Tiline: TC1853.07.01 (Pre-Dawn)
Location: Observation Point - Ridgeline East of Seven Peaks
One Hour Before the Attack
Lord Marcus Drayton adjusted his viewing scope with the satisfaction of a man about to witness the destruction of everything he despised.
The ridgeline offered a perfect vantage point—three kiloters from Seven Peaks, elevated enough to observe the entire valley while remaining safely beyond any defensive response. He’d positioned his magnetic suspension vehicle in a natural alcove, the formation-dampened hull rendering it invisible to spiritual detection.
Beside him, Lady Whitmore sipped heated wine from a crystal glass, her fur-lined cloak warding against the pre-dawn chill. Lord Ashford stood at a secondary scope, his mining fortune having purchased him a seat at this exclusive viewing party. Lord Corvain checked his tipiece with shipping magnate precision.
Four noble houses. Four Federation collaborators. Four people who had gambled everything on today’s outco.
"The carriers are in position," Corvain confird, lowering his communicator. "Attack comnces at sunrise. Twelve dropships, three hundred sixty soldiers, plus the... special units."
Lady Whitmore’s lips curved with predatory anticipation. "The cyborgs. I still can’t believe the Federation agreed to deploy them."
"They agreed because we made it worth their while," Drayton said, eye pressed to his scope as he watched Seven Peaks’ peaceful walls. Lights were beginning to appear in windows as the settlent stirred toward waking. So innocent. So unsuspecting. "Trade concessions. Intelligence on Imperial military positions. And most importantly—docuntation of today’s events that will discourage any future... entrepreneurial commoners."
"You truly think the Celestial families will approve?" Ashford asked, a tremor of uncertainty in his voice. "This is... rather more aggressive than political maneuvering."
Drayton laughed—the sound of a man who believed himself untouchable. "Our Ascendant patrons assured us this was the only way to preserve stability. The old order is crumbling, Ashford. Commoners learning cultivation? Building sects? Defying the natural hierarchy that’s maintained peace for centuries?" He shook his head. "Soone had to act decisively."
"But inviting the Federation—" Ashford started.
"You think we minor nobles have the clout to arrange sothing like this?" Drayton cut him off with dismissive amusent. "We’re just the face, Ashford. The deniable elents who take the risk in exchange for the rewards. The real power cos from much higher. Much, much higher."
Lady Whitmore nodded, her expression knowing. "The Celestials can’t be seen acting against an Imperial-sanctioned sect directly. But if the Federation happens to attack, and if that attack happens to succeed..." She spread her hands elegantly. "Tragedy. Nothing to do with proper Imperial families."
"And if questions are asked about how the Federation knew exactly when to strike? How they obtained defensive specifications? How they knew the sect leader would be present?" Corvain smiled thinly. "Well. We minor nobles make excellent scapegoats. But our Ascendant protectors have assured us that won’t be necessary. Victory, they say, writes its own history."
Drayton gestured toward the figure crouched twenty ters away, professional recording equipnt trained on the valley below.
Finn rcer. Journalist. Or rather, journalist-for-hire when nobles needed propaganda dressed as news.
The young man had been given very specific instructions: docunt the destruction of Seven Peaks. Capture the fall of the upstart sect that had dared to challenge noble monopolies. Create a cautionary tale that would remind every commoner in the Empire of their proper place.
What Finn hadn’t been told was that the footage would be edited, censored, and distributed through noble-controlled channels to maximize the terror while minimizing any... inconvenient details.
Like the cyborgs.
Like the Federation involvent.
Like the Celestial puppeteers pulling strings from the shadows.
***
Finn rcer kept his expression professionally neutral as he checked focus settings on his primary recording crystal.
Inside, he was praying.
Please let them survive. Please let those walls hold. Please let that young woman—that impossible cultivator who taught commoners like they mattered—please let her win.
He’d taken this job because refusing ant his family’s debts being called in imdiately. His mother’s dicine. His sister’s apprenticeship. Everything the rcer family had scraped together for three generations, leverage in noble hands.
But he’d also taken it because he’d heard the rumors. A sect that accepted anyone with talent. A leader who shared cultivation knowledge freely. A place where birth didn’t determine worth.
If such a place could exist—if it could survive—maybe the Empire wasn’t as hopeless as he’d always believed.
His recording equipnt captured everything. The nobles’ whispered conversations. Their gleeful anticipation. Their casual references to "special units" and "Federation arrangents." Their terrifying admissions about Ascendant patrons and power from "much higher."
Finn recorded it all. Every incriminating word. Every damning admission.
Just in case.
***
The first explosions ca with the sunrise.
Through his scope, Drayton watched Federation dropships descend on Seven Peaks like tal raptors. Beautiful. Efficient. Overwhelming force against peasant pretensions.
"It begins," Lady Whitmore breathed, leaning forward with predatory anticipation. "Finally, the natural order will be—"
The first dropship exploded.
Drayton blinked. Adjusted his scope. Surely he’d seen wrong—
A second dropship beca a fireball, debris raining into the forest below. Then a third.
"What—" Corvain’s voice cracked. "What are those things?"
Sleek shapes filled the sky above Seven Peaks—aerial units moving with impossible coordination, weapons firing with precision that turned military aircraft into coffins. Hunter-drones, Drayton’s intelligence had called them. But the reports had described prototypes. Experintal technology. Not... not this.
Not fifty operational units conducting systematic slaughter of Federation air assets.
"The ground forces," Ashford said urgently. "The ground forces will—"
The ground forces were dying.
Through magnified viewing, they watched soldiers enter the forest surrounding Seven Peaks. Professional. Disciplined. Moving in tactical formation toward their objective.
The forest ate them.
Vines erupted from nowhere, dragging armored figures underground. Explosions of biological matter shredded squad formations. Soldiers who’d been advancing one mont simply... vanished the next, consud by vegetation that moved with predatory intelligence.
"That’s not possible," Lady Whitmore whispered, wine glass trembling in her grip. "Plants don’t... plants can’t..."
"The wall cannons," Corvain reported, voice hollow. "Look at the southern approach."
The southern assault team was being annihilated. Projectiles moving too fast to track turned soldiers into red mist with chanical precision. Bodies fell in waves. Screams carried faintly across the distance.
In under five minutes, two hundred soldiers were dead.
Dead.
"The cyborgs," Ashford said desperately. "Deploy the cyborgs. That’s what they’re for—overwhelming any cultivation-based defense—"
The cyborgs deployed. tal nightmares faster than horses, stronger than siege engines. They carved through the plant defenses. Reached the walls. Started climbing.
"Yes," Lady Whitmore hissed. "Yes, tear it down—"
A figure appeared on the wall.
Even at three kiloters, Drayton recognized her. The young woman from the rumors. Dark hair whipping in the wind. Moving with speed that made the cyborgs look sluggish.
She engaged four of the chanical nightmares simultaneously.
And dismantled them with her bare hands.
"This is impossible," Drayton snarled, watching cyborg after cyborg fall across the periter. "The cyborgs were supposed to be unstoppable—our patrons assured us—"
His communicator crackled. Federation command frequency, encrypted but accessible to collaborators.
"Protheus Protocol authorized. Deploying primary asset."
"What’s Protheus Protocol?" Ashford demanded.
Drayton’s face went pale. "I don’t know. That wasn’t in any briefing. Our Ascendant contacts never ntioned—"
Sothing new appeared on the horizon.
Sothing massive.
***
Finn watched it erge from behind the eastern mountains with his heart stopping in his chest.
A cha.
But calling it that felt inadequate—like calling a hurricane "wind" or calling the sun "warm."
Fifty ters of liquid-black tal that seed to drink the morning light. Armor plating that rippled with iridescent patterns, suggesting technology beyond anything the Federation had publicly acknowledged. Joints that moved with organic fluidity rather than chanical precision. A cockpit module where the head should be, glowing with baleful crimson light like an eye awakened from ancient sleep.
It walked toward Seven Peaks with ground-shaking steps, each footfall an earthquake that Finn felt through the stone beneath his feet even at three kiloters’ distance.
But it was the weapon that made him understand true fear.
In the cha’s right hand, energy coalesced—not plasma, not lightning, sothing else entirely. A blade of pure light extending fifteen ters from the tal fist, humming with frequencies that made Finn’s teeth ache. The energy sword cast shadows that moved wrong, bending away from the blade as if reality itself flinched from its edge.
This wasn’t Federation technology.
This was sothing older. Sothing wrong. Sothing that whispered of powers humanity shouldn’t possess.
***
On the ridgeline, the nobles’ celebration had curdled into horror.
"That wasn’t part of the arrangent," Corvain whispered, his shipping magnate composure shattered. "We agreed to cyborgs. Soldiers. Limited engagent. Not... not that."
"They lied to us," Lady Whitmore said, wine glass slipping from nerveless fingers to shatter on stone. "They’re not trying to capture anymore. They’re making a statent."
"Our patrons never ntioned anything like this," Ashford added, his voice climbing toward panic. "The Ascendants assured us this would be clean. Surgical. A lesson, not a massacre."
The cha raised its energy sword, and even at this distance, the light was blinding—a column of impossible radiance that turned the morning sky white.
"We need to leave," Drayton said. "Now. Before anyone connects us to—"
The cha spoke.
Not through speakers. Through reality itself. A voice that bypassed ears and spoke directly to minds, carrying across kiloters with perfect clarity.
"SURRENDER THE DINSIONAL ANCHOR DESIGNATED ’ELIAN’ OR FACE ANNIHILATION. YOU HAVE THIRTY SECONDS TO COMPLY."
The voice was wrong. chanical and organic blended together. Human words filtered through sothing that had never been human.
Drayton was already running toward his vehicle. "Go! Go now!"
The nobles fled in blind panic—magnetic suspension vehicles screaming to life, engines whining as they accelerated away from a disaster that had spiraled beyond their control or comprehension.
They didn’t look back.
They didn’t think about the journalist.
***
Back on the ridgeline, Finn rcer stood alone with his recording equipnt still running.
He should run. Should flee like the nobles. Should put as much distance as possible between himself and whatever was about to happen.
Instead, he adjusted his equipnt for optimal capture of what was about to unfold.
If he was going to die, he was going to die docunting the truth.
His communicator found the encrypted frequency he’d morized years ago.
"Dex? Are you receiving?"
"Every fra, brother." His friend’s voice crackled through the connection. "Finn, what is that thing? The readings I’m getting—"
"Keep recording. Keep everything. And when I give the signal—"
"Empire-wide broadcast. Every channel I can crack. I know." A pause. "Finn... you should run."
"Soone has to witness this."
On the walls of Seven Peaks, a small figure stepped forward to face the colossus.
Finn watched Raven, Sect Leader of the Luminous Dawn, look up at a fifty-ter war machine ard with weapons that could level cities.
And she smiled.
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