Northwest
Cryolume Forest - The Next Morning
Snow
grinds under Spartan's boot like glass. The wind comes down from the
ridges in a hard, cold whisper that strips breath bare, and it
carries the smell of ancient bone and iron, the plateau's skeleton
creaks somewhere below, a slow, unseen tide. She crouches at the lip
of the cliff, armor bridging shadow and glare, the pale of her
faceplate a slash against the white. Beside her, Rho Voss is a statue
carved from winter: broad shoulders hunched, one gauntleted hand
wrapped tight around the hilt of his zweihander, the other resting
where the new armor plates meet the old.
Thirty
Venators march the valley road like a white and crimson ribbon. Their
cloaks flap in stiff, ceremonial unison. APCs trail them, low, squat
things that clatter on treads and belch steam into the grey air.
Between the marchers and the machines, two pairs of Hounds slither
like shadows on chains; their handlers snap short commands in clipped
Latin. The Hounds themselves are worse than weapons, they are shame
and cruelty wrapped in metal and flesh. Muzzles of sectioned steel
clamp over the broken faces; straps pin their arms across their
chests so they cannot use their hands; their eyes are blindfolded,
glazed over with a Venator varnish to dull instinct. They snarl, they
drool, they are dragged forward like ledge-bound beasts.
The
wind favors Spartan and Rho. It carries the Venators' scent away from
them and carries the faint clatter of their march into the canyon's
throat. Spartan lets the sound paint a map across her ribs: cadence,
spacing, where the command voices come, where the rear APC hisses its
coolant. She breathes slow. Her gloves flex.
Rho
tilts his head. A soft signal, one knuckle rubbed against the hilt,
the old hunting sign. Spartan answers with the thumb press against
the glyph under her collar, a silent call to the dead forge. They are
not alone; Red Baron's shadowed elements move in the folds of the
ridge farther back, and the bolt line is ready. But this moment is
theirs.
Down
below, a Venator corporal laughs, a short dry sound that snaps in the
teeth of wind. He leans toward his map console, not watching the
road. The Hounds strain, claws clicking against packed snow, as their
handlers prod them with the flat of a blade. One Hound's chain jerks,
and a man staggers; the dog's muzzle squeals against steel. The sight
tightens Spartan's chest into a cold calm.
She
moves first, exactly. One carved step, then another, and she slides
over the lip like shadow unstitched from night. Rho follows, the two
of them falling the length of the face in a controlled drop, talons
and crampons biting the stone. The cliff shivers under their boots
for a heartbeat; below, a Venator head jerks up, the laugh dying.
They
land like ghosts in the lee of a bone arch, the curve of a vertebra
swallowing their shape. For a beat, the only sounds are the creak of
straps and the distant rattle of the APC. Spartan tastes the cold as
a weapon and the cold is precise: it makes thinking clear.
Rho
growls, and that's the signal. Spartan pulls a pair of compact
charges from the bandolier at her hip, not enough to level a road,
but enough to make the earth cough and close a path. She slings one
to the left side of the route where a shelf of frozen scree hangs
over the track; the second she wedges into the snow-lip above a
shallow culvert. Both are rigged with whisper-timers, set to sulk
until the moment the trail is choked with fleeing boots.
They
do not linger to admire their handiwork. Spartan drops, sword in
hand, and slides into the road like an answer. Rho moves with the
slow, heavy grace of a mountain wolf. Their first clash is close
enough that the wind takes none of it; the Venators' formation
shatters into wet noise.
Spartan's
blade goes under a throat with crude economy. Steel finds gaps the
armor leaves open: a collar seam, a hollow beneath a pauldrons'
flare. She moves like a machine remembering a single remembered
prayer. The Venators react with the trained flinch of the well-fed:
they raise too many guns, they shout clipped commands, their
discipline frays. The Hounds explode forward on their chains, blind
and crazed, they crash into Rho with the sound of breaking wood. Rho
slams an elbow into a muzzle, spins, and his spear arcs. He tears the
chain at its anchor, and a Hound collapses, seizing the snow with a
rictus of pain. It whimpers, then goes still.
Sparks
jump where metal meets metal. An APC's bulk turns, the driver snarls,
hosing tracer fire into the bone arch. One of the Venator squad tries
to raise a rifle on Spartan, but she is already across him, a red
streak, gutted breath escaping him in a hot fountain. Rho's
prosthetic arm whirs and clamps a grapple to a wheel hub; he yanks
with both hands and the machine shudders, stalling. Men shout. Smoke
blossoms; oil leaks slick as night.
The
charges answer their cue. The shelf of frozen scree gives with an
old-snow roar, an avalanche that comes clean and white. Snow and
shattered stone thunder onto the track, burying the rear APC and
cutting the Venators' line of retreat. The culvert explodes in a
shudder of ice; steam hisses into the air, a choking plume.
Chaos
blooms. Spartan slams a shoulder into the corporal who laughed and
twists him down into the snow; his face is blue with cold and terror.
Rho moves like an anchor, drawing the Venators into a funnel of their
own making. He slaps his zweihander's guard against a rock, the sound
is a drumbeat in Spartan's ear. They have him where they want: a
confined kill-ground with only one obvious exit.
Spartan
barks once. The sound is not for the Venators but for the plan: bait,
retreat, chase. She wants Absjorn's pride to taste movement, to taste
pursuit.
They
retreat through the bone arches like water slipping beneath ice.
Their tracks are handfuls of sinuous prints collected by wind, hard
to read in the whitened night. Behind them, Venator calls go shrill
and hate-laced. Men run. One of the Hounds, freed by Rho, scrambles
after them with raw, animal joy, and even then its handlers curse and
drag.
Spartan
does not look back until she hears the first familiar signal, the
metallic tone of a comm pinging a command. Absjorn's voice is not on
it, but his authority snaps like a whip through the channels. Someone
farther down the trail answers; more armored shapes spill into the
pass. The bait is taken.
Rho
slows at the edge of a narrow defile, breath steaming from his mouth.
He leans toward her, a deep, gravelly growl resonating through the
vox of his helm.
Spartan's
hand finds the rune under her collar and she presses once, twice. The
cliff behind them is a shadowed mouth, and beyond it the ridge where
Red Baron waits like a promise. The valley below lights with motion,
a black tide moving toward the trap the Vardengard set like teeth.
Red
Baron's Position - Continuous
Snow
drifts through the ruins of the ridge, catching on the black edges of
broken stone and wire. Red Baron lies prone against the curve of a
half-buried mastodon tread, his rifle balanced across a stack of
rock. The scope glows faint in the dark, an amber ghostlight
reflecting in his eye.
Arturo
crouches to his right, quiet and steady, helmet off, a rag of cloth
wrapped around his neck to keep the frost from biting deep. To Red
Baron's left, Liam hunches over the detonator panel, thumb hovering,
eyes wide with adrenaline and cold. Behind them, the other two
Federalists, Keller and Dace, wait in the snow trench, weapons ready,
breath steaming through their face filters.
The
mountain breathes around them, low and restless. The only sounds are
the wind's slow sigh and the faint pulse of distant gunfire from
somewhere below.
Then,
motion.
Two
shapes break from the white distance, fast, low, sharp as blades:
Spartan and Rho Voss. They sprint across the ridge path, their armor
a dark blur, snow kicking off in sparks. They move like living
ordinance, silent but for the hiss of heat vents.
Red
Baron raises a hand; hold.
The
Vardengard pass through their kill zone without a sound, not even a
glance to mark the hidden Federalists. Ten heartbeats later, the
Venators crest the ridge in pursuit. Thirty, maybe less now. They
come in a wave of white and crimson, shouting litanies of the
Absolute, rifles drawn, boots slamming the ice. The Hounds snarl
ahead of them, chains snapping.
Red
Baron watches, patient. He waits until the first APC's treads grind
over the buried charges, then chops his hand down once.
"Now."
Liam
slams the switch.
The
mountainside erupts.
The
flank vanishes in a geyser of fire and shattered stone. Half the
Venator line disappears in the concussion, men flung screaming, APCs
flipped onto their sides like tin toys. A dozen bodies arc through
the smoke and vanish into the snowdrift below.
"Open
up!" Red Baron barks.
Arturo
rises with him, and the ridge flashes white with gunfire. Rail rifles
crack, sharp, deafening reports that echo for miles. The rounds punch
through armor like paper; the Venators crumple where they stand,
sparks and blood mist bursting in the cold. Keller and Dace add their
fire, disciplined and clean. The ridge becomes a storm of light.
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Venators
scatter for cover, some trying to form firing lines, others dragging
wounded. A few drop into the snow and start shooting back blindly up
the slope. The air fills with tracer fire and shrapnel.
One
round slams into the stone near Red Baron's shoulder, showering him
with dust and snow. He ducks, reloads, and rises again. Another
Venator drops with a hole in his chest the size of a fist.
Then
the Hounds are loose.
Chains
snap. Masks peel open in four sections with a wet, mechanical hiss.
The straps that pinned their arms fall away. Two monstrous shapes,
once men, once Vardengard, come bounding through the snow. Their
bodies are swollen with muscle and metal; spines break through the
flesh at their shoulders. Their mouths gape, twin rows of metallic
teeth glinting under the stormlight.
"Contact,
left!" Arturo yells, swinging his rifle around.
The
first Hound hits Keller like a hammer, slamming him into the ice. His
gun clatters away as the beast tears into him, jaws closing over his
throat. Keller manages one strangled cry before the sound gurgles and
cuts. Blood spatters across the white.
Dace
fires point-blank, rounds punching into the creature's flank, but it
barely slows. It turns, snarling, lunging at him. Arturo dives in,
firing three clean shots into its spine. The Hound convulses,
stumbles, and collapses beside Keller's body, twitching in the snow.
The
second beast barrels toward Red Baron and Liam. Liam tries to swing
his rifle up, but the Hound smashes him aside with a backhand,
sending him sprawling. Red Baron braces, fires once, twice, each shot
slamming into the creature's chest. It shrieks, more animal than man,
and lunges again.
At
the last instant, Red Baron sidesteps and drives his combat knife up
beneath its jaw, burying the blade to the hilt. The Hound stiffens,
trembling, then goes limp and falls heavily into the snow, dragging
him down with it.
The
world goes still. Only the wind moves now.
Red
Baron pushes himself up, wiping blood from his cheek. Arturo checks
Liam, who's dazed but alive. Dace kneels over Keller, shaking his
head once, slow.
Red
Baron glances downslope. The surviving Venators are breaking, some
dragging wounded toward the shattered APCs, others stumbling away
into the mist. He lets them go. The ridge belongs to Invicta.
He
reloads his rifle and speaks, voice low through the comms.
"Spartan,
the hammer's dropped. Path's clear. But we lost Keller."
Static
crackles back, Spartan's voice steady and metallic.
"Acknowledged.
His sacrifice feeds the Forge."
Red
Baron looks down at the corpses, the Venators, the beasts, Keller.
Snow already beginning to cover them all the same.
He
exhales, slow, frost curling from his lips.
"Yeah,"
he murmurs. "The Forge..." Then to the others, he calls,
"Let's move out!"
The
Venator Encampment - Continuous
The
tent hums faintly with the pulse of holo-projectors. Pale light
ripples across the war table; maps layered in wireframe and runic
overlays, icons shifting as data streams update and vanish in
sequence. The sigil of the Absolute glows faintly at the center, a
crimson crossed shaped like a soaring dragon.
Absjorn
stands at the head of the table, hands planted firmly on the edge.
His armor groans with the motion, the white plates catching the light
like oil on steel. His helm rests beside him, visor cracked from a
previous battle.
Around
him stand Cassiel and two other Priests, Benedan, tall and whip-thin
with a voice like a rasped whisper, and Thaneus, broader, his armor
scarred and pitted with plasma burns. All four wear their mantles of
rank, robes of white and crimson trimmed with gold.
The
table's projection ripples, showing the mountain range in layered red
topography.
"We
know where they fled," Cassiel says, his voice low, precise.
"Karthane lies buried beneath the range. They used it as a
fortress, perhaps a shrine. Inquisitors report sub-level activity and
heat signatures. The Invictans have made their den there."
Absjorn
nods, eyes on the map. "Then we drive them out."
Benedan
folds his hands, lips twisting. "Inquisitors first," he
says. "Silent entry. We plant sanctified mines beneath their
bunkers, collapse their tunnels, bleed them before they know we're
upon them."
Thaneus
shakes his head, the light catching on his helm's golden trim. "A
waste. While you play with shadows, the Eldiravan multiply. They
strike from the peaks and vanish into the storms. We've already lost
three Redeemer detachments to their ambushes." His eyes flick
toward Absjorn. "These aren't mere savages. They're organized.
They watch our skies. Air support dies in the first minute aloft."
"Then
we fly low," Cassiel answers curtly. "Strike fast, land
faster. We pray the wings hold."
Thaneus
scoffs. "Prayer alone doesn't bring down xeno interceptors."
Absjorn
raises a gauntleted hand, and silence falls like a blade. The faint
whine of the holo-table is the only sound.
"We
cannot afford to ignore either front," he says. "The
Eldiravan infest this world, but they are not our quarry. The
Invictans are.
is."
He
looks up, eyes hard as hammered glass.
"Spartan.
Naburiel. The false god's favored daughter. I want her alive. Her
pack, if possible. Her mate, Rho Voss, bring him to his knees before
her eyes. Magnus Tiberius…"
He
lets the name hang, venomous.
"Dead
or dying. I care not which."
Benedan
bows his head. "The Redeemers hunger for righteous work. Let
them track the Invictans."
Thaneus
grunts, still grim. "And when the Eldiravan strike again? When
they come howling through the passes and tear our lines apart?"
Cassiel
leans forward, voice a cold counterpoint. "Then they will find
themselves baptized in the blood of their own."
Absjorn
almost smiles, an expression that looks more like a scar twisting.
"Faith will hold our lines. But steel will keep them."
He
straightens, gestures to the map. "We fortify this valley. Here,
and here." He taps two ridges marked in crimson. "We dig
in, trenches, bunkers, interlocking kill-zones. We will not move
again until I say so. This mountain will become our altar."
Benedan
inclines his head. "And the air?"
"Grounded
until the Word allows," Absjorn replies. "We'll keep our
eyes beneath the storm. Let the Eldiravan choke on their own skies."
Before
another word can pass between them, the tent flaps burst open. A
Venator Lieutenant stumbles in, snow crusted to his armor, helm
half-removed, breath ragged with cold and fear. He snaps to
attention, voice shaking.
"Fathers!
Patrol Gamma-North, the Thirty-Second, contact lost, sir. Last
transmission reported Invictan Vardengard sighted near the western
pass. No response since."
Cassiel's
eyes narrow. "How long ago?"
"Seventeen
minutes, Father."
The
silence stretches taut. The table flickers, showing the western
range, an empty swath of static now marking where the patrol once
was.
Absjorn
exhales through his nose. "Slaughtered."
The
word is flat, certain.
Benedan
mutters a prayer under his breath, a string of words half mechanical,
half divine. Thaneus only shakes his head, grim satisfaction edging
his tone. "So the Invictans move again."
Absjorn's
gauntlets creak as he clenches his fists. "Good. Let them. Every
time they draw breath, they reveal their trail."
He
reaches for his helm, the servos hissing as it locks into place. The
visor flickers to life, red light bleeding across his faceplate.
"Rouse
the Redeemers. Double the patrol lines. I want drones watching the
passes, I want Inquisitors in the snow within the hour. We will find
the ones who struck my patrol…"
He
steps around the table, the light of the holo reflecting like fire
across his armor.
"…and
when we do, I will break them beneath my hand."
Spartan
and Rho Voss' Position - Continuous
Snow
swirls like ash in the air. The mountain winds carry the dull thunder
of boots far below, thirty Venators marching in formation, their
armor a patchwork of iron and crimson against the pale expanse. Their
leashed Hounds snarl and tug, the sound distant but sharp, echoing up
the rock face.
Spartan
lies prone at the cliff's edge, her armored forearm pressed against
the frozen stone. Her helm's lenses glint with reflected light from
the Venators' armor below. Beside her, Rho Voss adjusts the
magnification on his visor, tracking the movement of the lead APC.
"Same
formation as before," Spartan murmurs. "They're learning.
Spreading their Hounds wider." She pauses for a moment, her helm
tilting. "We strike from higher ground this time."
A
crunch of gravel behind them. The faint hiss of breath. Red Baron and
his team emerge from the treeline, Arturo, Liam, and Dace close
behind. They are panting, snow and frost clinging to their fatigues.
Red
Baron's visor flickers as he leans against a rock, catching his
breath. "By God's Will, Spartan, you cover ground like a storm."
Spartan
glances back but doesn't rise. "You're late."
Liam
lets out a tired laugh. "We were sprinting uphill through half a
mile of ice. Not all of us are built like walking tanks."
Spartan
smirks faintly under her helm. "Then consider it training."
Arturo
groans. "If this keeps up, I'll be trained right into the
grave."
Dace
says nothing, just adjusts his rifle and scans the horizon, breath
pluming in the cold.
Spartan
finally rises to a crouch. She gestures with two fingers toward the
north ridge, the slope winding down into a narrow gorge lined with
shattered pine. A new mark flashes on Red Baron's wrist display: a
blinking blue icon.
"Here,"
she says. "Two klicks north, high ground overlooking the ravine.
The Venators will pass through within the hour. You'll set charges on
the eastern side, staggered along the bend. When the Hounds are
inside the kill zone, you collapse the snow shelf above them."
Red
Baron nods, already uploading the coordinates to his HUD. "What
about you?"
"Rho
and I will herd them in."
Arturo
exhales, shaking his head. "You make it sound easy."
Spartan's
voice sharpens. "It isn't. Which is why you'll do it right."
There's
no challenge in her tone, just the cold edge of command. Red Baron
meets her gaze for a heartbeat, then taps the side of his helmet.
"We'll
be in position."
He
turns sharply, waving the others forward. They break into a jog
through the snow, boots thudding, breaths ragged but steady.
The
terrain steepens, and for a time the only sounds are wind and
crunching ice.
Arturo
mutters, "How much farther?"
Liam,
carrying the bulk of the explosives pack, grunts. "Half a klick.
Maybe less if we cut through that ridge."
Dace
laughs breathlessly. "You sure? Last time we 'cut through,' we
nearly walked into a Venator scout line."
Red
Baron doesn't slow. "Then keep your eyes up and your mouth shut.
We'll get there."
The
path narrows, snow waist-deep in places. They climb a frozen incline,
hands scraping on stone, and emerge onto a shelf overlooking the
ravine Spartan marked. Below, the terrain funnels sharply, a perfect
kill box.
Arturo
drops to one knee, breathing hard. "I swear he plans these
routes to kill us before the Venators do."
Liam
collapses beside him, laughing between gasps. "At least he'll
have fewer corpses to carry if we die here."
Dace
sets down the pack, opening it to reveal bundled shaped charges,
signal wire, and a compact detonator. "Less talk. More work."
Red
Baron crouches beside him, scanning the gorge through his scope. The
Venators aren't in sight yet, but the sound of their engines drifts
faintly through the mountains, a distant, mechanical growl.
"They're
coming," Red Baron says quietly. "We'll have to move fast."
He
glances at his men, each exhausted but already unpacking gear,
setting fuses, and climbing toward the ridge to plant charges. Their
hands tremble from cold, not fear.
"Make
it count," he murmurs. "Every breath we take up here buys
someone else a chance down there."
The
wind howls through the gorge. Snow begins to fall harder, thick
flakes carried sideways by the gale.
Arturo
looks up from arming a charge, voice low. "Captain…
what if the Vardengard don't make it in time?"
Red
Baron's eyes stay on the valley below, scope tracking the growing
movement, Venator shapes beginning to emerge through the storm.
"Then
we finish it ourselves."

