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Now reading: Chapter 206: The Shieldmaiden from The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality, a Fantasy novel by VedScans.

On Day 28, the secondary line broke.

A 400-ter section on the western flank, specifically — where Durnok’s Crushist infantry had been rotating fresh companies against a garrison that hadn’t received reinforcents in three days. The breakthrough ca at a junction between two regints — an eighteen-inch gap in the earthwork that the post-construction survey had flagged for repair.

The repair hadn’t happened. Five days of fighting converted "scheduled maintenance" into "thing we’ll do when we’re not dying."

The gap beca twelve ters in four minutes. Two hundred Crushist heavy infantry — Earth-domain blessed, eighty pounds of armor, trained to push — poured through. Then Durnok sent eight hundred more.

Corporal Maren Ashwick saw the breach open from thirty ters away.

Maren was twenty-eight. Human. A carpenter’s daughter from the eastern district of Ashenveil who had joined the Iron Banner because carpentry paid twenty coppers a month and the military paid twenty-five, and the five-copper difference was the difference between her younger brother eating dinner and her younger brother eating hope.

She had been fighting for five days. Not the stories’ version of fighting — the brave charges and the dramatic duels and the heroic last stands that the Crucible’s recruitnt narratives described. Real fighting. The version where you crouched behind packed dirt and loaded crossbows for n with steadier hands and dragged wounded soldiers backward through mud that slled like iron and sewage, and you did this for five days, and the days blurred into a single continuous experience of noise and fear and the specific exhaustion that turned sleep into sothing your body demanded and your mind refused.

Five days. She had not slept in five days.

When the breach opened, Maren did not panic. She did not run. She watched twelve ters of earthwork give way and watched armored soldiers pour through the gap and felt the specific flatness that combat exhaustion produced — the emotional deadzone where fear should be but wasn’t because fear required energy and energy was gone.

"Fall back," her sergeant said. His voice was calm. Calm was a lie that sergeants told because the alternative was screaming, and screaming was catching.

She fell back. To the secondary position. The secondary position was a shallow trench with timber bracing that would not hold against eight hundred Crushist infantry and the hundred more arriving every minute. She knew it wouldn’t hold. Everyone knew it wouldn’t hold. They held it anyway, because holding things that couldn’t be held was the only option left.

Boreth sent the request at 15:32.

***

Nissa Tarvond ca into the world like a door closing against a storm.

The silver light appeared above the secondary line — not a column descending but a do expanding. Outward. Upward. A hemisphere of pale luminescence that spread from a point above the breach to a diater of four hundred ters in eight seconds.

The light touched Maren’s skin and she felt warm.

Not forge-warm. Not fire-warm. The warmth of a blanket pulled up by hands that weren’t your own. The warmth of coming inside after being outside too long. The warmth that existed in the space between a mother’s arms and a child’s shoulders — the specific, irreplaceable warmth of being held by sothing larger than yourself.

Maren’s knees buckled.

The safety did it. Five days of combat had wound her body into a coil of sustained panic — muscles locked, teeth grinding, the autonomic nervous system running at full alert every second of every hour because relaxing ant dying. The silver do’s warmth was the first signal her body had received in five days that said: you can stop.

She sat down in the trench. She didn’t choose to sit. Her body sat because her body had been waiting five days for permission to stop functioning at ergency levels, and the permission arrived as silver light.

Around her, other soldiers responded the sa way. A Dwarf from the engineering platoon — a hard man with forge-burned hands and a face that expressed emotions the way stone expressed emotions — leaned against the timber bracing and closed his eyes. His shoulders dropped three inches. The weight he’d been carrying — not pack-weight, the other weight, the kind asured in dead friends and near-misses and the constant acid awareness that the next second might be the one that killed you — lifted.

A Human private — nineteen, a boy from the fishfolk quarter whose na Maren didn’t know — curled into a ball at the bottom of the trench and slept. Instantly. No gradual surrender to exhaustion. One second he was awake and terrified and running on the last fus of a body that had been burning reserves for days. The next second he was unconscious, his face in the mud, his breath steady, his body making the executive decision that consciousness was no longer required.

Maren watched him sleep and felt tears on her face. The tears surprised her — they weren’t sadness, weren’t relief. They ca from the overwhelming discovery that safety still existed. Five days had been long enough to forget. The silver do reminded her.

***

Inside the do, Nissa stood.

She was Human. Five feet nine — ordinary height, unmorable build, the kind of woman you passed in a market and did not rember unless you looked twice. But looking twice at Nissa was what every soldier who stood behind her described as the mont they understood what Heroes were.

She carried a tower shield — rectangular, silver-inlaid, standing nearly as tall as she was. She did not carry a weapon. The absence was deliberate. Nissa’s mortal life had been defined by the things she carried and the things she refused to carry.

Born in Year 38 AF. Raised in a frontier settlent that the kingdom’s expansion had reached during its first century. Her father was a militia sergeant — the kind of man who stood between his family and whatever ca out of the wilderness, which in the frontier years included beasts, bandits, and the occasional divine construct from a rival god. Her mother was a weaver. Her brother was ten years old when the settlent was raided by Rootist marauders and Nissa — fourteen, holding her father’s shield because her father was holding a wound in his stomach — stood in the doorway of their house and did not move.

The marauders broke against her the way water broke against stone. She was fourteen and weighed ninety pounds — strength had nothing to do with it. She was there. In the doorway. Between the raiders and her brother. And she would not move.

Her father died. Her brother lived. Nissa learned the lesson that would define a lifeti and an afterlife: you could not save everyone. But you could stand between the ones you loved and the things that wanted to hurt them, and sotis standing was enough.

She died at 106 — from age, not violence. A century spent standing in front of things wore a body down. Her final words were to a young shield-bearer who asked what the hardest part of defense was: "The holding is easy. The hard part is knowing that sowhere outside your shield, soone is dying because you can’t be everywhere."

Now she stood at the center of a silver do and held. The shield was planted. Her eyes were open. She watched the Accord soldiers test the barrier — throwing rocks, firing arrows, sending armored warriors to push against a boundary that absorbed force the way the ocean absorbed stones.

A Crushist captain — Minotaur, seven feet tall, scarred across the left side of his face from a battle fought before this war — stood at the do’s edge and pressed his hands against the silver light. He pushed. The do absorbed. He pushed harder. The do absorbed harder.

His na was Torvak. He had two daughters in Durnok’s territory. The older one had just turned twelve. He had promised her he would bring back a story worth telling. Every war produced a story. Every soldier brought one ho.

The story he would bring ho was this: I pushed against a wall made of silver light, and the wall did not move, and behind the wall a woman stood with a shield and no weapon, and I could not reach her.

He stopped pushing. Exhaustion wasn’t the reason — recognition was. The sa recognition that every Accord soldier who tested the barrier eventually reached: this was not a wall. This was a statent. The civilization behind this do had produced a Hero whose power was not killing. Whose power was not letting you kill.

Behind the do, the engineering teams rebuilt the earthwork. Soldiers who had been fighting twenty minutes ago traded crossbows for shovels. The kingdom’s military doctrine said every soldier was a builder. The doctrine was correct. In six hours, they rebuilt the breach to seventy-five percent structural integrity — a wall within a wall, constructed in safety that a single woman with a shield was providing to three hundred and twelve people.

The boy in the trench slept for four hours. When he woke, the do was still there, and Maren Ashwick was sitting beside him, and her face was wet, and she said: "You’re fine."

She had heard Sorela the dic say it. A good thing to say, and it didn’t need to be true.

The do held. Nissa held. And for a few hours, the kingdom breathed.

[DEPLOYNT STATUS — NISSA TARVOND]

[Duration: 6 hours | FP Expended: 270,000]

[Barrier Radius: 200 ters (sustained)]

[Enemy Penetration: ZERO]

[Breach: Rebuilt to 75% during deploynt]

[Kingdom Casualties During Deploynt: 0 (inside do)]

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