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"No." Thrak’s certainty was absolute.

"Belief is emotional commitnt beyond rational analysis. This is simply recognition that your data suggests better approach than mine. When new data improves outcos, only inefficient system would ignore it."

He turned to survey his fortress, his outpost, his domain of chanical violence.

"I will hold Vor’esh, Lord Azra. Not because I believe in you. Not because I feel inspired. But because analysis suggests your continued success benefits defensive operations across entire Ashard Periter. Therefore, maintaining this position serves larger tactical objective."

"Whatever works," Liam said quietly.

[Thrak - Emotional State: Null]

[Belief: 0%]

[Loyalty: 73%]

The numbers were bizarre. No belief whatsoever—Thrak was incapable of faith in anything beyond tactical data. But loyalty through pure pragmatic calculation.

A machine that had decided Lord Azra was worth following because the mathematics said so.

Sohow that was more unsettling than passionate faith would have been.

---

The garrison assembled in the courtyard as the sun began to set.

Eighty-one demons remained. So wounded. All exhausted. They’d been fighting for eight hours before Liam arrived, and they looked like they’d aged years in that ti.

But they were standing. And Vor’esh was theirs.

Liam stood on the captured western rampart, looking down at soldiers who’d survived the at Grinder. Unlike Krazax or Dra’kul, these demons didn’t look at him with awe or desperate hope.

They looked at him with the sa dead-eyed calculation their commander showed. They’d been ground down by repetition until emotion had beco a luxury they couldn’t afford.

He should have given a speech. Sothing inspiring. Sothing to remind them they were more than tactical variables in Thrak’s calculations.

But looking at their faces, Liam realized they didn’t want inspiration. They wanted what Thrak wanted.

Data. Results. Proof that the pattern had changed.

"I’m not staying," he said, his voice carrying across the courtyard. "I’ll be here three days. Then I move to the next outpost. You’ll hold this position without ."

No protests ca or even pleas to stay. Just tired acceptance.

"Commander Thrak has held Vor’esh through forty-seven exchanges. He’s fought for years with tactical precision and chanical efficiency. He knows this fortress better than anyone alive."

He paused, letting them see Thrak standing beside him, ancient, emotionless, unbreakable.

"I’ve changed one variable. I’ve shown the Radiant Empire that the patterns they rely on can be disrupted. That the slow grinding they’ve perfected has a weakness—unpredictability."

His grey eyes swept the garrison.

"Three days from now, they’ll test you again. They’ll want to know if today was luck or a pattern shift. Commander Thrak will respond with the sa tactical precision he’s shown for three centuries. But now he has new data. New thodology. New understanding that the enemy’s decision-making is as much a target as their fortifications."

"You’re not soldiers waiting to be ground down anymore. You’re data points that don’t fit the enemy’s calculations. And that makes you more dangerous than any tactical advantage they possess."

He drew Igar’s Shard, the black blade catching sunset light.

"Hold this position. Not for your believe in or because you feel inspired. But because the mathematics say it’s possible now. And that’s enough."

The garrison stared at him. Then, slowly, one by one, they saluted.

It was the strangest show of respect Liam had received.

And sohow the most honest.

[Collective Belief - Outpost Vor’esh: 0%]

[Collective Pragmatic Acceptance: 67%]

The System had created a new category... acceptance that Lord Azra’s thodology produced results, therefore his thodology should be followed.

Faith without faith. Loyalty without emotion.

The at Grinder had created soldiers who couldn’t afford feelings.

So they’d stopped feeling and started calculating instead.

As the sun set over Vor’esh, Liam stood on the rampart beside Commander Thrak, looking out at the territory they’d secured.

"How long did you fight before you stopped feeling?" Liam asked quietly.

Thrak was silent for a long mont. "I’m not sure, but at so point..." The precision was automatic. "...during a defensive action that fear and hope were consuming cognitive resources that could be better allocated to tactical analysis. So I stopped."

"Do you regret it?"

"I do not know. Regret is emotional response." Thrak’s pale eyes didn’t leave the horizon. "I simply continue functioning. Optimizing. Calculating. It is... sufficient."

"Sufficient," Liam repeated.

"Yes." Thrak glanced at him. "You still feel, Lord Azra. I can observe physiological indicators. Emotional responses. Fear. Doubt. Perhaps even guilt." His chanical voice held sothing that might have been curiosity. "Does it help? The feeling?"

Liam thought about the executions at Krazax. The assault on Dra’kul. The crossing of Vor’esh’s courtyard while leaving wounded behind.

Thought about the steady erosion of whatever had made him human.

"No," he said honestly. "It doesn’t help."

"Then why not stop? Why continue to process emotional data when it provides no tactical advantage?"

"Because—" Liam paused, searching for an answer. "Because that might be all a part of has left. And I’m not sure I’m ready to let it go."

Thrak absorbed this, his chanical mind processing data it couldn’t quite categorize.

"I do not understand, Lord Azra. But I will include it in my analysis of your tactical thodology." He turned back to the fortress. "Perhaps the feeling serves function I can no longer recognize. Perhaps it is the variable that makes your disruption effective."

[Humanity Index: 25%]

The number held. Didn’t drop. But didn’t rise either.

Suspended between human and sothing else. Between feeling and calculation. Between Liam Cross and Lord Azra.

Three days at Vor’esh. Then four more outposts.

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