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CHAPTER FORTY-THREE: I Want My Seat At The Table

  The Northwestern

  Coordinates – Two Days Later

  The hour before sunrise bleeds

  cold and blue across the mountains, the sky a thin, bruised line

  where night is beginning to lose its grip. Fog clings low in the

  ravines, crawling like something alive, dampening sound and

  swallowing distance. The air smells of wet stone, pine sap, and old

  smoke.

  Decimus

  is already in position.

  He

  lies prone along the spine of a ridgeline, thirty feet above the

  valley floor, body pressed flat against the rock as if he’s trying

  to become part of it. His DMR rests steady against his shoulder,

  barrel angled downward, scope already adjusted. The stone beneath him

  still holds the night’s chill, seeping through his gloves and into

  his bones.

  Behind

  him, the horizon is lightening. Soon, the sun will rise at his back.

  Soon, it will blind anyone foolish enough to look uphill. Below him,

  the others move.

  Lucille

  and Cain advance from the southern approach, shadows threading

  between boulders and scrub brush. They’ve spent most of the night

  getting here, slow, deliberate, painful progress measured in inches

  and held breaths. Knees scrape stone. Fingers numb against damp

  earth. Every movement is chosen, weighed, committed to only when the

  night itself seems to give permission.

  Marcus

  and Tiber mirror them from the north, slipping through shallow

  ravines and dry creek beds, using the land like it was meant for

  this. Like it was shaped for ambush.

  Twelve

  enemy cadets occupy the valley floor.

  Too

  many for a clean fight. Enough to make mistakes deadly.

  They’ve

  chosen rough terrain, broken stone shelves, uneven ground cut by

  narrow streams, low rises that offer natural cover. It’s

  defensible. Smart. But they’ve grown comfortable inside it, and

  comfort is a slow poison.

  At

  the center of their encampment, the VIP kneels.

  An

  Academy instructor.


  Hands

  cuffed behind his back. Head bowed. Dirt stains his knees, his

  sleeves, the front of his uniform. Two cadets stand close, rifles

  slung loose, posture casual as they talk quietly between themselves.

  They’re discussing relocation, Lucille can’t hear the words, but

  she can read the body language. Lazy gestures. No urgency. No fear.

  Three

  more cadets sit around a small fire pit, eating. One laughs softly at

  something the others say. Another pokes at the coals with a stick,

  sending up a faint spark that dies before it can rise far. Their

  weapons rest nearby, leaned against stone or laid across packs.

  A

  few patrol the perimeter.

  Not

  well.

  One

  stands with his back to a ravine, weight shifted onto one leg, helmet

  unfastened. Another slowly walks a lazy arc near the stream, boots

  crunching softly over gravel, eyes half-lidded as if he’s already

  thinking about sleep.

  Complacent.

  Lucille

  sees it all from her low vantage point, cheek pressed to cool stone.

  Cain is beside her, breathing controlled, rifle angled just enough to

  cover her blind spot. She can feel his tension without looking at

  him, tight, coiled, ready to snap.

  Her

  heart beats slow. Too slow for someone about to start a war.

  She

  counts heads again. Confirms positions. Measures distance. Her mind

  is quiet now, razor-focused, the world narrowing to angles and timing

  and lines of fire. The old book presses against her chest through the

  fabric of her jacket, unnoticed but present, like a weight she’s

  learned to carry.

  Decimus

  adjusts his scope.

  The

  sun creeps higher.

  In

  minutes, light will spill over the ridge, washing the valley in gold

  and turning shadows into lies. When it does, the enemy will be

  looking straight into it, eyes burning, depth perception shot.

  They

  don’t know they’re already dead.

  Lucille

  brings the radio to her mouth, thumb resting light on the transmit.

  Her voice is barely more than breath. “Marcus. Tiber. Prep flashes

  and smoke.” A pause. Her eyes track the slow patrol near the

  stream, the way his head turns lazily away from the ridge. “On my

  mark.”

  Cain

  shifts beside her, rifle steady, body angled to cover her advance.

  His breathing stays even, disciplined, but his jaw is tight. He knows

  what comes next.

  Lucille

  counts in her head.

  Three.

  Two.

  One.

  “Go.”

  From

  opposite sides of the encampment, shapes move.

  Marcus

  and Tiber rise just enough to throw.

  The

  flashbangs arc through the dark like dull stars, clattering once

  against stone before detonating. The valley erupts in white light and

  concussive force, the sound slamming outward like a physical thing.

  The fire pit vanishes in a bloom of glare. Shadows are burned into

  vision. Men cry out, disoriented, blind, hands flying up too late.

  Before

  the echoes even finish bouncing off the ravines, the smoke grenades

  go.

  Thick,

  rolling clouds vomit outward, chemical white swallowing rock, fire,

  and figures alike. The encampment disappears behind a wall of choking

  fog. Shouts turn sharp and panicked. Orders overlap. Someone screams

  a name.

  Lucille

  flinches hard despite herself.

  The

  flash punches through her helmet, through the dampeners, through bone

  and instinct alike. Her ears ring, a high, shrill whine that sets her

  teeth on edge. Her vision swims for half a second, stars bursting

  behind her eyes.

  Cain’s

  hand is on her shoulder instantly.

  “Lucy—”

  She

  shakes her head once, sharp and vicious, forcing the world back into

  focus. Her fingers tighten around her rifle.

  “Move,”

  she breathes.

  They

  surge forward together.

  Lucille

  rises into a low run, rifle shouldered, muzzle cutting through the

  smoke in clean, controlled arcs. Cain stays half a step behind and to

  her right, covering angles, watching her blind spots. They don’t

  fire blindly. Every shot is measured, every squeeze of the trigger

  preceded by confirmation, silhouette, movement, weapon.

  Inside

  the smoke, the enemy cadets are unraveling.

  Some

  scramble for rifles they dropped near the fire pit, fingers slipping

  on metal slick with condensation. Others stumble into rocks or each

  other, coughing, eyes streaming, ears ringing. A patrolman bolts the

  wrong direction and nearly collides with Marcus as he comes out of

  the haze like a ghost, rifle already barking once, twice.

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  Up

  on the ridge, Decimus works.

  He

  breathes in.

  Breathes

  out.

  The

  first shot cracks, sharp and clean.

  A

  cadet on the perimeter jerks and drops, legs folding beneath him

  before his brain understands what’s happened. Decimus shifts,

  adjusts a fraction of an inch, fires again. Another body hits the

  ground, weapon clattering uselessly against stone.

  He

  doesn’t rush.

  He

  doesn’t need to.

  Targets

  stumble out of the smoke in ones and twos, silhouettes framed

  perfectly against the rising light. Decimus picks them apart with

  calm, methodical precision, neck, center mass, head. Each shot is

  final.

  Down

  below, Lucille and Cain hit the edge of the camp.

  A

  cadet lunges out of the smoke, wild-eyed, rifle half-raised. Lucille

  fires once. He goes down hard, skidding across damp earth. Another

  shape charges Cain from the side, Cain pivots, fires, then shoulders

  the body aside without breaking stride.

  Screams

  tear through the fog.

  Someone

  fires blindly, rounds cracking overhead, punching into rock. Another

  cadet stumbles backward toward the stream, only to collapse as a

  round from above drops him mid-step.

  Marcus

  barrels through the smoke from the north, a dark shape moving fast

  and low. He takes one cadet down with a brutal strike to the rifle,

  then fires point-blank when another tries to grab him. Tiber follows

  close, jaw clenched, eyes hard, movements sharp and economical.

  The

  assault is fast.

  Violent.

  Overwhelming.

  Shadows

  slam into panicking cadets from all sides, rifles flashing, boots

  pounding, bodies hitting the ground in wet, final sounds. Orders die

  in throats. Plans dissolve into fear. Through it all, the smoke

  thickens, the sun climbs, and above them, Decimus keeps firing, each

  shot another thread cut, another scream silenced.

  Lucille

  lets the rifle drop. The sling catches it against her hip with a dull

  thud as she reaches instead for steel. The sword clears the sheath in

  one smooth pull, edge already angled forward. Her shield is locked

  tight on her arm, weight familiar, reassuring. The smoke is thick

  enough now that muzzle flashes mean death just as often for friend as

  foe.

  “This

  is it,” she growls under her breath.

  She

  charges.

  The

  smoke swallows her whole.

  Cain

  is right behind her, boots pounding, blade drawn, his presence close

  enough that she feels it more than sees it. Somewhere to her left and

  right, Marcus and Tiber do the same, rifles abandoned, swords

  flashing, the fight collapsing inward into something older and more

  brutal.

  Steel

  meets steel inside the fog.

  A

  cadet lunges at Lucille, shape barely visible until the last second.

  She slams her shield forward, the impact rattling up her arm as the

  man goes down hard, breath knocked clean out of him. She does not

  slow. Her sword drives down and in, precise, practiced. The body

  stops moving.

  Another

  shadow rushes her. She pivots, blade flashing, catching his strike

  and locking with him chest to chest. His eyes are wide, panicked,

  breath hot and fast.

  “You

  ain’t supposed to be here,” he snarls.

  She

  rips her blade free and drives it into his side. “Neither are you.”

  He

  drops.

  The

  smoke churns, screams echoing off stone, voices overlapping in

  confusion and terror. Somewhere nearby, Marcus shouts, a sharp,

  pained sound that cuts through the chaos. Lucille turns just in time

  to see him stagger, blood darkening his sleeve. A blade flashes

  again, and Marcus goes to one knee.

  Tiber

  is on him instantly.

  “Stay

  down!” Tiber roars, planting himself between Marcus and the

  oncoming cadet. His sword snaps out in a brutal arc, forcing the

  attacker back. He shifts, covers Marcus with his body, steel ringing

  as another strike glances off his guard.

  Lucille

  does not have time to watch.

  Two

  more cadets come at her and Cain together. Cain steps left,

  intercepting one, their blades crashing together with a teeth-jarring

  clang. Lucille meets the other head-on. She bashes him with her

  shield, then stabs low….

  Pain

  explodes through her side.

  White-hot.

  Her

  breath leaves her in a ragged gasp as the torn stitches pull apart.

  Warmth floods beneath her armor. Her vision blurs for a split second,

  just long enough.

  Too

  long.

  A

  shield slams into her chest, driving her off her feet. She hits the

  ground hard, the world knocked sideways, smoke and dirt filling her

  mouth. She tries to roll, to bring her shield up….

  The

  cadet looms over her, blade lifting for the killing strike.

  He

  never gets it.

  Cain’s

  sword takes him almost in half.

  The

  blow is savage, fueled by pure, furious instinct. The cadet collapses

  in two directions at once, blood spraying into the smoke. Cain

  doesn’t even look at the body. He’s already dropping to Lucille’s

  side, grabbing her under the arm.

  “Lucy—hey—hey,

  stay with me,” he says, voice tight, hands shaking just enough to

  betray him.

  She

  grits her teeth, pushing herself up with his help. “I’m fine,”

  she snarls, even as pain screams through her side. “Get up. Move.”

  She

  barely gets her feet under her.

  Crack.

  The

  sound is wrong. Too sharp. Too close.

  Cain

  jerks as if yanked by invisible hands. His sword slips from his

  fingers.

  “Cain!”

  Lucille shouts.

  He

  stumbles forward into her, weight sudden and crushing. She barely

  manages to catch him, shield clattering against stone as she wraps an

  arm around his chest and drags him down with her, knees hitting the

  ground hard.

  Another

  gunshot snaps through the smoke, closer now. Someone is firing blind.

  Lucille

  twists, hauling Cain behind her shield as rounds punch into rock

  nearby. Cain gasps, a wet, broken sound, his breath hitching.

  “I—I’m

  hit,” he mutters, disbelief coloring his voice.

  “I

  know,” she snaps, pressing him flat, her shield angled to cover

  them both. Her hands are slick with blood, his, hers, she cannot

  tell. “Don’t you dare pass out. You hear me?”

  His

  forehead presses against her shoulder. “Still here,” he breathes,

  strained. “Ain’t leavin’ you.”

  Around

  them, the fight rages on, steel, screams, boots, the distant crack of

  Decimus’s rifle punctuating the chaos like a metronome. But for a

  heartbeat, Lucille only sees Cain slumped against her, bleeding and

  alive, and the truth hits harder than any blow.

  Lucille

  tracks the muzzle flash through the smoke by instinct more than

  sight.

  She

  eases Cain down behind a slab of stone, presses his shoulder once,

  hard, grounding. “Stay put,” she snarls, already moving. “If

  you get up before I’m back, I’ll kill you myself.”

  Then

  she’s gone.

  She

  breaks into a sprint, shield raised, sword low. The rifle cracks

  again, the round snapping past where her head had been a heartbeat

  before. She barrels straight into the shooter, smashing into him

  shoulder-first.

  Her

  blade knocks the rifle aside with a sharp clang, steel on

  steel, and she brings the sword up in a vicious backswing aimed for

  his throat….

  The

  world explodes.

  A

  grenade detonates somewhere to the side, close enough that the

  shockwave slams into her ribs and rattles her teeth. Shrapnel scythes

  through the smoke, pinging off stone, chewing into earth, rattling

  against the rock face at the foot of the ridge where Decimus is

  perched. Dirt rains down. Someone screams and cuts off abruptly.

  Lucille

  staggers but stays upright.

  The

  cadet does too.

  He’s

  big. Broad-shouldered. Strong in a way that comes from confidence,

  from never having been smaller than the people he fights. He slams

  into her with his full weight, driving her back several steps,

  forcing her shield wide. Her boots skid on loose gravel.

  He

  drops the rifle and draws his gladius in one smooth, practiced

  motion.

  The

  blade flashes.

  Lucille

  barely gets her shield up in time. The impact rings through her arm,

  numbing her fingers. He presses immediately, short, vicious cuts

  aimed at gaps, joints, places meant to bleed. No wasted motion. No

  hesitation.

  She

  backsteps, parries, grits her teeth as pain flares white-hot through

  her side again. Blood slicks her armor beneath the plates. Her

  breathing turns ragged, sharp.

  The

  cadet snarls at her through the smoke. “You should’ve stayed

  down.”

  She

  answers with steel.

  Their

  blades lock for a split second. He shoves, overpowering her, forcing

  her to break contact or lose balance. She stumbles, barely catching

  herself before the gladius darts in again, slicing across her shield

  rim, sparking.

  Lucille

  fights like an animal cornered, no finesse, no mercy. Shield bashes,

  quick cuts, feints meant to draw him in close. He answers every move,

  stronger, relentless, trying to break her guard, trying to end it

  fast.

  Neither

  of them see the rest of the battlefield.

  They

  don’t see Marcus limp away from his last kill, arm soaked red,

  breath coming in harsh pulls as Tiber finishes the final struggling

  cadet with a brutal thrust to the chest.

  They

  don’t see the VIP dragged free, hands shaking, eyes wide, alive.

  They

  don’t see Cain push himself upright behind cover, chest heaving,

  shock fading as he realizes the rounds cracked into his back plate

  instead of flesh. He retches once, spits, then drags his sword back

  into his hand.

  Lucille

  only sees the man in front of her.

  The

  smoke thins, just a little.

  Enough.

  The

  cadet overextends, swinging hard, confident she’s slowing. Lucille

  steps into it instead of away. She takes the hit on her shield, lets

  the force carry past her, then drives her sword forward with

  everything she has left.

  The

  blade punches under his ribs.

  He

  freezes.

  His

  eyes widen, breath leaving him in a wet gasp. Lucille twists the

  sword and rips it free. He collapses forward, gladius slipping from

  his hand, body hitting the ground with a dull, final sound.

  Silence

  creeps in where chaos had been.

  The

  smoke continues to clear.

  Lucille

  straightens slowly, chest heaving, blood dripping from her armor to

  the dirt. She turns in a slow circle, blade still raised, searching

  for the next threat.

  There

  are none.

  Bodies

  lie scattered around the ruined encampment. The fire pit is kicked

  apart, coals smothered. Marcus stands nearby, sword lowered, watching

  her with something like awe and worry tangled together. Tiber is

  kneeling beside the Instructor, cutting the cuffs from his wrists.

  From

  the ridge above, Decimus shifts, rifle lowering.

  Lucille

  finally lowers her sword.

  The

  realization hits her all at once.

  It’s

  over. For now.

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