The weight of failure hung over the ruins of the disruptor site, a ghost that refused to be exorcised. Veylan stood motionless amid the wreckage, the fractured sun emblem cold in his gloved hand. The truth had settled into his bones like an infection—this infiltration ran deeper than anyone had suspected.
The sabotage had been perfect. Too perfect. No traces of external magic, no gaps in mory that would indicate forced compulsion, no obvious tells. That terrified him more than anything.
A flawless betrayal was not an accident. It was precision. It was intent. It was a ga played by an opponent who had already planned several moves ahead.
And Veylan loathed playing from behind.
A cold wind howled through the charred remains of the leyline disruptor, carrying with it the acrid stench of burned tal and scorched earth. The remnants of the operation team worked in silence, their movents slow and heavy with the weight of failure. Every so often, one of the engineers would glance toward the sky, as if expecting retribution to co down upon them for their loss. But no punishnt would be as severe as the knowledge that they had been bested.
The fractured sun emblem pulsed weakly in Veylan's grasp, its dim light flickering with dying energy. He turned it over in his fingers, considering. The operative who had betrayed them had done so without knowledge of their own treachery. Their mind had been tampered with so seamlessly that no external magic had left its mark.
This was no re act of possession. This was sothing else.
Sothing worse.
A hand-carved deception that could bypass all known security asures, infiltrate the very fabric of the Order, and strike at the precise mont needed. A puppet whose strings had been pulled by an unseen master.
And it had worked.
For now.
A quiet set of footsteps approached from behind, the asured gait unmistakable.
"Inquisitor."
Malakar's voice, rough from years of battlefield commands, was steady, but there was an edge beneath it. He was holding sothing back.
Veylan did not turn imdiately. He let the silence stretch, listening instead to the wind, the whispers of the ruins, the distant, crackling remnants of failed power.
"Report."
"The security sweep is complete. No remaining anomalies detected. If there was another breach, they covered their tracks well." Malakar exhaled sharply. "Too well."
Veylan finally glanced at him. Malakar's expression was as hard as stone, but the flicker of frustration behind his eye was evident.
"They're mocking us," Malakar continued, his voice low. "This wasn't just an attack—it was a demonstration. A warning. And we let it happen."
Veylan tilted his head slightly. "Let?"
Malakar's jaw tightened. "We weren't cautious enough."
"We were cautious," Veylan corrected, his voice calm, almost conversational. "We just weren't cautious in the right places."
Malakar fell silent.
Veylan studied him for a mont before looking back at the ruined site. The disruptor's remains stretched like the skeleton of so ancient beast, its once-glistening core now a smoldering pit of useless slag. The air still crackled with residual leyline instability, the magic struggling to recover from the violent disruption.
A perfect attack. A perfect betrayal.
He hated perfection.
"Adjustnts are necessary," Veylan said finally, slipping the fractured emblem into a compartnt on his belt. "We can no longer rely on standard thods of detection. They have shown us their capabilities. We will respond in kind."
Malakar's shoulders squared slightly, waiting for orders.
Veylan turned away from the ruins, stepping toward the encampnt where the surviving operatives had gathered. Their faces were carefully blank, but he could see the unease behind their eyes. No one spoke. No one dared.
They didn't need to.
"The hunt begins," Veylan said, his voice carrying over the cold wind. "And this ti, we dictate the terms."
The first step was deception.
False orders rippled through the ranks of the Radiant Order, each directive subtly altered depending on its recipient. If there was another traitor lurking, the leaked information would expose them. Operatives were assigned missions with new, fabricated objectives, their movents monitored without their knowledge. Conversations were recorded, leyline signals traced, and every whisper examined for inconsistency.
So would falter.
And when they did, he would be waiting.
The shadows thickened as the plan took root. Hidden layers of surveillance coiled through the Order's structure, unseen hands watching every movent, tracking every deviation from expected behavior. Veylan did not sleep. He reviewed every report, every transmission, every detail, looking for the fracture point.
Malakar approached again as the final phase of deception settled into place.
"I have a suggestion."
Veylan nodded, waiting.
"A minor outpost, small disruptor. We stage a recovery mission, claim we retrieved critical schematics from the ruins and need to transport them. If they know we're rebuilding, they'll co for it."
It was logical. It was a risk. It was necessary.
Veylan exhaled slowly, his mind already piecing together the variables, the possible moves on the board.
Bait.
A trap.
And this ti, they would not be the ones caught in it.
"Do it."
____
The outpost humd with quiet efficiency, a carefully constructed illusion of an urgent mission in motion. Soldiers moved with calculated urgency, their boots crunching against the damp earth as crates of leyline disruptor components were carried into reinforced transports. Lanterns flickered, casting long, wavering shadows across the encampnt. Every detail, every movent was designed to be seen.
Veylan knew that if the enemy was watching—and he was certain they were—this would appear as a perfect opportunity. A supposedly critical recovery mission, a disruptor's remains, and vital schematics being transferred to another location. A tempting target, one too valuable to ignore.
He stood at the heart of the operation, seemingly focused on its execution, but in truth, his attention lay elsewhere.
Among the officers assigned to oversee the operation was Kain Varros.
Veylan's eyes flicked toward him often, hidden beneath the guise of a leader surveying his n. Kain was a mid-level strategist, competent, disciplined, and loyal—on paper. His records were impeccable. Too impeccable.
Every strategist made adjustnts, even small ones—revisions, miscalculations, alterations that built over ti. But Kain's reports had been perfect. Every tactical assessnt, every recomndation, every field decision was calculated with unwavering precision.
Not human.
Not natural.
Veylan had no proof. Not yet. But his instincts, honed through years of dissecting deception, told him sothing was wrong.
And so, he pushed the pieces into place.
Kain was assigned to oversee the transport of the recovered materials—a routine, seemingly inconsequential task. But unseen to him, the noose was tightening. Multiple operatives shadowed his every move, following each command he gave, analyzing the way he spoke, the cadence of his words.
Not a single mont was left unobserved.
The camp continued to move like a well-oiled machine. The cover of night deepened, the final checks being completed before the convoy was to depart.
And then, Kain hesitated.
It was barely noticeable—nothing but a second's pause before issuing an order. But Veylan saw it.
His shoulders tensed, just slightly. A fraction of a second of unease before he pressed his fingers against his ledger to relay a command.
A command that should have been routine.
But in that mont, Kain's fingers twitched, barely perceptible, before completing the motion.
Veylan's breath slowed.
____
The debriefing room was silent but charged, the thick scent of ink and parchnt mixing with the ever-present aroma of burning candle wax. Officers stood in a semi-circle around the large wooden table, their faces etched with exhaustion and barely concealed tension. The flickering candlelight cast long shadows against the cold stone walls, making the room feel smaller than it was.
At the center of it all, Kain Varros read from his notes, his voice steady, clipped, professional. His posture was rigid, his words precise. A model officer.
But sothing was off.
Veylan watched from his usual place at the head of the room, silent, unmoving. His sharp gaze dissected every minute detail—the way Kain held himself, the way his fingers gripped the parchnt too tightly, the flicker in his expression when he reached a particular line of his report. A tightening of the jaw. A hesitation, brief but undeniable.
Then it happened.
No warning. No shift in energy. Just the brutal, sudden explosion of motion.
Kain lunged.
His hand snapped to the hidden knife at his belt, the blade flashing under the candlelight. His target, a fellow officer seated across from him, barely had ti to react. The knife shot forward, a perfect strike aid for the man's throat.
A blur of motion—Malakar intercepted him mid-strike, an iron-like forearm colliding with Kain's ribs. The impact sent him careening sideways, crashing into the stone floor with a sickening thud. The knife clattered away, spinning across the room before skidding to a stop at Veylan's feet.
For a mont, silence.
Then chaos.
Operatives sward him, boots hamring against the stone as they forced him down, arms twisted behind his back. He thrashed, struggled, his body a mass of tense muscle, but there was sothing strange beneath the resistance.
Laughter.
At first, it was a breathless chuckle, low, uneven.
Then it grew.
The sound slithered through the room, spreading a chill down the spines of everyone present. It wasn't the laughter of a man caught in a desperate situation. It wasn't the hysterical breakdown of a man who had lost everything.
It was amusent.
A genuine, eerie amusent.
Veylan's boots echoed against the floor as he moved forward, slowly, deliberately, his expression unreadable. He knelt beside Kain, studying him with that cold, analytical gaze that had torn apart countless n before. Kain's breathing was uneven, his chest rising and falling with exertion. His eyes—once sharp with military discipline—were wild now, but not with fear.
Not with anger.
Sothing else entirely.
Veylan's voice was smooth, quiet. "You were never Kain, were you?"
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