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Chapter 6 - Campfires and a Silent Prayer

Erika's convoy travelled across a relatively open stretch of wasteland.

At dusk, the Guard Captain responsible for the squad's resonance slate followed procedure, pressing it against the small, portable energy sensor they carried—a weaker, mobile version of an anchor-point—to synchronize data.

The slate lit up slower than usual, its glow flickering weakly.When the message finally resolved, the Captain's brow furrowed.

SOURCE: Clerical Division - Logistics & Dispatch TO: All En-Route Escort Units (Sector: Eastern Border)PRIORITY: URGENT

CONTENT:Sector Alert.Multiple outlying villages reporting anomalous Deathbird swarm assaults.Energy-drain pressure spiking.Potential for delays/fluctuations in the Auric Network.

All en-route units are ordered to rally immediately at coordinates [45, 89] and proceed as a combined convoy.

SUPPLEMENTAL:In light of prior combat losses and current status, all units prioritize stable personal energy-cycles.If necessary, per Purification Codex, Chapter VII, Statute 3, enact the Energy Preservation Protocol.

Pre-emptively recover and redirect dispersed energy assets to ensure primary cycle integrity.

This is the final broadcast for this sector.Subsequent communications may be interrupted.May the Light guide you.

The Captain's face turned grim in the sunset light.

The Energy Preservation Protocol.

He'd heard of that statute.

It usually meant… when an unstoppable threat was imminent, any "energy asset" at risk of capture—including believers of wavering faith, those potentially contaminated, even entire villages that couldn't be evacuated—were to be "processed."

Their energy was to be forcibly harvested through a specific rite and fed back into the Network.

He put the slate away, offering no explanation to his men.

"Change of course," he ordered, his voice low."To the rally point. Pick up the pace."

A tangible urgency settled over the squad.

When they reached the coordinates, several campfires were already burning.

Two other convoys of similar size had arrived first.

The wasteland suddenly felt crowded—a stark, chaotic scene of reflected firelight on metal armor, different wagon markings, and soldiers' faces etched with weariness and wariness.

After a brief identity verification, the three Captains huddled together, speaking in low tones.

Their expressions were grave, their nods frequent as they shared intelligence and aligned their understanding of the Protocol.

The regular soldiers began making camp, tending to the horses.

Despite the tension, the shared identity of belonging to the Creed allowed men from different units to quickly mingle.

By the fires, the low, resonant strains of hymns praising the Golden Father and the Eternal Cycle began to rise—a brave sound against the vast, fearful dark of the wilds.

Erika was placed beside a relatively sturdy wagon.

He remained silent and numb, seemingly oblivious to the activity around him, mechanically chewing on a piece of hardtack.

It was then that a slender figure, accompanied by an older nun, timidly approached him.

She was a novice, very young, her slight frame swimming in a plain white habit edged with fine golden thread.

Her eyes were large, and in the firelight, they held a clarity that seemed out of place here, mixed with a poorly concealed anxiety.

In her hands, she clutched a simple prayer rod, set with a small crystal.

The older nun nodded to the soldier guarding Erika.

"This is Novice Anna. She wishes to offer a blessing for this 'Seed' who is to bear such glory.May the Light further steady his soul."

The soldier looked at the girl, then at the older nun, and nodded, stepping aside.

Novice Anna carefully approached Erika, kneeling before him.

Seeing the emptiness in his eyes, her own filled with a flicker of pity.

She raised the prayer rod and, in a soft but clear voice, began a short blessing.

The crystal at its tip glowed with a gentle, non-threatening light, like the softest of stars.

Her words were different from the soldiers' hymns about Cycles and Order.

Hers were a plea for "peace" and "inner guidance."

As the prayer ended, she did something unexpected.

She reached out with her small hand and touched the back of Erika's hand, where it rested on his knee.

The contact was fleeting, over in an instant.

"May the true light... illuminate your path," she whispered, a breath so quiet it was almost lost, the words a clear deviation from the standard text.

Then, like a startled fawn, she rose, kept her head down, and hurried after the older nun, back toward their own convoy's section of the camp.

Erika showed no outward reaction.

He continued to chew, his vacant gaze fixed on the dancing flames.

Yet, deep within the frozen wasteland of his mind—in a place his conscious self could no longer reach—that gentle touch and those unorthodox words settled.

A single, insignificant seed, carried by the wind and buried in the permafrost.

It was too small, too weak to change anything now.

But it was compassion.A quality long absent, and utterly foreign to the language of Cycles and Order.

At the edge of the camp, the three Captains concluded their hushed conference.

Their eyes scanned the campfires, the soldiers who still knew nothing, and beyond, into the darkness that shrouded the villages—villages marked by Deathbird swarms, or worse, now slated for "recovery."

The brief security of the rally was evaporating, replaced by something colder and vaster—a choice about sacrifice and survival that was already spreading, carried on the night wind across the wastes.

The night deepened over the wasteland.

The campfire crackled, its light dancing across the faces of tired, restless soldiers.

The fragile order brought by the combined caravan was fraying, worn thin by the late hour and the influence of cheap liquor.

Erika remained in the shadows by the supply wagon, as still and lifeless as a statue.

A few soldiers from other units, their moods soured by drink and discontent, staggered into the area.

They stared at Erika's vacant, numb expression, and a mix of jealousy, contempt, and raw anger began to simmer among them.

"Hey. Look at this one," a soldier with flushed cheeks jerked his chin toward Erika."Heard he's the 'Priest-candidate'? This is what we get?"

Another soldier snorted, picked up a small pebble, and tossed it at Erika.

It thumped softly against the white robe and rolled away.

Erika didn't even flinch.

"He really is a block of wood!"

The stone-thrower grinned, bending for another.

"Leave it alone. He's still—"a slightly more sober companion tried to intervene.

"Is he, now?"a third voice cut in, low and angry.

It belonged to a scarred veteran, his eyes dark.

"While our brothers are out there getting killed and maimed on the front lines!Take Carlos's squad.Went out on a mission, hit something nasty.Wiped out, most of 'em."

And then this...this whelp survives?

Gets to be a 'Priest-candidate'?Gets to lord it over us later?"

His words dug at old grievances and fresh losses.The liquor made the injustice feel sharper.

"Right! Carlos's squad was on escort duty too, wasn't they?Was it for protecting 'important' cargo like this that they…?"

The stone-thrower's voice rose.

He abandoned the pebbles, striding forward and grabbing a fistful of Erika's white robe, hauling him partway off the ground.

"Talk!What's so special about you, huh?Why do my brothers die while you get to sit here in this damned robe playing dumb?!"

Erika's body was jostled, but he offered no resistance.

His empty eyes just stared at the soldier's furious, twisted face, as if watching a dull play.

The complete indifference only fueled the veteran's rage.

He let go of the robe and drew his fist back.

"I said stop pretending!"he roared.

The angry fist started its descent—

but a thin, tearful voice sliced through the tension.

"Stop!Please, stop!"

Everyone froze, turning.

Novice Sister Anna stood there.

She was pale, her small frame shaking with fear, but she had planted herself between the veteran and Erika, arms spread wide like a fledgling bird trying to shield its nest.

"You mustn't hurt him!"

Her voice trembled, but held firm.

"He is... chosen by the Light!To harm him is to defile it!You'll... you'll be punished!"

She repeated the doctrine, the words a shield for her own terror, a last-ditch effort to reason with the drink-blinded soldiers.

She squeezed her eyes shut, clutching the simple holy symbol at her chest, and began to babble a prayer, frantic and desperate.

"Merciful Golden Father,please calm their anger...guide the lost...protect...please protect..."

Her sudden appearance and the broken, fervent prayer froze the scene.

The veteran's fist hung in the air.

He could ignore a numb candidate,but not a sister of the cloth—even a novice.

The other soldiers exchanged uneasy looks, the drink fading from their systems, realizing this had gone too far.

Other soldiers by the fire were watching now.

The officer on duty noticed the commotion and was striding over, his face grim.

The soldier holding Erika let go with a muttered curse.

The veteran glared once more at the still-catatonic Erika, then at the trembling but resolute girl in his way.

He spat on the ground and turned, shoving his way past his comrades as they all dispersed, grumbling.

Only when their footsteps faded did Anna dare to open her eyes.

Her legs felt weak; she nearly collapsed.

She looked back at Erika.

He hadn't moved, as if the violent confrontation and her protection had been nothing more than a passing breeze.

Seeing the profound emptiness in his eyes, her heart filled with a complicated mix—pity, confusion, and a strange, stubborn resolve.

She didn't speak again.

Just whispered one last, complete line of her prayer.

Then she pulled her hood up, hiding her pale face, and hurried away, disappearing into the deeper shadows of the camp.

The commotion in the camp was like a stone cast into stagnant water;as the ripples faded, an even heavier silence descended.

Erika was moved back into the shadows of the carriage,like an object briefly displaced and returned.

Little Sister Anna had been taken away by the older nuns, leaving only the soldiers' muted voices and the moan of the wasteland wind around the fires.

As the night deepened and the stars grew faint, an unnatural surge of energy rolled across the distant wasteland.

The dirt didn't shake.

Around the campfires, the Auric Guards suddenly froze, turning instinctively back toward the trail leading to the land they had just abandoned.

The dark horizon ripped open. A dense, blinding pillar of pure gold vomited from the black sky, striking straight down into the earth like a spear.

The impossible light held for barely three seconds before violently collapsing into itself.

No thunderous roar followed.

No dust rose into the air.

The absolute erasure left only a flawless, terrifying silence in its wake.

For a split second, the camp held its breath. Then, the scarred veteran who had nearly struck Erika earlier drew his sword, the steel hissing sharply in the quiet night.

"Glory to the Golden Father!" he roared, thrusting his blade toward the empty sky.

The camp erupted. It wasn't fear; it was pure, unadulterated zeal. Guardsmen leapt to their feet, drawing their weapons and slamming their heavy gauntlets against their shields in a deafening, metallic frenzy.

"Purged!" a soldier screamed, his face flushed with ecstatic euphoria, staring at the spot where a village had just been unmade. "Burn the shadows! Glory to the Circuit!"

The chanting swelled, morphing into a bloodthirsty, fanatical hymn that drowned out the crackle of the campfires.

Erika remained slumped beside the supply wagon, entirely motionless. His vacant, hollow eyes were locked on the dark, empty space on the horizon where the light had just died.

That patch of absolute blackness was once his home.

The deafening cheers and the rhythmic clanging of the guards washed over him, vibrating through the wooden wheels against his back. He didn't blink. He didn't cry. But beneath the thick, crushing ice of his brainwashed mind, a sudden, agonizing pressure spiked.

It was a purely physical sensation—like a taut, hidden string violently snapping against his ribs.

His fingers twitched, his nails scraping against the rough wood, right before the cold pulse of the badge forced his heart back into its numb, measured rhythm.

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