ログインThe smoke thickened as we pushed south.At first it lingered like a warning—thin, uncertain, easy to dismiss.Then it became a trail.Then a presence.By the time the first ridge broke open ahead of us, it was everywhere.Jaron slowed, raising a hand. The group behind us stopped instantly.No one spoke.We didn’t need to.I moved up beside him, crouching low as we approached the crest.“Wind’s wrong,” he murmured.“It’s shifting,” I said. “Carrying it uphill.”“Which means whatever’s burning…”“Is still burning.”We reached the top.And saw it.The valley below—one of the southern supply corridors—was scarred.Not destroyed entirely.But dismantled.Precision.The storage outpost had been split open, not collapsed. Timber walls cut clean rather than smashed. Supply crates broken—not looted, not fully burned—just ruined.Made unusable.Jaron exhaled slowly.“…Yeah. That tracks.”My eyes moved past the structures.To the bodies.Not many.That was the first thing that stood out.A norma
We didn’t speak much on the way back.Not because there was nothing to say—But because there was too much.The forest had shifted again.Not physically.But perceptibly.Every snapped twig, every rustle of leaves, every shadow between trees now carried weight. Not immediate danger—no one was following us—but awareness.We had crossed a line.And whatever came next would not be small.Jaron walked slightly ahead this time, his usual loose posture replaced with something more deliberate.“You’re thinking five steps ahead again,” he said without looking back.“Trying to.”“And?”“And I don’t like any of the outcomes.”He huffed quietly.“Good. Means you’re being realistic.”We pushed through a stretch of dense undergrowth before the terrain finally began to rise toward the fortress ridge.From here, we could just barely see the outer watchtowers in the distance.Home.For now.“They wanted us to hear that,” Jaron said after a while.“Yes.”“The external threat.”“Yes.”He glanced over h
The ravine swallowed sound.Water thundered below, churning white against jagged stone, mist rising in cold bursts that clung to the air. It blurred distance, softened edges, made everything feel closer than it should have been.Or farther.Hard to tell which.Jaron shifted beside me, weight balanced, gaze sweeping across the figures lining the opposite ridge.“…That’s more than last time.”“Yes,” I said.Behind the silver-pendant figure, at least six silhouettes stood spaced with deliberate precision.Not clustered.Not random.Positioned.“They’re controlling the terrain,” Jaron murmured.“Funneling us,” I added.His lips curved slightly.“Good thing we walked in willingly.”The figure across the ravine tilted their head, as if amused.“You adapted quickly,” they called out, voice carrying cleanly despite the roar of water.Jaron didn’t bother raising his voice.“Occupational hazard.”A faint smile.“But adaptation alone isn’t enough.”“No,” I replied evenly. “But it’s a start.”The
Morning came reluctantly.The storm had burned itself out sometime before dawn, leaving the fortress wrapped in a damp, uneasy stillness. Water dripped steadily from the stone eaves, each drop echoing faintly in the courtyard below.It felt like the aftermath of something unfinished.Because it was.Jaron hadn’t slept.Neither had I.By the time the first light crept over the mountains, the fortress was already awake—guards doubling rotations, messengers moving faster than usual, tension threading through every corridor like a drawn wire.And beneath it all—Expectation.“They let us live.”Jaron stood by the war room window, arms crossed, staring out over the valley.His voice wasn’t confused.It was annoyed.“Yes,” I said.“That’s bothering me.”“It should.”He glanced back at me.“They had the advantage. Surprise, positioning, numbers.”“And still chose not to finish it,” I added.Jaron exhaled sharply.“That’s not mercy.”“No.”“It’s strategy.”“Yes.”Silence stretched.Because we
The storm did not ease.If anything, it grew more violent as the night deepened—wind clawing at the fortress walls, rain striking stone like thrown gravel. The kind of storm that drowned out footsteps.The kind of storm that invited intruders.Jaron and I both felt it before either of us said a word.A shift.Subtle. Almost nothing.But wrong.We had just reached the upper corridor when Jaron’s hand caught my arm.“Did you hear that?”I nodded once.Not a sound, exactly.The absence of one.The guards stationed at the eastern stairwell should have rotated by now.They hadn’t.Jaron’s voice dropped to a whisper.“Stay here.”“No.”His jaw tightened slightly, but he didn’t argue. He knew better.We moved together, silent despite the stone beneath our boots.The closer we got, the clearer it became.Too quiet.No armor shifting. No low murmured conversation.Nothing.Jaron reached the corner first and leaned just enough to look.Then he froze.Not fear.Calculation.That was worse.“What
Night settled heavily over the ridge fortress, but sleep never truly reached it.Torches burned low along the stone corridors, casting wavering shadows that made the walls seem to breathe. Guards rotated in quiet patterns, their steps soft but alert.Jaron and I didn’t bother returning to our chambers.Instead, we claimed the war room.Maps covered the central table—territories, supply routes, old battle markers from conflicts that had ended years ago but still whispered lessons if you knew where to look.Jaron leaned over the map of the northern valleys.“If someone pushed Varik into this,” he said, tapping a ridge line with a finger, “they either promised him protection… or convinced him they were stronger than the consequences.”“Or both,” I replied.He glanced at me.“You’re thinking bigger than a rogue Alpha, aren’t you?”“Yes.”Because something about the entire scheme had bothered me since the recruits first confessed.Livestock attacks were crude.Framing Iron Vale was clever,
The evening air wrapped around us as we stepped beyond the sliding glass doors of the hospital. The sky was painted in amber and rose, the last light of day reflecting off the tall windows behind us. Kahlia inhaled deeply, as if only now allowing herself to breathe fully.I didn’t let go of her han
The courtyard path curved gently toward the hospital’s side garden, a space I had never paid much attention to before. Kahlia led the way with a quiet confidence, her hand still resting lightly in mine. I matched her stride, careful to mirror her pace, as if synchronizing our steps could somehow ma
The sun hadn’t fully risen when I woke. Its pale fingers slipped through the blinds, painting stripes of gold across the floor. My body felt light, almost weightless, and for a fleeting moment I forgot the past months, the fractures, the pain, the long, grueling therapy sessions. I blinked, stretch
The wind whipped against the hospital windows as dusk settled into bruised purple and gray. From the upper floor, I watched the road that led to the old stone clearing, imagining the scene there, the standing stones, etched with the weight of generations, neutral ground for negotiations and threats







