The next day, Lucas decided they needed to see it again with their own eyes.
Not from mory.
Not from assumption.
From reality as it now stood after the first wave of mobilization.
He stepped out with Patrick and Wesley, leaving the others behind to maintain position and readiness. The streets felt different the mont they rged into them, not empty, but noticeably thinner in presence.
Fewer soldiers.
Fewer patrol clusters.
More gaps between rotations.
Wesley noticed it almost imdiately, his gaze sweeping across the street as they walked. "They have moved a good number out," he said under his breath.
Lucas gave a slight nod. "Enough to create space, not enough to create weakness."
Patrick continued ahead of them, his posture straight, his pace steady, carrying himself exactly as an officer should. The armor sat naturally on him now, no longer feeling like disguise but identity. As they passed groups of soldiers, the reactions confird it.
Junior soldiers stepped aside.
So straightened instinctively.
Others gave brief salutes as they crossed his path.
Patrick acknowledged them with small nods, never overplaying it, never lingering, just enough to maintain the illusion of authority without inviting conversation.
Lucas and Wesley followed a step behind, silent, composed, appearing as subordinates accompanying him on routine movent.
No one questioned them.
No one stopped them.
They moved through the outer sections of the palace grounds again, this ti with sharper focus, asuring not just structure, but change.
The castle itself, however, told a different story.
As they drew closer, the contrast beca clear.
The streets had thinned.
The castle had not.
Guard presence at the periter remained firm, rotations tighter, not looser. Entry points were still controlled with the sa precision as before, if not more. If anything, the soldiers stationed there carried a heightened awareness, their movents sharper, their attention less relaxed than the ones out in the streets.
Wesley’s eyes narrowed slightly as he observed. "They pulled from the city, not from here."
Lucas’s gaze remained fixed ahead. "The castle is the core. They will not weaken it."
Patrick slowed slightly as they approached one of the internal access routes, his tone low enough to avoid carrying. "If anything, they reinforced it internally. Less outside pressure ans more focus inward."
Lucas nodded once. "Which ans we cannot rely on reduced numbers to get through."
Wesley exhaled quietly. "We rely on timing."
"And precision," Patrick added.
They continued moving, passing through sections they had already morized, but now viewing them through a different lens. Every guard, every shift, every glance was re-evaluated in the context of what had changed and what had not.
When they reached a point where they could observe one of the internal corridors leading deeper toward the restricted sections, Patrick slowed to a stop, just briefly, as though considering his next direction.
Lucas and Wesley halted behind him naturally.
No one paid them any unusual attention.
Patrick turned slightly, just enough to speak without being obvious. "Nothing has changed where it matters most."
Lucas looked past him, toward the guarded passage.
"Then the plan remains the sa," he said quietly.
Wesley gave a small nod. "No shortcuts."
"No assumptions," Patrick added.
They did not stay longer than necessary.
After a final pass through the area, they turned and began to move back the way they ca, blending once more into the controlled flow of the capital.
The city had shifted.
But the heart of it had not.
And that ant when they finally moved, it would still demand everything they had planned for.
They returned to the house without drawing attention, moving through the streets the sa way they had left them, controlled, unremarkable, unseen in a way that mattered. Once inside, the door was secured and the room settled into silence again, but this ti it was different from before. There was no more waiting in it, no more uncertainty. What remained was clarity.
Lucas stepped forward and spoke without raising his voice. "We go through it once more."
No one hesitated.
Patrick moved to the center and redrew the dungeon layout from mory, his hand steady as the lines ford again. Wesley pointed at entry corridors and confird guard rotations, Darmian walked through timing windows, Bartho reinforced fallback points, and Vorde outlined movent between layers with quiet precision. Each of them spoke only when necessary, refining what was already understood rather than discovering sothing new.
Lucas listened, adjusting small details, tightening decisions where needed. "We do not improvise unless forced," he said. "Every movent is deliberate. If anything feels wrong, we withdraw and reset. No hesitation."
They all nodded.
The plan was no longer sothing they were building.
It was sothing they carried.
When the final review ended, there was no dramatic pause, no speeches, no lingering looks. They simply moved.
Armor was lifted, straps tightened, pieces adjusted into place with practiced efficiency. The tal settled over them not as disguise anymore, but as function. Each of them checked the others briefly, making sure nothing was out of place, nothing that could draw attention or cause suspicion.
Patrick secured his officer’s armor last, adjusting the shoulder plate and letting his posture settle into command once again. Wesley rolled his shoulders once, testing movent. Lucas remained calm, composed, his presence steady as ever.
Then he spoke.
"It is ti."
They stepped out.
The streets welcod them the sa way they had the past few days, with routine, with structure, with controlled movent that hid the tension beneath it. They did not move as a group. They spread out just enough to avoid association, yet remained within distance that mattered.
Patrick took the lead, walking with quiet authority, his pace asured, his gaze forward. Lucas and Wesley followed behind him as expected, positioned like subordinates accompanying a superior. Every step, every glance, every shift in posture was deliberate.
Around them, the others lted into the flow.
Darmian joined a passing patrol without drawing attention, matching their pace as though he had always been part of it. Bartho positioned himself near a checkpoint, blending with a rotation group. Vorde moved along a separate path, shadowing their direction without being seen as connected. The remaining mbers did the sa, each one integrating into the system they had studied so carefully.
They did not look at each other.
They did not speak.
Communication ca through small signals only they understood, subtle shifts, brief pauses, changes in direction that ant everything without revealing anything.
From the outside, they were just soldiers.
Part of the structure.
Moving with purpose.
But beneath that illusion, everything was aligned toward a single objective.
And as they approached the palace once more, there was no hesitation left in any of them.
This ti, they were not there to observe.
They were there to begin.
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