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CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO: I Am The Final Dawn, I Am The Flood

  The

  Foot of Mount Kalthar, Arkaelus, Nirna - 2 Days Later

  The

  wind howls down from the mountains, cold and dry, biting through

  armor seams and cloth. The snow here is deeper, thicker, untouched.

  Every step crunches with a dull weight that seems to echo back off

  the frozen cliffs above.

  Spartan

  raises a hand, signaling a halt.

  The

  convoy grinds to a slow, hissing stop, engines idling low.

  Rho

  stands beside her, still and silent, one massive hand resting on the

  hilt of his zweihander, the other pressed to the side of his helm.

  His head tilts slightly, the faintest sign that he hears it too.

  The

  hymn.

  It

  drifts down the slopes, faint at first, like a whisper carried by the

  storm. Then stronger, fuller, harmonizing against the stone and snow.

  It's not human. It's too resonant, too pure. Each note hums through

  the chest, through the bones, vibrating like distant thunder.

  Spartan's

  jaw tightens beneath her helm. The sound is unmistakable.

  Eldiravan.

  She

  gestures for Rho to crouch beside her at the rise overlooking the

  white basin below. Together, they scan the horizon. The mountains

  stretch in jagged tiers of ice and rock, sharp as the Forger's anvil,

  and at their feet the world opens wide, a pale expanse where faint

  shapes move within the stormlight.

  "They're

  singing," she mutters through the voice filter, the tone deep

  and rasping. "Close…"

  Rho

  nods, slow and deliberate. He kneels, drawing a small notepad from

  his belt. A gloved finger scrawls across the frozen page.

  [How

  many do you think?]

  Spartan's

  visor narrows. "Hard to say. Sounds like a full choir, maybe a

  battalion. Maybe more."

  Behind

  them, Red Baron steps down from his APC, his boots sinking into the

  snow. His rifle hangs at his side, his breath steaming in the cold.

  "Something wrong?" he asks, voice muffled through the scarf

  around his mouth.

  Spartan

  turns slightly, motioning with two fingers to cut the engines. "Off.

  Now."

  The

  order ripples through the column. One by one, the APCs fall silent.

  The lights dim, leaving only the faint blue glow of the cryolume moss

  in the trees and the distant shimmer of ice.

  The

  Federalists dismount quickly, forming up on the right flank.

  Forty-nine men, rifles drawn, hearts hammering in the eerie quiet.

  Their boots crunch in the snow as they take position behind the

  armored hulls, scanning the white horizon.

  "Do

  you hear that?" one whispers.

  Red

  Baron shakes his head. "Hear what?"

  Spartan's

  eyes never leave the slopes, she never answers.

  The

  hymn swells again, a low, sweeping chorus that makes the air vibrate.

  It's beautiful in a way that makes the skin crawl, an ancient, sacred

  tone of something vast and knowing.

  Rho

  straightens slowly beside her, his posture tense. He looks toward

  her, his silence speaking volumes.

  Spartan

  exhales, a plume of white vapor escaping the vents of her helm.

  "They're coming," she says quietly. "And they're not

  far."

  Red

  Baron tightens his grip on his rifle. "How far?"

  She

  glances toward him, then back to the horizon. "Close enough to

  start praying."

  The

  wind shifts, and the song changes. The pitch deepens, echoing through

  the valley like a rising storm.

  The

  snowfield goes deathly still.

  The

  hymn drifts down from the mountain face, not a song of joy, but a

  dirge, something old and haunting. Its echoes ripple over the valley

  floor, over Spartan and Rho where they crouch low on the snowbank,

  their armored frames half-buried in drifting powder.

  Spartan's

  voice cuts through the comms, low and deliberate.

  "Rho.

  We can intercept them here. Hit them before they spot the convoy."

  Rho

  gives a curt nod, the faintest metallic scrape from his helm as he

  shifts his head. His breath comes in slow, measured bursts.

  "The

  others should be returning soon," she murmurs. "We just

  need to keep their attention until then."

  The

  two remain perfectly still as the figures emerge through the fog,

  tall, luminous shapes gliding between ice and shadow. The eldiravan

  move with purpose, their burnt orange and obsidian armor whispering

  with every motion. Their long spears hum faintly, harmonic resonances

  pulsing down the hafts in rhythm to their chants.

  Spartan's

  eyes narrow behind her visor.

  "Thirteen…

  fourteen… maybe fifteen," she whispers. "Patrol

  formation. Heavy guards."

  Rho

  flexes his gauntlet, knuckles cracking against the hilt of his sword.

  "Two

  directions," she says, barely a breath. "You take right."

  He

  nods once and moves.

  They

  split, black silhouettes gliding across the white expanse like

  wraiths. The eldiravan continue unaware, their voices rising,

  harmonizing in tones that make the air tremble.

  Then

  one of them stops. His head tilts toward the ridgeline. His visor

  flashes faint gold.

  He's

  seen Rho.

  The

  two warriors freeze in mutual recognition. The eldiravan opens his

  mouth to shout, and a howl tears through the air.

  It

  comes from the opposite ridge, low and resonant, a sound that rolls

  through the basin like thunder. Spartan's howl, guttural, ancient,

  Vardengard. It echoes off the cliffs and the trees and carries for

  miles, shattering the hymn.

  The

  eldiravan turn as one toward her.

  That's

  when Rho moves.

  He's

  on them in a blur, a black streak against white, armor cutting

  through snow with seismic force. His zweihander comes up, already

  mid-swing before the eldiravan nearest can even raise his spear. The

  blade cleaves through two of them at once, a flash of black light and

  yellow blood against the snow.

  Spartan

  leaps from her ridge, landing hard enough to send up a spray of

  powder, her sword and shield already drawn. The ground thunders as

  the two Vardengard crash into the eldiravan line like wolves tearing

  into a herd of caribou.

  The

  song dies instantly, replaced by the clash of metal, the shouts of

  war, the hiss of harmonic weapons colliding with Olympian alloy.

  From

  the convoy line far behind, Red Baron stands on the snowbank with

  Arturo and Liam at his sides. They stare at the chaos in disbelief,

  two armored giants carving into an army of luminous warriors beneath

  the rising suns.

  "Jesus

  Christ," Arturo mutters, awestruck. "They didn't even wait

  for us to set up a firing line."

  Red

  Baron lowers his scope slightly, watching Spartan's silhouette crash

  through the eldiravan ranks like a thunderbolt.

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  "They

  don't need one," he says quietly. "That is their firing

  line."

  Liam

  exhales, snow billowing from his scarf. "What in God's name are

  we fighting alongside…"

  Red

  Baron doesn't answer. He just watches, eyes narrowed behind his

  visor, as the Vardengard make war.

  Snow

  churns beneath their boots as Spartan and Rho Voss cut down the first

  ranks. But there are more, far more than expected.

  Dozens.

  Nearly

  fifty eldiravan warriors emerge through the fog, their forms glinting

  bronze and gold beneath the pale light. Each bears a spear or halberd

  that hums with harmonic energy, their chants rising again in furious

  unison. The valley trembles with their resonance.

  Spartan

  hears it and knows instantly, they're not outnumbered. They're

  out-resonanced.

  "Rho,"

  she hisses through the comms, blade dripping steam. "We've got a

  whole choir."

  Rho's

  laugh is low, distorted through his helm.

  They

  converge again, two shadows darting in and out of the eldiravan

  formation, blades sweeping in arcs that paint the snow red. Spears

  crash against their armor, harmonic energy screeching across Olympian

  alloy, sparks cascading like falling stars.

  Then,

  another howl.

  It

  echoes across the valley, deep and resonant, rolling through the

  snow-laden trees like a living thing. A response.

  Ashurdan.

  And

  with him, Samayel.

  The

  sound sends a thrill through Spartan's chest. She grins beneath her

  helm.

  The

  eldiravan falter for half a breath, their formation shifting uneasily

  as the answering howl fades.

  That's

  all the opening Red Baron needs.

  He

  raises his arm from the snowbank near the convoy and sweeps it

  forward. "Line up! Fire, fire!"

  Three

  dozen rifles rise in unison. The air fills with the crack of

  railfire, slugs screaming through the fog in streaks of violet light.

  Some

  soldiers rush forward past the APCs, taking knee behind outcroppings

  and snowdrifts for a clearer shot. Others hunker along the vehicles,

  their rifles humming from overuse, barrels glowing faintly red.

  The

  first volley slams into the eldiravan line, piercing armor, tearing

  through resonant shields. A few of the giants stagger, their songs

  turning to hissing static before they fall.

  But

  the return comes quick.

  Eldiravan

  railrifles, elegant and deadly, arc with golden energy. The first

  counter-volley sears through the air, hammering into the snowbanks

  where the Federalists take cover. Men shout and scatter, two soldiers

  crumpling beside Red Baron, armor plates sizzling from the impact.

  "Keep

  firing!" he roars. "Suppress them! Don't let them regroup!"

  Yet

  the eldiravan's attention remains divided. The Federalists are

  distant targets, manageable. But the two figures within their midst,

  the black-armored titans carving through their formation, those are

  something else entirely.

  Spartan

  takes a blast full-on, the round sparking off her breastplate with a

  flash of molten metal. She barely flinches, grabbing the nearest

  eldiravan by the neck and driving him into the snow, snapping his

  spear as she plunges her blade through his chest.

  Rho

  Voss, further down the slope, slams into another trio, his zweihander

  spinning in a wide, brutal arc that cleaves through armor and bone

  alike. His movements are economical, predatory. The snow beneath him

  is a churned, steaming mire.

  Their

  armor can take what the railrifles cannot, those weapons were never

  meant to kill gods.

  Spartan

  glances toward the horizon, just long enough to see two distant

  shapes bounding across the snow, their armor burning like black suns

  against the storm.

  Reinforcements.

  The

  eldiravan realize it, too. Their chant shifts, desperation seeping

  into the harmony.

  Spartan

  plants her sword into the snow, lifts her head, and lets out another

  howl, louder than before, daring them to come closer.

  All

  around her, the battlefield vibrates with sound, flesh, steel, and

  song colliding at the foot of the mountain.

  Red

  Baron holds his ground behind the main line, shouting orders over the

  din. His voice is steel and thunder. "Advance! Keep the line

  tight! Push them back to the ridge!"

  Liam

  and Arturo are the first to move.

  They

  sprint ahead of the others, diving into the snow between the APCs and

  the growing chaos ahead. Rail slugs zip past their helmets, tearing

  up white plumes at their feet. They skid to cover behind a rise and

  start laying down disciplined bursts into the eldiravan ranks, every

  shot aimed, every shot meant to count.

  "Left

  flank's thinning!" Liam calls.

  Arturo

  reloads, smoke rising from his rifle. "Then let's help thin it

  faster."

  Behind

  them, Red Baron's main firing line roars alive again, forty guns in

  rhythm, the Federation's measured precision hammering against the

  eldiravan's thunderous hymn.

  The

  Insarii Medicae stand not far from the line, each armored in white

  and red, symbols of the Forger gleaming beneath the frost. Decimus,

  missing his left arm, braces his rifle against his remaining forearm,

  firing one-handed, stance unwavering. They don't move to the front,

  they hold the middle, eyes scanning for any Invictan or Federalist

  who falls.

  But

  none do, not yet.

  The

  Vardengard see to that.

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss are pure motion, black storms among giants. They strike

  and fade, reappear and tear, carving the eldiravan formation apart at

  its heart. Every swing leaves ruin; every step carries heat that

  steams the snow.

  Then,

  another thunder in the distance.

  A

  sound that is not gunfire, but impact.

  The

  ground shivers.

  Through

  the trees to the east, two shapes explode from the gloom, Ashurdan

  and Samayel.

  They

  hit the eldiravan flank like meteor strikes, armor wreathed in frost

  and bloodlight, momentum alone snapping bones. Ashurdan's claymore

  cleaves three in a single sweep, their harmonic song cut short in a

  discordant scream. Samayel follows close behind, spear tearing

  through orange-plate armor like parchment, his laughter a mechanical

  growl through his vox.

  Rho

  Voss bellows, turning to intercept a new cluster of eldiravan who try

  to reform the line.

  The

  choir of the enemy fractures. Their unified hum splinters into

  panicked shouts and scattered bursts of resonance as they lose

  rhythm, their harmony dies in their throats.

  Spartan

  lunges forward, driving her blade through a commander's torso,

  lifting him from the snow before throwing him aside. "Keep

  pressure!" she snarls. "Don't let them regroup!"

  The

  Federalists respond in kind, advancing step by step, Liam and Arturo

  pushing closer still. Liam dives behind a dead eldiravan, firing over

  its corpse. Arturo, beside him, ducks low and tosses a thermal charge

  into a knot of the enemy. The explosion turns the snow to vapor and

  sends armor spinning into the air.

  Through

  it all, Red Baron's voice cuts through the static: "Maintain the

  line! Eyes on the Vardengard! Cover their advance!"

  The

  Insarii echo his command with a sharp bark, "For the Forger!"

  and fire again. Decimus, unflinching, drops another eldiravan with a

  precise shot through the helm.

  The

  battle becomes rhythm, flesh and metal, fire and harmony.

  The

  air is thick with steam and smoke, the hiss of cooling blood against

  snow. Spartan stands at the front, her armor black against the white

  world, sword flashing red in reflected firelight as she holds the

  line alone.

  Behind

  her, Red Baron's formation fires in measured bursts, Decimus shouting

  over the chaos, "Keep your fire tight!" His voice rasping

  through vox distortion. Beside him, Cassian and Lira, the other two

  Medicae, move like a pair of wraiths in white and crimson, dragging

  downed soldiers from the line and returning with weapons in hand when

  no more bodies need saving.

  "On

  her flank!" Cassian yells, raising his rifle and squeezing off a

  burst to drop an eldiravan rushing Spartan's side.

  But

  there are too many.

  Spartan

  catches one by the tail, claws of black flashing, and rips the

  creature from its feet, hurling it bodily into two others charging

  from the opposite side. The sound of cracking armor echoes through

  the snow.

  Another

  rushes in low, striking her shield with a resonant clang that shakes

  her frame. This one holds against her, muscles taut and tail braced

  in the ground. Spartan grits her teeth and slides back through the

  snow, boots carving deep lines until her heel nearly clips the

  shoulder of a soldier crouched behind her, Arturo.

  She

  snarls through vox static and shoves, power floods her limbs, pistons

  venting steam, sending the eldiravan stumbling back. But two more

  crash into her right side. Then a third.

  "Spartan!"

  someone shouts, maybe Red Baron, maybe no one at all.

  The

  fourth comes from behind, tail whipping low, and finds a seam.

  The

  serrated tip of the tail punches through her lower armor with a

  crunch of composite plating. She jerks with the impact, growling deep

  in her throat as the blade sticks, trapped in the reinforced alloy.

  The eldiravan hisses, tugging, but can't pull free.

  Rage

  takes her.

  Spartan

  grabs the nearest attacker by the helm and smashes it down into the

  snow, the force enough to dent the skull beneath. The body crumples.

  The momentum sends her stumbling back into the Federation line, right

  at Arturo's feet.

  Without

  thinking, Arturo moves.

  He

  sees the size of her blade, half-buried in the snow beside her. He

  knows he can't lift it properly, not the way she can. But he doesn't

  need to.

  "Get

  down!" he yells.

  He

  grabs the sword with both hands, the weight dragging his shoulders

  low, and swings. It's an awkward, heavy arc, but the edge finds its

  mark. The blade crashes through the air and shears clean through the

  eldiravan's tail where it pierces Spartan's armor.

  A

  spray of yellow ichor mists the snow.

  The

  eldiravan howls, staggering back. Spartan, freed, rips herself

  upright, one hand gripping the wounded section of her side as she

  kicks another eldiravan to the ground, denting its breastplate

  inward.

  She

  turns, helm snapping toward Arturo, but before she can say anything,

  a howl tears across the field.

  Ashurdan.

  Spartan's

  head whips around toward the sound, he's raising his claymore to the

  treeline, signaling danger.

  Downrange,

  two eldiravan stand side-by-side, one bracing an RPG launcher against

  his shoulder. Samayel is already leaping, sprinting across the snow

  toward them, but even his speed is not enough.

  The

  RPG fires.

  A

  bloom of exhaust and smoke streaks across the field.

  Spartan

  doesn't think.

  She

  slams her right hand down over Arturo's back, forcing him low, and

  throws her left arm up. The kinetic shield deploys in an instant, a

  shimmering hex of energy snapping into being, and the world goes

  white as the warhead hits.

  BOOM.

  The

  explosion eats the sound from the air. Snow and dust rise in a

  geyser.

  The

  kinetic barrier flares bright red, fracturing under the impact, every

  panel sparking like a dying sun. Spartan braces, legs locked, armor

  screaming under the pressure.

  Then

  silence.

  The

  shield collapses in a crackle of fading energy. Smoke drifts.

  Spartan

  still stands, shield blackened and scolded, the snow melted to glass

  around her. Arturo kneels beneath her, alive, ears ringing.

  Across

  the field, Samayel lands on the two eldiravan rocketeers, and their

  screams end quickly.

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