Florence didn’t know what she was looking at anymore. The Ark hadn’t changed physically. Its structure remained exactly the sa, every line and surface as it had been before. Yet sothing within it was wrong. The difference was not in its shape or its function, but in its silence. The AI no longer spoke to her, or to anyone.
That silence was heavier than any shifting geotry or strange pulse of energy could ever have been. It was not the absence of sound that unsettled her, but the absence of will. The Ark had always been inquisitive, always reaching outward with its questions, trying to understand the world it no longer rembered. And now, it had gone still.
It still functioned. It still perford every task it was built for. But when she pressed against it with her Soul Skill, when she tried to read its inner language, it simply gave her nothing.
Where once it would have opened itself eagerly to her probing, flooding her with fractured histories, broken echoes, and strange questions, now it stood mute. She should have been able to see its hunger for knowledge, should have felt the familiar pull of its curiosity, but there was only a blank refusal.
It wasn’t resistance. It wasn’t even dismissal. It was nothing. A void where presence should have been. The machine that had once been so willing to learn had gone quiet, and that wrongness gnawed at her in ways she could not explain.
Only once had it broken that silence. Just once, and the words remained carved into her mind like a scar: take to the Heart. No further explanation. No context. Just that plea, spoken once and then swallowed by stillness.
They were nonsense at best, madness at worst, and yet she could not shake the feeling that the Ark had ant every syllable. The request was not accidental, not corrupted noise. It was a question, and perhaps even a demand. The Ark had asked, and now it waited.
Florence shivered. Not because the Ark had ceased to function, it had not, but because the silence felt deliberate. This was not a glitch. Not corrupted data. It was intention withheld, purpose obscured. The Ark had chosen not to speak, and that choice unsettled her more than any malfunction could.
Whatever the Heart was, the Ark believed it needed to be there. Until it was, she feared, it would not speak again.
The Bazaar was a thriving economy now, no longer the chaotic sprawl of tents and desperate bartering it had once been. Stalls were rebuilt with permanence. Traders traveled from further afield, and the clatter of comrce filled the air at all hours. Even rchants from the Green, or what had once been the Green, set up their stalls in the Bazaar. The forr Yellow of Mara still did not truly trust going into the Green, even though they now had access and even though the borders were blurred. They understood that the Bazaar was the place where items were traded, so in Mara, trade did not happen anywhere else, even if it might have made sense for it to.
Goods flowed easily: crafted tools, reliable food supplies from the outlying lands, even luxuries brought in through bold trade routes. Car and his team had fixed most of Mara into a livable, civilized city since Warren had gone. The roads were paved where they could be. The ruined districts were restored into functioning neighborhoods, and the stink of rot and ruin scrubbed away.
There were still cracks here and there, streets where rubble lingered or walls leaned dangerously, but nothing too dramatic. Mara was no longer collapsing. It was standing upright.
The Broken didn’t walk the streets anymore. Patrols of Legion soldiers kept order. Mara’s Legion, built from the city’s survivors and hardened in new discipline, marched in clean lines. They carried lances with confidence and wore proper uniforms.
They weren’t Legion armor, but they had everything they needed now, and they looked the part of a real force. They thought themselves spectacular, proud of their formations, proud of the banners that flew above their stations.
To the people, they were heroes, protectors who made the city feel safe again. In their own minds, they were already becoming the Real Legion, or at least the beginning of it. They believed themselves worthy of the na, certain that with enough ti and training they would match the legends.
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Whether that was true or not didn’t matter yet. What mattered was that Mara believed in them, and they believed in themselves. For now, that faith was enough.
The pharmacy had beco more than just a ho for Wren and their friends. The clinic that had been built within its walls had grown into one of the pillars of Mara. It was a place where the wounded and the sick could find care without hesitation.
The shelves were stocked with dicine. The equipnt was clean and reliable, and its doors never closed. Its halls were filled with quiet determination.
For many, it was the first true sign that Mara was not rely surviving anymore. It was healing. The sick who once would have died in their beds now found treatnt. The broken-limbed walked again. Children grew without the constant specter of fever stealing them away.
Wren and their team had carved out sothing irreplaceable, and the city leaned on it with gratitude unspoken but deeply felt.
Muk-Tah had to act. The Green who had been relegated to backbreaking labor after their first rebellion had tried again. Their desperation boiled over. But this ti, there was no forgiveness. No second chance.
The executions were swift, carried out without hesitation. The condemned were lined up in the square so all could see. Their bodies were left as a grim reminder; a warning hamred into the mory of the city.
Mara’s order was fragile, brittle as glass, and treachery could not be tolerated. The people understood the ssage. They whispered of Muk-Tah’s ruthlessness, so in fear, others in respect, but all with the knowledge that Mara would not survive if rebellion was allowed to fester.
The line had been drawn, and it was written in blood.
Wren hadn’t slept in days. Not because of the baby. Her daughter was beautiful, perfect in every way. She couldn’t wait for the mont that Warren could see her, to place the child in his arms and watch his guarded, sharp exterior crack into sothing tender. That thought alone kept her steady.
But everyone else. That was the problem. She had thought that Calra and even Car could be overwhelming at tis, but nothing compared to the flood of strangers who ca to her door. People wanting to offer a blessing. People insisting they had to give a gift. Others pressing food into her hands or begging to share so scrap of kindness. They ca in shifts, as though they had organized themselves. It was constant. It was unending. It was a siege disguised as generosity, and she was sick of it.
It had only been a week, and already she felt smothered. No one would leave her alone just to be a mother. Calra had been fighting and kicking people out left, right, and center, snarling at them until they fled, but still they found ways to slip in. So would claim they were going to the clinic, only to sneak past and try to catch a glimpse of the baby. Others pretended to carry urgent ssages just to set foot across her threshold. They whispered prayers in hallways, lingered at the windows, and tried to turn her private monts into holy spectacles.
She might as well have been Mara Reborn for how they treated her. They knew who Mara had been. They knew who Warren was. They knew who she was. They knew what she had done. What they had all done. And this baby, this tiny child, had beco the hope of their entire city. In their minds she was not simply Warren’s daughter, she was a symbol, a living prophecy, sothing to pin their trembling futures upon.
It was exhausting. It was the most brutal experience she had ever gone through. She had lived through battles, through ruin, through nights when the Broken prowled at every shadow. Nothing compared to the tornt of being denied even a mont of quiet with her newborn. And nothing would ever convince her otherwise.
As she was about to scream at yet another gawker, at least she thought it was a gawker, an old crone shuffled through the doorway. Her gait was halting, uneven, and yet sohow deliberate. A blind old woman, her eyes clouded and unseeing, her clothes moth-ridden and thin as paper. Wren had no idea how she had stumbled her way in. Stranger still, no one had even tried to stop her. The guards outside hadn’t raised a hand. The clinic staff looked the other way. Wren herself would not have dared. There was sothing about the air that clung to the crone, sothing that pressed against the room and made resistance feel not only impossible but wrong.
The old woman’s presence pulled the warmth from the space. The air seed to hush, and Wren’s anger drained, leaving only a cold awareness that this was not so ordinary intruder. Then the moth-eaten woman spoke, and Wren instantly knew who she was.
"The Last Kindness. The Daughter of the Ghost." Her voice rasped like torn cloth, each word carrying a weight that bent the room around it. “Let tell you this. The Queen is reborn. And he waits. The Red Widow rises, and she will be answered in screams, and blood, and fury.”
The words lingered like ash on the air, and though Wren clutched her baby close, the child slept on, unaware of the storm the prophecy had just loosed.
As Wren looked down to check on her daughter, who had started crying, she glanced back up to speak to the crone. But the old woman was gone. Vanished, as though she had never been there at all.
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