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Now reading: Chapter 426: The Mirror That can Communicate part four from I Became an Ant Lord, So I Built a Hive Full of Beauties, a Fantasy novel by NFStories.

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"Point one: approach. No drums. Signals by cord and hand only. Oru — harriers at ten and thirty paces off the flanks. Not farther. I want the veil on our ribs, not playing ghost stories."

Oru smiled with half a mouth. "I have n who can walk under a hawk and make the hawk feel foolish. They’ll stay leashed." Then, with a lazy flick of fingers toward the mountain, "Crown or no crown, throats still close when squeezed."

"Point two: ground," Mardek continued. "Skall lays reed-mat causeways across soft backs of dunes. Last span gets yanked when the rear steps off. If the sand caves, we don’t."

Skall held up a spade; iron winked. "Causeways every hundred paces on the worst bellies; teeth every third mat," he said. "If the white hair charges blind, the floor eats him."

Oru snorted lightly. "If he charges blind, I’ll sell tickets."

"Point three: contact," Mardek said. "Yavri, wall up in a shallow wedge — roofed, mouths shut. If he roars —and he will— shields stay up. No brave chins. Nets forward teams ready to step through after the sound, not before."

Skall scratched the salt. "That crown sound — the knee-breaker. Can’t spare that."

"I can," Oru said, pleased. "Iron-dust nets. Old trick. The salt in the knots turns roar to mud. Throw low so he has to breathe it."

Mardek nodded once. "Double-salt your knots," he told the net teams. "If it tastes like old blood and rust when you lick it, it’s right."

"Point four: assault," he finished. "One face, one shove. No prongs. We hit the desert door, not the stone spine."

Skall, buoyant in his own steadiness, rolled his neck. "A hill with doors is a courtesy," he said. "Doors are for opening or breaking."

Oru, looser, let his shoulders drift. "And if the white hair steps out waving that pretty crown," he purred, "I’ll drift his shadow away from his feet. He can’t stand if he doesn’t know where to put them."

Mardek ignored the easy talk. "He is not a trick," he said, blunt. "As I told you before, He walked through a hundred of mine like wheat. He has a thousand four-stars under him now —hatched from nowhere— and he will co out if we give him the wrong scent. We bait pride, not blood. We stay one thing. If we split, we die."

Yavri’s eyes stayed on the horizon, reading distances no one else could see. "Contingencies," she said. "He dives into our nose and the crown cracks a rank — Skall’s third row steps under and props the roof. Oru fogs his flanks with dust, not n. If our pace breaks, we halt and reset. No one runs to fill a hole. If the hole becos a trap or we withdraw a dozen steps and take precautions."

Skall grunted. "Withdraw? I didn’t bring that word."

"Bring it now," Yavri said, flat. "The desert loves n who think it loves them back."

Oru twirled a bone ring, lazy as a cat in sunlight. "I’ve bled worse dunes," he said, unconcerned. "If the bird cos low, I’ll give her a song she doesn’t like."

"Do not touch the bird," Yavri snapped, the first ice in her voice. "Blind the ground under her, not her wings. She is bait for fools."

Skall chuckled, unbothered. "Yavri will scold the wind if it blows wrong."

"She keeps us living," Mardek said, and let the admission sit.

"Rations," Yavri continued. "Half-water for the first watch, quarter for the second, half when we form. No fires. Cold grain. If anyone complains they can chew a leather tie."

"Punishnts for peels," Mardek said without blinking. "Water gone. Shoes gone. You keep up barefoot or you stay where you chose to stop."

Oru’s n grin-smiled without teeth; Skall’s n didn’t smile at all.

"Prisoners?" Oru asked idly.

"The white hair lives only if he kneels," Mardek said, the lie tidy. "Everything else that reaches for a blade doesn’t."

"Rewards for soldier?" Yavri asked, not because she cared but because n fought steadier when the end was nad. "We split what we find inside the mountain. Mardek declines rewards and asks throat-right if a throat remains."

Skall shrugged. "Fine. Give iron and a wall that stays stood."

Oru spread his hands. "Give the shadows he drops. I will make a necklace."

Mardek’s jaw worked once. "Give the chance to make him choose between kneeling and breaking," he said. "I’m not here for prizes."

He scored the last marks: reserve cohorts staggered behind Yavri’s roof at ninety-pace intervals; casualty runners assigned by na; cord-signal patterns knotted into bands — pull twice, slide once for "halt," pull thrice for "wall tight," a sharp snap for "net forward." Skall added dead-ground choke points where dunes made bowls; Oru mapped false weak spots — gaps that invited and then collapsed; Yavri placed her captains like nails along the seam.

Oru, buoyed by his own quiet pride, flicked sand from a knuckle. "You worry too much, Mardek. A crown is a hat. A hat is nothing when wind takes it."

Skall snorted. "And a hill is a table. We’ll eat on it."

Mardek let them talk. The itch under his breastbone didn’t leave. He had seen a man with white hair walk through his elite hundred trained soldiers and not even breathe hard until the end. He didn’t intend to et that man alone again.

"Step off at first light," Yavri said, closing the book. "Wall in front, veil at the ribs, floor under the feet. We reach the desert face by late morning. We form once. We push once. By dusk, the stone is quiet or we are."

They moved. Reed mats swung up. Nets ca off carts; salt burned splits in fingers; n tested knots by tongue. Oru’s veil unspooled along the column, staying close. Skall’s spade-n shouldered tools like priests. Yavri’s thousand squared their breath to her raised palm and held it until she dropped the hand.

Mardek walked at the center with his small remnant, palm on the iron ring at the resonant glass as if it were a pulse. He didn’t look back.

"Before the day ends," he said —not loudly, and not for courage— "we stand on his ledge."

No cheer ca. Instead, the answer traveled the only way it matters when n decide to spend themselves: straps tightened by habit, shoulders that didn’t slope, boots that didn’t slow.

A single-prong spear of 3,130 moved into the dune sea, arrogant talk riding the edges, caution seated in the center, and worry like a small knife under one man’s ribs — the only man there who had already learned what it felt like to bleed for underestimating the white hair with the crown.

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