Chapter 344: Chapter 339: The Kill
Location:Off-World — Beastkin World (Capital Settlent)
Date/Ti:Mid Emberwane, 9939 AZI (Day 10)
Realm:Nexus Mission
Eden made the compound before they left the grove.
She worked in silence — grinding local plants with the mortar from her dical kit, adding drops from two vials, mixing with the particular patience of a surgeon who understood that precision in preparation was the difference between painless and painful. The result was a clear solution. Odourless. Fast-absorbing through skin contact. A dampened cloth carried in a sealed pouch.
"Just in case," Eden said. Her blue eyes steady. Her hands steady. Everything was steady because the alternative was not steady, and Eden had spent ninety years learning that the hands ca first and the feelings ca after.
Reiko ca with them.
Not in his lion form — contracted down to the size of a large cat, his mass compressed through the shapeshifting ability that primordial shadowbeasts carried in their blood. Silver eyes reduced to housecat proportions. The rcury rune dimd to invisible at his will. He rode in the pack on Jayde’s back — a beast companion small enough to transport, unremarkable enough to ignore. Takara sat on her shoulder as always.
Two unblessed travellers. A kitten. A cat in a pack. Walking toward the capital on the Mother’s straight road.
***
They found the Mother in the central square.
Not in her chamber. Not on her throne. In the open — standing at the edge of the work district where the textile details operated, surrounded by enforcers and administrators. A public appearance. The Ivory One among her people, white fur catching the morning light, the headdress hiding her ears, the robes concealing her tail.
She was listening to soone.
An old woman — bear Beastkin, grey-furred ears, broad hands gnarled with decades of work. She was on her knees. Not in reverence — in supplication. The posture of a grandmother begging.
Jayde and Eden stopped at the edge of the square. Unblessed travellers pausing to watch a public proceeding. Unremarkable.
Isha’s translation arrived through the bond, barely lagging behind the words:
"Please, Mother. My daughter’s boy is only three. He still wakes at night calling for her. He doesn’t understand why she can’t co to him. Please — let the children stay with their mothers until they’re older. Five sumrs. Just five. They’re so SMALL—"
The Mother’s expression didn’t change. The flat, efficient attention of a processor receiving input. She waited for the old woman to finish. Not out of respect — out of the sa patience she applied to any data stream. Let the input complete. Then respond.
"The directive is effective imdiately," the Mother said. Her voice carried across the square — not raised, but pitched with the particular clarity of soone accustod to being heard. "All children weaned from the breast will be transferred to the education facilities. The maternal bonding period has been determined as the maximum necessary for biological developnt. Beyond that point, maternal proximity is a productivity impedint. The children will receive proper skills training. The mothers will return to full output."
The old woman’s gnarled hands pressed against the stones. Her grey-furred ears were flat. "They’re BABIES—"
"They’re future workers. And future workers require structured training, not sentint."
The old woman looked up. The bear Beastkin’s face, carrying sothing that had been beaten down by five years of compliance and was now, in this mont, rising through the surface like a body through water. Not anger. Grief. The absolute, drowning grief of a grandmother who had just been told that her daughter’s three-year-old would be taken and trained into a production unit.
"The Beast Lord didn’t make children to be—"
"The Beast Lord." The Mother’s voice held the particular flatness of soone repeating a word they found quaint. "The Beast Lord didn’t make roads. The Beast Lord didn’t make irrigation. The Beast Lord didn’t make anything that works. I did." She turned to her administrator. "Begin transfers at the first bell tomorrow. Start with the weaning-age cohort."
The old woman stayed on her knees. Nobody helped her up. The enforcers stood with their arms crossed. The square’s population — workers, administrators, children in their rows — continued their patterns around the kneeling grandmother the way water flowed around a stone.
Jayde’s hands didn’t move. Her disguised brown eyes didn’t change. Inside, the Commander was filing. Every word. Every detail. Every fra of a grandmother on her knees being told that babies would be taken from their mothers because maternal bonding was a productivity impedint.
(Jayde—)
I see it. Wait.
The Mother hadn’t finished.
She turned from the administrator to a cluster of children being marched past the square — a work detail, small bodies in formation, fox and wolf and deer and rabbit, their beast traits visible in the ears and tails and fur that the Beastkin carried as birthright.
The Mother studied them. The pink eyes moving across the small faces with the asuring focus that Jayde had seen in her working chamber — not seeing children, seeing variables.
"Those two," she said. Pointing. A deer-eared girl, maybe seven. A fox-eared boy, maybe six — different from the beetle boy, sa flat ears. "The beast attributes are pronounced. Excessively so. The ears are oversized for the skull proportion. It affects productivity — the sensory overload from enhanced hearing reduces concentration in structured environnts."
She turned to a woman standing behind the administrator — a healer. Not a beast-marked healer. An unblessed healer, wearing the golden standard, carrying instrunts in a leather case.
"Can the ears be reduced?"
The square went very still.
"Surgically," the Mother continued. "Not removed — reduced. Brought closer to the unblessed standard. The tail as well. If the beast attributes are the source of sensory distraction, removing the attributes removes the distraction."
The healer opened her mouth. Closed it. Her human-shaped face — unblessed, elevated, wearing the Mother’s golden standard — carried sothing that looked like nausea.
"Mother, the — the ears are connected to the essence channels. Removing or reducing them would sever—"
"The essence channels are vestigial in a properly structured society. The beast attributes serve no function in an industrial context. Schedule an assessnt. I want a feasibility report by the end of the cycle."
She said it the way she said everything — flat, certain, efficient. The sa voice that allocated harvest quotas and relocated families and sent nine-year-olds to mines. The voice of soone designing a world where the Beastkin looked less like beasts and more like what the Mother wished she looked like.
She was going to cut the ears off their children.
(Jayde.)
I see it.
(She’s going to MUTILATE—)
I SEE IT.
Jayde turned away from the square. Walked three steps into the shadow of a grain store. Eden followed. The shade was deep enough to hide their faces.
"Eden. The compound."
Eden reached into her dical kit. The sealed pouch. Her hands were steady.
(NO. You can’t just — you haven’t TRIED — you said you’d try to reach her, you PROMISED—)
And Jayde turned on the child voice with a coldness that had never been directed inward before. Not the Commander’s asured response. Not the tactical frawork. Sothing harder.
Stop.
(You said you’d—)
STOP. You’ve been spending ten days worrying about this woman. About whether she was given a fair chance. About whether soone should have helped her. About whether killing her makes us the sa as the Federation.
(Because it DOES—)
Look at them. LOOK. AT. THEM. The children she’s about to cut. The babies she’s about to take from their mothers. The miners who died in her black powder tests. The pregnant woman she called an equivalent unit. The hawk grandmother alone in the western quarter. The fox boy in the mines. Rael with his antlers on her WALL. You want to worry about the Mother? Worry about THEM. They didn’t choose this. They can’t fight this. And every day we spend debating her humanity is another day THEY spend losing theirs.
Silence. Inside her own mind, silence. Not the silence of agreent. The silence of a child who had just been spoken to by a parent who had never spoken to her that way before. The shock of it. The distance it created.
(You’ve never talked to
like that.)
No. I haven’t. And I’m sorry. But I’m done debating while children are being asured for surgery.
The child’s voice went quiet. Not gone. Not dead. Quiet in a way that was different from every other quiet — the particular silence of a voice that had been hurt by the person it trusted most.
The crack deepened. Beca a fissure.
"Eden. How do I use it?"
"Skin contact. Press the cloth against any exposed surface — hand, wrist, neck. Three seconds. The absorption is imdiate." Eden’s voice was clinical. The surgeon briefing on procedure. "Onset: ten seconds. Duration: permanent. She won’t feel pain."
"Can you get close enough?"
"YOU can. She’s still in the square. If you approach from the supply side — the grain carriers pass within arm’s reach."
Jayde looked at the square. At the Mother standing beside the children, she was planning to cut. At the old grandmother still on her knees. At the enforcers with their crossed arms, the healer with her nausea, and the workers moving through their patterns.
"Reiko."
Through the bond, from the pack on her back: [Here.]
"I need you."
[I know. I’ve been waiting for you to ask.]
She told him the plan. Not all of it — the part that mattered. The part that would make this death an sothing beyond the end of one woman’s occupation.
[You want
to be a god,] Reiko sent.
"I want you to be what this world needs to see. The grove has been calling you Vor’shael since we arrived. The trees lean toward you. The Heartstone pulses stronger in your presence. Whatever the Beast Lord is to these people — you’re connected to it. Use that connection. Give them a story they can heal with."
[And the Mother?]
"She used their faith as a weapon. We use it as dicine."
A long pause through the bond. Then: [I understand. When?]
"When I tell you."
***
The grain carriers moved through the square in their pattern. Jayde joined the flow — a sack of grain hoisted from the supply cart, carried on her shoulder with the practiced movent of a worker who belonged in the line. Unblessed face. No beast traits. Invisible.
Three carriers from the Mother. Two. One.
The Mother was talking to the administrator. Sothing about the education facility layout. Her right hand gesturing — reaching for a pocket that didn’t exist, the body’s mory of another world surfacing in the smallest movent.
Jayde passed within arm’s reach. The sack on her shoulder blocking the sight line from the enforcers. Her left hand — holding the dampened cloth — brushed the Mother’s wrist. Three seconds of contact. The cloth pressing against white fur and the skin beneath.
The Mother didn’t flinch. Didn’t notice. The touch was lighter than a breeze.
Jayde kept walking. Carried the sack to the grain store. Set it down. Walked back into the shade.
Ten seconds.
In the square, the Mother stopped mid-sentence. Her hand went to her chest — not pain, not alarm. Confusion. The body’s systems receiving an input they couldn’t categorise. Her pink eyes blinked. Her mouth opened — then closed. Her legs folded. Slowly. Gently. The compound working with the precision that Eden had built into it — no spasm, no seizure, no violence. Just the quiet cessation of a body whose occupying soul had been released.
She sat down on the square’s stones. The administrator caught her arm — "Mother? Mother, are you—"
She looked up at him. The pink eyes already dimming. Sothing crossed her face — not fear, not understanding. The faintest flicker of surprise. The last expression of a mind that had computed everything except its own end.
She closed her eyes. The white fur settling. The hidden ears relaxing beneath the headdress. The tension leaving the body the way air left a room.
She stopped.
The square went silent.
And then Reiko manifested.
Not from the pack. Not from anywhere visible. He APPEARED — full size, lion-form, silver-eyed, the rcury rune blazing on his forehead with a light that had nothing to do with the morning sun. He stood above the Mother’s body like a guardian. Like a judgnt. Like a god.
The bioluminescence of every tree within a mile FLARED. The grove’s pulse — dim and struggling for years — surged through the earth and up through the roots and the cobblestones and the walls and hit the capital like a heartbeat restarting. Every Beastkin in the square felt it — the connection to the land that the Mother had spent five years trying to sever, blazing to life in their beast aspects like fire in dry wood.
Ears lifted. Tails uncurled. Fur stood on end. Three thousand years of suppressed beast-nature WAKING.
And through every mind in the square — through every beast-aspect, every connection to the land, every channel that the Beastkin’s heritage had built into their biology — Reiko’s voice:
[HEAR .]
Not words in a language. Sothing deeper. The voice of the forest. The voice of the grove. The voice of the sothing that the Beastkin had worshipped for thirty thousand years and called the Beast Lord and had believed, for five years, had abandoned them.
[The one who called herself Mother was not the Ivory One. The Ivory One was taken from you. In her place, an evil soul was sent — a soul that could not see you, could not hear you, could not feel the song of the land or the cry of your children. This soul turned your faith into chains and your reverence into a weapon against you.]
Every Beastkin in the square was on their knees. Not from command. From recognition. The thing they were hearing — the voice in their beast-aspect, the pulse in the earth beneath their feet — was the thing they’d prayed to every day of their lives. And it was ANSWERING.
[The Beast Lord heard your prayers. The evil soul has been judged. The one who broke the caretaker’s antlers, who stole your children, who tore the mountains and silenced the songs — she has been removed. The Mother is gone. The Beast Lord has spoken.]
Reiko stood above the body. Silver eyes blazing. The rcury rune pouring light into a square that had known only the flat efficiency of production schedules for five years. The trees along the square’s edge — ornantal, stunted, neglected — burst into bloom. Flowers that hadn’t opened in five years. Leaves that had been grey turning green. The land responding to the voice that had finally co.
Then Reiko contracted. Shrank. Stepped backward into the shadow of the grain store. Lion to cat in three heartbeats. Gone.
The square remained.
The Beastkin remained. On their knees. So weeping. So with their faces in their hands. So looking at the sky with expressions that had no na — the look of people hearing a voice they’d given up on and finding, in the hearing, that they hadn’t given up at all.
The old grandmother was still on her knees. But her grey-furred ears were up. And her hands — the gnarled, work-worn hands of a bear Beastkin who had spent five years begging — were pressed against the cobblestones. Feeling the pulse. Feeling the land’s heartbeat returning through the stone.
Feeling.
Jayde stood in the shadow of the grain store. Eden beside her. Takara on her shoulder. Reiko in the pack.
The Mother’s body lay in the square. The white fur. The headdress. The hidden ears that nobody would need to hide anymore.
(She’s dead.)
Yes.
(We killed her.)
I killed her. I made the decision. I administered the compound. I gave the order. .
(You.)
The silence between them was a canyon now. The child voice on one side. The Commander on the other. And in the space between — the thing that had been a crack and was now a fissure and would, in ti, beco sothing that might never close.
(I don’t know you anymore.)
You know . You’ve always known . You just never had to watch
work.
The Beastkin were rising from their knees. So were running toward the great hall. So were running toward the gates. So were standing very still, feeling the pulse in the earth, touching their own ears with the tentative wonder of people rediscovering sothing they’d been taught was shaful.
In the shadow of the grain store, Jayde watched them rise.
The Commander’s work was done.
The harder work was starting.
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