Princess Selai looked out over her army from the shelter of her palanquin as it advanced with steady, chanized steps through the bog. The platform moved smoothly despite the ground beneath it, its articulated supports compensating for every shift of mud and softened earth beneath the armored feet of her forces. Pistons flexed, stabilizers adjusted, and the palanquin never once tilted or slowed. It glided forward as if the bog itself had agreed to bear her weight.
It was a luxury, yes, but also a statent. Selai had no need to walk in the wake of her soldiers, no obligation to share their labor or discomfort. She could have waited behind the lines, arrived only when the ground was secured and cleared. Instead, she chose to remain among them, visible and undeniable, carried at the heart of the advance rather than trailing behind it. Presence mattered. Symbol mattered.
This first stop would be nothing more than a staging ground. A necessary pause before the real work began, a place to settle formations and align supply before the campaign unfolded in earnest. From here, she would witness her army’s first official victory of the march. The declaration would be made in her presence, if not by her own voice. Knight Commander Cavil would handle the formalities, the words, the ritual of demand and refusal. That was his role. Hers was to be seen, to be felt, to let inevitability speak louder than any proclamation.
The terrain pleased her. A high ridge cut off the northeastern approach, a natural barrier that would funnel any organized response into narrow, predictable routes. To the west, a massive fungal bloom rose like a living wall, its towering growths layered thick enough to break sightlines and disrupt long-range coordination. Once taken and reinforced, this place would be an excellent defensive anchor. It could be shaped into a forward bastion against the Green Bastards, a hinge point from which pressure could be applied again and again.
Her army moved with practiced cohesion, a machine built of many parts that knew its own rhythm.
At the front rolled the ch warriors, thousands of them, heavy fras advancing in disciplined formations that held even as the ground softened beneath them. Armored legs pressed into the bog without hesitation, each step reinforced by internal stabilizers and adaptive traction systems designed for hostile terrain. Their silhouettes were unmistakable, broad shouldered and imposing, plating layered thick and functional. Banners and sigils marked unit and command, identification clear even at distance. The sound of them was constant, a low chanical thunder that never quite faded, felt more than heard.
Interspersed among them were dozens of ch knights. Taller, heavier, and unmistakably elite, their fras bore additional plating, reinforced joints, and customized systems tuned to their pilots. These were not mass production machines. Each one represented authority and trust, piloted by veterans with the autonomy to act without waiting for command. They advanced at asured intervals, positioned deliberately so that any point of resistance could be answered imdiately and with overwhelming force.
Behind the armored advance ca the engineers. Hundreds of them moved in organized columns, escorting mobile fabrication rigs, power couplings, bridge layers, and terrain modification platforms. They worked as they marched, scanning, asuring, preparing. Their task was simple. Where the land resisted, they would reshape it. Where the bog remained unstable, they would harden it. Where defenses were required, they would raise them from nothing but intent and material.
Foot soldiers filled the gaps between machine and machine. Thousands of infantry moved alongside the towering constructs, their presence almost understated by comparison, yet no less essential. They secured ground as it was taken, established periters, and followed doctrine with quiet confidence. These were not conscripts pressed into service. They were trained, supplied, and utterly certain of victory.
Skiff runners skimd ahead and along the flanks, their flat hulls gliding over fog and shallow water with effortless speed. Wide intake fans drove them forward in smooth arcs, allowing them to ignore terrain that would trap conventional vehicles. Mounted weapon systems tracked the horizon as they moved, scanning for threats, probing the edges of the advance. They served as scouts and harassnt units rolled into one, fast, loud, and impossible to overlook.
Selai watched it all unfold with calm satisfaction. This was power made visible, order imposed upon chaos through preparation and resolve.
Reports had already reached her from the forward elents. The town ahead had erected what could generously be called a token defense. A handful of turrets. Sparse patrols. No aningful fortifications worth the na. The only irregularity noted was the bog itself. Sohow drained, reshaped into a broad adow dotted with flowers. The vegetation appeared intentional, even curated, as if soone had taken care to make the land pleasing rather than useful.
She found it rather beautiful.
It would not matter.
This small town would be the beginning. After it ca Palathera, then Anzemal, then Ledivere. Each city held resources worth taking, yet lacked the defenses required to hold against her forces once pressure was applied. With this campaign, the Princedoms would see her strength made undeniable. Her banners would fly where others had faltered, her authority written into the land itself.
And if she pushed far enough, hard enough, the throne would fall into her grasp as surely as every lesser prize along the way.
Empress sounded like a suitable title for all that she had given. For all the years she had worn the mask of a princess. She knew what she was.
She was the Empress.
Knight Commander Lucian Cavil advanced at the head of his column, Belphegor moving in perfect lockstep beside him. The ch knight’s fra was a towering silhouette of layered armor and reinforced joints, every surface scarred just enough to speak of use rather than neglect. Its internal systems humd in a low, steady register that Cavil felt through the soles of his boots more than he heard, a constant vibration that set the pace for the march. Above them, the banner of Branthorn hung from its mount, heavy fabric marked with sigils of the Marsh realm, snapping only slightly in the damp air, as if even the wind knew better than to waste its strength here.
Cavil looked over the forces under his command with a practiced, appraising eye, cataloging details out of long habit. The numbers were precise, as they always were. Two thousand four hundred and sixty-eight ch warriors marched in ordered ranks, their spacing exact, their pace uniform to the fraction of a second. Their fras moved as one, stabilized against the uneven ground, armored feet sinking into mud only to pull free again without hesitation. Twenty-seven ch knights accompanied them, not counting Belphegor, and not counting the Princess’s own escort. Each knight was a walking concentration of authority and destructive potential, positioned deliberately within the formation rather than clustered together. It was an invasion force calibrated for certainty. With this strength, they could break a major Green city in a single day, provided supply lines held and resistance followed expected patterns.
And this was not a city.
Ahead lay their first objective, little more than a fortified town positioned at a junction of terrain that mattered more for what it would beco than what it was now. Low walls, scattered structures, and earthworks that spoke more of habit than preparation. There had been troubling reports, of course. Scouts claid troops had been sighted moving in this direction. Legion formations, possibly. Cavil had reviewed those reports himself, weighed their credibility, and found them lacking urgency. Those movents were days out at best, and nothing guaranteed they were even headed here. Legion forces marched constantly within their own regions, repositioning, probing, posturing. After Gravenholt, redistribution was expected. The town’s defenders could not reasonably expect relief, not in ti to matter.
From this side, the operation would be a formality.
Cavil understood exactly why the location mattered, and why Princess Selai had chosen it as the opening move. Once taken, the settlent could be expanded into a true Branthorn fortress with minimal expenditure. The surrounding terrain favored containnt and control. Marshland could be shaped, hardened, claid, drained where needed and flooded where useful. Supply routes would be secure, shielded by natural barriers and easily monitored choke points. Forward pressure could be maintained indefinitely, allowing Branthorn forces to project strength deeper into contested regions without overextending. It was an ideal foundation for the coming war.
But the taking of it would be easy.
There would be no resistance worth the na. None that could stand against the force now advancing through the bog. The ch pilots alone could conquer a Green city if ordered to do so, leveling districts and breaking organized response through sheer mass and firepower. Against a town, even that was excessive. The foot soldiers would suffice, advancing behind armored cover, securing ground with thodical precision. Skirmishers were trained for harder work than this, for harassing Legion outposts along Branthorn’s edges, for rooting out silt pirates from their hidden settlents buried deep within the Marsh Realm’s fringes. This place did not compare.
There were no Wilds in Branthorn territory. Everything belonged to the Marsh Realm, claid and ordered through discipline and force. Even the marshes themselves bent to doctrine eventually. And in ti, the whole world would follow the sa pattern, once Princess Selai rose to the throne and imposed her vision without compromise.
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The thought ca unbidden, and Cavil cut it off just as quickly, jaw tightening for a brief mont before discipline reasserted itself.
She was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen. That much was undeniable, a fact he acknowledged with the sa clarity as any other observation. But what need would she ever have for soone like him? A knight commander, useful, loyal, and ultimately replaceable, valued for obedience and competence rather than presence. He let the thought die where it stood, swallowed by duty, by rank, by the certainty that personal considerations had no place here.
Belphegor’s sensors adjusted as the formation pressed forward, optics sweeping the road ahead, threat profiles updating in silent cycles. Cavil lifted his gaze toward the distant settlent, already asuring angles, approaches, and tilines.
Victory awaited them.
Marjorie, one of Princess Selai’s closest confidants and her handmaiden by title if not by function, watched the marching column from the edge of the palanquin. The machine beneath them moved with a steady, almost soothing rhythm, articulated supports adjusting to the marshy ground with practiced ease. Below, ranks of armored figures advanced in ordered silence, tal and discipline pressed into the wet earth. Marjorie followed their movent for a long mont before finally speaking.
“Lai,” she said, using the private na she reserved for monts without an audience, for spaces where rank loosened its grip. “What would you do to a town that small if it resisted?”
Princess Selai did not look away from the road ahead. Her gaze remained fixed on the distant line where adow t mist. “There would be a token execution of the leadership after we raised it,” she said calmly, as if discussing supply allocations. “The town itself is not important. Neither are the people. It is the location that matters.”
Marjorie stilled, fingers tightening briefly in her lap, listening without interrupting.
“And the fact that it belongs to those Green bastards, the whore-sons squatting behind those Green walls,” Selai continued, her tone asured and precise, anger refined into sothing sharper. “Taking it ans taking sothing from them. Tokenistic, yes, but symbolic. A proper statent that war is no longer theoretical. That their vulnerable borders were not protected.”
She folded her hands in her lap, fingers interlacing neatly, posture composed. “They expected us to remain still. We skirmished for years. Hit and run. Harassnt along the edges. They mistook that for weakness.” Her eyes narrowed slightly. “It was a distraction.”
Marjorie frowned, brow creasing. “A distraction from what?”
“From the forces we were building,” Selai said without hesitation. “From preparation. From consolidation. We let them believe we lacked the raw strength of Kess. That we could not project power the way others could.” Her mouth curved faintly, not quite a smile. “We lacked none of it. We simply did not need to use it.”
The palanquin rolled on, carried by machinery that never broke stride, its steady motion underscoring the certainty in Selai’s voice.
“Now that Graveholt has been pushed,” Selai said, her voice hardening almost imperceptibly, “we cannot allow the false Legion and those Green bastards, those polished sons of bitches, room to breathe. We must be the wolf at their necks. Relentless. Present. We cannot allow them to take what is ours and walk away untouched.”
Marjorie hesitated, then spoke carefully. “By all reports, wasn’t Graveholt a disaster?”
Selai’s lips pressed together briefly, a small, controlled expression of irritation. “The Legion claims they were not involved,” she said. “I do not believe them. Those Legion bastards had to have had sothing to do with it. There is no world in which the Red Widow breaches Graveholt’s borders without help.”
“There were no recordings,” Marjorie said quietly. “The storm hit, and then she was inside the walls.”
“Exactly,” Selai replied. “Whatever anyone claims, my instincts tell the Green cock-suckers were involved. And my instincts are never wrong. I cannot prove it.” She paused, then added, “I do not need to.”
She turned her head slightly then, just enough that Marjorie could see her expression clearly. There was no rage there, only certainty. “If they can do sothing like that to one of the most fortified locations in all the Princedoms, including the Marsh Realms, what makes you think they cannot do it to us?”
Marjorie looked away at that, eyes drifting back to the marching army. “Are you saying they’ve weaponized Aberrants?”
Selai did not hesitate. “If we could, we would,” she said simply. “I see no reason they wouldn’t.”
“But those things are monsters,” Marjorie said, unease creeping into her voice. “And by all reports, when the group hunting the Widow failed…”
“…the High Imperator and the squadron holding Knight Lucy of Graveholt released her and her people to defend against the incursion,” Selai finished. “Yes. I know the story.”
She exhaled slowly, breath controlled. “And I do not believe it.”
Marjorie turned back toward her. “You think those sons of bitches caused it.”
“I think there was sothing more,” Selai said. “Sothing we did not see. Sothing buried beneath panic and lies. I wish I could have witnessed it with my own eyes.” Her fingers tightened together. “But my gut tells the truth does not match the reports.”
“And until proven otherwise,” Selai said softly, “I will act as though the Green whore-sons were the ones to do it.”
Princess Selai would never have spoken this way in other company. Not in council, not before officers, not where words could be weighed, repeated, or turned into leverage. But Marjorie had a way of drawing the truth out of her, of letting Selai speak without armor or ceremony. It helped that Marjorie did not rember things particularly well. Details slid off her. Patterns never quite settled. Selai liked that about her.
She was fiercely loyal, unquestioning in her devotion, and simple enough not to stitch conversations together into sothing dangerous. Selai had learned long ago that clever people rembered too much, and that mory was often more lethal than ambition.
This was not the first ti they had spoken of Graveholt, or of the Red Widow, or of what the Green bastards might be willing to unleash. It was the fourth ti the subject had circled back to the sa conclusions. And yet Selai did not stop it. Repetition had its uses. Each pass sharpened her resolve, stripped uncertainty away, and left only the shape of the coming war clearer in her mind.
The palanquin carried them onward through mist and marsh, the army flowing around it like a living thing. Selai let the silence settle once more, already thinking several moves ahead, already planning how the world would look once the masks were no longer necessary.
Orange smoke blood across the marsh in disciplined sequence.
The flares fired upward in pairs, bright against the low sky, their trails lingering just long enough to be unmistakable. A formal declaration of intent. The signal rippled through the Princedom lines, echoed by status lights across ch formations as systems shifted from march posture to engagent readiness.
Knight Commander Lucian Cavil advanced to the very edge of what had once been bog, Belphegor moving with him in perfect, thunderous lockstep. The ch knight’s massive fra lood behind and above him, armored feet sinking only as far as the reinforced ground allowed.
He did not cross it.
The ch warriors halted in perfect unison behind him, armored feet sinking no further than the hardened periter they had already claid. Engineers watched the ground warily, instrunts feeding data that did not align with expectation. The terrain ahead was wrong. Where there should have been sucking mud and standing water, there was grass. A broad adow, cultivated, flowers arranged with an almost intentional aesthetic. Too even. Too calm.
Beautiful.
Cavil did not like that.
Within Belphegor’s command cradle, Cavil raised his hand, and the ch knight’s broadcast systems ca online. Speaker towers mounted along Belphegor’s shoulders and flanks adjusted orientation, amplifiers spinning up with a low hum that rolled outward across the field. The sound carried. It would carry into the town. Into every street. Every structure.
He waited a beat longer, letting the silence stretch.
Then he spoke.
“This is a formal declaration of intent,” Cavil said, his voice routed through Belphegor’s amplifiers and magnified until it pressed against the air itself, “this settlent is ordered to surrender itself to our lawful occupation.”
The words carried cleanly over the adow, over the forr bog, over the walls beyond.
“You are encircled by the forces of the Marsh Realm,” he continued. “Resistance is unnecessary and ill advised. This location has been deed strategically vital by Her Majesty, Princess Selai of The Branthorn.”
He paused, letting the na settle.
Silence followed.
Then movent.
A figure appeared atop the wall.
Cavil’s eyes narrowed.
The armor was Legion make. There was no mistaking that. But it was wrong. The silhouette was unfamiliar, heavier through the chest, the plating layered in a way that suggested this was a non-standard issue. And if the plating alone was not enough to suggest that, the thing had wings.
They rose from the back of the armor like sculpted tal extensions, angular and unmistakably insectile. They looked functional from what Cavil could see. The helm followed the sa design philosophy, mandible-like contours framing a faceplate that reflected the sky in muted gold.
The figure stepped forward, alone.
He had no guards flanking him. No banners rose behind him.
He lifted his hands and removed his helt.
The adow went still.
Cavil felt sothing cold settle behind his ribs.
The face matched the reports.
Older than he had expected. Calm. Too calm. The eyes were steady, assessing, unafraid. This was not the posture of a man about to beg.
The voice carried without amplification, clear despite the distance.
“Give your demands,” the man said, “and then I will give you my answer.”
Cavil did not respond imdiately.
A mory surfaced, unbidden.
Knight Lucy of Graveholt’s report. About a brand new Legion squadron. One mber was described as having wasp-like armor. The details had been imprecise, half dismissed at the ti as stress or exaggeration.
But the face.
The face was the sa.
There had been no ntion of wings.
Must be the new generation of armor, Cavil told himself. The Legion were notorious for their modifications. They changed designs like maggots molted. This was no different.
“You will lower your defenses. You will open your gates. You will present your leadership for judgnt. In return, your civilians will be spared. Your hos will remain intact. Your people will be taken in as citizens of the Marsh Realm.”
“Lower class citizens,” Cavil said, not softening the truth. “With all rights thereto afforded. They will not be hard. Your town will be requisitioned for the war to co. This is a generous offer I promise you that.”
He paused again.
“Only a few of you will die,” he said. “Those who serve the false Legion. Those who resist our lawful authority. It is better to save your civilians, is it not?”
“By the authority of Her Majesty, Princess Selai of The Branthorn,” Cavil said, his voice once more filling the field, “I command you to surrender.”
He gestured toward the adow.
“Surrender your town. Surrender yourselves to her judgnt. Surrender to the rightful rule of the future Empress.”
The figure on the wall did not move.
“You and those who stand with you will be taken in,” Cavil continued. “Your people will live. Your structures will remain. This land will serve a greater purpose.”
His gaze hardened.
“Refusal will result in escalation. You know what that ans. You know what will follow.”
The man in the wasp-like armor tilted his head slightly, as if listening to sothing Cavil could not hear.
Then he smiled, too wide, cruel, carrying an understanding of sothing that had not yet co to pass.
“You’ve made your offer,” the man said. “Clearly.”
He set the helt down at his feet.
“Now you will have my answer.”
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