Vaeliyan looked down at the fleeing Princedom troops who had staggered out of range of the snipers and stepped off the parapet without hurry. The stone beneath his boots was warm from recent fire, chipped and scarred where rounds had struck and failed to stop anything. Below him, the retreat had already collapsed into sothing uglier than an organized withdrawal. n ran in clumps before breaking apart, so throwing weapons aside, others dragging wounded companions who would not survive the next hundred ters. Vaeliyan watched until the pattern resolved itself, then turned away.
He walked down toward the rest of the city with his helt loose in his hand, a faint sar of blood along its edge already drying. His smile stayed small and controlled, a precise expression that matched the outco rather than celebrated it. Behind him, the rest of the initial greeting party followed with loose spacing and unhurried confidence. The fight on the wall was finished. They had eliminated more pilots than expected and a disproportionate number of unprotected foot soldiers and support personnel. Anyone outside a vehicle and within range when the killing had began had died. The snipers had done exactly what they were assigned to do.
Vaeliyan had been flooding the area with his field since Warren, the twins, and Alorna returned from their journey into the bog more than two hours ago, and the pressure had remained constant throughout. Bodies accumulated faster than they could be cleared. Units thinned unevenly, leaving gaps where squads should have been, and every survivor could see it happening in real ti. Morale collapsed under the certainty of exposure rather than confusion, because there was nothing abstract about watching people die around you. Even as their forces tried to re-form, Vaeliyan could see how narrow their remaining margins had beco. He continued to process what had been uncovered in the bog, although the knowledge resisted settling cleanly into place.
Looking through Warren’s eyes during that encounter had sharpened the strain instead of easing it. Watching Mondenkind collapse under shock and grief locked Warren in place for several seconds, the weight of it heavy enough to halt thought and motion alike. The image of her kin, mummified and preserved in the bog, pressed against Vaeliyan with the certainty of sothing fundantally wrong, a presence that refused to be reduced or explained away.
Mondenkind retreated into his mind once again, silent for now. Deep within his soul, Vaeliyan knew he would need to dive back into that space later, but not now. There were more pressing demands on his attention, and whatever ti he devoted to that reckoning would be costly. Every second mattered in this mont, even for soone who could bend ti to his will. He acknowledged what he had seen and set it aside with deliberate control. This mont required focus.
Phase two of their plan now mattered more than anything else. The opening strike achieved its purpose by injuring the Princedom, disrupting coordination, and forcing them into a reactive posture. This window existed because the damage was incomplete rather than final. Vaeliyan believed they could use it to force the Crownless Kings into agreent on what followed, because the opportunity was real and ti-limited. The Kings disagreed.
They accepted the initial assault because it required only one of them to commit, and because the risks to their own people stayed low and contained. They had been protected, insulated by distance and position, and the devastation they caused carried an intimacy they did not bother to hide. It excited them. It let them get close enough to make the killing personal, to show the Princedom exactly what it ant to be hunted.
Saila, the God’s Eye, embodied that enthusiasm. She was a sniper, a lancer, and sothing closer to a demon than a soldier when she was holding an R2–6 LMP lance. She stood as Gwen’s equal, if not her better, and that alone said more than most people ever managed to prove. Even Gwen admitted it openly. Still, Saila was not quite Fenn’s equal anymore, not since Fenn got his new lance.
Fenn was born for the lance. Even Gwen acknowledged that he now outmatched her when it ca to ranged lethality. But Car was sothing else entirely. Car had been born for every weapon that ever settled into his hands, as if tools themselves recognized him. He was the only one among them who brought down a ch knight, one of nearly three dozen they had seen so far.
Fenn’s new lance cracked the protective glass do that housed the pilot, damaged enough to make a kill possible. Car did not use that opening. With Betty, he chose a different line entirely, a place where the pilot had tried to hide rather than reinforce. Betty punched through the ch’s siding and into the cockpit as it turned, tearing straight into the pilot’s skull. The machine dropped where it stood, and the inside of the cockpit looked as though a body had burst apart under pressure.
They committed so many forces to trying to recover the thing that it bordered on the absurd. The effort was spectacular in its failure. That single attempt cost the Princedom more than a hundred additional deaths as they pushed again and again into the field. The ch still lay where it fell, scattered among other smaller fras whose pilots died too far forward to be retrieved.
As the city settled into the uneasy quiet that followed slaughter, Vaeliyan adjusted his grip on the helt and continued walking. Phase two would arrive regardless of consensus. The remaining uncertainty lay in whether the Crownless Kings would recognize the mont in ti to act, or understand the cost only after it passed.
Vaeliyan walked over to Imujin and the Last Testant and let his gaze travel across the gathered mass inside the city. The space was crowded in a way that felt earned rather than chaotic, bodies packed together by shared purpose instead of panic. Militia stood shoulder to shoulder with scavvers, forr rcenaries, bazaar guards, and anyone else who had taken up a position on the walls or in the streets below. So held proper weapons, others carried whatever they had been able to salvage or repurpose, but all of them were watching the sa thing, waiting for what ca next.
Beyond them were the organized ranks. The Legion stood in disciplined lines, Imperators spaced with deliberate intent, Mobile Infantry idling in reserve, their posture carrying a subtle edge of confusion. They were press units by design, the ones sent first into the most dangerous work, expected to absorb risk because they were considered expendable in theory, if not in truth. Being held back ran against instinct and doctrine, and it showed in the way they watched the gate instead of moving toward it.
Nearby, the engineer corps clustered around an unfinished construct spread across modular fras and tool rigs. They were actively building sothing, hands moving even as their attention kept drifting back toward the walls and the gate. Confusion showed plainly on their faces. Florence stood among them, talking quickly, pointing, trying to explain what she wanted and why it mattered. Each explanation only seed to make them look more uncertain. Questions were asked, answers given, and the gap widened.
Then one of the engineers said sothing quietly. Florence stopped, listened, and nodded once. Whatever had been said cut through the confusion. The group broke apart without ceremony and went back to work, tools moving with renewed purpose, as if the problem had resolved itself all at once. These were the professionals, the ones who understood the implications of what had just happened without needing it explained. Even among them there was a visible shift. Vaeliyan’s plan had worked, and it had worked cleanly. That reality forced adjustnts none of them had fully prepared for.
None of the reactions were as tightly controlled as those of the Crownless Kings. They watched from their positions with expressions that betrayed very little. Tarrin, in particular, looked calculating, his attention fixed sowhere beyond the present mont, already weighing outcos that had not yet arrived and costs that had not yet been paid.
Vaeliyan kept his voice low as he spoke to Imujin, making the exchange sound casual despite the weight behind it. “So, you think they’ll do it now, after seeing that it wasn’t a batshit crazy plan?”
“Probably not,” Imujin replied without hesitation. He did not bother to soften it. “They’re willing to help hold the city, but they’ve got plans of their own. What you did wasn’t a decisive blow in their eyes. They think the next step is a suicide run.”
“It isn’t,” Vaeliyan said, the words simple and flat.
“No,” Imujin agreed. “It isn’t. They just don’t know you yet. Or rather, they don’t know the Ghost in the Mist who’s going to lead the next assault.”
Vaeliyan nodded once. “Warren’s going to lead it.”
Imujin glanced at him, searching his face for sothing he already expected to find. “Is he ready?”
Vaeliyan already knew the answer, but that wasn’t the point of the question. He raised his voice just enough to carry beyond their imdiate circle, letting it drift into the surrounding crowd. “He is.”
It mattered that people heard it spoken aloud. Not because Warren needed convincing, but because the city did. Rumor and implication were not enough for what ca next. The hero of Mara was not hiding behind walls, titles, or interdiaries. He would step forward himself. He would go out to nip at the heels of the Princedom and show, openly and without distance, what his power actually ant. Not as Vaeliyan, but as Warren.
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The gates lood nearly a hundred feet away, massive slabs of tal and stone that had remained sealed since the siege began. Their presence dominated the far end of the thoroughfare, a reminder of both protection and restraint. A ripple moved through the crowd as Warren stepped out, Batu, Jurpat, Grix, Wren, several shifters, and Bee falling in with him without hesitation. They pushed forward as a unit, angling toward the gate with purpose that did not slow or waver.
Vaeliyan watched himself move with purpose. Warren and the others moved with intent toward the threshold, boots striking stone in a rhythm that carried through the space.
He turned toward the control tower and raised his voice. “Open the gate.”
The chanisms engaged with a deep, grinding sound, tal shifting against tal as systems long held dormant ca back to life. The gates began to part, inch by heavy inch, opening a widening path to whatever waited beyond.
Tarrin stepped out from the crowd and intercepted Warren, gripping his arms as if to stop him or anchor himself in the mont. Whatever Tarrin wanted to say, Vaeliyan left it there. He would hear it as Warren.
Vaeliyan turned back to Imujin and the Last Testant. There were preparations still to finish, alignnts still to secure, and timing still to control. The next phase was already in motion, and there was no room left for hesitation.
Warren felt the hand clamp onto the front of his jacket before he heard the voice. He looked down at the fingers gripping the fabric, then slowly lifted his gaze to the man towering over him.
“What?” Warren said. The word carried venom, sharp and unapologetic.
“Ghost,” Tarrin said, his grip tightening rather than loosening. “What are you doing? This is suicide.”
Warren stared at him for a beat, then tilted his head slightly. “You care?” The question was flat, but the edge behind it was unmistakable.
“You’re obviously important to these people,” Tarrin snapped, his voice rising instead of softening. “They follow you. They believe in you. And you’re about to get them killed for your ego. This isn’t bravery. It’s stupidity. This plan is fucking insane.”
“It would be less insane if you were actually willing to help,” Warren shot back, irritation bleeding through now. “If you were going out there with us, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. You know that.”
Tarrin scoffed, the sound openly contemptuous. “You really think Vaeliyan is the power here?”
Warren smiled, slow and humorless. “No, brother. You have no idea what the fuck you’re talking about.”
Tarrin’s expression twisted, irritation flashing hot across his face. “Then explain it to .”
“When I first t Vaeliyan,” Warren said, his voice almost conversational, “I kicked his ass so hard it almost killed him outright. And every single ti we fought after that.”
Tarrin shook his head. “Sure. When you were kids. But he’s a High Imperator now.”
“No,” Warren said, the word cutting clean through the objection. “You don’t understand. I have beaten Vaeliyan every ti we have ever fought. He cannot beat . It isn’t a matter of pride or confidence. It’s a matter of fact.”
Tarrin’s grip loosened despite himself.
“What I’m about to do,” Warren continued, “is show you what the real power of this city actually is. Not walls. Not ranks. Not titles.” He leaned forward slightly, close enough that Tarrin couldn’t look away. “.”
He straightened and glanced toward the open gate. “You could have so of that glory if you wanted it. You could stand with us.” His eyes returned to Tarrin, hard now. “But you won’t.”
Warren shrugged out of the man’s grasp. “You’re going to stay back. You’re going to hide behind my walls and call it strategy.”
Tarrin opened his mouth, then closed it again.
“You were supposed to be my backup,” Warren said, his voice dropping into sothing colder and aner. “You were supposed to be there when it mattered.”
He leaned in just enough to make it personal. “Instead, you’re hiding. You’re hiding behind my walls, behind my people, and calling it strategy.”
Warren’s smile showed teeth. “That makes you a just another coward.”
Tarrin turned sharply and shouted back toward the Crownless Kings. “You hear this?” His voice carried easily. “This little piece of shit wants to see what the Crownless Kings can do. He wants us to prove we’re not cowards.”
He spread his hands in a mocking gesture. “Why would we do that? We’re here to save your city, and this is how you talk to us?”
The Crownless Kings shifted as one, boots scraping stone as they moved closer to their leader. They were huge n, scarred and armored, their presence alone enough to cow most crowds. Warren stood before them, smaller than every one of them, and did not step back.
He looked up at Tarrin and said, quietly and clearly, “You are a fucking coward.”
Then he turned and walked away.
Sothing in Tarrin snapped.
He lunged forward and swung, a heavy, ugly punch ant to drop Warren where he stood. Warren stopped, turned, and as Tarrin’s fist cut through the space where his head had been, Warren was gone. He simply was not there anymore.
A murmur rippled through the onlookers.
Warren stepped out from the edge of the crowd, already facing them. “Real mature,” he said. “Swinging at your allies because you’re too small a man to go swing at your enemies.”
Tarrin spun on him, breathing hard. “We’re going,” he snarled. “Fuck this little shit. He thinks he’s so kind of legend. So kind of myth people whisper about.”
He jabbed a finger toward the gate. “I want to see him get his fucking ass handed to him. And when it happens, I’ll be there to drag him back inside. I’ll make sure he has no teeth left to say that kind of shit to ever again. Then he can lick the bottom of my boot for every word he just said as an apology.”
Warren had not been lying.
He had beaten Vaeliyan every ti they had ever fought. That truth held even if there had only been one real fight, long ago, back when the world still fit into simpler shapes. After that, the original Vaeliyan died, and Warren took his corpse as his veil. Vaeliyan would never fight Warren again, not in any way that mattered. The distinction was technical, academic, sothing only outsiders would try to argue over. What mattered was that the statent was true, and Warren understood exactly how truth could be sharpened and driven like a blade.
What mattered more was that he had maneuvered the Crownless Kings into a plan they despised. A plan they believed was insane, reckless, and beneath them. He had done it deliberately, patiently, because he knew Tarrin could be pushed. He knew where the cracks were, and he knew how to lean on them without ever seeming to touch them directly. Tarrin never saw it coming, and that was the cleanest part of the whole thing.
Deck had been the one to explain it, back when Tarrin was still being trained. Tarrin’s greatest weakness had never been fear or caution. It was pride wrapped in certainty, the belief that once he decided he was the responsible one in the room, no one could maneuver him anymore. Once Warren understood that flaw, the rest fell into place. Tarrin believed Warren was a nobody who should not have known how to press those buttons. What he did not understand was that Warren was Vaeliyan, and Vaeliyan had known exactly where Tarrin cracked.
The gates finished opening.
The Transford adow lay before them, stretched wide and deceptively calm, grass rippling softly in the breeze as if nothing had ever died there. Batu shifted first.
His body did not collapse inward. It expanded.
Nanites stread forward, spreading outward from his fra like a rising tide. His body remained where it was as layers built around him, covering, stacking, locking into place. Black, light-absorbing mass accumulated rapidly, wrapping him in a fra that expanded his silhouette without replacing what was already there. Fur was not grown or assembled from nothing, but laid down as surface structure, extruded and anchored as the coverage thickened.
Wings forced themselves into existence from his shoulders, four of them, built layer by layer as nanite lattices hardened into broad, brutal aerodynamic forms. Horns spiraled out from his skull, dense and rciless, constructed rather than grown, locking into a fra that no longer resembled anything human. Additional limbs unfolded from his sides, six in total, each one forming through rapid structural reinforcent until they ended in paws the size of siege doors.
When the transformation finished, Batu stood nearly forty feet long and twenty five feet tall at the shoulder, a massive four winged bear-shaped construct of black nanite mass. Weight radiated from him. The ground beneath his paws cracked and settled as he lowered himself into a forward stance, nanites flowing and tightening to absorb the load, a low chanical rumble replacing breath as he stabilized.
Several of the shifters followed imdiately, their own transformations unfolding with practiced efficiency. Warren glanced at those moving with him. Jurpat t his eyes, nodded once, and shifted as well.
His form did not swell like Batu’s. It reconfigured.
Nanites flowed across him instead of away from him, spreading outward in overlapping layers that wrapped, covered, and locked into place. A wolf took shape, massive and low to the ground, its silhouette so sharp it seed to cut the air around it. There was no fur. Every surface was a blade, plates sliding over plates, serrated edges nesting together with predatory precision. Each movent carried a whisper of tal on tal as the nanites shifted, aligned, and reinforced themselves in motion.
Eyes burned into existence last, narrow and cold, set deep within a skull composed entirely of interlocking cutting surfaces. When Jurpat finished shifting, he stood as a giant wolf sheathed in razors, a living engine of edges, nanites flowing continuously across his form to maintain angles too sharp to ever dull.
Wren called, and the ground answered her.
The land before them tore itself open as she passed, soil and stone obeying without hesitation. Pits yawned wide where dead drops had once been hidden, their contents long removed and repurposed. From those cavities, structures rose, dragged free from the earth, reshaped and reinforced into constructs that followed Wren’s movents as if tethered directly to her intent.
Then Bee did sothing that made several of the Crownless Kings swear under their breath.
She snapped a bone in her own finger without hesitation. The break was sharp and ugly, the jagged end punching through skin as she forced it upward. Liquid bone spilled from the wound and poured onto the ground in front of her, spreading with unnatural purpose. It crawled across Wren’s constructs, plating them in pale armor, then flowed onward to the shifters without protection, hardening into layered reinforcent as it went.
When Bee finished, Wren stepped back, laid a hand over the ruined finger, and healed it cleanly. Bee flexed her hand once, testing it, then turned and walked back toward the gate without comnt.
The Crownless Kings stared.
Eron looked at Warren and said what the rest of them were clearly thinking. “So you’ve got armored troops. But you’ve just shown half your hand. Ruined half your traps.”
Warren smiled.
“Oh no,” he said easily. “You think this was the trap?”
He gestured toward the adow. “This was the trap for when you weren’t here. That plan changed the mont you touched down in Mara.”
His gaze lifted toward the distant dark line beyond the adow.
“This,” Warren said, “is just a pretty adow.”
Then his smile sharpened.
“The real trap is the bog.”
He paused, just long enough to let it settle.
“And ."
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