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When the stretcher turned, the old woman at Vorak’s side spoke without looking at Kai. "Yavri?" she said.
"I hear," ca the answer from the shade under the lintel.
Vorak’s helt turned toward the voice. He did not try to step the distance with his eyes. "You sit," he said. "Good. I would be angry if you made angrier."
"I sit," Yavri said. "A voice told to. A crown or a king will tell when to stand."
Vorak’s gauntlet flexed once in a way that told the old woman what to write later in a book. He lowered his hand and did the only graceful thing left: he began to go.
"General," Kai said.
Vorak stopped.
"Tomorrow," Kai said, "I will give you an answer about Yavri’s long sitting. The answer will not be ’walk now.’ It will be ’wait until a royal arrives’ or it will be ’send a royal to speak with where stone listens for truth.’ Choose which story you prefer to carry back."
"Generals tell themselves comforting fables," Vorak said. "I prefer ledgers." He pointed a gauntlet at Kai’s chest. "You say ’tomorrow,’ so I let tonight live. If I sll a trick by dawn, I cut the trick’s hands off."
"Cut your own if you need practice," Thea muttered from the shade, too low for anyone but the people under the lintel to hear. Luna touched her wrist and the words found a place to sit down and behave.
Vorak signaled without looking like a signal. The front of his army uncoiled, closed ranks around the stretcher teams, and flowed backward in a slow, patient retreat that never showed its back completely. In monts the space between stone and army had refilled with heat and the small dust a day makes for its own amusent.
Kai waited until the last causeway span ca up. He didn’t lift the crown. He didn’t need to. He planted the spear again and turned, and the mountain behind him breathed out the breath it had been holding while two n explained math to each other out loud.
They did not cheer. Cheer is for problems that will not co back. But the sound that rose as he walked under the lintel and up the first ledge was honest: water being set down, a shoulder blade that had carried a shield all morning finding a better angle, a forge bellows that rembered it was allowed to feed small fires again.
Mia’s eyes found his first and took a long, quiet drink. "You gave him courtesy," she said.
"I gave him what I could afford," Kai said. "We have a night of it to make use of."
Silvershadow slipped in on the side of his vision the way conscience does. "Walls are set," he murmured. "Runners at the east and south humps. Wolf refuses to admit the beetle is a problem and, therefore, the beetle is not a problem."
Luna glanced at Yavri and then at Kai. "What answer tomorrow?" she asked.
"The one Mia bought with a childhood I wasn’t there for," Kai said. "Yavri sat until a royal ca. She didn’t join the enemies. That’s sothing..."
Yavri gave him a look that was not gratitude and was not defiance, which is sotis the only way a soldier can say ’understood.’ "My won will drill on your slope," she said, "without weapons and with discipline. If your n fear the sight, we will drill in a fold where eyes can’t find us. I will not let them soften."
"Drill where my people can see you sweat," Kai said. "n behave better around enemies who do not look like problems later."
Thea’s mouth quirked. "Is that a proverb or did you invent it because it sounded like one?"
"It tasted like one," Kai said. "It will do."
A runner slid in, breath even despite the distance. "The west ridge found a dust wall," she reported. "Not a storm. Drills moving. Two thousand sets facing north. The big camp makes squares like a counting board."
"Vorak is good at squares," Yavri said. "He will make you look at one and slip a circle under it."
"I like circles," Azhara said, distracted, sketching a kill-lane with a thumb. "They fit bowls. Bowls fit traps."
Kai put a palm flat on the table and felt the mountain listen. "Orders," he said, and the ledge leaned in.
"Tooth and wall by thirds," he told Vexor, who nodded, already thinking in thirds. "Shadeclaw: your shield owns the mouth. Silvershadow: paint a line twenty paces out where n think the ground belongs to them and change that line after the first moon. Lirien: grips for every hand that blisters by midnight. If tal is short, leather pulls weight."
He turned to Mia. "You will sleep," he said gently. "Then you will write the words that make the rope legal in a court that likes ropes."
She raised a brow. "You think a court that likes ropes will like mine?"
"I think you will make them," he said. "And if they don’t like their own reflections in those words, I think you will hand them a better mirror."
It was the kind of complint that didn’t waste sugar. Mia took it and tucked it away.
"Akayoroi," Kai said softly, "co with ."
They climbed the inner step to the egg chamber where Miryam’s cocoon had been set on a low cradle of silk and polished wood. The warmth in that carved throat of stone was perfect; the hum was a long, soft line that had found the note it liked best and planned to stay in it.
Kai laid a palm on the cocoon. It answered. The two nine-star cores flanking the cradle —once great lanterns— were gray and polite now, almost embarrassed to be stones again. When he lifted them, they crumbled into clean dust that slled faintly like rain that hasn’t happened yet.
"System," he asked inside himself, "speak plainly. Is she safe?"
[Ding! Evolution phase complete. Protective tamorphic shell stable. Secondary rank cycling will proceed iteratively.
Estimated duration: variable.
Hazard index: minimal within controlled environnt.
Recomndation: maintain constant temperature and low vibration exposure. Outco probability: favorable.]
"Plain enough," he murmured. To Akayoroi he said, "She sleeps right. I will make the mountain continue to be a quiet thing."
Akayoroi’s fingers brushed the cocoon with the reverence of a queen touching a crown she did not have to wear to own. "She will be what she wants," she said. "That is all we ever promise our children. The rest is noise."
Kai nodded, stood a mont longer, then let the work pull him sideways.
By late afternoon Vorak’s squares had settled into an ugly kind of beauty. They didn’t brag. They didn’t threaten. They pressed, the way ti pressed — it was constant, patient, counting the breath of n and the distance between als. He set pickets in long, flat chevrons. He put his causeways away because he knew n who could lay them in the ti it takes fear to cross a company. The old woman drank her bitter tea and pretended to count when she was morizing faces.
Toward sunset he sent a second herald, this ti a woman with a voice like cool water and a spine like sothing that had learned to bend the right amount and no more.
"The general accepts the rope and the wells for one night," she said from the three-pace mark. "He requests the bodies be brought to his first rank so his n can see their ends. He offers nothing else. He owes nothing else."
"Done," Kai said. Shadeclaw signaled. The sa careful teams as before stepped out from the mountain’s mouth and carried Skall and Oru and Mardek through a corridor of air that felt like a thin blade. n in the front rank did not spit. They did not weep. They watched. That is what soldiers do when asked to look at what they cannot change.
The herald took a breath like a person preparing to swim. "A personal note," she said, voice a shade lower. "His generalship says: tell the white hair I enjoyed his grammar. I will enjoy his endurance more."
"Tell him," Kai replied, "that I enjoyed his honesty. I will enjoy his surprise less. He should avoid it."
She made a small sound that might, in another world, have been a laugh; here it was a professional acknowledging that two n could speak in whole sentences without wasting adjectives. She left.
Night did what nights do when they are tired: it held the world together while n worked at changing its shape. On the ledges, they ate by twos, slept by thirds, and drilled by the rest. Yavri took her won down into a fold of the slope and ran them through shieldless formations that were all legs and lungs and the discipline you own when steel is taken away. The sound of their marching for once did not make Kai brace for impact; it sounded like a clock.
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