My first night in Bastion was a sleepless one. I was given a small, one-man tent made of stretched, pungent beast-hide, pitched in a crowded, muddy area designated for new arrivals. The ground was hard, the air was cold, and the sounds of the nascent town were a constant, chaotic symphony that clawed at the edges of my frayed nerves. I heard the murmur of a dozen different languages, the quiet, heartbroken weeping of soone who had lost everything, the sudden, boisterous laughter of a successful hunting party returning late, and the ever-present, low hum of the settlent's Central Crystal, a sound that felt like the planet itself was breathing. For the first ti in months, I was utterly surrounded by people, a sea of flickering auras, yet I had still felt profoundly alone. The chasm of my true power was a silent, unbreachable wall between and them, isolating more completely than any physical distance ever could.
The next few days were an exercise in deep imrsion and calculated assimilation. I beca 'Jack the Healer,' a quiet, unassuming man nursing a private, believable grief. I kept my head down, my contributions small but helpful, and my ears open. I ate the communal stew — a surprisingly palatable concoction of alien beast at and strange, bitter-tasting tuber-ous vegetables — and I listened. I learned the rhythms of the place not as a detached outside observer, but as a resident. I learned that the stout, bearded folk, the Dweorg, valued craftsmanship above all else, their argunts over the proper angle of a joint in the new longhouse ringing with professional passion. I learned that the lithe, reptilian S'skarr, while appearing abrasive and selfish, had a fierce, almost fanatical loyalty to their clutch-mates and respected strength and cunning above all else.
In the evenings, I'd find a spot by one of the larger cookfires, patching my simple cloak or cleaning my gear with thodical slowness, and just let the stories of this broken new world wash over . The survivors of the Kyorian tutorial had a desperate, gnawing need to talk, to share the weight of the horrors they'd endured, as if speaking them aloud might lessen their power. They spoke of the 'Iron-jawed Gorger' in the desert biodo that could bite a person in half. They spoke of the 'Whispering Labyrinth' trial, a psionic maze that drove its victims mad with echoes of their worst fears. And they spoke with a bitter, universal hatred of the casual cruelty of the Kyorian Overseers. Each story was a fresh, gaping wound, and listening to them felt like a grim but necessary form of reconnaissance, building the foundations of my borrowed identity, one painful brick at a ti.
It was during one of these evenings that I first witnessed the ritual. A palpable stillness had fallen over the main commons. Lucas, his massive fra silhouetted against the roaring central fire, stood before the gathered residents. His face, usually so full of relentless warmth and conviction, was somber, carved into grim lines by a sorrow that felt personal to everyone present.
"Today," he began, his voice a deep baritone that carried a heavy weight, effortlessly quieting the entire assembly. "We perform the Rembrance. We lost two more in the quarry two days ago. Mikel and Fenya. Good people. Brave fighters. Their watch… their watch is now over."
A profound, collective sigh rippled through the crowd, a sound of shared grief that transcended species. This was not a Kyorian or a human tradition; it was sothing new, sothing that could only have been born of their shared, desperate experience in this fractured reality. A tall, pale Lorian glided to the center, its solid purple eyes closed. It began to hum, a low, resonant note that seed to make the very air vibrate with sympathetic sorrow. As it humd, tiny, infinitesimally small motes of golden light — similar to the fundantal essence I used for my healing, but far, far weaker — began to rise from the fire, drawn out by the creature's strange, mournful song. They floated in the air like dust in a sunbeam, swirling in the heat.
Lucas spoke the nas again, his voice thick with emotion. "Mikel. A warrior who always took the front, who never let a friend's flank be exposed." A powerfully built human man, his face a mask of grief, stepped forward and placed a small, smooth river stone at the base of the fire pit — a simple, human gesture of permanence, a rock to mark a rock. "Fenya. A scout whose eyes were sharper than any hawk's, whose warnings saved us all more tis than I can count." A S'skarr moved with fluid grace, tilting its head back and letting out a sharp, guttural hiss — a sound that, just days ago, I would have interpreted as aggression. Now, I understood. It was a cry of respect for a fallen hunter. One of the Dweorg followed, his braided beard seeming to droop with sadness as he silently poured a small amount of potent, fernted ale onto the earth — a final drink for a departed shield-sibling.
As each tribute was paid, the Lorian's humming grew in intensity. The collective grief, the shared mories, the potent respect of their comrades — it all seed to feed the ritual, to give it substance. The swirling cloud of golden motes began to coalesce, to thicken. The specks of light spun faster and faster, forming two faint, shimring human-shaped outlines in the air for a brief, breathtaking, and utterly heart-wrenching mont. They lingered there, just for a second, a silent testant, before rising up into the cold night sky and vanishing among the unfamiliar, alien stars.
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The Lorian fell silent. The ritual was over.
A lump ford in my throat, hard and painful as a swallowed stone. I was an imposter, a pretender hiding behind a mountain of power, but in that mont, watching these disparate beings mourn together, I felt a pang of connection so sharp it almost brought to my knees. These were my people — not just the humans, but all of them, the broken, the resilient, the survivors. This was what the Kyorians were trying to stamp out. This stubborn, beautiful, aching humanity. And yet, the sorrow was a double-edged sword. As they mourned their dead, a fresh wave of my own grief crashed over . I mourned my own — my family, lost to not in battle, but in the screeching, world-rending chaos of the Confluence. The hope of finding them, a fla I had been so carefully nurturing, suddenly felt fragile and distant, a flickering candle in a vast, dark, and uncaring expanse.
The ritual's end gave the resolve I needed. The following day, I began a quiet, thodical search. I scanned the settlent's central notice board again, my eyes scouring every new piece of parchnt, every desperate ssage tacked to its surface. My heart hamred as I searched, but the nas 'Anna Kai' and 'Arthur Kai' were nowhere to be found. I wandered the makeshift marketplace for hours, listening to the chatter, my gaze discreetly scanning every face, looking for a certain determined jaw or a familiar thoughtful brow. I found nothing. The settlent held hundreds of souls, but none of them were mine.
That afternoon, Lucas found sitting alone, staring into the embers of a dying fire. "Jack," he said, his voice gentle. "I need you. The two fighters who survived the quarry… they're not doing well. The dic says the Thorn-Beetle venom is a deep toxin. It's paralyzing their limbs. They're scared."
I nodded, my personal disappointnt pushed aside like a curtain. This was my role here. My purpose. "Show ."
He led to the infirmary, a long tent reeking of antiseptic herbs and fear. My [True Sight] confird the dic's diagnosis: a potent neurotoxin was thodically shutting down their bodies. I knelt beside the first man, Roric, and placed my hand on his chest. I called upon [Phoenix Pyre nding], but I was careful, suppressing the overt display. I let only the faintest, warm golden light be visible through the skin of my own hand, as if I were a lamp with the wick turned low. It was an intricate, delicate process, separating the cold, spidery threads of the toxin from his life-force. To the onlookers, it looked like I was in a state of intense, draining concentration. I made sure to let out a deep, weary breath as the last of the black veins faded from Roric's skin. I repeated the process on the second man. When I was done, I stood, feigning a slight dizziness.
"It's done," I said, my voice tired but firm. "They'll live."
Lucas stared at the two sleeping n, then he looked at . The raw gratitude in his eyes was overwhelming. "Jack… I don't have the words. You just… you saved them. You saved two of Bastion's best warriors."
"We all contribute in our own way," I said simply.
Later, he approached as I was sharpening my simple sword by the main fire, a mundane task to maintain my cover. "What you did today… that wasn't just a skill, Jack. That was a miracle," he said, his voice full of awe.
I just nodded, my mind whirring. Lucas' gratitude felt absolute, his sincerity almost painfully real. Every instinct I had told that this man was exactly what he appeared to be: a genuinely good leader. But the part of that had been forged in suspicion, the part that had seen Chris' group ready to enslave , remained skeptical. Could this much charisma, this much moral certainty, simply be a more sophisticated tool for control? Was his vision of a league of free settlents a genuine dream, or a grand, benevolent-sounding sche to make himself king of the refugees?
I didn't have an answer. But I knew his goals and my own were, for the foreseeable future, aligned. For now, that was enough.
"Your ability is going to be critical," Lucas said, his voice pulling back to the present. "I'm leading another expedition to the Western Quarry tomorrow at dawn. The Thorn-Beetles are a constant threat, and we need that stone to reinforce the main gate. With you there… we might actually succeed this ti." He looked at , his grey eyes searching my face. "I know you're not a fighter, and I won't ask you to stand in the shield wall. But will you co with us? Stay in the back, support the team? Your presence could be the difference between victory and another Rembrance ritual."
This was it. My chance to earn the trust I would need to continue my search. My opportunity to get a first-hand look at the settlent's strongest fighters.
"Of course," I said, eting his earnest gaze with my own carefully crafted, weary determination. "I'll be there. Soone has to patch you all up when you do sothing stupid."
A genuine laugh bood from Lucas' chest. "Fair enough, Jack. Fair enough." He clapped a heavy hand on my shoulder, a gesture of profound relief. As he walked away, the sounds of preparation began to echo through the settlent — the ring of steel on a sharpening stone, the taut thwack of crossbow strings being tested. I looked into the flas, my purpose clear. Tomorrow, I would walk into danger not as Eren Kai, the walking cataclysm, but as Jack, the healer, a small part of an expedition in a world I was only just beginning to understand.
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