vardengard.

  Four

  executioners.

  The

  circle closes.

  For

  the first time in years, Spartan feels the cold inside her chest.

  Even

  Rho Voss, stone of a man, unflinching through any hell, goes still,

  every muscle locked, his breath quiet and measured. The only thing

  that can make their kind hesitate… stands before them now.

  Spartan

  speaks low, almost reverently. "Venators… here?"

  Tzurinn

  tilts his head, the red glow of his visor like an ember in the frost.

  His voice filters through vox distortion, smooth, confident, and

  filled with cruel delight.

  "By

  the Absolute, we've been blessed to find you first." He steps

  closer, halberd gleaming with harmonic fire. "It is nice to see

  you again, bitch."

  Akriel's

  laughter is sharp, metallic. "You won't be escaping this time."

  The

  forest holds its breath.

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss draw their blades as one, reflex, muscle memory, the

  bond between them wordless and absolute.

  Snow

  explodes upward in shimmering plumes as steel meets steel.

  The

  Venators strike first, no words, no warning. Just fury made flesh.

  Tzurinn

  lunges in a flash of crimson light, halberd cutting the air with the

  sound of thunder. Akriel follows with a flourish of twin glaives,

  their harmonic edges leaving trails of pale gold through the frost.

  Spartan barely raises her shield in time. The blow shudders through

  her arm, rattling her bones.

  Rho

  Voss pivots beside her, the weight of his zweihander whistling in a

  deadly arc. It meets Malchiel's chain-axe mid-swing. Sparks cascade.

  The forest itself seems to recoil at the violence.

  "Rho,

  left!" Spartan shouts, twisting her shield outward to deflect

  Vaedran's sabre as it slides down the face of her plate, shrieking

  like glass.

  They

  are surrounded, four against two. The Venators move with predatory

  precision, inhuman rhythm, the hum of their weapons forming a

  discordant hymn.

  "Still

  too slow, Spartan!" Tzurinn snarls through his vox, halberd

  crashing against her shield again. "You and your mute hound

  should've stayed buried on Rauvis!"

  "Didn't

  have the pleasure," Spartan growls back, driving her sword

  upward in a quick riposte that slices across his pauldron, sparking

  against his sanctified plate. "Next time, I'll remember to bring

  flowers."

  Akriel

  laughs, his glaives spinning. "She remembers how to talk! I

  thought fear had stolen her tongue."

  Rho

  Voss doesn't answer. He never does. He just moves, a blur of black

  metal and killing intent. His zweihander carves through the air, so

  heavy it sounds like tearing thunder. The blade slams against

  Malchiel's chain-axe again, throwing both combatants backward with

  the sheer concussive force.

  The

  four Venators close in, circling tighter. Their laughter turns

  animal.

  "Back

  to back," Spartan mutters.

  Rho

  grunts in acknowledgment. They press shoulder to shoulder, a living

  bulwark against the storm.

  Tzurinn

  and Akriel strike first again, Akriel leaping high, glaives

  descending in twin arcs of light. Spartan raises her shield just in

  time, the impact flaring across her HUD. Alarms flash red. Armor

  strain: 37%.

  Vaedran

  rushes low from her flank. Spartan pivots, slamming her shield rim

  into his jaw, cracking his visor. "You're not the first choirboy

  to try me," she hisses, and her sword slashes out, cutting deep

  across his arm.

  Rho's

  zweihander roars through the air. He catches Malchiel's chain-axe and

  shatters it in two. The Venator stumbles, growling through vox

  distortion, but Tzurinn sweeps in before Rho can follow up, the

  halberd striking the Vardengard's chest plate with bone-crushing

  force.

  Rho

  slides back, boots digging into the snow, armor smoking from the

  kinetic burst, but he's still standing.

  Still

  breathing.

  The

  Venators circle again, their laughter subsiding into harsh, heavy

  breathing.

  Spartan

  steadies her sword. "You've gotten better," she calls out,

  visor gleaming. "Last time you couldn't even touch us."

  Tzurinn's

  voice drops low, almost reverent. "Last time, we fought as

  soldiers."

  He

  raises his halberd, the blade crackling with divine light.

  "This

  time," he says, "we come as judgment."

  And

  then they're moving again, four blinding streaks of white and red,

  colliding with two unyielding shadows in a storm of steel and wrath.

  Even

  with Olympian armor, Spartan and Rho Voss are driven back step by

  step, the forest shaking around them as the Venators' holy fury

  crashes against the forged might of the Forger's chosen.

  The

  air cracks with divine thunder.

  Spartan

  barely registers the new rhythm in the chaos, not the metallic clash

  of blades, but the pounding rhythm of hooves breaking through snow

  and ice. A heartbeat later, the forest erupts.

  Absjorn

  crashes through the veil of frozen trees atop his monstrous steed,

  Balthamar, its snow-white hair still marred by old burns, one eye a

  clouded ruin. Steam pours from its nostrils in white plumes. The

  creature's roar sounds more like a furnace exhaling.

  Spartan

  turns, too late. "Rho!"

  The

  cry is drowned out as Absjorn's dual-headed axe arcs through the air,

  charged with raw electricity. It strikes Rho Voss square in the

  shoulder with the force of a meteor.

  Impact.

  The

  explosion of light and sound shakes the entire clearing. Rho is

  ripped from the ground, flung like a broken statue down the snowbank.

  His left arm separates cleanly from his body, spinning through the

  air before vanishing into the snow. He crashes through the frost and

  disappears among the cryolume trees, leaving a jagged crimson trail.

  "Rho!"

  Spartan's voice tears from her throat. She steps forward

  instinctively, but the moment she moves, the Venators are there

  again.

  Tzurinn's

  halberd slams into her shield. Akriel's glaive carves sparks across

  her flank. The air is thick with static rising like a cathedral choir

  in full wrath.

  Cassiel

  gallops in behind Absjorn, his own mare shrieking as her hooves churn

  the snow into mist. He leaps from the saddle mid-charge, landing

  heavy, his staff already leveled at Spartan's chest.

  "Spartan

  of Invicta," he calls, voice amplified through the vox, serene

  in its judgment. "You stand condemned by decree of the Absolute.

  Your kind are false gods, mockeries of creation."

  Spartan

  pivots hard, the spear scraping across her pauldron, singing against

  Olympian alloy. She drives her shield into Cassiel's chest, the

  impact echoing, but he absorbs it like stone.

  She

  snarls through her vox: "You Venators, always preaching after

  the strike."

  Absjorn

  reins in his horse, Balthamar pawing at the ground, snorting black

  smoke. "The word of the Absolute needs no sermon," he

  growls, axe dripping with sparks and Rho's blood. "Only

  judgment."

  He

  swings again, this time at Spartan. The impact detonates through the

  clearing like a thunderclap, knocking her several paces back. Her

  armor holds, but the shock slams into her bones, rattling her HUD

  with overload warnings.

  The

  four Venator Vardengard close in again, reforming their perimeter

  while Cassiel and Absjorn ride the storm's edge.

  Spartan

  crouches low, shield raised, breathing hard inside her helm.

  Somewhere below the ridge, Rho Voss is either dying, or about to make

  them pay for assuming he can.

  Through

  the haze of snow and smoke, her voice cuts cold through the vox: "You

  should've killed me first."

  The

  roar that tears from Spartan's throat is primal, a sound that shakes

  snow from the branches above.

  She

  charges through the flurry, boots crushing the ice, crimson-plumed

  helm cutting through the haze like a spearpoint. Absjorn wheels

  Balthamar to meet her, the massive stallion snorting steam, one blind

  eye burning like a dead star.

  Spartan

  leaps.

  For

  a heartbeat, she hangs in the air, her shield outstretched, fingers

  clawing for Absjorn's throat, intent to drag him from the saddle and

  crush him into the snow.

  But

  Balthamar rears, front hooves lashing like battering rams. The

  shockwave alone nearly sends her sprawling. And before she can

  recover, Cassiel's staff whistles through the air.

  The

  gilded cross at its head flashes in the frozen light, and the strike

  lands with a thunderous crack against Spartan's ribs. Her shield

  flares, then shatters in a burst of static. She hits the ground hard,

  her breath knocked out, visor cracking against the frozen crust

  beneath her.

  She

  forces herself up, vision swimming, snow melting in the heat that

  pours from her wounded side.

  Then

  comes the second blow.

  Absjorn

  swings his axe backward as Balthamar spins, the twin heads screeching

  through the air, and connect. The blade bite through her side,

  carving deep through armor and flesh alike. Electricity crawls across

  her plating, arcs of white and blue lightning snapping through the

  trees as she's hurled across the forest floor.

  She

  crashes through a dead trunk, splintering it in two before slamming

  into the base of another. Her armor smokes. Her HUD flickers.

  Warnings blare: HEAT LIMIT EXCEEDED. VITALS UNSTABLE.

  Snow

  hisses as her blood burns through it.

  And

  through the haze, she sees him.

  Rho

  Voss, massive, broken, half buried in the drifts. His vantablack

  Olympian plate gleams against the white expanse, a silhouette of

  ruin. Blood pumps freely from his missing arm, a dark trail painting

  the snow red. He kneels, trembling, one knee sinking deep into the

  ice as he grips the hilt of his great zweihander with his remaining

  hand.

  Their

  visors lock.

  Spartan's

  voice comes ragged, half snarl, half command. "Rho, run!"

  He

  doesn't move.

  He

  plants the blade into the snow, uses it to drag himself upright. His

  breath comes out in fogged bursts behind his visor, silent, defiant.

  Above

  them, the Venators regroup, Cassiel and Absjorn circling with their

  steeds, Tzurinn and Akriel closing in like hounds to the kill.

  Spartan

  grips her sword again, her other hand pressed to her bleeding side.

  "Rho,

  damn it, go!" she roars.

  But

  Rho Voss only turns slightly, one wordless motion that says all it

  must: Never.

  He

  tears the zweihander free from the snow.

  Then

  as the Venators descend again, the Vardengard of Civitas Invicta

  stand together once more, broken and bleeding, against the judgment

  of the Absolute.

  Spartan's

  fingers move in a blur, left hand slamming down to her belt, pulling

  free two smooth iron-gray spheres. The haptic clicks confirm her

  priming sequence: smoke in one, flash in the other.

  She

  yanks both pins with a twist of her thumb.

  "Cover!"

  she snarls, not sure if Rho can even hear her through the ringing in

  his ears.

  The

  first grenade hits the snow, bouncing once before bursting open,

  thick plumes of ash-gray smoke pouring outward in roiling waves. The

  world vanishes into haze.

  Then

  comes the second.

  A

  crack like thunder, light and sound tearing through the storm, a

  detonation that shatters the air and sends flocks of birds scattering

  from the trees. Even through her polarized visor, the flash sears her

  eyes.

  Shapes

  twist and blur in the chaos. Venators shout curses, their chants

  breaking into static-laced distortion as comms and sensors scramble

  from the overload. Warsteeds rear and scream, their hooves hammering

  the frozen ground.

  Spartan

  moves.

  She

  finds Rho by his silhouette, vast and staggering, blood painting the

  snow where he stands. She grabs his good shoulder, armor locking

  against armor, and pulls.

  "Come

  on!" she roars, her voice muffled in the storm. "Move!"

  Rho

  hesitates only a heartbeat. Even without seeing his face, she knows

  the look behind that visor, that stubborn, immovable refusal to

  retreat.

  But

  then, with a low growl that vibrates through his chest, he relents.

  The

  two vanish into the whiteout, the smoke curling around them like

  ghostly tendrils. Spartan drags him forward, half-running,

  half-hauling the bloodied giant as they carve a path through the

  snow. Their footfalls thud heavy, their breath mechanical and ragged

  in the silence that follows the flash.

  Behind

  them, the Venators emerge slowly from the veil, blinded, disoriented.

  Cassiel shouts orders, his voice filtered and furious, but the forest

  swallows it whole.

  Only

  the echo of boot prints and the faint trail of crimson remain,

  melting faint lines into the untouched snow, the last proof that

  Spartan and Rho Voss were ever there at all.

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