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CHAPTER FORTY-ONE: Whyd You Have To Chase The Light Somewhere I Cant Go?

  The

  Venator Encampment – The Next Morning

  Absjorn’s

  boots echo through the sanctum long before his silhouette fills the

  doorway.

  The

  mobile church is warm compared to the frozen day outside, thick with

  incense, candlelight, whispered prayer, but none of it touches him.

  Not the heat. Not the holiness. Not the comfort it is meant to grant.

  He

  walks down the central aisle with Cassiel’s corpse in his arms,

  moving with a reverence that borders on trembling. The Priest’s

  massive armor, broken and bloodied, glints beneath the lantern light.

  Cassiel’s decapitated head rests atop his breastplate, helmet

  placed carefully over the ruined flesh as though dignity could still

  be restored by ritual.

  When

  Absjorn reaches the altar, he lowers the body with the same delicacy

  he would use for a newborn child. He settles Cassiel flat upon the

  crimson tapestry, adjusts the weight so the corpse lies straight,

  then folds the Priest’s enormous gauntleted hands over his abdomen.

  The

  priestesses gather around him immediately, soft footsteps, hushed

  breaths, veils swaying. Their black-and-white robes rustle as they

  kneel, as they murmur prayers, as they reach timidly for rags and

  holy oils to begin the purification of the fallen.

  One

  breaks away, darting behind the altar to summon Priest Benedan.

  Absjorn

  remains kneeling.

  He

  cannot tear his eyes from Cassiel’s shattered chestplate. From the

  folded hands. From the silent helm perched atop the ravaged neck. His

  own breath stutters, shoulders shaking once, quickly, shamefully. He

  presses a hand over his mouth, then over the ruined armor, as if

  trying to warm it. Trying to understand how it had gone cold.

  Benedan

  emerges moments later.

  The

  Priest is tall, though not as towering as Cassiel once was,

  broad-shouldered, armored in white and crimson. He moves with

  measured calm, but when he sees the body his lips part in a quiet

  gasp. He comes to kneel beside Absjorn, lowering himself carefully

  until they sit shoulder to shoulder before the altar.

  For

  a moment, neither speaks.

  Benedan

  bows his head, touching two fingers to Cassiel’s forehead through

  the helmet, tracing the sign of the Absolute.

  Absjorn

  finally breaks the silence, voice a rasp, “…I could not save

  him.”

  Benedan

  turns to him, not reprimanding, not shocked, only deeply, painfully

  solemn. “Captain Absjorn,” he murmurs, “no mortal man saves a

  Priest. They walk closest to the Absolute. They rise, and fall, by

  His will alone.”

  Absjorn’s

  jaw works, his breath shaking again. His eyes burn, not with tears,

  but with something deeper, something wounded, confused, furious,

  devout.

  “It

  was not His will,” Absjorn whispers. “It could not have

  been His will.”

  Benedan

  lets out a long, quiet breath. His hand rests atop Absjorn’s

  shoulder, heavy, steady, anchoring. “We will pray for clarity,”

  he says softly. “For guidance. For the Absolute to reveal the truth

  of this trial.”

  Behind

  them, the priestesses continue their soft chanting as they begin

  gently cleansing Cassiel’s armor, sponges dipped into basins, holy

  water running in rivulets through the grooves of his pauldrons.

  A

  funeral rite.

  A battlefield relic.

  A loss that shakes the

  faith at its foundation.

  Absjorn

  bows his head again, shoulders hunched, hands clenched into fists so

  hard the metal creaks. He whispers through clenched teeth, “Then

  pray quickly. For I fear the truth will demand blood.”

  Benedan

  straightens slowly, drawing a deep breath as the priestesses widen

  their circle around the altar. Their chanting softens, thinning into

  a gentle hum so the Priest may speak clearly to the Absolute. He

  rises to his full height, taller than Absjorn remembers, or perhaps

  simply steadier, and lifts his hands over Cassiel’s body.

  His

  voice begins low, resonant, the sort of tone that slips beneath the

  ribs more than it enters the ears.

  “Absolute,

  Unbroken Father… Shepherd of the righteous… Judge of all that

  treads this earth…”

  The

  air warms around them. Or maybe it only feels that way.

  “We

  return to You one forged in Your image,” Benedan continues. “One

  who bore Your Word as shield and sword. Cassiel, Priest of the

  Crimson Mantle. Loyal unto his last breath, steadfast in duty,

  unflinching before the wicked.”

  The

  priestesses bow deeper.

  Holy

  water drips from their cloths like falling tears.

  “We

  commend him to Your hand,” Benedan says, lowering his arms, “that

  he may rise among Your host in the sky and stand sentinel over the

  faithful. Grant him rest. Grant him peace. Grant him glory.”

  A

  final breath. A final bow of his head.

  “And

  grant us clarity,” Benedan murmurs, quieter now. “For we who

  remain walk in shadow. Illuminate the path before Your chosen

  warrior… lest he falter.”

  He

  ends the prayer with the sign of the Absolute, two fingers pressed

  first to brow, then lips, then heart. When his hand falls, he places

  it firmly on Absjorn’s pauldron. The contact is grounding. Heavy.

  Commanding.

  “Absjorn,”

  Benedan says softly, “what of your forces?”

  Absjorn

  stares at Cassiel’s still form as though the corpse might yet rise

  to answer for him. His throat works. His jaw trembles once before

  locking into place.

  “They

  killed them,” he says, voice hollow. “All of them. Every last

  one.” He swallows. His teeth grind. “My soldiers. All two

  hundred. The horses. Cassiel’s Titansteed. And the four Vardengard

  I brought with me.” His breath hitches, not in grief, no, not

  anymore, but in rage sharpening itself against bone.

  Benedan’s

  fingers tighten on his shoulder. “Then this,” he says gently,

  almost soothingly, “is the Absolute’s Will.”

  Absjorn

  lifts his gaze at that. His eyes burn red, fevered, desperate for

  some meaning that doesn’t feel like madness.

  Benedan

  continues. “He tests you, Captain. As He tested every great warrior

  before you. You are meant to be His hammer of judgment, His chosen

  instrument of wrath upon the faithless.” His voice lowers, but it

  grows no less intense. “A warrior is not forged in ease. He is

  tempered by fire. By failure. By loss. The Absolute strips away the

  weak to strengthen the worthy. And you, sole survivor, are the proof

  of His intent.”

  Absjorn’s

  breath steadies. But it steadies like a blade drawn from a sheath.

  Benedan

  turns slightly, surveying the priestesses as they continue cleansing

  Cassiel’s broken armor. “We will gather the rest of our forces,”

  he says. “We will plan a better strike against the Invictans, once

  we deal with the eldiravan hunters marching toward our encampment.”

  Absjorn

  nods slowly, the motion stiff, mechanical. “Yes… the eldiravan.”

  He clenches his fists. Metal groans. “Let them come.”

  Benedan

  smiles faintly, pride, pity, and faith woven into one expression.

  “You will not face these trials alone, Absjorn. The Absolute

  Himself walks with you. And when the time for judgment comes… you

  will be ready.”

  Something

  in Absjorn’s chest tightens, then ignites. A vindictive light

  glimmers behind his eyes. “Tiberius,” he whispers. “Spartan.

  That damned Rho Voss.”

  His

  hands shake, not with grief, not with doubt, but with the burgeoning

  purity of vengeance.

  “They

  will all answer,” Absjorn says. “They will kneel. And I will

  deliver them to the Absolute myself.”

  Benedan

  bows his head approvingly.

  Absjorn

  and Benedan walk side by side down the aisle, the warm glow of

  candles fading behind them. The church doors loom ahead, heavy and

  dark, letting in thin slashes of cold morning light. Benedan speaks

  as they approach, his voice low but unwavering.

  “I

  will accompany you on the next excursion,” he says. “The Absolute

  has placed me at your side for a reason. I will not remain behind

  while His judgment unfolds.”

  Absjorn

  gives a short, sharp nod. “Your presence will strengthen the men.

  And me.”

  “It

  is meant to,” Benedan answers simply.

  They

  push open the doors.

  The

  cold hits immediately, biting, sharp, merciless. But it’s the noise

  that gives them pause. Chatter. Murmurs. Gasps. The gathered Venators

  scatter backward in a rough semicircle around the front gate, fear

  and confusion rippling through their ranks.

  A

  Lieutenant forces his way through the crowd, breath misting, helmet

  tucked under his arm. He salutes quickly, face pale.

  “Fathers,

  there’s… there’s been a discovery.” He gestures toward the

  gate with a stiff hand. “A body. Left at the entrance.”

  Absjorn

  exchanges a look with Benedan.

  They

  approach. The crowd parts like a wound opening.

  Two

  Venators kneel in the snow, frozen mid-step. One holds the dead man

  by the shoulders, the other by the legs. They were in the process of

  lifting him, carefully, gently, but stopped the instant they saw

  their Captain and Priest.

  Between

  them lies the Inquisitor. Or what remains of him.

  His

  body is limp, too limp, boneless in its collapse. His limbs sag like

  heavy cloth, bones shattered into dust beneath the skin. Frost clings

  to him, eyelashes iced white, lips cracked and blue, blood frozen in

  jagged rivulets along his armor. His chest is caved inward. His

  throat… wrong. Torn. Something carved into his cheek, letters

  warped by frostbite.

  Absjorn’s

  jaw locks.

  Benedan

  takes in the sight with a slow, reverent breath. Not horrified. Not

  shaken. But solemn, knowing.

  “A

  message,” he murmurs. “The Invictans send us an omen.”

  The

  priestesses’ chanting from the church behind them fades into the

  cold silence.

  Benedan

  crouches slightly, examining the corpse without touching it. “This

  man was interrogated. Broken. Then delivered here with purpose.”

  His gaze lifts to the distant treeline. “Their Vardengard must be

  near. Watching. Waiting.”

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  A

  cold wind sweeps across the encampment.

  Absjorn

  straightens to his full height, eyes narrowing.

  “Let

  them watch,” he growls. “Let them listen.”

  He

  steps forward until he looms over the corpse, breath steaming in

  harsh bursts.

  “They

  think fear will soften us.” A bitter, humorless laugh escapes him.

  “They do not understand what they’ve made.”

  Benedan

  rises beside him, placing a steadying hand on Absjorn’s back, not

  to calm him, but to anchor him.

  “They

  understand little of the Absolute’s chosen,” Benedan says. “This

  message is not warning.” His eyes harden. “It is invitation.”

  Absjorn

  looks toward the mountains.

  Toward

  the unseen eyes hidden in the snow.

  And

  smiles.

  A

  slow, murderous smile.

  “Then

  let us answer.”

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss’ Position – Continuous

  Spartan

  trudges through the deep snow, each step a crunching, hollow thud

  against the frozen mountainside. The wind howls like some old, dying

  beast, whipping snow across the path in frantic curls. She walks a

  few paces ahead of Rho Voss, who follows in steady silence, the cold

  clinging to their Olympian armor in a sheen of frost.

  Her

  voice cuts through the storm.

  “I

  wonder what those pious little Venators will think,” she says,

  casual, conversational, almost amused. “Finding their precious

  Inquisitor dropped at their doorstep like butcher scraps.”

  Rho

  Voss gives a quiet grunt of agreement behind his helm.

  Spartan

  kicks through a ridge of snow, breath a cloud. “Samayel probably

  enjoyed delivering it. Bastard always liked a little theatrics.” A

  pause. “Absjorn won’t take it lightly.”

  The

  mountain wind howls again. She tilts her head, tone dropping darker.

  “He’ll come at us harder. More desperate. More righteous. Next

  time, we don’t just survive him.” Her teeth bare in a grin that’s

  anything but friendly. “We kill him properly.”

  Rho

  Voss nods once, slow, deliberate, approving.

  They

  continue a few more steps before Spartan suddenly halts. She angles

  her head toward the stone face on their right. There, half buried in

  drifted snow, lies a narrow, shadowed opening in the mountainside.

  Wide enough for a man in armor. Even Olympian armor.

  She

  perks up instantly.

  “Well,

  look at that,” she murmurs.

  She

  approaches, brushing snow aside with a gauntleted hand. A small

  cavern mouth yawns back at her, dark, quiet, untouched by the storm.

  She

  turns sharply, energized, and rushes back to Rho Voss.

  Before

  he can react, she grabs his hand, her armored fingers clamping around

  his with a sudden, eager pull.

  “Come

  on,” she says, excitement bubbling into her voice.

  And

  without waiting for his answer, Spartan drags the massive Vardengard

  into the cavern’s shadowed throat, snow crunching underfoot, the

  wind swallowed behind them.

  Spartan

  and Rho Voss’ Position – Some Time Later

  The

  cave is quiet now. Only their breathing fills the stillness, slow,

  warm, human breaths rising in faint clouds against the cold air.

  Their Olympian armor sits abandoned against the far wall like two

  empty metal giants, hulking and silent in the gloom. Rho Voss and

  Spartan lie together on the spread cloaks beneath them, skin still

  flushed from heat, the air around their bodies warm enough to chase

  back the cavern chill.

  Spartan

  straddles Rho’s waist, her palms spread across the broad plane of

  his chest, his warmth seeping into her fingers. Their sweat cools

  slowly on their skin, but the faint, satisfied smiles on both their

  faces linger like an afterglow.

  Rho’s

  hand rests on her hip, thumb tracing lazy circles along the bone,

  small motions that look almost reverent coming from a killer his

  size. His eyes stay fixed on her, soft in a way they never are on the

  battlefield, never are in camp. Only here.

  Spartan

  leans down, hair falling like a curtain around them, and presses a

  slow kiss to the line of his jaw. His stubble rasps against her lips,

  and she brushes her hair back with a soft huff of breath.

  A

  giggle escapes her, quiet, warm, rare. “You were so afraid of the

  cold,” she teases, voice a low whisper against his throat.

  Rho

  Voss huffs a laugh, deep and quiet. He lifts a hand to her head,

  fingers threading into her long black hair, tugging gently until she

  meets his gaze.

  His

  voice, rough from disuse, rumbles out. “Not so cold anymore.”

  She

  snorts, biting back another laugh. “No, it isn’t,” she agrees,

  settling against him.

  For

  a moment they just lie there, skin to skin, breath to breath, the

  storm muffled outside the cave while the last of their shared heat

  clings to them.

  Then

  Spartan stretches, arms lifting lazily above her head, back arching

  with a satisfied groan.

  “Gods,”

  she mutters with a grin, “I’m glad we finally got the chance.

  I’ve been dying for it for weeks.”

  Rho

  Voss actually laughs, a quiet, rumbling, genuine sound.

  Spartan

  joins him, their laughter echoing softly through the cavern, warm and

  human in a world that rarely allows either.

  Spartan

  lets out a long, sorrowful sigh, the kind that seems to scrape out of

  her ribs on its way up. “As much as I wish we could stay like

  this,” she murmurs, “there’s a war waiting for us.”

  She

  shifts, slowly, reluctantly, sliding off Rho’s body. His fingers

  tighten on her hip for a heartbeat, an instinctive protest, before

  she slips free. Rho rolls onto his side as she rises, propping

  himself on an elbow, cheek resting against his knuckles. He watches

  her cross the stone floor toward the pile of her clothes. For a

  moment, he lets himself imagine a world where this isn’t stolen

  time, where life can be as simple as her warmth and his breath.

  Life

  is better when they’re like this. It’s a cruel truth.

  Spartan

  pulls on her underlayers with practiced motions, even if each one

  feels like it weighs more than armor. Rho finally pushes himself up

  and stands, stretching the ache from his spine before he begins

  gathering his own clothes.

  As

  she fastens her boots, Spartan breaks the silence.

  “I’ve

  been thinking,” she says, not looking at him yet. “We wait until

  Absjorn’s army hits the Eldiravan line. Let them chew on each

  other. Then we sweep in and ambush from the flank. If we time it

  right, we might get a chance to put Absjorn down. Or at least cripple

  his advance.”

  Rho

  pauses mid-buckle, jaw tightening. His seldom-used voice is gravel

  when he answers. “Master told us not to engage Absjorn without

  him.”

  Spartan

  shrugs, an almost careless motion, though the set of her jaw betrays

  the edge beneath. She zips her jacket up to her throat. “Master is

  overprotective. He thinks his presence changes everything.” She

  huffs quietly, shaking her head. “I’m not hunting Absjorn. Not

  unless the opportunity’s perfect. If we can’t kill him, then

  there’s no reason to waste blood trying.”

  She

  pulls her jacket on and zips it up, clasping each button.

  Spartan

  tightens the last buckle on her boots and steps past Rho toward her

  waiting armor, cold, towering, and lifeless without them inside it.

  But she barely gets two steps before his hand closes around her arm.

  Firm. Warm. Unwilling.

  He

  pulls her back, and before she can smirk or tease, he claims one last

  kiss, slow, hungry, and final in the way only warriors taste

  finality.

  It

  softens her. She smiles up at him, breath misting between them.

  She

  pulls away, but she does it gently, her fingers drifting down the

  length of his sleeve… brushing his palm… sliding along his

  fingers until they slip apart. Only then does she turn back to the

  dark shell of her Olympian armor. She climbs inside, the plates

  sealing around her like a coffin rediscovering its occupant. She

  tucks her helmet under her arm, its visor catching the faint blue

  glow of the cave.

  Behind

  her, Rho draws his face mask up over his nose, hood shadowing his

  eyes. He finishes the last ties and straps with efficient motions

  before stepping into his own armor. The machine takes him back in

  with a hiss of pneumatics and a low hum, as if recognizing him.

  Spartan

  snatches up their cloaks, shaking the dust from them. She tosses one

  to Rho, and he drapes it over his pauldrons in a dark sweep of

  fabric. The other she swings over herself; the clasp snaps shut at

  her collarbone with a metallic click.

  Together,

  they walk toward the mouth of the cave, footfalls echoing, armor

  heavy, breaths controlled.

  The

  moment they step outside, the world changes.

  The

  wind hits like a blade. The cold is merciless, ancient, and uncaring,

  gnawing at steel and flesh alike. The Nirnan Mountains stretch in

  every direction, white, jagged, and endless. Snow whips sideways in

  violent sheets, erasing the horizon. Nothing but ice, death, and the

  promise of war. Side by side, they descend back into the frozen hell

  awaiting them.

  Samayel’s

  Position – Sometime Later

  Samayel

  crouches on the knife-edge of the ridge, his silhouette nothing more

  than a jagged shadow against the storm-churned sky. Below him, the

  world is on fire.

  The

  Venators have slammed into the eldiravan like a wave of steel and

  devotion and shattered on impact. The mountainside is a battlefield

  carved by blood and song. Gunfire rattles the air, explosions flash

  in brief suns, and beneath it all, the hymns rise.

  Their

  hymns always rise.

  A

  few meters behind him, Red Baron and Arturo tend a tiny fire, its

  glow swallowed by the snow before it can even warm the air. Liam sits

  on the other side of it, cleaning frost from the sensor of his rifle.

  But

  it’s the singing that pulls Red Baron and Arturo to their feet.

  Quietly,

  without needing to speak, the two trudge across the crunchy ice and

  settle on either side of Samayel, men drawn by the ghost of

  familiarity.

  “Those

  songs…” Red Baron murmurs, brows furrowed beneath his

  frost-rimmed goggles. “It’s Latin, yeah? Don’t know what

  they’re saying, not really, but...” He pauses as the melody

  shifts, echoing across the cliffs. “I swear I’ve heard that one

  before.”

  Arturo

  snorts, pulling his scarf tighter around his nose. “We all have.

  Church stuff. My mother dragged me to Mass enough times. That one

  down there,” He points to a section of the Venator line where the

  hymn rises stronger, louder, desperate. “I don’t know the words,

  but the tune? Aeterna something.”

  “Aeterna

  Lux,” Samayel says without looking at them.

  The

  two men blink.

  Samayel’s

  voice is calm, almost bored, as he watches Venators fall under

  serrated eldiravan spears, banners dipping, blood misting in the air.

  “They’re begging their God to make them ‘a lantern in the night

  of war.’” A pause. “A foolish request. They die just the same.”

  Below,

  the eldiravan raise their own song, low, harmonic, resonant. Not

  hymns but weapons. Their voices ripple through the stone itself. The

  terrain shifts subtly under the Venators’ boots; a ridge bulges, a

  slope angles, an avalanche pauses in mid-threat as if held by

  invisible hands. Eldiravan Veyr’Kael walk untouched through gunfire

  as if wrapped in wind-woven shields.

  Red

  Baron shivers, not from the cold. “Christ…”

  Arturo

  swallows. “Their songs do… that?”

  Samayel

  finally glances at them, amusement curling faintly at his lip. “Yours

  lift spirits. Theirs bend reality.”

  Another

  blast shakes the mountainside. A Venator choir belts out a verse so

  powerfully that even the wind hesitates; yet their line buckles all

  the same.

  Red

  Baron huffs an incredulous, shaky laugh. “And you can just…

  translate that stuff?”

  “I

  know all their hymns,” Samayel replies, gaze dropping back to the

  carnage. “Every verse they sing. Every prayer they choke on. Every

  plea they offer before dying.”

  He

  tilts his head as the melody shifts again.

  “If

  you wish, I can tell you the next line as well.”

  Below,

  a Venator standard falls.

  Arturo

  and Red Baron exchange a look, uneasy, fascinated.

  Samayel’s

  grin widens by a fraction. “Curiosity,”

  he murmurs, “is a dangerous appetite in a war like this.”

  And

  still, the hymns rise.

  Before

  Red Baron or Arturo can muster a reply, a voice cuts clean through

  the cold.

  “Curiosity

  isn’t dangerous,” Spartan says from behind them, “Ignorance

  is.”

  Both

  Federalists jolt so violently they nearly fall off the ridge. Red

  Baron lets out a strangled noise; Arturo’s hand flies to his

  sidearm before he realizes who stands there.

  Samayel

  doesn’t even flinch. Of course he doesn’t. He only exhales a

  short, smug breath through his nose.

  Her

  visor tilts down toward the two Federalists. She stares at them,

  silent, unblinking, for a cold, heavy second. The kind of second that

  feels like a blade suspended above a throat.

  Red

  Baron swallows audibly. Arturo tries not to.

  Then

  Spartan’s voice softens into a smirk beneath the helmet. “Feds

  are cute when they’re startled.”

  Red

  Baron’s blush hits instantly. Arturo’s hits just as fast, but his

  comes with a stuttered “…M-ma’am?”

  Samayel

  laughs, an easy, unbothered sound, and reaches out to punch Spartan’s

  pauldron. The impact rings softly off her armor.

  “Look

  at that,” he says, grinning wide. “You’ve terrified them.”

  Spartan

  shrugs, amused. “If they’re that jumpy, they shouldn’t be up

  here.”

  Below

  them, the battle rages, hymns, screams, and war-songs clashing like

  storms. The wind howls through the ridge, carrying the scent of blood

  and ozone.

  Samayel

  snorts at Spartan’s jab toward the Federalists, then tilts his

  head. “So what’s the plan, then?”

  Spartan

  doesn’t answer right away. She watches the battlefield instead, the

  Venators clashing with the Eldiravan, hymns meeting war-songs, faith

  crashing against fury. She lifts a hand, waving his question away

  like smoke.

  “Master

  wants us to watch,” she says. “Observe. Report.” A low breath.

  “He doesn’t want us interfering yet.”

  Arturo

  wheels toward her, incredulous. “But they’re humans too!” he

  blurts. “Those Venators, they’re people! Shouldn’t we be

  helping them? Fighting each other is pointless. It’ll just… it’ll

  just wipe us all out!”

  Spartan

  laughs, sharp, amused, with no warmth in it. She drops to a knee

  beside him, resting one armored hand on the other knee as she leans

  forward. “If things were different,” she says, “I’d already

  be down there painting the snow red. But Venators don’t listen.

  They don’t bend. They don’t reason. To them, everything outside

  their scripture is heresy.”

  Arturo

  doesn’t back down. His brows draw tight. “Then someone just needs

  to explain it to them. Make them see we’re all the same. We’re

  all human!”

  Samayel

  answers before Spartan can. “We’re not,” he says simply.

  “Praevectus are not human. And Vardengard…” He taps his own

  chest, “we are something else entirely.”

  Arturo

  shakes his head stubbornly. “You look human. All of you.

  Just, bigger, stronger, sure, but still human.”

  Spartan

  rises with a small grunt of effort, brushing snow from her greave.

  She pats Arturo’s shoulder, gentle, but still enough force to rock

  him a little.

  She

  starts walking back toward the campfire where Rho Voss and Liam

  linger, but she speaks over her shoulder, voice dropping into

  something older. Heavier. “Sergeant,” she says, “you’re

  confusing shape for substance.” Her

  helm turns just enough that he sees the faint glow of her visor. “Two

  creatures may share a face and still be nothing alike. Humanity isn’t

  bone or blood. It’s choice. It’s what you do when the

  world turns to ash.” A beat. Snow drifting around her. “The

  Venators chose devotion over mercy. They chose purity over peace. And

  we…” she taps her chestplate, “we were made to be weapons.”

  She

  turns fully back toward the fire. “Don’t mistake resemblance for

  kinship.”

  Then

  she goes to rejoin Rho Voss and Liam, leaving Arturo standing there

  with the cold wind biting at his cheeks and something colder twisting

  inside his chest.

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