Chapter 67: Bleeding for the Dead
The contingent’s withdrawal was not a rout.
Alistair watched from the settlent’s main street as the remaining soldiers moved in formation toward the western periter. Their spacing was still professional, their movent disciplined.
These were Therasia soldiers, and Therasia soldiers did not flee, regardless of how the operation had gone.
However, the purpose was gone.
Every soldier in the unit could feel it. The capture objective had dissolved the mont Valve refused the order, and what remained was a force going through the motions of retreat rather than executing a plan.
Silas’s disruption had stripped their information flow, and Due’s obligation fracturing had broken their coordination at the joints.
And Valve’s silent refusal had removed the one thing that held an operation together when everything else failed – the commander’s will.
Alistair sat down on a stone step near the junction where he’d fought Valve.
His leg wound needed attention, and his shoulder was worse than it had been before the fight, the assassin’s injury reopened by the impact of Valve’s strikes. Blood was dripping steadily onto the stone beneath him.
Due ca from the settlent’s center, walking slowly.
The cost of sustained Characteristic deploynt was visible in the way he placed each step, carefully, like soone walking on ground he didn’t entirely trust.
His face was grey.
"I need to sit down," said Due, and he sat down next to Alistair without waiting for a response.
They sat there together, two people bleeding from different kinds of cost, watching the last of Valve’s contingent disappear around the settlent’s edge.
Alistair was honestly unsettled.
"He’s twenty-three years old," Due said after a while.
Alistair looked at him, furrowing his brows.
"Valve. He’s twenty-three. He’s been commanding since he was nineteen." Due was looking at his hands. "He’s been bleeding for people since he was nineteen."
Alistair didn’t respond imdiately. He watched the empty street where Valve had stood, and he recalled the mont when the blood threads had gone still.
One second of decision that had changed the shape of the entire engagent.
However, Valve hadn’t left entirely.
Earlier, he had stopped at the settlent’s edge before the contingent moved beyond sight, and turned back. It was not the grief of the battlefield where Sargus had fallen, but sothing else, sothing that hadn’t nad itself yet.
He looked at Alistair from twenty ters. Looked at Due.
Then he spoke, loud enough to carry across the distance.
"Tell your left-hand mber that the obligation he read on
in the field is still running. I know he felt it."
Following that, he turned and walked. He didn’t look back again.
The silence after his departure was strange. It was not the silence of the battle’s aftermath, where the dust settles and the living are counted. It was the silence of n watching sothing they could not na.
Due exhaled slowly, and he was still looking at his hands.
Eventually, Elara erged from the civilian spaces. She moved through the street with the composed efficiency that ant she had been working, redirecting residents back to their hos, assessing whether anyone had been caught in the engagent, doing the work that nobody assigned her because she assigned it to herself.
She looked at Alistair’s leg. Looked at Due’s pallor. She didn’t comnt on either.
"The child from the doorway is back with her family," said Elara. "The elderly man’s cart was damaged, but he’s uninjured. No civilian casualties."
"Thank you," Alistair replied.
Elara nodded once. She crossed her arms and leaned against the wall opposite them.
Silas surfaced at the street’s edge shortly after. He was slightly more present than usual, the extended Dark Interval use leaving him looking thinner, as if the effort of being invisible for that long had subtracted sothing from his visible self.
He looked at the direction Valve had walked.
"The obligation he ntioned," said Silas. "What is it?"
Due didn’t answer imdiately. He was still looking at his hands, and Alistair could see that his Characteristic was processing sothing it had been carrying for a while.
"I’ve been feeling it since the first battle," said Due, eventually. "The obligation Valve carries. It isn’t toward Caldren, and it isn’t toward the army."
He paused.
"It’s toward his brother."
Silas furrowed his brows. "Sargus is dead."
"Yes." Due looked up. His expression was the one he wore when sothing about the way obligations worked made him genuinely sad rather than academically interested. "The obligation is to soone who can’t receive it anymore. Those are the ones that don’t resolve. They just run."
Nobody spoke for a while after that.
Alistair thought about Valve’s face during the fight. The discipline, and the grief underneath the discipline.
The mont when the blood threads stopped, because refusing an order against civilians was more important than completing the mission that brought him here.
’He bleeds for fighters who can bleed back,’ Alistair thought. ’That is the line. Caldren asked him to cross it, and he said no.’
"Is that why he refused the order?" asked Alistair.
Due considered it carefully. "Partially. The obligation to Sargus is complicated, it isn’t revenge, and it isn’t grief exactly. It’s the compulsion to be what his brother would have wanted him to be."
He adjusted his collar.
"And Sargus, for all his aggression on the battlefield, was a soldier. He fought soldiers. Using the Characteristic against food stores and water channels, against people who aren’t fighters, that isn’t what Sargus would have done. Valve knows it."
"So his dead brother is still making him a better person than his living commander," said Elara, her voice flat.
Due looked at her, slowly. "That’s a painful way to phrase it."
"Yet, it is accurate."
"Yes. It is."
Alistair stood up, and his leg protested, but he let it.
The settlent was settling back into its morning routine around them – residents erging, the baker three streets away opening his shutters, a child running past with the oblivious energy of soone too young to understand what had just happened.
Cities move on, the way cities do after violence leaves them.
"We need to move before Caldren processes the report," said Alistair. "Valve’s refusal changes things. The next response won’t be a capture operation."
Due nodded, standing slowly. "Agreed. When Caldren learns that Valve declined the order, the calculation shifts. Valve’s reliability is no longer assud."
He looked at the direction the contingent had withdrawn.
"That’s dangerous for Valve as much as it is for us."
Alistair’s jaw tightened, as he hadn’t considered that angle.
Valve had just refused a direct order from the Duke of Therasia, and in Caldren’s world, that wasn’t forgiven. It was rembered, and it was eventually addressed.
’He knows what he did,’ Alistair thought. ’He chose it anyway.’
Seeing this, Elara pushed off the wall.
"Let
look at your leg before you try to walk anywhere," said Elara. "You’re dripping."
Alistair looked down, and she was right. He was dripping.
"Fine," he replied.
Elara knelt and began working on the wound quietly, while the settlent continued its morning around them as if nothing had changed.
Silas didn’t move. His eyes stayed on the northern edge of the street, half-present, half sowhere else.
"Sothing is off," said Silas, finally.
Alistair looked up. "Off how?"
Silas shook his head slightly. "The withdrawal stopped. Valve’s n aren’t moving anymore."
Alistair was quietly disturbed by that. A disciplined contingent did not halt mid-retreat without reason, especially not one that had been stripped of purpose.
’They’re waiting,’ Alistair thought. ’Or soone told them to wait.’
"Could be injured n, could be regrouping," said Due, although his voice didn’t sound like he believed either of those. He adjusted his collar again, and this ti, the gesture was slower than usual.
Elara paused on the bandage. She looked up at Alistair, her eyes narrowed.
"If they’re not moving, sothing else is."
Alistair pushed off the step despite his leg, summoning his Rune Sword quietly into his right hand. Blood ran down his calf and onto the stone, but he ignored it.
Valve’s line existed now, and whatever ca next, that line would not disappear. Having said that, lines didn’t stop what was already approaching them.
Alistair’s eyes drifted toward the northern edge of the settlent, where the road led back toward Therasia.
’He knows Valve refused by now,’ Alistair thought. ’By sundown, Caldren will know every detail of it. Sooner, if he has eyes on the road.’
The wind picked up, carrying the sll of old blood and dust down the empty street, and the sun had barely climbed past the rooftops.
However, the morning already felt too long.
Alistair’s jaw tightened, as he was not afraid of what Caldren would send next.
He was afraid of how quickly it would co.
Reviews
All reviews (0)