Seylith, the Pale Bloom, stood at the edge of her territory and watched the army march past.
They didn’t enter her lands. Deterra’s column moved through the grasslands to the west — Gorvahn’s Frogn in the van, the Human conscript regints behind, supply wagons churning ruts in the soft earth. The Thornwyrm’s passage was visible as a distant trail of crushed vegetation, a scar across the golden plain.
Seylith’s territory was a pocket of cultivated farmland — twelve hundred humans spread across four villages, growing wheat and barley under the Growth domain’s passive acceleration. Peaceful land. Productive land. The kind of territory that existed because soone larger allowed it to exist.
She watched the army pass from the elevated garden behind her central shrine — a human-built stone church repurposed with Growth domain symbology, golden wheat sheaves carved into the lintels. Her divine perception extended three kiloters in every direction, the awareness of a Rank 3 god: sharp enough to count the soldiers in the column, too weak to hear their soldiers’ thoughts.
Her orders had arrived through the Root Network five days ago. Deterra’s voice — always her voice, never a lieutenant’s: Attack the Grand Ordinator’s eastern settlents. Draw his defenses east. Create the opening for Gorvahn’s push through the western corridor.
Attack. With what? Seylith’s fighting force was eight hundred farrs with spears and good intentions. She had no siege capability. No divine creatures. Her domains were Growth and Illusion — useful for agriculture and deception, worthless for pitched battle. Against the Ordinator’s stonesteel-ard veterans, her troops would break in the first engagent.
Deterra knew this. Deterra didn’t care. Seylith’s role wasn’t victory — it was distraction. A sacrifice play by a vassal whose loss would cost Deterra nothing of strategic value.
Expendable*, Seylith thought. After six years of service, I’m expendable.
She turned from the window. The shrine’s interior was modest — wooden pews, a pressed-earth floor, a golden altar shaped like a flowering vine. Her divine presence filled the space like perfu: warm, organic, the Growth domain’s ambient radiation making the potted plants along the walls bloom slightly brighter.
The communion request arrived at sunset.
Not from Deterra. From the Grand Ordinator.
***
Divine communion between unfamiliar gods was a particular discomfort — like speaking a language you’d learned from a book. The connection opened as a cold, structured channel. Where Deterra’s communion felt like roots pressing into soil — organic, warm, possessive — this felt like entering a room made of iron. Clean. Precise. Intentionally engineered.
Seylith. The voice was clinical. No warmth. No threat. Just a na, spoken as a fact. I’ll be direct. You don’t like and I don’t need you to. What I need is your army out of my eastern flank.
"I have orders," Seylith said. The formality was automatic — divine communion didn’t require speech, but the habit of speaking in her own shrine gave the exchange structure.
You have orders to throw eight hundred farrs against fortified positions defended by stonesteel infantry and a Gnoll strike force commander who eats armies your size for breakfast. Your orders are a death sentence for your people and your territory.
Silence.
You know this. Deterra knows this. The difference is that she doesn’t care and you do.
"What are you offering?" Because there was always an offer. Gods didn’t commune to chat.
The Iron Covenant. A structured comprehension washed through the communion — not words but architecture. Seylith felt the concept as a blueprint: a divine alliance with contractual obligations and retained sovereignty. Not vassalage. Partnership, with teeth.
Keep your territory. Keep your believers. Keep your domains. You contribute a ten-percent FP tithe and military cooperation when called. In return, you get forge technology for your people — your farrs will have stonesteel plows that don’t break. Faith infrastructure — my Knowledge domain will establish literacy programs in your villages. Protection — my military commitnt to defend any Covenant mber’s territory as my own. I’m not asking you to kneel. I’m asking you to sign.
"And if I refuse?"
Then you attack my eastern settlents, your eight hundred farrs die on stonesteel walls, and Deterra doesn’t send reinforcents because you were always a sacrifice play. You lose your army, your territory becos indefensible, and within two years you’re absorbed back into Deterra’s system — this ti without the pretense of autonomy.
The analysis was cold. It was also accurate.
"You have proof this arrangent works?"
I have a disgruntled minotaur who’ll tell you himself.
The communion expanded. A third presence entered — rougher, warr, carrying the heavy musk of the Beast domain. Thyrak, the Herd Lord, Rank 2, involuntary founding mber of the Iron Covenant.
***
Thyrak’s divine presence was exactly what Seylith expected from a minotaur god: blunt, physical, radiating a resentnt so concentrated it had beco a personality trait.
He wants to sell you this arrangent, Thyrak said. So I’ll tell you the truth instead.
Seylith waited.
He is insufferable. Every single system he builds, every structure, every protocol — it’s designed so that he’s the ceiling. You’ll never outgrow him. The Iron Covenant is brilliant because it makes subjugation feel collaborative. You’ll attend councils. You’ll vote on matters. You’ll contribute to decisions. And every single ti, the decision was already made before you opened your mouth.
Through the communion, Zephyr said nothing. He let Thyrak speak.
My minotaurs are healthier than they’ve ever been, Thyrak continued. Better ard. Better fed. Better organized. The calving rate this year is thirty percent higher than any year under my rule, because his Life domain makes the births easier and his Knowledge domain taught the midwives techniques my people never had. My warriors carry stonesteel weapons that make the old bronze look like toys. My children learn to read.
A pause. Heavy with the specific weight of a god admitting sothing that cost him.
I hate it. I hate that he’s better at running my civilization than I was. I hate the tithe. I hate the councils. I hate his smug, analytical precision when he explains — always explains, never orders, just explains until you realize you were going to agree anyway.
But my people are alive. They’re fed. They’re strong. And they’ll outlive , because his system doesn’t need to work. That’s the cage, Seylith. The food is better than freedom. And the worst part is — I’d choose it again.
The communion held for a long mont. Three gods in a shared space, the silence filled with the weight of pragmatism.
"When do I betray her?" Seylith asked.
The cold, structured presence of the Grand Ordinator answered: When the first arrow flies. Not before. You withdraw your troops from the eastern attack. That’s all you need to do — pull back and close your borders. The gap in Deterra’s eastern flank will do the rest.
"She’ll mark ."
She already considers you expendable. The only difference is tiline.
Seylith closed the communion. She stood alone in her shrine, surrounded by blooming plants and golden light, and felt the shape of her future reorganize.
Six years serving Deterra. Six years of Agricultural blessings and quiet obedience and the slow understanding that her autonomy was a gift that could be revoked at any ti. She had never been an ally. She had been a tool kept sharp because she was useful.
The Iron Covenant was a cage. Thyrak had said so plainly, and Thyrak had no reason to lie.
But it was a cage where her people would eat.
She composed her prayer. Not to Deterra — her goddess, her master, her cage-builder. And not to the Grand Ordinator — not yet. He hadn’t earned prayer.
She prayed to herself. To the part of her that had chosen Growth and Illusion as her domains because she wanted things to flourish, not because she wanted things to obey.
Let sothing grow from this that isn’t poisoned.
She opened her eyes.
Outside, the army marched on.
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