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Chapter 33: Critical Realities

Alistair sat on the edge of the base’s only table, running his scan for the fourth ti since returning.

The miscalibrated Equalizer returned its slightly off readings, and he corrected for each one the way he had been doing since the crater.

Reach, adjust, and proceed. It was becoming a habit already.

His arms ached from the morning’s fights. His ribs were worse, carrying the mory of every hit his armor hadn’t fully absorbed.

The exhaustion was heavy behind his eyes, and he was doing his best to work around it.

He didn’t ntion any of it.

Due was across the base, seated in a chair. Alistair had moved closer to the wall without saying why. His hands worked their settling gestures at a pace that was noticeably slower than before.

The fifteen percent was gone now, and it showed in everything. Things his body used to handle automatically were being handled consciously, one thread at a ti.

Three tis in the first hour, he reached for a thread that wasn’t there.

Alistair watched this happen without comnting. Due adjusted his collar three tis in the first stretch of sitting. Each adjustnt took slightly more effort than it should have.

"You’re staring," Due said without looking up.

"I’m running my scan," said Alistair.

"You’re staring while running your scan. Those are different things." Due adjusted his collar a fourth ti. "I’m functional."

"I didn’t ask."

"You were about to."

Alistair clicked his tongue and looked away.

Elara hadn’t left. He had expected her to be gone when he ca back from the crater, and she wasn’t, and she was doing practical things around the base without needing to be told.

Supplies reorganize, water containers refilled. The floor swept where debris and dried blood had been tracked in from the field.

She did it all quietly.

Alistair noticed. He didn’t say anything about it.

***

The Sovereign Record arrived in the late afternoon.

It cos the way it always cos – a bird carrying dissolving paper that materializes from the sky and finds its way through the open doorway, settling in front of whoever it’s ant for. The paper was warm to the touch and already decaying at the edges.

He picked it up. Due straightened in his chair.

"Sun Harvest," Alistair read aloud, then went quiet.

Hearing this, Due stood and walked over slowly, favoring his left side. Elara stopped sweeping and moved closer.

The battle was described in the clinical language of continental military analysis. Two pages of coverage, dense with numbers.

Therasia’s deploynt was listed accurately. Sargus’s death noted in a single line.

Two Sovereign Debts noted, one denied and one activated, with the weight the Record gives to monts that reveal what a faction leader considers worth the cost.

The stalemate with Viridius was described as an engagent without conclusive outco.

Alistair read his own na in continental print and was honestly speechless for a mont.

’This is what it looks like when it becos real.’

Due took the paper from him and read through the battle coverage quickly. Then he reached the Glory section and his hands went still.

Eight faction collapses. The Shadow of Forr Glory, revived from isolation, had destabilized eight factions across the continent simply by being active again.

The coverage was brief and clinical, the way the Record handles things it doesn’t fully understand. Glory had moved and the continent had responded imdiately, the way it tends to when soone it assud was gone turns out not to be.

Seeing this, Due folded the paper and handed it back to Alistair without comnt.

His expression was carefully neutral, but his hands had stopped their settling gestures entirely.

Elara walked over and read it standing. Her expression didn’t change, but she read it twice.

Nobody ntioned the First Warden line. All three of them saw it – Seraphine described as no longer rely observing – and nobody said it out loud.

"There’s more," said Due quietly.

Alistair looked at him. Due pointed at the bottom of the Oasis of Grain section.

A new line. The Echelon had convened regarding instability in the Oasis of Grain.

However, that wasn’t what Due’s expression was about.

Below the convening notice, the Record had included a reference. It didn’t na any person or organization directly, but it described an unknown presence affecting how civilians behaved in the neutral settlents of the Oasis of Grain. The Record used careful language for it, the way it always does when it knows sothing is there but can’t confirm it yet.

Alistair’s eyes widened slightly.

He showed it to Elara. She leaned forward and read it slowly, then stepped back.

"The Unmarked," said Alistair.

Due nodded slowly. "The Record can’t identify them directly. However, it knows they’re there." He paused. "That’s new. Soone at the Record decided this was worth making public."

"Is it about us?" asked Elara.

"It’s about the region," Due replied. "We happen to be in it."

He adjusted his collar. "However, if soone is influencing civilian behavior in the neutral settlents, they’ve been doing it longer than Sun Harvest has existed. This isn’t a reaction to us. This is sothing that’s been running quietly for years, and soone at the Record finally noticed."

Alistair furrowed his brows. "An invisible organization operating in the Oasis of Grain for years, and we’re only learning about it from the Record."

The Sovereign Record had been the continent’s primary evaluation body since long before the current Echelon was ford. If it noted sothing publicly, the weight behind it was considerable.

Elara was quiet for a mont. Then she said, "My father ntioned sothing once. When I was younger. About groups that operate below the Echelon’s notice on purpose. He said they were more dangerous than factions because factions have to declare themselves."

Due looked at her. "He said that to you?"

"He said it to a room. I happened to be in it." She paused. "I was twelve. I rembered it because it scared ."

Alistair clicked his tongue. The base was quiet after that. The late afternoon light ca in grey through the doorway.

He folded the Record and set it on the table.

"We need more people," he said.

Due looked at him. "We needed more people before the battle. We need more people now for different reasons."

"The reasons being that soone is carving symbols into our region and the continent’s most powerful evaluation body just noticed we exist," said Alistair.

Due almost smiled. "Those would be the reasons, yes."

Having said that, nobody moved for a mont. Elara was still there and still not leaving, and Alistair had stopped trying to predict what she would do.

He looked at the folded Record on the table.

Alistair was unsettled, and it wasn’t going away.

"We move on recruitnt tomorrow," he said.

Neither of them disagreed.

But the thing that kept pulling at him wasn’t the Unmarked themselves. It was the timing.

Soone at the Sovereign Record had noted the presence in the Oasis of Grain publicly, in the sa record that covered Sun Harvest’s battle. That was a choice soone made at this specific mont and sent to every faction in the region at the sa ti.

Soone wanted the factions to know. The question was who, and what they expected those factions to do about it.

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