Ashen Ford, Serewyn, Draem, Marleon, League... He strung them together like beads on a wire. A war being written before it’s fought. He could almost see Elowen hunched over a map, her hand steady, her eyes distant. The thought made his chest tighten again.
She carried all this without .
He clenched his jaw, forcing his mind to settle. No use drowning in guilt. Work first, regret later. He inhaled through his nose and let it out slow. The breath ca out steadier than he felt.
From his coat, he drew a small, coin-thin slate. Its surface glead faintly under the candlelight, etched with runes so fine they looked like scratches. He crouched beside the low bench in the hall, where servants often left their shoes, and slid the slate beneath. Then, with a piece of stylus chalk, he drew three short marks—one for route, one for ti, one for silence. Rodion would understand the ssage when his systems recovered enough to move freely.
He lingered for a mont, listening to the muffled conversations fade. Then he turned and walked away, as quietly as he had entered.
The way back to the lower halls felt longer. He noticed more details now: the cracked tile by the stair corner that hadn’t been fixed, the missing curtain hooks, the faint sll of oil and wax where soone had hastily cleaned blood. None of it surprised him. It was the kind of wear a fortress earned when it worked too hard to stay upright.
When he reached the linen alcove, the air felt warr. A soft pulse of light flickered from within. Rodion’s arm panel was half-open, exposing a faint glow that pulsed unevenly. The construct stirred as he approached.
Mikhailis exhaled through his nose. "Take it slow. We’re not making a parade."
He smiled, despite everything. "Thank all the gods for that."
He knelt beside the alcove and raised two fingers toward a thin crack in the baseboard. The seam darkened, alive with subtle movent. Tiny shapes crawled out—necromantic ants, sleek and black, their bodies glinting faintly in the dim light. He crouched low, resting one elbow on his knee as they gathered in a small semicircle before him.
He listened. They tapped their mandibles against the beam in a rhythm that only he could read—short, quick, spaced like words in an invisible sentence. The code was simple. He had made sure of that when he taught them: sound, not magic. Predictable. Safe.
He nodded. "Teams," he said quietly, his tone shifting from warmth to focus. "I need three roles tonight. Shaft crawlers—vents and chimney mouths. Mortar sears—stone joints, old repairs, channel the map. Cordon skirmishers—wall shadows and outer turns."
The ants stirred, faint legs brushing the stone in a soft hiss that felt like agreent.
"Orders," he continued, lowering his voice even further, his breath mixing with the faint hum of Rodion’s core behind him. "Map movents. Confirm Lira’s last routes. Confirm Cerys’s patrol schedules. Confirm Aelthrin’s office hours. Check pantry counts. Watch for unfamiliar faces—paper clerks, sly shoes, Technomancer agents who talk like they own the room."
He paused for a long mont after giving the order, his voice barely above a whisper. The faint hum of Rodion’s repairs echoed behind him, filling the silence between breaths. He let the sound ground him before continuing.
"Rules," he said quietly, as if speaking to himself as much as to the ants. "No contact with civilians. No fear tricks. Report using beam-taps only—here and the stair post by the pantry door."
He tapped the beam twice, then the stone near the door, the sound low and distinct—two dull notes that carried through the cracks like a secret heartbeat. The tiny creatures tilted their heads, antennae flickering, then shifted into motion with eerie discipline.
The shaft crawlers went first, climbing the vent lip in perfect silence. Their bodies shimred faintly, almost lting into shadow. One paused for half a second, brushing its antennae against the tal rim before vanishing into the dark. The mortar sears followed, their shapes thinning as they slipped between the stones, crawling through the unseen veins of the castle. The last group, the cordon skirmishers, fanned out along the baseboards—small, fast, efficient, like a string of living punctuation.
He watched them go. They always reminded him of a thought—silent, relentless, impossible to erase once written. His hand rested on the stone, feeling the faint vibration as they moved through the walls.
He waited. Waiting had beco second nature to him, a habit that ca with too many years of planning, hiding, and watching others act first. His patience, once a weapon, now felt heavy.
Rodion’s faint hum pulsed once, steady as a heartbeat.
"Eight minutes," Mikhailis echoed. "Good. That gives ti to think."
He leaned his back against the wall and closed his eyes, listening to the quiet. The castle spoke to him—not with words, but with the way its walls breathed. He could hear the distant scrape of boots, the faint clink of armor being adjusted, the sigh of an open window catching a draft. All small sounds, but together they painted a picture: vigilance, exhaustion, and purpose.
They’re still holding together, he thought. Elowen built this place well. Even without her here, it rembers her discipline.
When the first tap ca from the beam, it was so soft that most ears would have missed it. Mikhailis didn’t. His eyes opened instantly.
One tap. Pause. Two taps. Short gap. Three more. He smiled faintly.
"Hall of ledgers," he murmured. "They’re keeping the rotation."
He translated the reports quietly as they ca, reading the code by instinct.
"Hall of ledgers: Aelthrin’s staff maintained river-safe logs and checked them twice." His tone was approving. "Good man. Doesn’t trust mory, trusts ink."
A few seconds later: two quick taps and a long drag. He tilted his head. "Drumsticks confiscated. Cerys’s order." A dry chuckle escaped him. "That’s my wolf—hates noise, loves order."
Rodion’s light blinked.
"She calls it common sense," Mikhailis said. "I call it paranoia. But tonight, it’s genius."
The next ssage ca after a pause. A steady, rhythmic pattern—slow, short, then quick again. "Lamp oil rationed after midnight. Hm. Sensible. Keeps morale low but eyes sharp."
He waited again. Another ssage—short, erratic, like footsteps. He translated it under his breath. "ssenger cadence adjusted. Irregular steps. Pauses out of beat. Soone’s thinking. Soone’s learned."
A smile crept over his face, small but proud. They’re adapting on their own. He made a ntal note. "Tell Elowen when she returns," he whispered. "Her people don’t need command to think straight."
He pulled a scrap of parchnt from his pocket and began to jot down each note, short and clear, no embellishnts. His handwriting was small but precise—years of habit from writing reports for people who hated wasting ink.
Rodion’s soft hum wavered.
"Is none of your business," he muttered, though his hand did shake slightly. He steadied it on his knee.
He almost laughed. "You’re learning sarcasm too fast."
"Still counts."
The faintest smile tugged at his mouth again. For a mont, he almost forgot the fatigue. But then a sound cut through the quiet—a scuff, soft but close. He stopped mid-sentence.
He turned his head slowly, hand lifting in instinctive caution. The scrape ca again, this ti followed by a light thump, then the whisper of linen brushing stone.
Soone was in the passage.
Mikhailis straightened, his posture calm but alert. His hand brushed the edge of his cloak where a hidden blade rested—not to draw, just to rember it was there. He waited as the steps grew closer, quicker, then suddenly halted.
The light caught movent—white cloth tumbling from soone’s hands. A small gasp followed.
He exhaled, not in relief but recognition.
"Lira," he said softly.
She stood frad in the doorway, the fallen stack of folded linens at her feet. For a heartbeat she didn’t move. Her dark ponytail caught the dim light, her face pale from the long hours of work. Then she breathed out, shoulders trembling slightly.
"You’re here," she said.
Her voice carried control, but just barely. It was the tone of soone who’d rehearsed calm for too many nights.
He didn’t answer right away. He simply looked at her—the crease in her brow, the exhaustion beneath her grace, the faint mark on her wrist from where she must’ve tied her apron too tight. Every detail struck him like a mory he didn’t know he’d missed.
"I am back," he said at last. His voice was quiet, but steady.
Lira didn’t wait for more. She closed the distance between them in three steps. Her hand ca up, light as a breath, and touched his face. Her fingers were cold, her palm soft. She hesitated only for a second before brushing his cheek, tracing the edge of his jaw.
"You’re real," she whispered.
He smiled faintly. "Last I checked."
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