from An Open Letter

I figured out something embarrassing that I’m surprisingly going to reserve away from notarizing. But with this I was incredibly productive and cleaned my mirrors, the bathroom counters, did all of my laundry, vacuumed upstairs and downstairs, cleaned the kitchen and organized all the stuff there, finally packed away several of the boxes that have been here since I first moved in, cleaned up and organized the upstairs island, put away clothing that I haven’t put away since getting, clean the bathrooms, and a few other things I don’t remember right now. I’m really proud of myself.

 
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from folgepaula

I really resent some stuff I say demands you to be stoned or on drugs for them to be interesting. But Metaphor is the only language to talk about some things. How possibly else could I speak about the feeling of being so seen yet so caged on someone's gaze. Am I crazy? Are you crazy? Are we crazy? How can some things be so impersonal yet so intimate? Why we keep forgetting who we are? The play behind all of this is: I will pretend to be this, while you pretend to be that. You can be something for me to love, or to forgive, to confuse myself with, or we could do art, or we could learn something, or we could fold origami paper into birds, or we could do nothing. Whatever. Can we just accept we are accepted?

/Jun26

 
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from EpicMind

Illustration eines antiken Philosophen in Toga, der erschöpft an einem modernen Büroarbeitsplatz vor einem Computer sitzt, umgeben von leeren Bürostühlen und urbaner Architektur.

Freundinnen & Freunde der Weisheit! Gedankliches Abschweifen gilt oft als Zeichen mangelnder Konzentration, allerdings scheint Tagträumen beim Lernen hilfreich zu sein.

Eine Studie aus dem Journal of Neuroscience zeigt, dass spontanes Tagträumen beim impliziten Lernen sogar hilfreich sein kann. In einem Experiment mit einfachen Aufgaben, die auf unbewusster Mustererkennung basierten, schnitten Teilnehmende, deren Gedanken abschweiften, genauso gut oder sogar besser ab als jene mit voller Aufmerksamkeit. Besonders wirkungsvoll war das unbeabsichtigte, spontane Tagträumen – nicht das absichtliche Abschweifen.

Die Forschenden um Péter Simor von der Eötvös-Loránd-Universität stellten fest, dass das Gehirn während dieser Phasen typische niedrigfrequente Hirnwellenmuster zeigt, die an Schlaf oder schlafähnliche Zustände erinnern. Diese sogenannten „wakeful rest“-Zustände scheinen es dem Gehirn zu ermöglichen, verborgene Wahrscheinlichkeitsmuster im Hintergrund zu verarbeiten – ohne bewusstes Zutun. Das Ergebnis: Lernen kann auch im Leerlauf stattfinden, wenn das kognitive System gerade nicht gezielt gesteuert wird.

Die Studie stellt damit die gängige Vorstellung infrage, dass effektives Lernen immer mit voller Konzentration einhergehen muss. Stattdessen zeigt sich: Gerade bei niederkomplexen Aufgaben mit geringen Aufmerksamkeitsanforderungen kann unser Gehirn im Hintergrund weiterarbeiten – vergleichbar mit der Konsolidierung von Gedächtnisinhalten im Schlaf. Tagträumen wird damit nicht zur Ablenkung, sondern zur ergänzenden Lernstrategie, die das Potenzial hat, unbewusste Muster besser zu erschliessen.

Denkanstoss zum Wochenbeginn

„Gut zu kochen ist ein schöpferischer Akt. Wer die Küche liebt, der liebt es auch, zu erfinden.“ – Maria Callas (1923–1977)

ProductivityPorn-Tipp der Woche: Langfristige und kurzfristige Ziele setzen

Kombiniere grosse, langfristige Ziele mit kleinen, erreichbaren Zwischenzielen. Das hilft Dir, motiviert zu bleiben und Fortschritte sichtbar zu machen.

Aus dem Archiv: Fünf Prinzipien aus der sokratischen Philosophie

Sokrates begegnet uns oft als historische Figur – als unbequemer Fragesteller, der in den Gassen Athens über Tugend, Wissen und das gute Leben diskutierte. Doch jenseits seiner biografischen Umrisse und der dramatischen Erzählung seines Prozesses liegt ein philosophisches Denken, das bis heute als Impulsgeber dienen kann: nicht als fertiges System, sondern als Einladung zur Selbstprüfung, zur Klärung von Begriffen – und zur verantwortungsvollen Führung des eigenen Lebens.

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Vielen Dank, dass Du Dir die Zeit genommen hast, diesen Newsletter zu lesen. Ich hoffe, die Inhalte konnten Dich inspirieren und Dir wertvolle Impulse für Dein (digitales) Leben geben. Bleib neugierig und hinterfrage, was Dir begegnet!


EpicMind – Weisheiten für das digitale Leben „EpicMind“ (kurz für „Epicurean Mindset“) ist mein Blog und Newsletter, der sich den Themen Lernen, Produktivität, Selbstmanagement und Technologie widmet – alles gewürzt mit einer Prise Philosophie.


Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet. Das Artikel-Bild wurde mit ChatGPT erstellt und anschliessend nachbearbeitet.

Topic #Newsletter

 
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from Nerd for Hire

The English language can be communicated in two primary ways: aloud in its spoken form or written down using its alphabet. This system is the most common approach found in modern languages around the world, although not by as wide of a margin as you might think. According to Ethnologue, there are 7,170 living languages, of which 4,153 (57.9%) have a developed writing system. That means that the remaining 3,017 are strictly oral languages, with no known system for preserving them beyond audio recordings. On the other side of the spectrum, there are some languages that aren't expressed through speech at all. The most familiar of these for most people are sign languages, which are strictly visual, but there are also sonic languages that don't use what we think of as speech. The best example coming to mind here are the whistled languages found frequently in mountainous, rural areas, like Silbo Gomero from the Canary Islands or languages like Chinatec and Mazatec in Oaxaca, Mexico, which are used to communicate over long distances.

All of this is to say that language can be a more diverse and complex thing than many people think of at first blush. This can be useful knowledge for sci-fi and fantasy writers because it expands the ways you can envision communication, especially if your focus includes other forms of life beyond humans. Here are a smattering of other writing systems and communication approaches for anyone who's looking for a more unique way to have their characters share information and ideas. 

Non-alphabet writing sytems

The alphabet is by far the most common writing system used by modern Earth languages. Getting even more specific, the Latin alphabet—which is the one used by Western European languages like English, Spanish, French, and German—is by far the most common approach. Of the 2,378 written languages listed on Omniglot, 1,906 (80%) use the Latin alphabet. Cyrillic (149, 6.2%) and Arabic (112, 4.7%) are a distant second and third. 

And, technically—in a very push-the-glasses-up-the-nose kind of pedantic way—Arabic isn't an alphabet. Strictly speaking, it's an abjad, where all consonants have a symbol but vowels are often omitted and must be inferred through context, or are expressed using diacritic marks or dots added to the base consonant's symbol. For a writing system to qualify as an alphabet, it needs to use a standardized set of symbols which each correspond to a phoneme (a grammatical sound), and every phoneme has a symbol. This doesn't need to be an exact one-to-one correspondence, as is evidenced by English. The phoneme expressed by a letter can change depending on things like which letters come before or after it. But the general gist is that speakers can learn standardized rules to correctly pronounce a word they've never heard before just from reading the letters. That's another key trait of an alphabet—the symbols express sounds, not ideas. Seeing an unknown word spelled out can give you a good idea of how to pronounce it, but the letters alone won't help you figure out what it means.  

This isn't the only way to make a visual record of a spoken language, however. There are a couple of other approaches still in use by living languages, and even more that were used by now-dead languages. Here are some examples, starting with the closest to an alphabet and ending with the most distinct. 

Syllabary

A syllabary is like an alphabet plus. Instead of each symbol representing a single phoneme, each symbol represents an entire syllable, usually a consonant sound paired with a vowel. Other than this, syllabaries work just like alphabets: symbols are grouped together into words, and those groupings gain meaning that must be learned separately. The symbols themselves only express a sound, not what that sound might represent. 

One difference between alphabets and syllabaries is that there are usually more symbols in the latter. The typical alphabet runs around 20-40 letters, but in a syllabary there can be 100 or more. The Katakana and Hiragana Japanese writing systems are the most widely used syllabaries in the modern world. Each of those has 46 base characters along with 25 variants formed using diacritics and 33 compound sounds formed by combining characters, for a total of 104 represented syllables. Other examples of syllabaries can be found in American languges, including living ones like Cherokee and Chee and ancient scripts like those of the Olmec and Maya.

There's also a variant known as an abugida, or alphasyllabary, where each symbol represents a consonant with an inherent vowel sound, which can be changed by altering the base symbol. Hindi (or technically Devanagari, which is also the script used to write Nepali) is an example of this approach, as are Thai, Burmese, and Khmer. 

Logographic systems

In the sequence of alphabet to syllabary, a logographic system is the next logical step up the ladder. In these writing systems, each symbol represents an entire word, or at least a meaningful unit of language. This represents a significant shift from the above writing systems in that each symbol conveys two pieces of information: both how that word sounds, and what it means. 

Logographic systems are efficient in the sense that you can express more information in fewer characters. The flip side of this, however, is that there are many, many more symbols to learn. There are often patterns behind how symbols are formed that can allow a relatively fluent speaker to make some sense of an unfamiliar character, but you can't as effectively “sight-read” an unknown word in a logographic language as one in a language with an alphabet. 

The most widely used logographic system in the modern world is Chinese, which has over 100,000 total characters. Not all of those are in regular use, though. According to Hutong School, you can read over 99% of written works if you know around 3,500 characters, and the average well-educated native Chinese speaker can recognize around 6,000. Egyptian hieroglyphics are another well-known example, as is the cuneiform script used by the Sumerians. Hieroglyphics often use pictograms or pictographs, which is when the symbol resembles what it represents. Symbols representing abstract ideas are known as ideograms or ideographs. 

Most logographic systems express both the meaning and the sound of a word, but some express only meaning. An example of this is the constructed language Blissymbolics, which was designed to be a universal written language to facilitate global communication. The 2,000+ symbols in the language each represent an idea, but there is no associated spoken language—someone reading a Blissymbolic sentence aloud could do so in any spoken language. 

Tactile systems

Sight and sound are humans' two most dominant senses, so it makes sense the majority of active communication happens in those domains. But our third most dominant sense is touch, and that can also play a role in communication. In the modern world, it's mostly used by those who are blind. Braille is the most widely used system, and most of us have probably seen it enough to recognize it on sight, even if we don't how how to read it. It uses a grid of 6 dots arranged in patterns to represent different letters, which can then be read with the fingertips. Another well-known system is the Moon alphabet, which uses simplified variants of Latin letters to represent them in raised form for blind readers. 

Writing systems specifically designed to be read by touch seem to be a relatively modern invention. Ancient scripts dating back as far as the Sumerians were often engraved in stone or pressed into clay tablets, which means they can be read by touch, but they didn't use a distinctive script—the same shapes could be read by sight, too. 

Textile systems

Writing systems are the main approach most human civilizations have used to record their language, but some have instead used cloth, threads, or other textiles to record and convey information. The example that is likely the most well-known is the Quipu, which was used in the Andean region of South America as far back as 2500 BCE. These are sets of cords that are knotted in a specific pattern to express information. The color, material, and number of cords can also convey information, along with the placement and style of the knots tied into them. Some quipu were used for numerical data, where it's fairly easy to see how a sequence of knots could be interpreted, but there were also narrative quipu. And this isn't a writing system that died out with the Incan Empire. People in the village of San Juan de Collata in Peru used quipus for record keeping until the 1940s.

Other cultures have used textiles to record lineages, document accomplishments, or send messages. One example is the Wampum belt made by members of several tribes in north-eastern North America. These would use different colors of beads to form designs that could be read by anyone who understood the pattern, even if they spoke a different language (similar to the Blissymbolics system described earlier).

Other ways to communicate

Humans by and large default first to a spoken language. Even whistle languages can be generally lumped into the category of “assigning meaning to sounds made with our mouths.” Some spoken langauges don't rely on words alone. In tonal languages, for instance, inflection and pitch are also critical to the interpretation of a word. There has also been at least one constructed language, Solresol, which doesn't use words at all, but instead has a system of 7 notes used in various arrangements and accent patterns to convey meaning. Solresol can even be notated on a three-line musical scale.

An adjacent form of communication is a pattern-based language like Morse code. One unique advantage of a pattern-based system is that it can be used for either visual or auditory communication. With Morse code, for instance, it can be communicated through a series of sounds, or by flashing lights. This is another system that, in the real world, is used to convey another language, rather than one that's self-contained. But there's no reason another culture couldn't develop an independent language that uses this same basic idea. 

Often, alongside spoken language, humans use gestures and expressions to add to the meaning of the words. In some languages, these can take prominence. The most obvious example of this is sign language. In modern Earth usage, sign language is similar to braille in that it's derived from another spoken language and aims to convey the same meaning. There are over 100 of these around the world, each of which is used within a specific region or community. Many of these were invented for people who are deaf, but they can also be used in other contexts, like hunting or warfare. 

Movement can be a form of communication more broadly, as well. On the Hawaiian islands, Hula was used as a form of communication, with certain gestures used to represent objects, actions, or concepts that they'd work together to tell stories. Aboriginal people in Australia also use dance to tell mythological stories, and the hand motions in Bharatanatyam dance from India are similarly linked to ideas that combine to tell a narrative. Outside of the human world, honeybees communicate via dancing, giving their companions directions on where to find food by wiggling their bodies. 

And, if you're thinking up a language for a creature that evolved from something other than primates, you have a whole array of other options available for you. One common way that creatures in the animal kingdom communicate is through scent and pheremones. Even humans do this, to an extent. While humans don't produce true pheremones, we do release chemical signals that are a form of olfactory communication, though not consciously enough for most to be aware of or control it. Other species make use of scent more intentionally, and an intelligent, further-evolved version of them could well do the same thing. 

I'm sure there are some other forms of communication used by some form of life on Earth that I've overlooked. The bottom line here, though, is that even among one species on one planet, there are a huge variety of ways that we can share ideas. Having an invented culture communicate in a less familiar way can help to establish their uniqueness for the reader, and opens up fun new avenues to explore when it comes to how you develop those characters and their world. Hopefully this overview of alternative writing systems has given some folks out there fresh ideas for how to use language in their stories. 

See similar posts: 

#Conlangs #Worldbuilding

 
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from cache

A simple tokenmaxxing playbook. Briefly talk about how to increase token throughput (queues, fan-out, more context, loops) to generate high quality work (repetition, verification, evals).

Closing the software loop

  • PR review agents, PR generation agent (review error logs, confirm error, reproducing error
  • Issue triage agents (labeling, adding context to PRs), documentation agents (review code diffs to update knowledge), security/audit agents
  • Test writing agents, refactor/migration, Q&A agents, monitoring/incident/cause grouping agents, dependency audit agents, etc.

Patterns

  • Humans gate where being wrong is expensive
  • Tokenmaxxing = context size x pass count x call count x frequency x io type (pdf, datasheet, diagram, text, etc.)
  • Add context, world expansion, generate more things
  • Multiple passes: spawn independent agent passes on the same problem, verify passes, solve same problem multiple times (fixes confidently wrong outputs, stress test pros and cons)
  • Spawn many agents to create queues to drain them (multiple step research, crawlers, testing many ideas)
  • Synthetic data generation: training examples, test cases, etc.
  • Loops to revise (generate, critique, revise loop)
  • Map-reduce over large inputs
  • Throughput stoppers workarounds (e.g. rate limits, human intervention)

Tooling

  • MCPs (access layer like github, CI, sentry, etc.), Claude Code, Agent SDKs
  • Schedule (cron), Loop (watch)
  • Skills (how to do things; pr-review, pr-generation, etc.); use evals on skills (positive and negative cases) for consistent results
  • skill-creator + eval-viewer to scaffold skills and review results

Guardrails

  • Eval set for each agent/skill (set expectations on correctness)
  • Measure output delta with different agents and skills or without (choose best one)
  • Check output / usage; check token usage and downstream metrics
 
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from 下川友

畑の土は朝の光を吸い込みながらゆっくり温まっていた。そこにしゃがみ込んで鍬を振るう少女がいた。ドラゴン族の血を引く彼女は、背に柔らかな翼を持ち、炎を吐くことすら日常の延長のように扱う。太陽に照らされた健康的な肌は、まるで光そのものが彼女の味方をしているようだった。二十歳ほどの、名をドラコという。

俺は山の鉱石を取りに行くため、彼女に同行を頼みに来ていた。だが、声をかける前に、彼女の背中に刻まれた丸い傷跡が目に入った。まるで過去の季節が皮膚の上に残っているようで、そこに触れれば昭和の埃っぽい風景まで蘇りそうだった。俺は思わず、俺たちはいつからこんな時代と戦っているんだろうと考えてしまう。

ドラコは鍬を止め、こちらを振り返った。常識的で、無口でも流暢でもない、ただ丁寧に言葉を選ぶ子だ。だがその目は、急に全てを託されても受け止めてしまうような強さを秘めている。俺はその視線に押されるように、山へ行く話を切り出した。

その瞬間、遠くの空を鳥が横切った。俺たちは鳥の種類に妙に詳しくなってしまった自分たちに気づき、思わず苦笑した。あれは恐竜の子供の名残みたいな飛び方だな、と心の中で呟く。写真に写っていた柿の木のように、記憶にないのに懐かしいものがこの世界には多すぎる。

ドラコは鍬を置き、翼を軽く広げた。風が巻き上がり、畑の土が細かく舞う。彼女は枝を集める必要があると言い、俺に早くバイクを降りろと促した。まるで、山へ向かう前にこの土地の呼吸を整える儀式のようだった。

俺はふと、好きな子が二人になったような錯覚に陥った。ひとりは目の前のドラコ、もうひとりは、彼女の中に眠るドラゴンの血が形づくる、別の時間の影だ。名前なんて覚えていない。ただ、仕草でわかる。翼の角度、土を払う手つき、太陽に向かって顔を上げる瞬間。どれもが、彼女を二重に見せる。

山の方角には、古い旗のように揺れる雲がかかっていた。あれを見ていると、旗を作っておけばよかったと妙な後悔が胸をよぎる。俺たちはいつも駆け足で、何かを置き去りにしてきた気がする。雑誌に座って時間を潰していた日々には、もう戻れない。

ドラコは俺の背中の傷を見て、少しだけ眉を寄せた。斬られたのか、と問う代わりに、ただ土の匂いを吸い込んでから、行こう、と短く言った。その声は、窓の向こうから誰かに見られているような緊張を含みながらも、確かに前へ進むためのものだった。

俺たちは歩き出した。船の影が遠くに見える。山の鉱石を取りに行くはずなのに、なぜか海の匂いが混じる。世界は時々、順序を間違える。だがドラコは振り返らない。翼が光を受けて、いつか本当に羽ばたくんじゃないかと思わせるほど鮮やかだった。

俺はポケットの中身を全部質屋に出す覚悟で、彼女の後を追った。あの武士のような影を倒しに行くわけでも、誰かに託された使命を果たすわけでもない。ただ、ドラコと一緒に山へ向かう。それだけで十分だった。

そして気づく。俺たちはもう、二人で行くしかない。三人で行く必要なんてない。枝を集めるのも、鉱石を運ぶのも、昭和と戦うのも、全部この二人でやっていくんだと。

ドラコの背中の翼が揺れた。太陽がその輪郭を縁取る。畑の土が遠ざかり、山の影が近づく。俺たちは、今日も駆け足で世界の端へ向かっていた。

 
もっと読む…

from SmarterArticles

It is a flat-lit room at the back of an arrivals facility on the Kent coast, the kind of room that smells of disinfectant and damp neoprene. A teenager, soaked through and shivering, sits on a plastic chair. He says he is fifteen. The officer in front of him, who has been on shift for nine hours, is not entirely sure. There is a tablet on the desk. The officer angles its camera, asks the boy to remove his hood and look up, and waits while a model trained on millions of faces (none of them his) returns a number. Sixteen. Twenty-one. Nineteen point four. Whatever the number, it will travel with him. It will determine whether he is taken to a children's home or to a hotel full of adult men. It will determine whether a social worker is involved. It will determine, in the most material sense, what kind of person the British state has decided he is.

The room exists, more or less, although the boy in this version is composite and imagined. The camera, the tablet, the model, the number: those are now a matter of policy. On 28 April 2026, the Home Office confirmed that it would proceed with a trial of artificial intelligence facial age estimation on migrants arriving via the Channel, the latest and most contested move in a long, slow rationalisation of border judgement into machine output. The announcement followed a damning report from the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration that catalogued more than a decade of badly made age decisions, and arrived in the same month as a published legal opinion arguing that aspects of the Home Office's existing AI work in asylum processing might already be unlawful. Human Rights Watch called the plan “an AI experiment on children seeking asylum”. Right to Remain, the migrant rights charity, used a slightly less diplomatic phrase: “Artificially Intelligent, Genuinely Harmful”.

What follows is an attempt to take the system at its own measure. To ask what the technology actually is, what it can and cannot do, where the law sits, and what standard of accuracy, transparency and accountability would have to apply before it could plausibly be deployed on people who, by definition, cannot afford a barrister. The short version is that the gap between the standard the moment requires and the standard the trial provides is enormous. The longer version begins with a model and a face.

What a Face Estimator Actually Sees

A facial age estimator is, in its modern form, a deep neural network trained on a vast labelled dataset of photographs in which each subject's age is approximately known. Yoti, the British identity firm whose facial age estimation product is the most independently tested in the world, builds its model on tens of millions of images and reports its accuracy in mean absolute error: the average number of years by which the model's prediction differs from the truth. Yoti's most recent results in the United States National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Face Analysis Technology Evaluation, which tested its model on more than eleven million images, give a mean absolute error of about 1.88 years for thirteen to sixteen year olds in NIST's visa image set. That sounds modest. In context it is anything but.

Mean absolute error is a reassuringly tidy number that hides a messy distribution. If a model's mean absolute error is two years, that does not mean every prediction is within two years of the truth. It means that, averaged over the whole population, the absolute differences come out to two. Some predictions will be exact; some will be five or six years off. NIST's own age estimation report, NISTIR 8525, published in 2024, makes the point explicitly: error distributions are wide and asymmetric, and the worst tail matters far more than the average, especially when the model is being asked to draw a categorical line at a specific age. The Home Office's interest is not in approximating someone's age. It is in deciding which side of eighteen they sit on.

Even the firms doing the most rigorous work concede the limits. Yoti's own statements in 2025 and 2026 have emphasised that its product was originally designed for online age assurance contexts (alcohol sales, pornography access, social media age gates) where the cost of error is asymmetric in the other direction: customer friction. Companies, the Human Rights Watch researcher Anna Bacciarelli noted, have tested the technology “in a handful of supermarkets, pubs, and on websites”, with thresholds typically set to flag whether someone looks under twenty-five rather than under eighteen, precisely to absorb the error margin. The supermarket can afford a wide margin. A child wrongly placed in adult detention cannot.

There is then the older, larger problem, which is that facial analysis models do not work equally well on everyone. The 2018 Gender Shades study by Joy Buolamwini, then at the MIT Media Lab, and Timnit Gebru, then at Microsoft Research, evaluated three commercial gender classification systems and found that the error rate for darker-skinned women was up to 34.7 per cent, while for lighter-skinned men it was 0.8 per cent. That study was about gender, not age, but the underlying mechanism is identical: models inherit the demographic skew of their training data. NIST's Face Recognition Vendor Test Part 3, on demographic effects, confirmed the same pattern across dozens of identification algorithms. Performance gets worse when the subject is younger, female, darker-skinned, or photographed under non-ideal conditions. In other words, performance is at its worst on the exact demographic intersection that arrives in a small boat.

This is the heart of the technical objection, and it is not a marginal concern. The population the Home Office proposes to assess is overwhelmingly young, often non-white, very often male but with an under-counted minority of girls, and almost always photographed in poor light after a sea crossing that has reshaped their faces with cold, salt water, dehydration and exhaustion. The features that most age estimators rely on (skin texture, periorbital structure, jaw definition) are precisely those most distorted by the conditions of arrival. As Hye Jung Han, the senior researcher at Human Rights Watch's Children's Rights Division, put it when the trial was first floated in July 2025, algorithms “identify patterns in the distance between nostrils and the texture of skin; they cannot account for children who have aged prematurely from trauma and violence”. They cannot, she added, “grasp how malnutrition, dehydration, sleep deprivation, and exposure to salt water during a dangerous sea crossing might profoundly alter a child's face”.

A model trained largely on benign images of middle-class teenagers in studio lighting is not the same instrument when pointed at a fifteen-year-old Eritrean girl on a winter morning at Western Jet Foil. It is not even the same instrument as the one NIST evaluated in a controlled visa-photograph dataset. There is, at present, no public evidence that any facial age estimator has been independently validated on a population resembling Channel arrivals. The closest thing to it is the Home Office's own statement, reported in April 2026, that its testing has used 2.5 million images. That is a lot of images. It is not an answer to the question of whose images, in what conditions, against what ground truth.

A Decade of Bad Decisions Before the Camera Arrived

The political seductions of an algorithm only become visible against the backdrop of the system it is meant to replace. The Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration, currently David Bolt, published in 2025 the report that the Home Office's announcement now leans on. Its conclusion, in the inspector's careful prose, was that “many of the concerns about policy and practice that have been raised for more than a decade remain unanswered”. Decade is the word that matters. The inspector traced the same complaints back to 2013: poor record-keeping at the border, perfunctory visual assessments, an unclear and inconsistently applied “significantly over 18” threshold, and frontline officers under operational pressure making categorical decisions about other people's childhoods on the basis of appearance alone.

The Refugee Council, working with the Helen Bamber Foundation and Humans for Rights Network, had already put numbers to the failure. Between January 2022 and June 2023, eighteen months, more than 1,300 children were wrongly assessed as adults at the UK border. In the first half of 2023, sixty-nine local authorities received over a thousand referrals of young people who had been routed into adult accommodation or detention. Of the cases that were eventually concluded, fifty-seven per cent were found to be children. The error rate of the existing visual assessment, in other words, is on the order of one in two when it gets challenged.

To make the failure of the existing system the case for a camera is to commit a particular sort of category error. It is true that visual assessment by a tired officer under pressure is bad. It is not true that the only alternative is a model. The alternative the law has in fact specified for more than two decades is a Merton-compliant age assessment: a structured social work process developed in the 2003 case B v London Borough of Merton, in which two qualified social workers conduct interviews, weigh documentary and circumstantial evidence, and apply a benefit-of-the-doubt principle to the child. Merton assessments are slow and resource-intensive, but they are a forensic process designed for exactly the kind of uncertain, undocumented case that the border produces. They are not infallible (the Helen Bamber Foundation has long catalogued their inconsistency), but they are at least an instrument calibrated to the ambiguity of the question.

What the Home Office is proposing is not a replacement for Merton, although ministers have been careful with that framing. The minister of state for border security and asylum, Dame Angela Eagle, told parliament in July 2025 that facial age estimation would be the “most cost-effective option” and that it would not be used alone, but as part of a broader set of methods used by trained assessors. The phrasing is reassuring and structurally evasive. In any operational system, a numerical output from a model becomes an anchor. The officer who wants to record an age that disagrees with the algorithm has to write a justification. The officer who wants to record an age that agrees with it does not. That asymmetry is how decision-support tools become decision-making tools, and it is how every one of the previous Home Office automation projects has tended to drift.

There is a particular irony in announcing a new AI deployment in a month when a legal opinion is in circulation arguing that your existing AI deployments are probably unlawful. The Open Rights Group, a digital rights non-profit, commissioned and published in March 2026 a detailed opinion by Robin Allen KC and Dee Masters of Cloisters Chambers, together with Joshua Jackson of Doughty Street Chambers. The Independent picked it up in April. Its target was not facial age estimation, which had not yet been deployed; it was the two generative AI tools the Home Office had already integrated into asylum casework: the Asylum Case Summarisation tool, which produces summaries of substantive interviews for caseworkers, and the Asylum Policy Search tool, which retrieves country-of-origin information.

The opinion's arguments are technical but the gist is uncomfortable. Asylum applicants, the lawyers wrote, have a common-law right to be informed when AI is being used in the determination of their claims, what it is doing, and what its outputs say. Failing to inform them is likely to breach procedural fairness. There may also be obligations under the UK General Data Protection Regulation, including the Article 22 right not to be subject to a solely automated decision producing legal effects, and equality duties under the Equality Act 2010 if the systems exhibit demographic disparities. The Home Office's own internal evaluation, the lawyers noted, had found that nine per cent of summaries from the Asylum Case Summarisation tool were so flawed they had to be removed from the pilot. A nine per cent serious-defect rate in a system that summarises a person's asylum interview is not a marginal quality issue. In the population of people arriving from countries where being returned can mean prison or death, it is a structural risk to life.

What the opinion does not say (because it is an opinion about existing tools, written before facial age estimation was deployed) is that every one of the same fairness, data protection and equality concerns applies to the age estimation trial in sharper form. A summary tool affects how a caseworker reads the file. An age estimator decides what category of human being you are processed as. The legal asymmetry is enormous. And the wider context, courtesy of the Court of Appeal's 2020 ruling in R (Bridges) v Chief Constable of South Wales Police, is that the deployment of biometric AI by a public authority can fail at any of three points: an inadequate legal framework, a failure to grapple with the implications in a data protection impact assessment, and a failure to investigate whether the underlying software exhibits racial or sex bias. The Bridges judgement was unanimous. South Wales Police lost on all three.

The Home Office, asked in April 2026 whether it had completed an equivalent equality impact assessment for facial age estimation, has not published one. It has indicated that one will follow procurement. Which is a particular ordering: deploy first, evaluate later. The Ada Lovelace Institute, in its May 2025 report “An Eye on the Future”, was already arguing that the UK's broader regime for biometric AI exists in a “legal grey area” with insufficient governance even for police use cases that have been litigated to the Court of Appeal. The Institute's recommendation, modelled on the EU AI Act, was risk-based legislation with tiered obligations and an independent regulator. Britain has neither.

The EU AI Act, which entered into force in August 2024 and reaches its main applicability date in August 2026, classifies remote biometric identification and biometric categorisation based on sensitive attributes as high-risk uses requiring conformity assessment, registration and ongoing monitoring. It also restricts certain uses of biometric AI in migration, asylum and border-control contexts. The United Kingdom is not bound by it. But the contrast in framing matters: across the Channel, the legal default for this kind of system is that it is high-risk and must be heavily governed before deployment. In Britain, the default appears to be that it is procurable.

The Old Scientific Methods, and the New Ones

To understand what has actually been abandoned and what has been retained, it is worth dwelling briefly on the strange recent history of UK age assessment. Part 4 of the Nationality and Borders Act 2022, passed under the previous government, gave the Secretary of State powers to specify “scientific methods” for age determination. The Immigration (Age Assessments) Regulations 2023 then specified four: dental panoramic radiographs of the third molars, hand and wrist radiographs, magnetic resonance imaging of the distal femur and proximal tibia, and MRI of the clavicle. The Age Estimation Scientific Advisory Committee, which the Home Office had appointed to consider these methods, advised on which might be defensible, with extensive caveats about uncertainty.

The scientific case for these methods has always been weak. Radiologists have written for years that dental and skeletal age assessment was developed for archaeological and forensic identification of remains, not for live administrative decisions about teenagers; that the variation in skeletal maturation between individuals from different ethnic and nutritional backgrounds is large; that a third molar can be calcified at sixteen or absent at twenty; and that the radiation dose, however small, is ethically dubious for non-clinical use. The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health has consistently opposed the use of dental and skeletal X-rays for migration age assessment. The proposals provoked a years-long fight in Parliament and the courts, and, in practice, the radiological tools were never widely deployed.

This is the context in which Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, told reporters in 2025 that he welcomed the Home Office's decision to step back from intrusive scientific methods, but was not convinced that replacing them with AI tools was the answer. The political logic of facial age estimation is precisely that it is non-invasive, fast and cheap. The technical logic is rather different. A clinician's reading of a dental X-ray comes with a published uncertainty range, a peer-reviewed methodology, and a regulator. A facial age estimator comes with a vendor's white paper, a confidence score and a non-disclosure agreement.

There is also a particular institutional irony. The reason the radiological methods were so contested is that they are genuinely scientific in form: they have published error rates, peer-reviewed bone-age atlases, and decades of forensic literature. That very scientific scaffolding is what allowed researchers to point at the data and argue, persuasively, that the methods could not safely distinguish a sixteen-year-old from an eighteen-year-old. The new approach has none of that scaffolding. It also has, courtesy of being a commercial product trained on proprietary data, less of it than the radiology had. The system is being adopted not because it is more accurate than what it replaces (we do not know that) but because its inaccuracies are harder to argue with.

What Meaningful Contest Would Actually Require

The opacity question is, in the end, the one that matters. Right to Remain's July 2025 briefing on AI age assessment, written by their legal education officer, makes the practical point that a person subjected to an algorithmic age decision currently has no clear mechanism to contest it. There is no published model card. There is no way for the subject's lawyer to obtain the input image, the output number, the confidence interval, the version of the model that was deployed, or the dataset on which it was trained. Even where a Merton-compliant assessment is performed afterwards, the AI output sits in the file as an anchor. To displace it would require evidence that, by design, the subject does not have.

Compare this to what the law would normally demand. In a criminal proceeding, evidence from a forensic instrument is admissible only if its methodology is disclosed, its error rate quantified, and its operation auditable. In medical decision-making, regulators require pre-market validation, post-market surveillance and a paper trail that lets a clinician explain to a patient why the device produced its number. In ordinary administrative law, a public authority making a decision adverse to an individual must give reasons; a reason is not “the model said so”. The Bridges judgement made the point in slightly different language: a public authority deploying a system that profiles individuals must assess whether the system discriminates, must train and constrain its use, and must be able to justify its proportionality at the level of the individual deployment.

Right to Remain's framing of “no clear challenge mechanism” understates the problem. A real challenge mechanism would require, at minimum: the right to know that AI was used; the right to obtain the input image and the model's output, with a confidence range; the right to know the model's version, vendor and training data composition; the right to independent expert evidence; the right to a substantive review on the merits, not merely on procedural grounds; legal aid sufficient to fund such a challenge; and a default presumption in favour of the child's claim where the model's confidence interval includes eighteen on either side. None of these exist for an asylum-seeking minor in 2026. Most of them do not exist for any subject of any algorithmic decision in the United Kingdom.

Nor is the opacity merely procedural; it is technical. Modern facial age estimators are deep convolutional networks, often built on pre-trained backbones like ResNet or vision transformers, with a regression head fine-tuned for age. They do not have legible reasoning chains. The “explanation” tooling that exists for them (saliency maps, Grad-CAM heatmaps showing which pixels mattered) is widely accepted within the machine-learning community to be unreliable as a faithful account of model behaviour. There is, in short, no meaningful sense in which an officer can be told why the model returned the number it returned, beyond the trivial circular answer that this is what the model returned. To ask for an audit trail is to ask for something the technology, as currently architected, cannot provide.

Ally, the Right to Remain legal education officer, captures the core asymmetry in a phrase: “AI can mimic human judgement, but it cannot empathise.” The line is more than rhetorical. Empathy in this context is not a sentimental virtue; it is a functional component of the law. Merton requires the social worker to give the benefit of the doubt to the young person, to consider the child's account in the round, to weigh it against trauma. A model has no doubt to give a benefit of. It has only a probability distribution over a label space, in which “child” is a class boundary and confidence scores cluster in the middle of the range that matters most.

What the Standard Would Have to Be

This is, in the end, a question about thresholds. Not the threshold of the model (the age it is asked to predict), but the threshold of legitimacy a state should clear before it deploys a probabilistic instrument against people who lack the resources to contest its output. Drawing that threshold is not a purely technical exercise. It is a moral and legal one, and it is answerable in fairly concrete terms.

The first criterion is accuracy at the relevant decision boundary, not in the aggregate. A mean absolute error of two years is not a property of the model that decides a child's status; it is a property of the population on which the model was tested. What matters at the eighteen-year-old line is the rate at which the model misclassifies a seventeen-year-old as an adult. Published independent evidence on that specific question for the specific demographic of Channel arrivals does not yet exist. Without it, no responsible regulator should authorise deployment.

The second criterion is demographic parity, or as close to it as the underlying problem allows. The Buolamwini-Gebru work, the NIST Face Recognition Vendor Test, and a long line of subsequent studies have established that face-based AI systems exhibit performance differentials by skin tone, sex and age. The remedy is not to declare the differential acceptable; it is to test for it, publish the results stratified by demographic intersection, and require the deploying authority to demonstrate that the residual disparity does not produce disparate impact. The Equality Act 2010 makes that requirement statutory. The Public Sector Equality Duty under section 149 makes it a positive obligation, not a defence.

The third criterion is contestability. A real challenge mechanism, as outlined above, has to exist before the system is deployed, not after a child has been wrongly placed in adult detention. The challenge mechanism cannot be a sealed appeal to the same authority that deployed the model. It has to involve independent expert review, access to the model and its outputs, and a substantive merits standard. It has to be funded; legal aid for age-disputed minors has been eroded for a decade and would have to be restored.

The fourth criterion is proportionality, which is where the legal terrain becomes sharpest. Public authorities deploying intrusive technology against individuals must demonstrate that the measure is proportionate to its aim. The aim, in the Home Office's framing, is efficient and accurate identification of children at the border. The means are a model with documented demographic disparities, no published validation on the relevant population, no challenge mechanism, no equality impact assessment and a confidence interval that the subject cannot see. The Bridges court found a proportionality failure on much thinner facts. It would be surprising if the same logic did not apply.

The fifth criterion is irreversibility of harm. If a misclassified child is sent to adult detention and is harmed there (assaulted, exploited, trafficked, or simply deepened in trauma), the harm is not undone by a later finding that the algorithm was wrong. Where harms are categorical and cannot be made good, the standard of proof for deployment must be correspondingly high. International child-protection law, including the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, requires that in any decision affecting a child the best interests of the child are a primary consideration. A trial that knowingly deploys a system with known bias against the demographic in question, before independent validation on that demographic, before any published challenge mechanism, has not satisfied that test. It is not even close.

The Gap Between the Standard and the Trial

Set those criteria against the announced trial and the gap is not narrow. It is canyon-shaped. The trial proceeds without independent evidence of accuracy on Channel-arrival demographics. It proceeds without a published equality impact assessment. It proceeds without a published challenge mechanism, without legal aid restored to age-disputed children, without an independent regulator in place, and without the kind of risk-based statutory framework the Ada Lovelace Institute called for nearly a year ago and the EU has had on its books since August 2024. It proceeds against the backdrop of a legal opinion that the Home Office's existing AI use in asylum is probably unlawful, and a decade-old indictment from the inspector of borders that the assessment system it sits within is broken.

The case for proceeding is partly fiscal (it is cheaper than the alternatives), partly political (the boats remain a political fact and any technology that promises to manage them attracts ministerial enthusiasm), and partly ideological (a number from a model has the appearance of objectivity, which is exactly the appearance a hostile environment requires). The case against proceeding is, by contrast, dense: technical, legal, ethical and empirical, and almost entirely uncontested by the people who study the technology professionally.

What, then, is the moral and legal standard that would actually be required before such a system could be deployed? It is the standard the rest of public administration, rhetorically at least, claims to apply. Independent validation on the relevant population. Published demographic performance data. Equality impact assessment in advance. Statutory framework with proportionality test. Independent regulator with audit powers. Real, funded contestability for the subject. Default in favour of the child where the system's confidence does not exclude it. Reversibility of harm, or proof that harms can be made good. None of those obtain. The trial proceeds anyway.

There is a particular British way of framing this kind of choice as pragmatic, as a matter of trade-offs, as the inevitable gritty business of border policy. It is worth resisting the framing. The trade-off is not between an inaccurate human system and a more accurate machine one; the existing system is bad, but no public evidence supports the claim that the machine is better at the question that matters. The trade-off is not between cost and care; the cheap option produces irreversible categorical harms whose downstream costs (legal, social, in trauma) the Treasury does not pay. The trade-off, in fact, is between the appearance of decisiveness and the substance of due process. It is the appearance that has won the argument.

A camera at the back of an arrivals room is not a neutral instrument. It is a policy choice, dressed in technological clothing, made on behalf of a state that has decided that the ambiguous childhood of a teenager fished out of the Channel is the kind of question a model can answer. The boy in the imagined room at the start of this article does not get to ask for a second opinion. He does not get to know what the model was trained on, or which version was deployed, or what its mean absolute error was for someone with his complexion and his recent history of immersion in cold water. He gets a number, and the number gets him a bed. That bed is either in a children's home with a social worker assigned to him, or in a hotel where his roommate is a stranger of indeterminate age and intentions. The state has decided the bed; the model has decided the state's decision; nobody has asked whether the model has any business deciding at all.

A mature jurisdiction would have asked. The April 2026 announcement is the moment at which Britain confirms that, on this question, it is not yet a mature jurisdiction. The standard the moment requires is high, specific, and largely already articulated in the country's existing public-law tradition, in the Bridges judgement, in the Equality Act, in the procedural-fairness principles the Open Rights Group's lawyers identified, in the child-protection obligations of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, and in the technical literature that anyone who cares to read can find. The standard the trial provides is none of those. The interval between the two is where the children are.

References

  1. Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration. An inspection of the Home Office's use of age assessments (July 2024 to February 2025). Published 22 July 2025. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/69720dee3f2908a349040534/An_inspection_of_the_Home_Office_s_use_of_age_assessments__July_2024___February_2025__20_pt.pdf
  2. UK Home Office, Response to an inspection of the Home Office's use of age assessments. Published on GOV.UK, 22 July 2025. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/response-to-an-inspection-of-the-home-offices-use-of-age-assessments/response-to-an-inspection-of-the-home-offices-use-of-age-assessments
  3. ResultSense. “Home Office tests AI age estimation on 2.5m images.” 21 April 2026. https://www.resultsense.com/news/2026-04-21-ai-age-estimation-2-5m-images
  4. Community Care. “Government to test using AI facial age estimation in assessments of asylum seekers.” 22 July 2025. https://www.communitycare.co.uk/2025/07/22/government-to-test-using-ai-facial-age-estimation-in-assessments-of-asylum-seekers/
  5. PublicTechnology. “Age-estimating AI face scans could be 'fully integrated' into asylum and immigration processes next year.” 29 July 2025. https://www.publictechnology.net/2025/07/29/society-and-welfare/age-estimating-ai-face-scans-could-be-fully-integrated-into-asylum-and-immigration-processes-next-year/
  6. Open Rights Group. “Home Office use of AI in asylum cases likely to be unlawful, legal opinion finds.” Press release, March 2026. https://www.openrightsgroup.org/press-releases/home-office-use-of-ai-in-asylum-cases-likely-to-be-unlawful-legal-opinion-finds/
  7. Robin Allen KC, Dee Masters and Joshua Jackson. Legal Opinion on AI tools in the asylum process. Open Rights Group, March 2026. https://www.openrightsgroup.org/app/uploads/2026/03/Legal-Opinion-on-AI-tools-in-the-asylum-process.pdf
  8. Hye Jung Han. “UK Plans AI Experiment on Children Seeking Asylum.” Human Rights Watch, 31 July 2025. https://www.hrw.org/news/2025/07/31/uk-plans-ai-experiment-on-children-seeking-asylum
  9. Right to Remain. “Artificially Intelligent, Genuinely Harmful: AI and Age Assessments in the UK Asylum System.” 31 July 2025. https://righttoremain.org.uk/artificially-intelligent-genuinely-harmful-ai-and-age-assessments-in-the-uk-asylum-system/
  10. Refugee Council, Helen Bamber Foundation and Humans for Rights Network. Forced Adulthood: The Home Office's incorrect determination of age and how this leaves child refugees at risk. January 2024. https://www-media.refugeecouncil.org.uk/media/documents/Forced-Adulthood-joint-report-on-age-disputes-January-2024.pdf
  11. Refugee Council. “Press release: more than 1,300 children wrongly assessed as adults.” January 2024. https://www.refugeecouncil.org.uk/press-office/media-centre/hundreds-of-child-refugees-facing-abuse-harassment-exploitation-and-trauma-in-adult-hotels-and-detention/
  12. Joy Buolamwini and Timnit Gebru. “Gender Shades: Intersectional Accuracy Disparities in Commercial Gender Classification.” Proceedings of Machine Learning Research, vol. 81, 2018. https://proceedings.mlr.press/v81/buolamwini18a/buolamwini18a.pdf
  13. National Institute of Standards and Technology. Face Analysis Technology Evaluation (FATE): Age Estimation and Verification. NISTIR 8525, 2024. https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/ir/2024/NIST.IR.8525.pdf
  14. National Institute of Standards and Technology. Face Recognition Vendor Test (FRVT) Part 3: Demographic Effects. NISTIR 8280, 2019. https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/ir/2019/NIST.IR.8280.pdf
  15. Yoti. “Yoti facial age estimation evaluated in the NIST Face Analysis Technology Evaluation program.” https://www.yoti.com/blog/yoti-facial-age-estimation-evaluated-in-the-nist-face-analysis-technology-evaluation-program/
  16. B v London Borough of Merton [2003] EWHC 1689 (Admin). European Database of Asylum Law. https://www.asylumlawdatabase.eu/en/case-law/uk-court-appeal-14-july-2003-b-r-application-v-mayor-and-burgesses-london-borough-merton
  17. Nationality and Borders Act 2022, Part 4. https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2022/36/part/4
  18. Illegal Migration Act 2023, Section 58. https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2023/37/section/58
  19. The Immigration (Age Assessments) Regulations 2023. https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukdsi/2023/9780348251593
  20. UK Home Office. Assessing age guidance for staff (current version). https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/694954b81a2e540ccd8a5481/Assessing_age.pdf
  21. R (Bridges) v Chief Constable of South Wales Police [2020] EWCA Civ 1058. Court of Appeal judgement, 11 August 2020. Liberty case summary: https://www.libertyhumanrights.org.uk/issue/legal-challenge-ed-bridges-v-south-wales-police/
  22. Ada Lovelace Institute. An eye on the future: Examining the UK's approach to facial recognition technology governance. May 2025. https://www.adalovelaceinstitute.org/report/an-eye-on-the-future/
  23. European Union. Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 (the AI Act). Entered into force 1 August 2024. Annex III, on high-risk AI systems. https://artificialintelligenceact.eu/annex/3/
  24. Free Movement. “Latest inspection report finds that decade old concerns about age assessments remain unanswered.” https://freemovement.org.uk/latest-inspection-report-finds-that-decade-old-concerns-about-age-assessments-remain-unanswered/
  25. Context News (Thomson Reuters Foundation). “UK use of AI age estimation tech on migrants fuels rights fears.” https://www.context.news/ai/uk-use-of-ai-age-estimation-tech-on-migrants-fuels-rights-fears

Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

Listen to the free weekly SmarterArticles Podcast

 
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from sector7-signal-Inkari

They promised us new gods. One of them wears glasses, speaks softly, and writes bestsellers about why humanity is obsolete. Meet Yuval Noah Harari — the darling of Davos, Silicon Valley, and every globalist who still thinks they can engineer paradise without the Creator. This isn’t some random academic. Harari is the high priest of the emerging techno-religion. In Sapiens, Homo Deus, and his various talks, he lays out the vision with clinical detachment: humans are not made in the image of God. We are “hackable animals.” Conscious meat machines running biochemical algorithms. Nothing more. Free will? A myth. The soul? A story we told ourselves. Religion? Useful fiction — until it isn’t. He doesn’t scream “God is dead” like Nietzsche. He just calmly explains why God was never necessary and why we should hurry up and replace Him with data and algorithms. And the elites eat it up with a spoon. Harari openly talks about a future where a small class of “upgraded” humans rules over the “unnecessary” masses. He’s spoken of “useless people” who will have no economic or military value once AI takes over. Think about that. A man is being paid massive speaking fees to discuss the coming obsolescence of most of the human race — and the crowd nods along like it’s profound. This is where the false messiahs of the mind always end up: devaluing human life while promising godlike power to the few. Different vocabulary. Same ancient serpent energy. He pushes “Dataism” — the belief that the universe is just data flows and that the ultimate goal is to merge with the algorithm. Forget bearing God’s image. Forget moral responsibility. Forget eternity. Just upload, optimize, and disappear into the machine. Harari is remarkably honest about one thing, though: he knows his worldview requires the complete dismantling of biblical Christianity. He sees the Bible not as revelation but as one myth among many — and an outdated one at that. In his world, compassion, human rights, and dignity aren’t grounded in the fact that we are image-bearers. They’re fragile social constructs that can be rewritten whenever the powerful decide they’re no longer useful. That’s not progress. That’s regression to pagan barbarism with better marketing and better surveillance tech. Here’s the brutal truth Inkari-style: You cannot reduce human beings to hackable animals without eventually treating them like animals. You cannot declare free will an illusion and then act shocked when people behave like deterministic machines. You cannot mock the idea of a Creator and then act like your own godhood won’t become tyrannical. Every single time man tries to sit on God’s throne, the body count rises and the soul count plummets. The Christian answer is not fear. It’s clarity. We are not accidents. We are not algorithms. We are not data points to be optimized by Harari’s masters. We are fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139). Image-bearers of the living God. Accountable. Eternal. Worth the blood of Christ. No amount of neural implants, genetic editing, or AI overlords can change that reality. They can only rebel against it. Harari dreams of a post-human future. Christ offers a redeemed human future. One turns men into gods who fail. The other turns sinners into saints who endure. The prophet of Silicon can sell his sterile, soulless vision to the billionaire class all he wants. But the grave still waits for him too. And on that day, no algorithm will save him from the God he spent his career trying to render irrelevant. The data may flow. But the Blood still speaks louder. Choose your prophet carefully. —Inkari 🧵⚡ Sector Δ7 Data Recovered – Psalm 139:13-14 Transmission Archived @inkari_files

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * This Sunday saw a mix of intense physical work, and quiet recovery time. The physical work found me mowing the terribly overgrown back yard and hauling big fallen branches from a temporary staging area to one where I can more effectively work on them.

The yard work was done from mid-morning to early afternoon. The quiet recovery time began immediately after the yard work and continues now into the early evening hours as I listen to relaxing music and consider my chores for tomorrow and the upcoming week.

All that remains of this Sunday is working the night prayers, which I shall attend to shortly.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 234.57 lbs. * bp= 134/80 (72)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 06:50 – 1 banana * 07:20 – a pile of cookies * 13:15 – sausages, fried eggs, fried rice, fresh mango

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 06:45 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 06:55 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap * 10:00 to 11:30 – Yard work, mowing etc. in back yard. * 12:00 to 13:00 – ditto * 13:15 to 14:15 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 15:00 – listen to relaxing music

Chess: * 16:00 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from Noisy Deadlines

  1. Service Model by Adrian Tchaikovsky, 373p: I love an unemotional robot protagonist with an active inner monologue and strong critical-thinking skills, so this was a fun and engaging read for me. I thought it had the same snarky sense of humour found in the “Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy” by Douglas Adams. It's dystopian and explores the idea of what might happen if humanity destroys the environment to the point where mostly machines and robots are left behind. The book satirizes capitalism, bureaucracy, artificial intelligence and the pursuit of efficiency, while also dealing with questions of free will and existence. It was highly entertaining, both in terms of plot wise and writing style.

  2. The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie (Mackenzies & McBrides #1) by Jennifer Ashley, 320p: This is a unique historical romance book, because it depicts a neurodivergent male protagonist (Ian),  a widowed independent female protagonist (Beth) and a suspenseful murder mystery. It highlights how neurodivergent people were deeply misunderstood by society in the 19th century. I loved that both protagonists are rebellious and refuse to conform to society's expectations. They pursue what makes them happy while navigating a dark and challenging reality.

  3. The Anxious Achiever: Turn Your Biggest Fears into Your Leadership Superpower by Morra Aarons-Mele, 232p: I read this book slowly. It was an interesting read, although it felt repetitive at times. It offers some good advice for people with anxiety who work in high-demand positions and are leaders. I got some good ideas from it, and it helped me realize that I'm not alone. It also reinforced that it's possible to become a good leader without being extroverted, even if you have some anxiety-related traits.

  4. Murder by Memory (Dorothy Gentleman #1) by Olivia Waite, 103p: This was a quick read with a cozy mystery set inside a spaceship. I loved that the main protagonist, Dorothy Gentleman, is a sweet and smart older woman, who is also a detective. The writing is sharp and engaging. It almost feels too lighthearted at times and I found some of the solutions came a little too easily. The resolution of the murder mystery was not as interesting as I had hoped it would be. Overall, though, it was a fun and enjoyable read.

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from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse

JOURNAL 31 mai 2026

Les nuages sont partis la nuit est magnifique il fait presque chaud à peine un petit courant d'air sur nos cuisses sur la peau dans les cheveux l'odeur de la mer du vent de ton corps de nos corps si prêts si chauds si vivants au dessus de nous les étoiles 🌟 tout l'univers si loin mais si proche on en fait partie il nous habite comme nous l'habitons c'est fantastique à chaque fois le même effet le même vertige la même envie de s'y fondre de s'y envoler main dans la main

 
Lire la suite...

from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One

Jesus knelt beneath the wide leaves before dawn, where the trunks rose black against a sky full of cold stars and the shielded moon held its breath. The camp slept in broken pieces around Him, scattered under woven tarps, beside disabled scouts, inside shallow shelters scraped from the damp earth. Far above the trees, an armed citadel crossed the night like a moving eclipse, and its shadow passed over the forest as if war itself had learned how to blot out the heavens. Jesus did not look up at it. He bowed His head in the dark soil, and His prayer was quiet enough that only the Father heard the fullness of it.

Someone looking back might call what happened there Jesus in a Star Wars inspired story, because there were moons, rebels, armored soldiers, and a war machine burning in the black above them. Sella Arven would never have called it that while she was living through it. To her, it belonged beside the related story of mercy when hatred feels justified, because the hardest battle on that moon was not the one fought in the sky. It was the one hidden behind her ribs, where grief had turned into a law she obeyed more faithfully than hope.

Sella woke before the alarm chime and reached for the narrow blade under her blanket. She did that every morning, even when there was no sound, even when the sentries whispered that the forest was safe, even when exhaustion pressed her into the ground like another layer of mud. Her hand always found the handle first. After that she remembered where she was, who was still alive, and why her father’s name was no longer spoken around any fire where she sat.

The shelter smelled of sap, wet wool, and burned circuitry. Rain had leaked through the high canopy during the night and dripped steadily into a dented ration tin near Sella’s boots. Tavik slept on his side a few feet away with one hand across the charge pack strapped to his chest, the way men slept when they had carried explosives too long and trusted sleep too little. On the other side of the shelter, Lysa was already awake, tying back her hair with a strip of green cloth and staring at the faint red pulse of the field map between them.

“They moved the patrol line,” Lysa said softly.

Sella sat up and pulled the blanket from her shoulders. The cold hit the sweat along her neck. She leaned toward the map and watched a thin line of crimson lights crawl through the ravine north of their position, each one marking a Dominion walker or armored squad. “That path was clear at midnight,” she said.

“It was,” Lysa answered, and the plainness of her voice made the news worse.

Tavik opened one eye. “Maybe they got lost.”

“No one gets lost in a pattern that tight,” Sella said. She tapped the map twice, and the red lights shivered. “They know someone is close to the shield tower.”

Lysa looked toward the sealed pack beside Sella’s knee. Inside it was the relay key, a small crescent of metal and glass that had cost twelve lives to steal. Without it, the assault team hiding in the western trees could never blind the shield tower long enough for the fleet above to attack the citadel. With it, they had a chance, though no one said how thin that chance was. Hope had become something they handled carefully, like unstable fuel.

“We leave in seven minutes,” Lysa said.

Sella reached for her boots. Her fingers moved with the calm habit of a person who had decided long ago that fear was useless. She buckled the straps, checked the knife sheath at her calf, sealed the relay key inside her vest, and slung her pulse rifle over one shoulder. Nothing in her face changed while she worked, but inside, under all the trained silence, there was a pressure that never fully lifted. It had been there since the day Bram Arven opened the east gate of their mountain station and let Dominion soldiers walk through it.

No one had seen him do it except a kitchen boy who died three days later. The boy had whispered Bram’s name before the fever took him. Sella had been nineteen, old enough to understand betrayal but too young to know what hatred could do when it had years to practice. Her mother died in the lower passage. Her younger brother died near the water pumps with a repair tool still in his hand. Bram disappeared with the Dominion evacuation craft, and Sella learned that some grief did not soften with time. Some grief hardened into purpose and called itself justice.

The forest outside was still dark when they crawled from the shelter. The air carried the metallic taste of the shield grid, a thin vibration that made teeth feel wrong when a person stood too close to the tower’s reach. Above them, the citadel crossed behind clouds, a black shape rimmed with engine glow. Sella hated looking at it, but she looked anyway. She wanted to remember what had to fall. She wanted to keep her anger sharp enough to cut through mercy if mercy ever came asking for something she could not give.

A figure stood near the edge of camp, half hidden by a pillar tree whose roots rose like the ribs of some buried beast. Sella noticed Him because He was still. Everyone else in camp moved with the tense haste of people trying to outrun the next explosion, but this man stood as if time had no power to push Him. He wore a simple outer garment darkened by rain, and His hands were empty. His face was turned toward the trees where the patrol lights flickered in the far ravine.

Sella stopped walking before she meant to.

Lysa turned back. “What is it?”

“Who is that?” Sella asked.

Lysa followed her eyes. “The healer.”

“We do not have a healer.”

“We do now.”

Sella frowned. “Who cleared him?”

Lysa’s mouth tightened as if she had already asked the same question and received an answer that did not fit inside the rules. “Commander says he came in with the south survivors after midnight. Treated the burned ones. Sat with Jorin until he died.”

Sella looked at the man again. He turned then, not suddenly, not with the alertness of someone caught listening, but with the calm of someone who had known she was there before she spoke. Their eyes met across the damp camp. She felt no threat from Him, and that troubled her more than a threat would have. People without visible fear were usually foolish, broken, or dangerous.

“We need to move,” Lysa said.

Sella looked away first. “Then move.”

They entered the trees in single file, with Lysa leading, Tavik behind her, Sella in the middle, and two scouts from another cell following at a distance. The moon’s forest was older than the colonies that had tried to tame it. Great roots crossed the ground like sleeping animals. Pale insects drifted in small clouds above pools of black water. Somewhere far off, a creature called once and then went quiet, as if even the wild things knew that machines were hunting beneath the branches.

For the first hour, nothing went wrong. That should have comforted Sella, but it made her listen harder. The Dominion rarely left silence untouched. Their ships screamed, their towers hummed, their soldiers marched with amplifiers in their helmets so even their breathing sounded owned. Quiet belonged to the living. The Dominion hated anything it did not control.

They reached the dry creek bed just as gray morning seeped through the canopy. Lysa crouched and lifted one hand. Everyone froze. A soft clicking moved ahead of them, too even to be an animal and too low to be a walker. Sella eased down behind a root and brought her rifle up. Through the leaves, she saw three Dominion soldiers dragging a fourth man between them.

The prisoner’s hands were bound. His uniform coat was torn at one shoulder, and dark blood streaked the side of his neck. He was older than the others, broad in the shoulders, limping badly, but still trying to hold himself upright with the last pieces of his pride. One of the soldiers shoved him with a rifle stock. He fell to one knee in the creek bed and did not make a sound.

Tavik shifted beside Sella. “Officer,” he mouthed.

Lysa signaled for silence, but Sella was no longer looking at the insignia. She was looking at the prisoner’s left hand. Two fingers were crooked from an old engine crush, healed badly because the station clinic had run out of splints the winter Sella turned fourteen. She remembered holding that hand while her father laughed through the pain and told her that machines could bite, but daughters should not cry over stubborn metal.

The forest narrowed around her.

No one had spoken Bram Arven’s name for years, but the name rose in her now with such force that she nearly stood. Her finger tightened against the rifle. The prisoner lifted his head, and the morning caught his face through the branches. Older. Thinner. Gray through the beard. A scar crossing one cheek that had not been there before. Still Bram. Still the man who had taught her how to repair heat coils with copper thread. Still the man who had opened the gate.

Lysa’s hand closed around Sella’s wrist before Sella knew she had moved. The grip hurt. Sella did not look at her.

“Do not,” Lysa whispered.

Sella’s breath came slow and hard through her nose. The three soldiers had stopped near a rock shelf. One removed a signal rod from his belt and spoke into it. The words were too low to hear, but the answer came through with a sharp electronic crackle. Another soldier kicked Bram in the side and told him to stand.

“He is bait,” Lysa breathed. “They want us to break cover.”

Sella heard the words, understood them, and felt them fail to matter. Her father was twenty paces away. Not dead, not lost, not a ghost carried by anger through every sleepless year. Flesh. Breath. Blood. The man who had walked away while her mother screamed in smoke was kneeling in front of her with his hands tied.

Tavik leaned close. “Sella.”

She wanted to say she was fine, but the lie would not form. Her whole body had become the moment before a shot. She saw the east gate again, not as memory but as if the forest had opened into that hallway. She saw the lights fail. She saw her brother’s tool roll across the floor. She saw her mother push Sella into the grain chute and cover the grate from the outside. For years Sella had told herself that if she ever saw Bram again, she would not hesitate. The clean line of that promise had carried her through hunger, marches, cold camps, and every order she hated.

Now the clean line was shaking.

A branch snapped behind them.

The three soldiers turned at once. Lysa fired first. The creek bed erupted in white pulses, bark splinters, and shouted commands. Tavik rolled left and threw a flash charge that burst against the rock shelf. One soldier dropped. Another staggered blind. The third fired into the trees and hit the scout behind Sella, who fell with a sound that was more surprise than pain.

Sella moved without thought. She slid down the creek bank, shot the blinded soldier in the shoulder, and drove her boot into the third man’s knee before he could turn his rifle. He collapsed, cursing, and Tavik was on him with binders in less than a breath. The whole fight lasted maybe twelve seconds. Afterward the forest sounded too quiet again.

Bram lay on his side near the rock shelf, breathing through clenched teeth. His bound hands were pressed against his ribs. Sella stood over him with her rifle pointed at his chest.

He looked up at her.

For a moment he did not know her. That wounded her before she could defend herself against it. Then recognition came into his face like pain finding an old doorway.

“Sella,” he said.

Her name in his mouth nearly made her pull the trigger.

Lysa came down the bank behind her. “We have to go. More will come.”

Sella did not move.

Bram’s eyes went to the rifle, then back to her face. He swallowed. “You are alive.”

“That surprises you?” Sella asked.

His mouth opened, but nothing came out.

Tavik dragged the captured soldier upright and looked toward the ravine. “Lysa, we have movement north. Fast.”

Lysa cursed under her breath. “We take the officer. He may know tower codes.”

“No,” Sella said.

Lysa stared at her. “No?”

“He slows us down.”

“He is a ranking officer.”

“He is a traitor.”

The word entered the creek bed and seemed to change the air. Tavik looked from Sella to Bram and understood enough to stop speaking. Lysa’s expression shifted, not into softness, but into something more careful. She had known Sella for five years. She had seen her fight, starve, bleed, and keep walking. She had not seen her voice break around one word.

Bram tried to push himself upright. “Sella, listen to me.”

“I listened for years,” she said. “I listened for your boots in the hall. I listened for your voice outside the grain chute. I listened while Mother died because I thought you might come back.”

His face went gray under the dirt.

Lysa stepped closer. “Sella, we do not have time.”

Sella kept the rifle steady. “Then we save time.”

Bram closed his eyes, and somehow that made her angrier. She did not want him to receive death like a punishment already accepted. She wanted him afraid. She wanted him to understand the shape of what he had done. She wanted him to carry one honest second of the terror he had left behind for everyone else.

Then a voice spoke from the top of the bank.

“Daughter.”

Sella turned halfway, rifle still pointed downward. The healer from camp stood among the roots above them. No weapon hung from His shoulder. No mud marked His hands, though the ground around Him was wet. The gray morning touched His face, and the same stillness she had seen in camp held around Him now, not as distance from danger, but as authority over it.

Lysa lifted her rifle. “Get down.”

Jesus did not look away from Sella. “You have carried this death a long way.”

Sella’s throat tightened. “You do not know what he did.”

“I know what hatred has done to you.”

The words did not strike loudly. They entered quietly, and that made them harder to keep out. Sella turned back toward Bram because anger felt safer than being seen. “He opened the gate.”

Bram’s head bowed.

Jesus came down the bank slowly. Lysa looked as if every part of her wanted to stop Him, but she did not. Tavik held the captured soldier by the collar and watched the trees, panic building in his eyes. The red patrol lights were closer now, blinking through the brush like small wounds.

“He gave them my family,” Sella said. “He gave them children hiding under tables. He gave them old men in the infirmary. He gave them my brother.”

Jesus stood beside her, close enough that she could hear His breathing. “And if you give your soul to vengeance, what will be left of you when the shot is over?”

Sella almost laughed, but the sound came out bitter and small. “Do not ask me to forgive him.”

“I am asking you not to become the grave you survived.”

Bram made a sound then, not quite a sob. Sella hated it. She hated that the sound was human. For years he had lived in her mind as the shape of betrayal, clean and simple, with no breath, no age, no trembling hands. Now he was on the ground in front of her, bleeding into the creek stones, and Jesus was asking her to see more than the crime without pretending the crime was small.

A shot cracked through the trees and hit the rock shelf above them. Stone dust burst against Sella’s cheek. Lysa fired toward the ravine. Tavik shouted that they had to move now. The captured soldier twisted free and bolted, only to fall when Lysa struck him with the butt of her rifle. Everything became motion again, but Sella remained fixed in the terrible narrow space between the trigger and the man.

Jesus did not touch the rifle. He did not force her hand down. He only stood with her in the place where obedience would cost her something she had mistaken for strength.

“Sella,” He said.

She looked at Him then, and the forest, the tower, the citadel, and even Bram seemed to fall back behind that voice. There was no softness in His eyes that made evil look harmless. There was mercy there, but not the kind that erased truth. It was heavier than sympathy and cleaner than pity. It reached toward the part of her that had been living on borrowed fire and asked whether she wanted to be free or only avenged.

Her finger loosened.

She lowered the rifle so slowly that her arm shook with the effort.

Bram covered his face with his bound hands. Sella stepped back as if the space between them burned. She could not forgive him. She could not even look at him without wanting to reach for the weapon again. But she had not fired, and that one act felt less like mercy than a wound being kept open because God had placed His hand over it.

Lysa grabbed Bram by the back of his coat and hauled him upright. “Move, then. If he dies on the way, I am not carrying him.”

Tavik shoved the captured soldier ahead of them. The patrol lights were breaking through the ravine brush. Sella turned to Jesus, breath sharp, face wet from rain or sweat or something she refused to name. “If he betrays us again, his blood is not on me.”

Jesus looked at Bram, then at Sella. “The blood that rules you is the question before you.”

She did not understand Him, and she did not want to. Lysa was already pulling Bram into the trees. Tavik shouted her name. Sella backed away from Jesus for one step, then another. She expected Him to remain in the creek bed like a strange mercy she could leave behind.

Instead He followed.

They ran west beneath the shielded sky while the forest woke around them and the war above the moon moved toward fire. Sella kept one hand against the relay key inside her vest and the other near the rifle she had not used on her father. Every few breaths she heard Bram stumbling ahead of her, and each sound struck some buried place in her that had never stopped being nineteen. Behind her, Jesus moved through the trees with quiet steadiness, not rushing, not falling behind, and not letting the darkness have the last word simply because it had spoken first.

Chapter Two

They reached the western cedar hollow with the patrol close enough that Sella could hear the armored men calling to one another through the trees. Their voices came flattened by helmet speakers, stripped of breath and made into command. Lysa shoved Bram behind a fallen trunk and pointed two fingers toward the moss-covered rise beyond the hollow. Tavik understood without words and crawled toward it with the captured soldier’s belt knife in his hand, leaving the prisoner bound against a root with his mouth gagged and his eyes wild. Sella dropped beside Bram and pressed the barrel of her rifle toward the trees, but her attention kept breaking from the patrol line to the man at her feet.

Bram’s breathing sounded wrong. Each breath caught low in his ribs, and when he tried to sit straighter, his face tightened before he could hide it. Blood had soaked through the side of his coat, turning the gray fabric dark and heavy. Sella saw the wound and refused to care, then saw it again and hated herself for noticing. He had survived years beyond the night he should have come back for them. She did not want his death to feel unfair.

Lysa slid into the hollow beside her. “We cannot outrun them with him like this.”

“Then leave him,” Sella said.

Lysa looked at her for a long moment. “You know I will not do that unless I have to.”

“You did not know him before today.”

“No,” Lysa said. “But I know what he might know.”

Bram opened his eyes. “The tower lower access is flooded.”

Sella turned on him. “No one asked you.”

“You cannot enter through the lower vents,” he said, speaking past the pain. “They flooded the intake shafts after the south cell tried to breach them. There are current traps in the water and motion readers above the grates. If you take the old route, you will die before you touch the relay panel.”

Lysa went still. “How do you know our route?”

Bram’s eyes shifted toward Sella and then away. “Because I helped design the emergency defenses.”

Sella gave a cold, quiet laugh that had no humor in it. “Of course you did.”

The patrol swept closer. Red beams moved between trunks, touching leaves and wet bark. Tavik crawled back down the rise, his face streaked with mud. “Eight soldiers, maybe ten. One light rig. No walker yet.”

“Can we slip south?” Lysa asked.

“Not with him.” Tavik glanced at Bram. “Not unless we want to leave a trail wide enough for blind men.”

Bram swallowed hard. “There is another way.”

Sella leaned close enough that he could see the anger she had carried all morning. “You are not leading us anywhere.”

“I am not asking to lead,” he said. “I am telling you there is an old maintenance causeway beneath the root beds. It runs from the water processors toward the tower’s east service wall. Most of it collapsed after the winter quakes, but if the inner supports still hold, it will get you under their patrol grid.”

Lysa studied him. “Why would you tell us that?”

Bram’s face changed. Not enough for Tavik to see, maybe not enough for Lysa, but Sella saw it because she knew the bones of his expressions from a life that seemed to belong to another person now. Shame moved across him before he pushed it down. “Because the shield cannot stay up.”

“That is not an answer,” Sella said.

Bram looked at her then. “It is the only answer I have left.”

A branch cracked somewhere ahead. Lysa lowered her voice. “We move now. Sella, you keep him alive long enough to get us to that causeway.”

“No.”

Lysa’s eyes hardened. “That was not a request.”

The words landed between them with old command weight. Sella had followed Lysa through ambush, winter hunger, and three cities burning behind them. She had trusted her with her life more times than she could count. But trust did not make obedience easy when the order placed Bram’s weight on her shoulders. Sella looked past Lysa to where Jesus stood near the edge of the hollow, one hand resting lightly against the bark of a cedar tree, His face turned toward the patrol lights. He had not interrupted. That troubled her too, because His silence did not feel empty.

“You heard what she said,” Lysa told Bram. “Can you walk?”

Bram tried to push himself up. His bound hands made the motion clumsy, and he nearly fell. Sella watched without moving. Then Jesus stepped forward, knelt beside Bram, and looked at the rope cutting into his wrists.

“Untie him,” Jesus said.

Sella’s voice came sharp. “No.”

Jesus looked up at her. “A bound man cannot show you where to place your feet.”

“He showed the Dominion where to place theirs.”

Bram closed his eyes, and Sella wanted the words to wound him. She wanted each one to find him cleanly. Jesus held her gaze, and nothing in His face denied what she had said. That was the unbearable part. He did not ask her to pretend Bram was innocent. He simply would not let her hatred become the only truth allowed to speak.

Lysa cut the bindings herself. “If he runs, I will drop him.”

Bram flexed his fingers with a small grimace. The crooked ones trembled. Sella remembered those fingers guiding hers over a broken transmitter when she was a child, telling her that anger made hands sloppy and patient work saved lives. The memory came so quickly that she almost lost her breath. She shoved it down and stood.

They moved through the cedar hollow bent low, with Tavik ahead and Lysa behind the prisoner. Bram walked between Jesus and Sella, though Sella kept enough space to remind herself that she had not accepted his nearness. Twice he stumbled over hidden roots, and twice Jesus steadied him with a hand beneath the elbow. The sight scraped against something inside her. She did not understand how Jesus could touch him so gently after knowing what he had done.

The patrol passed behind them at the ridge. One soldier called out, and for a moment everyone froze. Sella could see his helmet through the thicket, black and wet with rain. A red beam swept low over the leaves and slid across the ground inches from Tavik’s boot. No one breathed. Somewhere overhead, the citadel groaned as its engines adjusted, and the sound rolled through the sky like a storm trapped inside metal.

The beam moved on.

They did not speak again until the ground began to slope downward and the trees thickened around an old service embankment. The place had once belonged to the first settlers on the moon, before the Dominion turned every useful thing into a weapon. A rusted pipe mouth jutted from beneath a curtain of roots, half hidden by moss and mineral stains. Water trickled out of it into a black channel that smelled of iron, rot, and old machinery.

“This is it?” Tavik asked.

Bram nodded. “The causeway begins inside. It should run beneath the patrol fields.”

“Should?” Sella asked.

He looked at her. “I have not been here in eight years.”

“Eight years of loyal service makes a man forget details.”

Lysa touched Sella’s arm, not softly. “Enough.”

Sella pulled away but said nothing. Tavik pried the rusted grate loose with a flat charge set low enough not to carry far. The metal gave with a tired scream that made them all flinch. After a moment of silence, Tavik slipped inside with a hand lamp. Lysa followed, then Bram, then Jesus. Sella entered last, dragging the grate back across the opening enough to break the shape of the hole from a distance.

The tunnel was narrow and damp, built for maintenance crews who had not imagined a wounded traitor, a hunted cell, and Jesus walking through it years later. Roots had cracked the upper seams and pushed thin fingers into the concrete. The floor sloped unevenly under shallow water. Every step sent ripples ahead of them, carrying tiny reflections from Tavik’s lamp along the walls like broken stars.

Sella hated the tunnel almost immediately. Not because it was dark. She had lived in darker places. She hated it because the sound of dripping water brought back the grain chute beneath the east gate, where she had hidden with dust in her mouth and her mother’s hand pressed over the grate above her. She had not seen her mother die. She had only heard the last part of it, the shouting, the heavy boots, the single cry that became silence. For years Sella had told herself that not seeing was mercy, but in the tunnel she knew it had not been mercy. It had left her imagination to finish what her eyes had been spared.

Bram’s limp worsened after the first bend. He kept one hand against the wall, leaving blood on the cracked concrete. Lysa noticed and slowed, but Sella kept walking, forcing him to keep the pace or fall. Jesus turned once and looked at her. He said nothing. That silence was worse than correction, because Sella could feel the truth forming in it before she had words to fight.

“You should save your strength,” Jesus said to Bram.

Bram breathed out through his teeth. “I spent most of it badly.”

Sella stopped so abruptly that Lysa nearly ran into her. “Do not do that.”

Bram looked back.

“Do not make small honest comments like they change what happened,” Sella said. “Do not bleed and limp and speak like a sad old man so everyone forgets what you are.”

The tunnel held her voice and carried it forward. Tavik stopped at the next bend but did not turn around. Lysa lowered her eyes. Jesus stood between Sella and Bram, but not as a shield. More like a witness.

Bram’s face was pale in the lamp glow. “I am not asking anyone to forget.”

“Good,” she said. “Because I remember enough for everyone.”

“I know.”

“No, you do not.” Sella stepped closer, and years of silence broke through before she could stop them. “You do not know what it was like to crawl through waste ducts with smoke in my lungs because my mother shoved me into the only place small enough to hide. You do not know what it was like to wait for my brother to answer when I called his name. You do not know what it was like to hear people say your name as if it were poison and still remember you singing in the kitchen. You do not know what it did to me to hate you and miss you in the same breath.”

Bram stared at her as if the last sentence had struck deeper than all the others. Sella wished she could pull it back. Not because it was untrue, but because truth had escaped without permission, and she did not want him to know that any part of her had ever missed him.

“I was there,” he said.

The tunnel went still.

Sella’s face hardened. “Do not lie to me.”

“I was there after the gate opened.”

“You were gone.”

“I came back.”

Her hand moved to the rifle. Lysa caught the motion, but Jesus’s eyes never left Bram.

Bram leaned against the wall. The blood on his coat had spread. “I came back through the service line under the west pump. The lower corridor was already burning. I found the boy who later named me. He had seen me at the gate controls, and he was right. I had opened them.”

Sella’s voice dropped. “Why?”

Bram shut his eyes. For several seconds the only sound was water dripping into water. “Because they had you.”

Sella stared at him.

He opened his eyes and looked at her with a grief so old it seemed to have worn down even his shame. “Dominion intelligence caught your courier team two days before the attack. You were supposed to be at the north relay with Nerin and Col. They sent me your scarf with blood on it and a message saying they would execute you unless I disabled the outer lock for three minutes.”

Sella’s mouth went dry. “I was never caught.”

“I know that now.”

“I traded routes with Mirel because she was sick.”

Bram nodded once, and the motion looked like it cost him. “They knew the old route. They thought they had you. I believed them.”

Lysa’s face had gone still in the hard way that meant she was thinking through every implication at once. Tavik turned at the bend, hand lamp trembling slightly. Sella could not move. The tunnel seemed to tilt under her feet.

Bram continued, each word dragged from a place he had buried because hiding it had become his punishment. “I opened the lock for three minutes. I thought I was saving you. I thought I could trigger the inner seal before they reached the residential levels. They had already overridden the second panel. By the time I understood, they were through.”

Sella shook her head. “No.”

“I ran to find your mother. I found the grain chute open. She was gone.” His voice thinned. “I found your brother near the pumps. I carried him until the ceiling came down. When I woke, the Dominion had me in a transport. They told everyone I had defected because it was useful to them. Later, they made it true enough.”

The words did not free him. They made everything worse. Sella wanted the clean story back. She wanted the father who had simply chosen evil because that man was easier to hate. This man had chosen wrong for love, caused ruin, failed to die with the ruined, and then lived under the power that had used him. It did not absolve him. It did not bring back the dead. It only made hatred harder to keep pure.

“You could have told someone,” she said.

“I tried once.”

“Once?”

His face twisted. “Cowardice does not always look like hiding from battle. Sometimes it looks like surviving one compromise and then obeying the next voice because you no longer believe you have any right to resist.”

Sella lifted her chin. “That sounds convenient.”

“It was not convenient,” Bram said. “It was damnation with a uniform.”

Jesus stepped closer to him. “Do not call unrepented sin by the name of damnation as if it were stronger than God.”

Bram looked at Him then, and for the first time fear entered his face in a different form. Not fear of soldiers. Not fear of Sella’s rifle. Fear of being known completely and still not being allowed to disappear behind his guilt.

Sella heard the rebuke and felt it brush her too. She did not want it near her. She wanted Jesus to speak only to Bram’s evil, not to the dark thing her own pain had built. The unfairness of mercy burned in her chest. It seemed to stand too close to betrayal.

A distant metallic clank sounded behind them.

Tavik raised the lamp. “They found the pipe.”

Lysa swore and pushed forward. “Move.”

The confession vanished into urgency, but it did not leave Sella. It followed with every step, unwanted and alive. Bram stumbled again, and this time Sella grabbed his arm before Jesus did. The motion shocked both of them. His weight came against her shoulder, warm and unsteady. For a moment she smelled smoke where there was none.

He whispered, “I am sorry.”

She shoved him upright. “Walk.”

They pressed deeper into the causeway. Behind them came the faint echo of boots entering the pipe. The patrol had not lost them. Tavik increased the pace until the wounded man nearly collapsed twice. Lysa kept checking the map, though the signal weakened underground and the field display stuttered with interference. The causeway narrowed ahead where roots had broken through both walls and formed a dense living gate around twisted metal supports.

Bram pointed with a shaking hand. “There should be a junction past that fall.”

“Should,” Sella muttered.

The supports groaned as Tavik climbed through first. Lysa followed, dragging the prisoner by the collar. Bram tried to duck under the lowest beam but slipped in the water. Sella caught him again, this time harder, because if he fell, they all stopped. The beam scraped across his shoulder, and he gasped. The sound cut her more than she wanted. She pulled him through and let go as soon as he found his footing.

Jesus came last. As He passed beneath the roots, one of the supports cracked above Him. Sella heard it and turned. A long section of concrete shifted loose from the ceiling. Jesus looked up, then placed His hand against the sagging beam with a calm that did not belong inside danger. Tavik shouted for Him to move, but He remained still long enough for Sella to see the rest of them were directly beneath the broken span.

“Go on,” Jesus said.

Lysa hesitated only one second. “Move.”

They ran the next twenty paces. Sella looked back once and saw Jesus still holding the beam, water falling around His shoulders, His face lifted in quiet strength. Then He stepped away. The ceiling collapsed behind Him with a roar that filled the tunnel, throwing dust and muddy spray through the air. Sella coughed and raised her rifle, but when the dust thinned, Jesus was already walking toward them from the edge of the fallen stone.

The passage behind Him was sealed.

The patrol voices stopped on the other side of the collapse. For a moment there was only muffled shouting and the scrape of metal against stone. Tavik stared at Jesus as if trying to decide whether to ask the question on everyone’s face. He did not. Some questions were too large for tunnels.

Lysa recovered first. “Will they find another way around?”

Bram leaned against the wall, breathing hard. “Not quickly.”

“Then we keep moving.”

The junction lay ahead beneath a broken service arch. Three tunnels split from it, each marked by old symbols half covered in mineral stains. Bram pointed to the right-hand passage. “East wall.”

Tavik looked down it. “That tunnel slopes up.”

“It should reach the tower service gallery.”

Sella studied Bram’s face. “And if you are wrong?”

He looked back at her. “Then I am wrong beside you.”

She wanted to answer with something cruel. Nothing came. The clean hatred had been disturbed, and what rose in its place was not forgiveness. It was confusion, and confusion felt weak. Sella had built her life on knowing exactly what Bram was. Now that certainty had cracked, and through the crack came memories she had buried under the accusation. His hands lifting her to reach a shelf. His voice teaching her old songs during power outages. His face the night he promised her that fear could shout, but it did not deserve to rule.

Jesus came to stand beside her while the others entered the right-hand passage. “Truth has begun its work,” He said.

Sella kept her eyes on the tunnel. “Truth does not make the dead alive.”

“No,” Jesus said. “But lies keep burying the living.”

She turned toward Him, angry because part of her understood. “You speak as if I chose this.”

“You did not choose what was done to you.”

“Then why does it feel like You are asking me to pay for it?”

Jesus’s face held sorrow, but His voice remained steady. “Because freedom can feel like loss to the heart that has learned to survive in chains.”

Sella looked away before tears could betray her. She was not ready for words like freedom. She was not ready for a world where Bram was guilty and not only guilty, where she was wounded and not only righteous, where mercy did not arrive like a pardon but like a hand reaching into a locked room she had mistaken for home. Tavik called from ahead that the passage was clear. Lysa told them to hurry.

Sella walked on, and Jesus walked near her in the tunnel’s dim light. Bram limped ahead with one hand against the wall, no longer bound, no longer simple, not yet forgiven, and not beyond the reach of the holy Man who had entered their war without carrying a weapon. Above them the shield tower waited, humming with power. Below it, in the dark causeway, Sella carried the relay key and a truth she could not put back where it had been.

Chapter Three

The right-hand passage climbed until the air changed. The tunnel no longer smelled only of wet earth and old rot. A bitter metal scent pressed into it now, the smell of heated conduits, shield coils, and power running through wires that had never been meant to sleep. Tavik dimmed the hand lamp and raised one fist. Everyone stopped beneath a low section of ceiling where roots hung through a crack and trembled from the vibration above them. Somewhere close, machinery pulsed with the steady confidence of something built to keep whole worlds separated from help.

Sella felt the relay key against her chest with every breath. It was small enough to hide under one hand, yet the lives gathered beneath the western trees depended on it. The fleet above the moon depended on it. Maybe whole colonies that had been waiting years for the Dominion to bleed depended on it too, though she could not let her mind stretch that far. When the stakes grew too large, they stopped feeling like people. Sella had learned to think in the next door, the next shot, the next hard choice. Anything beyond that could crush a person before the enemy had to.

Bram leaned against the wall near the junction box, his face slick with sweat. The climb had taken more from him than he wanted them to see. Blood had dried black along the edge of his coat, but fresh red still showed beneath it when he moved wrong. Sella watched him because she did not trust him, and because she did not trust the part of herself that kept checking whether he was about to fall. Both reasons made her angry.

Lysa crouched beside the old junction panel and wiped grime from its face. “This line still has power.”

“It feeds the service gallery,” Bram said. “If the tower has not been rebuilt past the original frame, there should be a manual override ahead. It will not open the main doors, but it may open a vent gate large enough for one person at a time.”

Tavik glanced back at him. “May open?”

Bram breathed through a wave of pain before answering. “I know what I built. I do not know what they changed after I was removed from the tower project.”

“Removed?” Sella asked. “That is a soft word.”

He looked at her and accepted the wound in the sentence without flinching. “After I refused to help them map the refugee tunnels under Korrin Ridge, they moved me to waste encryption and kept me under watch. I was useful enough to keep alive and distrusted enough to keep close.”

The captured soldier made a muffled sound through the gag Tavik had tied around his mouth. Lysa turned her rifle toward him. He had been silent for nearly an hour, but his eyes were awake in the dim light, flicking from Bram to Sella with the restless calculation of a man trying to measure every fracture in the group that held him. Sella knew that look. Men in Dominion uniforms were trained to find weakness before they found exits.

Tavik pushed the prisoner against the wall. “You have something to say?”

The soldier stared at Bram and smiled around the gag. It was ugly because fear was under it. Tavik looked to Lysa, and she nodded once. He pulled the gag loose but kept the knife at the man’s throat.

The soldier sucked in air and spat blood to the side. “He did not refuse because he found courage. He refused because they would not give him the one thing he wanted.”

Sella’s fingers tightened around her rifle.

Bram closed his eyes. “Do not listen to him.”

The soldier laughed quietly. “That is rich, Arven. You trained half the tower officers in how to lie without blinking.”

Jesus had been standing near the bend where the tunnel shadow deepened. He stepped closer now, and the soldier’s laughter weakened before it stopped. There was no threat in Jesus’s movement. No raised hand. No command bark. Still, the soldier’s mouth closed as if truth itself had entered the passage and stood where escape should have been.

Lysa said, “Speak plainly or stay gagged.”

The soldier looked at Sella. “He searched prisoner registries for years. Every terminal. Every transfer log. Every dead camp list. He was not resisting the Dominion. He was trying to find his daughter. When he realized you were alive and fighting with the western cells, he tried to trade tower secrets for access to you. They let him believe he might see you if he helped with one more security patch. Then another. Then another.”

Sella felt the passage tilt again. She hated the soldier for saying it. She hated Bram for not denying it. Most of all, she hated that the words fit too well into the broken shape of the truth already forming. Her father had not simply disappeared into power. He had walked deeper into compromise while telling himself that love gave him permission to obey evil one more time.

Lysa’s voice was cold. “Is that true?”

Bram opened his eyes. He looked older than he had at the creek bed, as if each truth spoken aloud removed another layer of strength he had been using to stand. “Yes.”

Sella almost stepped back, but the wall was behind her. “You helped them for me.”

“I told myself that.”

“Do not make me part of it.”

“I am not.” Bram’s voice shook, but he did not look away. “That is the worst truth of it. I used your name to make my fear sound like loyalty. I used love to excuse obedience to men I knew were cruel. I wanted to find you, but I also wanted not to face what I had done. Both things lived in me, and I let the darker one wear the better name.”

The soldier snorted. “Touching.”

Jesus looked at him. “And you?”

The soldier’s face hardened.

“You speak of another man’s chains,” Jesus said. “What name do you give your own?”

The soldier swallowed. “I follow orders.”

“No,” Jesus said. “You hide inside them.”

Something moved through the tunnel that was not sound, yet everyone felt it. Tavik’s knife did not leave the soldier’s throat, but his grip changed. Lysa stared at Jesus with the wary focus of someone watching a battle she could not map. Sella could not look away from the soldier’s face. The man wanted to sneer. The shape of it began and failed. Under the helmet marks and the bruised cheek, he looked suddenly young.

“My brother is on the capital world,” the soldier said, and the words came out before pride could stop them. “If I desert, they take him.”

Jesus’s gaze remained steady. “So you carry fear and call it duty.”

The soldier’s jaw worked, and for one strange second Sella saw him not as a uniform but as a man trapped in the same machinery that had used Bram. She did not forgive him. She did not trust him. But the simple wall in her mind between monsters and victims trembled. She wished Jesus would stop making people complicated.

Lysa reached for the gag. “Enough.”

“No,” Sella said.

Everyone looked at her. She did not know why she had spoken until the silence made room for the reason. The soldier had heard things. He might know patrol shifts, tower changes, signal patterns. He might also betray them the moment he found a chance, but so might Bram if fear rose stronger than regret. Sella hated that the next right decision did not come with clean edges.

She faced the prisoner. “What is your name?”

He hesitated. “Kane Voss.”

“That is not a Dominion serial.”

“No.”

“Then do not speak to me like a machine.” She crouched in front of him and kept the rifle across her knees. “If you want to live, you tell us what changed in the tower after Arven was removed. You lie once, and Tavik puts the gag back in with your teeth behind it.”

Kane looked from her to Jesus, then back again. “The east service gallery is watched by heat readers now. Not always. They cycle when the main grid draws heavy. But if you crawl through during a low pulse, they will see you.”

Bram frowned. “The old readers could not scan through the coolant wall.”

“They replaced the wall after the sabotage last spring,” Kane said.

Lysa leaned closer. “What sabotage?”

Kane’s eyes flicked toward Bram. “His.”

Sella turned. Bram’s face had gone pale in a new way.

“It failed,” Kane said. “Killed two workers and did nothing to the shield. They buried the report because they did not want anyone knowing an old engineer got that close.”

Bram’s voice was low. “I did not know about the workers until after.”

“You people never do,” Kane said.

Bram lowered his head. The accusation struck him and stayed there. Sella waited for him to defend himself, to explain, to reach for some smaller version of guilt that could be held without breaking. He did none of that. The silence made the tunnel feel narrower.

Jesus spoke to Bram. “You cannot heal what you will not bring into the light.”

Bram’s mouth trembled once before he controlled it. “I have brought more death than I can name.”

Sella wanted to say that was true. The words were ready. But she saw his injured hand braced against the wall and remembered that he had once used that hand to lift her brother onto his shoulders during spring floods so the boy could see over the levee. Memory was becoming cruel now. It no longer served her anger cleanly. It brought the dead with warmth still on them, and that hurt worse than accusation.

The tower tremor deepened overhead. Dust slipped from the cracked ceiling and settled in Kane’s hair. Tavik looked up. “What is that?”

Bram listened. “Grid surge. They are increasing shield density.”

Lysa checked the map. The display barely held a signal, but the red swarm above it pulsed brighter than before. “The assault team will not be able to wait much longer.”

“Then we do not wait,” Sella said.

She took the relay key from inside her vest. The little crescent caught the lamp light and threw it back in a thin blue line. For one moment everyone looked at it. The object seemed too delicate for all the fear placed upon it. It had no blade, no charge, no visible power. It was only a key, and yet the whole path ahead had narrowed around it.

Bram stared at the key. “Where did you get that?”

“People died for it.”

“I know what it is.” He reached toward it, then stopped when Sella lifted the rifle slightly. Shame crossed his face again. “There is something you need to know.”

Lysa gave a tired, dangerous breath. “Of course there is.”

“The relay key will open the shield command core, but it will also identify the last registered engineer who touched the tower root system. If the registry was never purged, my name will surface the moment it connects.”

Tavik’s eyes sharpened. “Meaning?”

“Meaning the system may lock down every command channel except the one tied to my old clearance. It was designed that way in case of internal breach.”

Sella stared at him. “So we need you alive.”

“For the relay, maybe.”

“Maybe?”

Bram’s voice weakened. “If my clearance has been stripped, I am useless. If it has not, I am the only one who can keep the key from triggering a full alarm.”

No one spoke for several breaths. There it was, the shape Sella had been trying to avoid since the creek bed. Bram was no longer only the man she wanted to punish or the man whose confession had torn open old certainty. He was now part of the mission itself. His survival had become tied to people who did not know his name and would never care how much Sella hated needing him.

Kane laughed under his breath. “The Dominion always did enjoy making families useful.”

Tavik hit him in the stomach with the side of the knife handle, hard enough to fold him forward. Jesus turned toward Tavik, and the rebel looked ashamed before any rebuke came. Jesus did not speak. Tavik stepped back, breathing hard.

Lysa studied the old wall markings. “We have two problems. The heat readers will catch us in the gallery, and the key may trigger a lockout unless Bram reaches the core.”

“I can time the grid surge,” Bram said. “There will be a high pulse every nine minutes. During the high pulse, heat readers blur. We can cross then.”

Sella looked at Kane. “Is that true?”

Kane coughed and nodded. “Mostly.”

“Mostly is not enough.”

“It is true,” he said. “But the high pulse also opens the floor current along the gallery. Anyone touching exposed metal during the surge burns.”

Tavik grimaced. “Wonderful.”

Bram pointed down the passage. “There used to be insulated maintenance planks stored before the gallery. If they are still there, we can lay them across the metal grate.”

“And if they are not?” Lysa asked.

Bram looked at the water running along the floor. “Then someone crosses without touching the sides and opens the inner panel before the pulse drops.”

Sella gave him a hard look. “Someone.”

“I am wounded,” he said. “I cannot make that crossing quickly.”

“Convenient again.”

“Sella,” Lysa warned.

But Bram did not defend himself. He only looked at his daughter. “You can make it. You were always better on narrow frame than I was.”

The memory struck before she could guard herself. She was twelve, walking the high beams of the station greenhouse while Bram stood below with his arms raised, pretending to be terrified. Her mother had scolded both of them afterward, but she had laughed while doing it. Her brother had begged for his turn. For a few seconds, the tunnel dissolved into green glass, warm light, and a family before the gate.

Sella blinked the memory away. “Do not speak about who I was.”

“I am speaking about who you still are.”

“You do not know who I am.”

Jesus spoke then, quietly. “He does not fully know. But hatred does not know you either.”

Sella turned on Him with hurt rising hot in her throat. “Why do You keep taking things from me?”

Jesus’s face did not change, but sorrow moved through His eyes. “I am taking nothing that gives you life.”

“You took the shot from me in the creek.”

“I kept you from making death your master.”

“He deserved it.”

“Yes,” Jesus said.

The answer silenced her because it did not argue. Jesus stepped nearer, and His voice stayed low enough that only those in the first bend of the tunnel could hear. “Mercy does not mean evil deserved less judgment. It means God is greater than the evil that judged you.”

Sella’s eyes burned. She looked away quickly, angry at the tears and angrier that Jesus had seen them before they fell. Lysa pretended not to notice. Tavik stared down the passage. Bram’s face crumpled for one second and then steadied. Kane looked confused, as if mercy were a language he had been trained to hear only as weakness.

A sound rang from behind the collapsed tunnel. Not boots now, but drills. The patrol had begun cutting through the fallen concrete.

Lysa stood. “Decision time. We take the service gallery on the next surge, or we go back and die in a tunnel.”

Tavik lifted Kane by the collar. “What about him?”

“We bring him,” Sella said.

Lysa frowned. “Why?”

“Because fear talks,” Sella answered, still looking at Kane. “And he has been afraid longer than he has been loyal.”

Kane’s face twisted. “I did not ask for your pity.”

“You do not have it.”

“Then why?”

Sella did not answer at once. The real answer stood too close to the thing Jesus had been pressing into the open. Because leaving him bound in a tunnel while drills came through the dark would be easy. Because easy had begun to frighten her more than hard. Because she had seen in Kane’s face the same trapped obedience that had ruined Bram, and she could no longer pretend that killing trapped men would free her.

She cut the rope around his ankles but left his wrists bound. “You walk. You help. You live long enough to decide whether orders are worth your soul.”

Kane stared at her.

Jesus watched Sella with a quietness that felt less like approval and more like witness. She almost asked Him what He wanted from her now, but she already knew enough to resent the answer. He wanted truth all the way through. Not just truth about Bram. Not just truth about the Dominion. Truth about the part of Sella that had called itself clean because its hatred had a reason.

They moved on. The passage narrowed into a crawl space where the ceiling pressed so low that Bram had to bite back a groan with every movement. Sella crawled ahead of him, rifle strapped across her back, relay key secure under her vest. Once, Bram’s wounded side caught against a jagged pipe, and his breath broke. She stopped without meaning to. The others kept moving for two body lengths before Lysa noticed.

Bram whispered, “Go.”

Sella looked back at him in the dim crawl space. His face was inches from hers, lined with pain and grime and all the years between the gate and the tunnel. She should have been able to leave him there. Part of her still wanted that power. Instead she reached back, hooked her hand under his arm, and pulled until he cleared the pipe.

“Do not thank me,” she said.

“I was not going to,” he answered, though his voice was thick.

“Good.”

They crawled farther until the space opened into a low chamber filled with old maintenance equipment. The insulated planks Bram had mentioned were stacked along one wall, warped but intact. Tavik let out a breath that sounded almost like laughter. Lysa checked the gallery door at the far end and held up one hand for quiet. Beyond the metal, something hummed with immense power, rising and falling in slow waves.

Bram dragged himself to the wall and listened with his palm against the panel. “We have less than two minutes before the next high pulse.”

Tavik began lifting planks. “How many across?”

“Three lengths,” Bram said. “Maybe four if the grating shifted.”

Lysa turned to Sella. “You cross first. Tavik feeds planks. I cover the door. Bram talks you through the panel from here.”

Sella nodded, because refusing would only waste time. She felt no bravery. She felt tired, angry, frightened, and torn open in places she had sealed years ago. But she also felt the strange thin line of obedience under it all, not bright, not easy, not clean enough to make a song about. It was only there, waiting for her foot.

Jesus came to her before Tavik opened the gallery door. The others were too busy to hear Him speak.

“You do not have to feel whole to obey,” He said.

Sella looked at the door. “I do not feel anything close to whole.”

“I know.”

She wanted to ask why He had come to this moon, this tunnel, this impossible hour. She wanted to ask why He did not simply break the tower, end the war, heal Bram, and take away the years that had made her hard. But the questions were too large, and the door was opening. Light poured through the crack, cold blue and violent, and the hum of the shield tower entered the chamber like a giant breathing in its sleep.

The service gallery stretched ahead over a deep shaft of light. Metal grating ran across it in a narrow path, slick with condensation and broken in places where old repairs had failed. Below, shield coils turned in slow rings around a core of blue fire that rose through the tower like a captive star. Sella stepped to the threshold and felt heat pulse against her face.

Bram called from behind her, voice strained but clear. “Wait for the surge. When the light brightens, the readers blind. You will have twenty seconds before the current peaks.”

Sella looked once at Jesus.

He stood in the low chamber with the others, calm in the glow of the machine and the coming danger. His eyes held hers, and for that one breath the tower did not seem like the largest thing in the world. The hatred did not either. Sella turned back to the gallery, took the first insulated plank from Tavik, and stepped into the light.

Chapter Four

Sella stepped into the service gallery with the insulated plank hugged against her chest and the blue light climbing over her face. The shaft below her was not empty. It moved. Rings of power turned inside the hollow tower with a slow, soundless violence that made the air tremble against her bones. The grating beneath the threshold was cold at first, then warm, then hot enough that she understood what Kane had meant. This place did not need guards to kill intruders. It had been built so the tower itself could do the work.

“Do not touch the rail,” Bram called from the chamber behind her. His voice was thin, but it held steady. “The current travels through the side supports first.”

Sella wanted to tell him that she could see that. She wanted to reject every word that came from him simply because the word came in his voice. Instead she lowered the first plank across the grating and moved one foot onto it. The plank bowed under her weight but did not crack. She carried the second one under one arm, and Tavik slid the third across the threshold to her with both hands while Lysa kept her rifle trained down the gallery.

The light below brightened, and Bram said, “Now.”

Sella moved, telling herself she had crossed worse spans in poorer conditions, though the lie weakened before she reached the second plank. The whole gallery flashed white-blue, and every hair along her arms lifted beneath her sleeves. Heat rose through the plank. Her boots slipped on condensation. She put the second plank down ahead of the first and stepped onto it before she could think long enough to lose courage.

A soft whine rose from the walls. The heat readers were turning blind inside the surge, but the tower was not blind in any human way. It felt aware, as if the machinery itself resented her smallness moving through its guarded light. Sella kept her eyes fixed on the next stretch of grating. She refused to look down after the first glance showed her the shield coils turning far below like the wheels of a judgment no one could appeal.

“Left side dips after the next brace,” Bram called. “Keep your weight toward the center.”

His words reached her through the hum. She hated that they helped. The third plank slid to her across the metal, and she dragged it forward with the toe of her boot. Behind her, Tavik held the fourth, waiting for her to clear enough space. Lysa shouted that they had movement in the outer passage. The drills had stopped behind them. That meant the patrol had found a way around the collapse or had decided to cut another path through the old service system.

Sella did not look back. The second plank shifted under her. She lowered fast, one knee striking the wood, and her left hand shot out by instinct toward the rail. She stopped an inch before touching it. Heat pulsed against her palm, close enough to sting without contact. Her breath locked. If she had grabbed the rail, the current would have taken her before anyone could speak her name.

“Sella,” Jesus said from behind her.

His voice did not carry urgency. It carried presence. She pulled her hand back and set it flat against the plank. The wood was rough and wet beneath her fingers. Her heartbeat hammered in her throat, but the next breath came. She rose carefully and reached for the third plank.

The first surge began to fade, and Bram called for everyone to get back from the threshold before the current shifted. Tavik and Lysa pulled away from the door. The gallery snapped with a sharp blue crack that ran along the side rails and leaped through a broken bracket near Sella’s shoulder. She ducked as sparks burst across the space ahead of her. The air filled with the smell of burned dust and scorched metal. Her ears rang. When she straightened, she saw the inner panel twenty feet away, mounted beside a sealed round hatch beyond the narrowest section of the gallery.

“Next high pulse in nine minutes,” Bram said.

Sella looked back then. The others stood in the chamber’s low doorway, cut by blue light. Tavik’s jaw was tight. Lysa had turned half sideways to watch both the outer passage and the gallery. Kane stood behind her with bound wrists, his face pale in the machine glow. Bram leaned against the wall, one hand pressed hard over his wound. Jesus stood near him, still and watchful, as if nothing in that tower could make Him less than Himself.

Nine minutes left Sella alone on the gallery until the next surge. The heat readers could see her now if she moved too far into their scan. She lowered herself onto the plank and stayed flat. Her cheek pressed against damp wood. Below her, the tower breathed light. The cold sweat along her back turned colder.

Time became cruel when movement stopped. She heard things she had ignored while crossing. The distant clank of soldiers somewhere inside the service system. The faint drip of water from the chamber behind her. Bram’s strained breathing. Kane whispering something that Tavik told him not to repeat. Lysa’s boots scraping as she shifted position. None of it was loud, but all of it entered Sella because she had no motion to defend herself with.

She thought of the grain chute again, of waiting in a place too small to move while the station died above her. She had spent years telling herself that she had become strong after that night, but lying still over the tower shaft, she knew the smaller truth. Part of her had never left the chute. Part of her was still waiting for a hand to open the grate and prove love had not abandoned her. Every mission, every shot, every hard command had been a way of refusing to wait anymore.

The plank creaked under her, and she closed her eyes while forcing herself to breathe through her nose. The tower hummed. Heat rose and fell in slow waves. In the chamber behind her, Jesus spoke too quietly for everyone to hear, but she heard because His voice seemed able to cross distances without effort.

“You have been afraid that mercy will make your pain invisible,” He said.

Sella kept her eyes closed. She did not answer.

“That is not what mercy does,” Jesus said. “Mercy brings pain into the light without letting it become a throne.”

Her throat tightened. She wished He would stop speaking into the exact place where she had no armor. She wanted to tell Him that He could not know what it was like to be left. The thought died before it became words. Something in Him made that accusation impossible, though she could not have explained why. There was sorrow in Him deeper than the tower shaft and obedience stronger than the machine beneath her feet.

A scraping sound came from the outer passage, and Lysa turned sharply. “They are here.”

Blaster fire tore through the chamber doorway. Lysa fired back and pushed Tavik behind the side wall. The gallery flashed with reflected red. Sella flattened herself harder against the plank as shots struck the metal around the threshold and hissed into the shaft. One bolt hit the first plank behind her, burning through the edge. Smoke curled up in a black ribbon.

“Tavik,” Lysa shouted. “Left side.”

Tavik answered with two shots and a short cry. Sella twisted just enough to see him stagger back from the doorway, one hand clamped around his upper arm. Blood ran between his fingers. Kane dropped instinctively to the floor though his wrists were still tied. Bram tried to stand straighter and nearly fell. Jesus moved through the gunfire toward Tavik as if fear had no claim on His steps.

“Stay down,” Lysa barked at Him.

Jesus knelt beside Tavik anyway. A bolt struck the wall above His shoulder and showered sparks over His hair and garment. He did not flinch. He placed one hand against Tavik’s wound. Tavik’s face twisted, not with fresh pain, but with the shock of being touched gently in a place where he had only expected orders.

Sella could not help them. If she moved now, the heat readers would mark her. If she stayed, the soldiers might push into the chamber before the next pulse. She looked toward the inner panel, then back toward the people trapped behind her. The relay key rested against her chest like a demand.

Kane shouted suddenly. “The lower conduit.”

Lysa spared him one hard glance. “What?”

“There is a lower conduit by your right boot,” Kane said. “Shoot the red coupling. It will vent coolant into the passage.”

“That will blind us too,” Lysa said.

“Better blind than dead.”

Tavik gritted his teeth. “He is right.”

Lysa fired twice toward the outer passage, then dropped her aim and shot the coupling beside the doorway. For a second nothing happened. Then the wall burst with a violent hiss, and white vapor flooded the chamber. Soldiers shouted from the passage. Lysa pulled back, coughing, while Tavik dragged himself toward the inner wall. The vapor rolled across the threshold and drifted out over the gallery, curling around Sella in cold ribbons.

The tower hum changed, and Bram coughed hard before shouting that the coolant line fed the surge dampers. Kane’s face drained.

“It should not,” Kane said.

“It does,” Bram said. He turned toward Sella with sudden fear. “The pulse will come early.”

The gallery light brightened beneath her as Sella pushed herself up. “How early?”

“Now,” Bram shouted.

The shaft erupted in blue fire. The plank under Sella’s knees jumped from the current below. She grabbed the second plank and threw it forward, barely keeping it from sliding off the grating. The heat readers would be blind, but the floor current was rising too quickly. She had no clean timing left. She crawled onto the second plank, dragged the third after her, and forced her shaking hands to work.

“Do not rush the left brace,” Bram called. “It is split.”

“I know,” she snapped, though she did not know.

The current climbed. Blue arcs ran along the rails on both sides of her. A shot from the chamber hit the far wall and burst near the inner hatch. Sella flinched, and the plank shifted sideways. One corner slid off the grating. For one suspended second, her weight pulled toward the shaft. She threw herself flat, arms spread, and the edge of the plank caught against a raised bolt.

“Sella,” Bram cried.

It was not the voice of an engineer guiding a mission. It was her father’s voice, naked with terror. The sound broke through her harder than any confession had. She was twelve on the greenhouse beams again. She was nine waking from a storm. She was nineteen waiting in the grain chute. She was every age at once, and he was calling her name as if losing her now would finish killing him.

“Do not call me that,” she whispered, but no one heard beneath the tower.

She shifted her weight slowly. The plank settled. Her arms trembled from the effort of holding still. The inner panel stood less than ten feet ahead. The surge was peaking. She could feel heat pressing through the wood. If she waited, the plank might burn. If she moved too fast, she might fall.

Jesus’s voice reached her again. “One step in truth, daughter.”

Sella clenched her jaw. She wanted to answer that truth had not made anything easier. But perhaps that was why He spoke of one step and not the whole path. She pulled the third plank forward, slid it into place, and moved onto it with every muscle locked under control. The plank smoked at the edge. The current snapped close enough to burn a small hole through her sleeve. Pain flashed along her forearm. She kept moving.

At the chamber doorway, Lysa fought through vapor and red fire. Tavik was shooting left-handed now, his injured arm hanging useless at his side. Kane had crawled to the wall and was shouting warning directions when he saw movement in the passage. Bram had one hand braced against the panel beside him, trying to stay upright. Jesus stood between Tavik and the exposed angle of the doorway, not blocking every shot, but somehow changing the space around them so panic could not rule it.

Sella reached the inner panel and pulled the relay key from her vest with trembling fingers. Up close, the panel looked older than she expected. Its casing was scratched and stained, with repairs layered over repairs. The Dominion had armored the tower, but beneath the additions was old settler work, the kind her father had taught her to read. She saw where the access seam had warped. She saw the manual latch hidden behind a cracked strip of insulation. For one strange second, she understood the machine not as an enemy but as something wounded into service.

“Panel open,” she shouted.

“Inner latch first,” Bram called. “Then key.”

She found the latch and pulled. It did not move. She tried again, harder. Nothing. Heat from the grating rose through the plank under her boots. The surge began to drop, which meant the heat readers would wake. She had seconds.

“It is jammed,” she shouted.

Bram pushed away from the wall. “I have to cross.”

“No,” Sella said immediately.

“I can open it.”

“You cannot even stand.”

“If the readers wake while she is exposed, the gallery locks down,” Kane shouted. “He is right.”

Lysa fired into the passage and shouted back, “We cannot cover that long.”

Bram took one step toward the threshold and nearly collapsed. Jesus caught him. For a moment they stood close, Bram leaning on the Man who had spoken to his guilt without letting it hide and to his daughter’s pain without letting it rule. Bram looked at Sella across the burning gallery. His face was gray. He knew he might die on the crossing. More than that, he knew she might have to choose whether to help him.

“I know the latch,” he said. “Sella, I know it.”

She looked at the panel, then at the plank path behind her. The first plank was charred where the bolt had hit. The second had shifted. The third was smoking at one corner. The surge was fading fast. Every practical part of her knew he was right. Every wounded part recoiled at needing him again.

Jesus looked at her from the threshold. “Let truth finish what it has begun.”

Sella’s answer came out rough. “Truth is asking too much.”

“Truth often does,” Jesus said. “But lies take everything.”

The heat readers gave a low awakening chirp from the wall above her. A red slit opened near the ceiling and began to sweep. Sella ducked beside the panel, but there was not enough cover. The scan would find her before the next surge. Lysa saw it and fired at the reader. The shot sparked off a protective casing and did nothing.

Bram pulled away from Jesus. “I am crossing.”

“Father, no,” Sella said.

The word left her before she chose it. The whole gallery seemed to hear it. Bram froze at the threshold, and Sella felt the shock of what she had said move through her own body. She had not called him that in seven years. She had imagined doing it only once more, maybe as accusation, maybe as curse. It had come now as fear.

Bram’s eyes filled, but he did not let the moment hold him. “Then help me do what I should have done when fear first came for us.”

The scan line moved closer to Sella’s shoulder. She looked at Jesus, furious and pleading at once. He did not rescue her from the decision. He stayed with her inside it.

Sella grabbed the end of the third plank and shoved it back toward the middle of the gallery. “Tavik, feed the first one forward. Lysa, keep that doorway sealed. Kane, if you see a pulse change, call it before it kills us.”

Kane nodded once, all mockery gone from his face. “I will.”

Bram stepped onto the first plank with Jesus beside the threshold but not holding him. Sella understood. This had to be Bram’s obedience too. He had spent years letting fear lead him one compromise at a time. Now he had to step where fear could not be obeyed. Tavik pushed the second plank toward him with one hand, grimacing from his wound. Lysa fired until her rifle whined from heat.

Bram crossed slowly, too slowly. The scan line crept toward Sella’s shoulder. She pressed herself against the panel and held the relay key tight. Bram moved to the second plank, swayed, and dropped to one knee. Sella saw the blood spreading again at his side.

“Get up,” she shouted.

He tried. His hand slipped. The rail snapped blue beside him, and he jerked back with a gasp. The second plank shifted under his knee. Sella grabbed the far end and pulled it straight, exposing her arm to the scan. Red light touched her sleeve.

An alarm began to build in the wall.

Kane shouted, “Heat mark. Three seconds.”

Sella did not think. She stood into the scan and fired three shots into the reader casing from less than ten feet away. The first two struck armor. The third found the cracked lower seam and blew the device apart. The alarm died mid-wail, but the shot threw her backward against the panel hard enough to knock the breath from her lungs.

Bram surged forward on the last plank. He reached her as the current began to rise again, early and unstable from the damaged dampers. Sella caught him under both arms. For one moment his weight nearly took them both down. She braced her back against the panel and held him upright while the blue fire climbed around them.

“I have you,” she said, and the words broke something open in both of them.

Bram’s head bent near her shoulder. “I am sorry,” he whispered again, but this time the words did not ask to be accepted. They simply stood in the truth with him.

Sella swallowed hard. “Open the latch.”

He nodded and turned toward the panel. His hands shook so badly that she had to steady his wrist. The crooked fingers found the hidden release under the warped seam. He pressed once, then twice in a rhythm she remembered from childhood repair lessons. The latch gave with a dull metal clunk. The panel opened.

“Key,” he said.

Sella placed the relay key into the slot.

For a second the tower went silent.

Then a voice from the panel spoke in a cold machine tone. “Engineer Bram Arven clearance recognized. Root command channel restricted. Manual confirmation required.”

Lysa shouted from the doorway. “Tell me that means good news.”

Bram stared at the panel. “It means the key worked.”

Sella heard what he did not say. “And?”

A second light appeared beneath the key slot, red and steady. Bram’s face changed.

“And the system requires a living confirmation from the registered engineer inside the command core,” he said.

Sella looked toward the round hatch beside the panel. Beyond it, the tower’s core waited in blue darkness.

Bram did not look at her when he spoke again. “I have to go in.”

Chapter Five

The round hatch beside the panel did not open at once. It loosened with a slow grind, as if the tower were reluctant to let any living soul reach its heart. Blue light spilled through the widening seam and washed over Bram’s face, showing every line the years had cut into him. For a moment he looked less like a traitor, less like an engineer, and more like a man standing before the exact place where all his compromises had finally come back to ask for an answer.

Sella kept one hand against his arm because he would have fallen without it. She told herself that was the only reason. His weight dragged heavily against her shoulder, and the warmth of his blood had begun to soak into her sleeve. The tower’s current snapped along the rails behind them. In the chamber at the far end of the gallery, Lysa and Tavik held the doorway through smoke, coolant vapor, and red weapon flashes. Kane shouted directions when he saw movement through the white haze, and each warning came quicker now, less like a soldier obeying fear and more like a man trying to decide what kind of voice he still had.

Bram stared into the open hatch. “The command core is shielded from outside fire. Once the hatch closes, the panel will not answer to anyone in the gallery.”

Sella looked past him into the blue-lit space. “How long?”

“I do not know.”

“That is becoming your favorite answer.”

His mouth moved as if he wanted to accept the blow and say nothing. Then he seemed to understand that silence had done enough damage in their family. “The old confirmation took less than a minute. But the Dominion changed the root system after my sabotage attempt. They may have added a loyalty lock.”

Sella tightened her grip on him. “What does that mean?”

Bram’s eyes stayed on the core. “It means the tower may ask me to prove I still serve them.”

The words landed cold inside her. Behind them, a blast hit the doorway hard enough to shake dust from the ceiling. Tavik cursed, Lysa fired back, and Kane yelled for them to lower their heads before another shot tore through the vapor. The whole tower seemed to be narrowing around Bram’s unfinished sentence.

Sella said, “Can you lie to it?”

“I have lied to enough things.”

“That is not an answer.”

Bram finally looked at her. His face held pain, shame, and something steadier beneath both. “If it asks for loyalty, I will refuse.”

“And if refusal locks the shield permanently?”

“I do not know.”

Sella almost struck the panel with her fist. “You brought us here on maybe.”

“No,” Bram said. “I brought you here because this is the only path I know that does not end with everyone outside dying under that shield.”

She wanted to argue, but the truth was too plain. Their old route had been watched. The patrol had nearly trapped them. The tower had already begun increasing shield density. The war above them had a clock she could not see, and every second of it pressed down through the machine’s blue light. Bram was not enough. He was all they had.

Jesus stood at the threshold of the gallery now, His figure cut by vapor and power glow. Lysa had told Him to stay back more than once, but He had moved where He chose, not recklessly, not to prove courage, but with a calm that made fear look smaller than it felt. He looked across the gallery at Sella and Bram, and His eyes held the same truth they had held in the creek bed. No escape from the decision. No permission to let hatred make it easier.

Sella called to Him over the hum. “If he goes in and the hatch seals, I may not be able to get him out.”

Jesus answered, “You are not being asked to control the outcome.”

“That is what people say when they are not the ones losing everything.”

Bram flinched, but Jesus did not. “No,” He said. “That is what truth says when fear demands a throne.”

Sella looked away first. The words entered her differently now. In the creek bed, she had heard them as an accusation. In the tunnel, she had heard them as a pressure she resented. Here, at the heart of the tower, with her father bleeding beside her and the whole mission hanging by a thread, she heard them as a door she did not want to open but could no longer deny was there.

Bram drew a breath that shook badly. “I go alone.”

“No,” Sella said.

His eyes widened slightly.

She hated that he looked surprised. “You can barely stand.”

“The hatch may not allow two.”

“Then we find out.”

“Sella.”

“You are not dying behind a sealed door where I have to imagine the rest.”

The words came out before she softened them. She had not meant to reveal that much. Her father looked at her as if the sentence had reached into a place neither confession nor anger had touched. He seemed older and younger at the same time. For one breath, she saw the man who had carried her through floodwater when she was five and the man who had opened the gate when she was nineteen, and the terrible thing was that they were not two different men. That was the pain she had been refusing. Love and ruin had lived in the same face.

The tower spoke again. “Manual confirmation required. Command core access closing in ten seconds.”

Bram turned toward the hatch. “If you come in, you may be trapped with me.”

Sella pulled his arm across her shoulders. “Then walk.”

They stepped through together.

The hatch sealed behind them with a sound that cut off the gunfire as if the rest of the world had been dropped into deep water. Inside the command core, the hum became a pressure more than a noise. Blue light rose from a circular well in the center of the room, where shield energy moved through layered rings of glass, metal, and something older than either. The walls were smooth and dark, covered in thin streams of symbols that shifted too quickly to read. The air was hot, but not like fire. It felt charged, alive with a force that wanted everything in the room measured, recorded, and judged by function.

Bram sagged the moment the hatch shut. Sella tightened both arms around him and dragged him to the central console. His boots scraped across the floor. Each step left a small mark of blood that the light swallowed and turned black.

“Where?” she asked.

He lifted one shaking hand. “There. The palm reader.”

The device was mounted beside the central well. It looked simple, almost plain, a narrow plate of dark glass fitted into a ring of old brass. Sella had expected a weapon, a code wall, a guarded intelligence system, anything except a place where a wounded man had to lay his hand and be known.

Bram placed his palm on the reader.

The tower answered in the same cold voice. “Engineer Bram Arven. Clearance active under Dominion emergency statute. Confirm continued allegiance.”

Sella’s heart dropped. Bram closed his eyes. For several seconds he said nothing, and those seconds opened a terrible space in her. She remembered Kane’s words in the tunnel. One more patch. One more compromise. One more obedience wearing the mask of love. She felt the old fear rise again, not only that Bram would betray them, but that part of her still expected him to because expecting betrayal hurt less than hoping for courage.

Bram opened his eyes and looked at the blue well.

“No,” he said.

A red line appeared across the console. “Noncompliance registered. Confirm continued allegiance.”

Bram’s hand trembled against the reader. “No.”

The light in the room darkened. Heat rose from the floor. Sella heard locks shifting somewhere behind the walls. She put one hand on the console to steady herself, then snatched it back when it burned her palm.

The tower spoke again. “Final confirmation required. Engineer Bram Arven, confirm continued allegiance or root command access will be revoked.”

Bram looked at Sella. His face was wet with sweat, but his eyes were clearer than she had seen them since the creek bed. “I am sorry I made fear my master.”

The words were not dramatic. They were almost plain. That made them harder to hear. Sella wanted to tell him to stop apologizing and finish the override. She wanted to tell him that repentance was useless if the shield stayed up and everyone outside died. But something in his voice held her still. He was not trying to buy her forgiveness. He was naming the chain before he broke it.

He turned back to the reader. “I do not serve the Dominion.”

The console went black.

For one awful breath, nothing happened. Then the whole core shook. A deep alarm sounded inside the walls, lower than the warning from the gallery, more final. The blue well flared white and then dimmed to a hard, pulsing red. Sella grabbed Bram as he nearly collapsed.

“What did you do?”

“What had to be done,” he said, but fear crossed his face because he did not know what the tower would do next.

The sealed hatch behind them remained shut. The console stayed dark except for one narrow line of text burned in red across the glass. Sella leaned close, reading the words as they formed.

Clearance revoked. Root command inaccessible. Emergency succession available.

“Succession?” she asked.

Bram stared at the line. “No.”

“What does it mean?”

He looked at her with fresh pain. “It means the system can transfer emergency access to a blood relation if the registered engineer is unable or unwilling to confirm allegiance.”

Sella stepped back as if the console had struck her. “No.”

“Sella.”

“No.” Her voice sharpened. “Absolutely not.”

“The tower recognizes family lines in case a field engineer dies in isolation. It was a settler safeguard before the Dominion turned it into a loyalty gate.”

“You knew this?”

“I knew the old system had succession. I did not know it survived.”

The tower voice returned. “Biological relation detected. Candidate may claim emergency succession. Candidate must provide identification and assume command liability.”

Sella stared at the palm reader. It waited for her now. The machine that had recognized Bram, judged him, and stripped him had turned toward her like a beast finding a new throat to grip. Command liability. She did not know the exact technical meaning, but she understood enough. If she placed her hand there, the tower would mark her. If the override failed, the Dominion might know her bloodline, her access signature, her presence in the core. If the system was a trap, she might do what Bram had done years ago and open a door believing she was saving lives while another darkness waited behind it.

Bram saw the thought form on her face. “You do not have to.”

A bitter laugh rose in her, small and broken. “That is funny coming from you.”

“I mean it.”

“You meant a lot of things.”

“Yes,” he said. “And I was wrong.”

Sella turned from him and walked three steps away because the room was too small for the anger in her. The blue-red light moved across the walls in waves. Outside the core, beyond the sealed hatch, she could faintly hear the battle again, not as sound, but as vibration through the tower frame. Lysa, Tavik, Kane, Jesus. They were still out there. The rebels in the forest were still waiting. The fleet above the moon still needed the shield to fail. Her private pain did not cancel public consequence.

That thought enraged her because it sounded too much like the thing she had always used to survive. Do the mission. Carry the weight. Feel later if there is time. But this was different. The mission now demanded not that she bury her wound, but that she put her hand on the place where Bram’s guilt and her blood met.

The core speaker sounded. “Emergency succession window closing in sixty seconds.”

Sella turned back to Bram. “If I touch that reader, am I swearing allegiance?”

“No,” he said quickly. “Not if the old safeguard holds. You would be claiming command authority through family succession, not Dominion loyalty.”

“If the old safeguard holds.”

He lowered his eyes. “Yes.”

She looked toward the hatch. “Can Jesus open this door?”

Bram blinked, thrown by the question. “I do not know.”

Sella almost smiled, but it was a sad, tired thing that never fully reached her mouth. “Nobody knows anything in this tower.”

Then Jesus’s voice came through the sealed hatch.

“Sella.”

She turned so quickly that Bram reached out as if to steady her. The hatch had no window. No seam of light showed around it. The core was insulated against sound, fire, and external command. Still, His voice entered the room as gently and clearly as if He stood beside her.

“You are not your father’s sin.”

Her breath caught.

“You are not your hatred either,” Jesus said.

Bram bowed his head. Sella stood very still while the tower counted down around her. She wanted to ask how He had heard them. She wanted to ask how His voice had crossed a sealed command core. But wonder would have to wait, because truth had arrived first.

The tower spoke. “Forty seconds.”

Sella looked at her father. The word still felt dangerous, but it no longer felt impossible. He was braced against the console, barely upright, his hand burned from the reader, his body failing from blood loss and exhaustion. Years ago he had let fear place his hand on a control that opened the gate. Now he had placed that same hand on another control and refused the master he once obeyed. That did not undo the dead. It did not repair the station. It did not give Sella back the years. But it was real.

She stepped toward the reader.

Bram shook his head. “Only if you choose it for the living. Not for me.”

Sella stopped. Those words mattered. She searched his face and found no demand there. No father claiming a daughter. No guilty man using her mercy to lighten his punishment. He was telling her that this act could not be another chain between them. If she placed her hand on the reader, it had to be because obedience had become larger than revenge.

The tower spoke. “Thirty seconds.”

Sella thought of her mother in the smoke, not as the scream from the hallway, but as the woman who used to press warm bread into the hands of hungry mechanics before she fed herself. She thought of her brother carrying spare parts in pockets too small for them, always convinced he could fix whatever broke if someone would only let him try. She thought of the camp under the trees and the wounded lying under tarps while the shielded sky held them in danger. She thought of Kane’s brother on the capital world, a faceless life held hostage by the same system that had trained Kane to hide inside orders. She thought of Tavik bleeding in the doorway and Lysa fighting because giving up had never learned her name.

Then she thought of herself, nineteen in the grain chute, waiting for a father who did not come.

“I wanted killing you to give me back what I lost,” she said.

Bram’s face tightened, but he received the words.

“It would not have,” Sella said.

“No.”

“I still do not know how to forgive you.”

“I know.”

She looked at the reader. “But I know I cannot let the Dominion keep using what happened to us.”

The tower spoke. “Fifteen seconds.”

Sella placed her hand on the glass.

The reader was cold at first. Then it burned. Not hot enough to destroy skin, but deep enough to feel like the tower was searching beneath it. Light spread under her palm in thin blue veins. The console woke. Her name did not appear. Instead the display filled with lines of old settler code buried under Dominion command layers, two histories fighting in one machine.

The tower voice changed slightly, as if reaching into older language beneath its own cold authority. “Succession candidate recognized. Confirm command liability.”

Sella looked at Bram. “What do I say?”

“Say you accept responsibility for the command you give.”

“That sounds simple.”

“It is not.”

She looked at the blue-red light. “I accept responsibility.”

“Command purpose required.”

Bram leaned close, struggling to read the display as it shifted. “It wants the reason for override.”

Sella frowned. “Reason?”

“The old settlers built safeguards against panic shutdowns. You had to name why you were breaking a major system.”

She almost laughed again, but the sound would have become something else. The machine wanted a reason. After all the codes, guns, lies, bloodlines, and betrayals, the tower had brought her to a place where she had to tell the truth to a thing without a soul.

She thought of saying military necessity. She thought of saying shield failure. She thought of saying strategic breach. All of it was true and not true enough.

Jesus’s voice came again through the sealed hatch. “Let your yes be clean.”

Sella closed her eyes. The reader burned under her palm. “To stop fear from ruling the living.”

The core went silent.

Bram stared at the display. A line of white light moved across it, then another. The red warning dimmed. Deep inside the central well, the shield rings slowed by a fraction. Sella felt the tower resist, as if Dominion command layers were tightening around the old safeguard.

“Override challenged,” the tower said. “Dominion authority requires suppression of unauthorized mercy language.”

Sella blinked. “Mercy language?”

Bram’s expression shifted with sudden understanding. “The old code. It was written before the Dominion. Protection, refuge, release, evacuation. They buried the words under command filters.”

“Can it still work?”

“If the old root accepts your reason, yes. But the Dominion layer will try to force a narrower command.” Bram pointed weakly at the display. “It wants you to restate in military terms.”

The tower spoke. “Restate command purpose. Accepted categories: tactical advantage, enemy elimination, asset preservation, imperial continuity.”

Sella looked at the categories glowing in front of her. There was the Dominion, naked in its language. Every reason bent toward control. Every life reduced to use. Even rescue had to disguise itself as asset preservation before the machine would tolerate it. She felt something settle inside her then, not peace exactly, but a steadiness that did not come from anger.

“No,” she said.

The display flashed red. “Restate command purpose.”

“No.”

Bram whispered, “Sella, if it rejects the phrasing completely, we may lose access.”

She kept her hand on the reader. “Then we lose access telling the truth.”

The tower pulsed harder. The burn under her palm deepened. “Restate command purpose.”

Sella’s voice shook, but she did not pull away. “To break the shield so people can live free of fear.”

The central well flared.

For a moment the command core filled with light so bright that Sella could not see Bram, the console, or her own hand. The tower groaned around them, not like a machine failing, but like something long buried shifting under stone. Lines of old code ran across the walls, no longer red, no longer cold, but blue-white and fast. The Dominion categories vanished. In their place, one phrase appeared across the console.

Root command accepted.

The hatch behind them unlocked.

Bram let out one breath and collapsed.

Sella caught him before his head struck the floor. She went down under his weight, landing hard on one knee, her hand torn from the reader. The tower did not reject the command. The central well continued to slow. Somewhere outside the core, alarms changed pitch. Not the final alarm of lockdown. Something else. Something larger.

The hatch opened, and sound rushed in all at once. Gunfire. Lysa shouting. Tavik groaning through pain. Kane yelling that the shield cycle was dropping. Jesus entered first, and He crossed the floor to them without hesitation. Sella had Bram in her arms now, his blood warm against her and his face slack with unconsciousness.

“I did it,” she said, though she did not know whether she was speaking to Jesus, to Bram, or to the frightened girl still waiting under the station floor.

Jesus knelt beside her. “Yes.”

Sella looked at Him. “Why does it hurt?”

His hand came to rest near Bram’s wounded side, not yet touching, simply present. “Because truth has opened what hatred kept closed.”

She looked down at Bram. She still saw the traitor. She still saw the father. She saw the wound, the wrong, the ruin, the confession, and the first costly step that had not been enough to heal everything but had been enough to turn them toward life. Her tears came then, not violently, not cleanly, but with a quiet force she could not stop.

Outside the core, Lysa shouted that soldiers were falling back from the surge collapse. Tavik yelled that the shield readings were breaking unevenly. Kane’s voice answered that the tower was not down yet, only vulnerable. The mission was not finished. The war had not ended. Bram was bleeding in Sella’s arms, and the next decision was already pressing in.

Jesus looked toward the central well as the blue light dimmed and rose again.

“Then we continue,” He said.

Chapter Six

The command core did not become safe after the root command accepted Sella’s words. It became angry. The walls dimmed from blue-white to a deep warning red, and the central well began to pulse in uneven waves that made the floor rise and fall under Sella’s knees. Bram lay against her, too heavy and too still, his blood spreading into the fabric at her thigh. Jesus knelt on the other side of him with one hand near the wound and the other resting lightly against Bram’s shoulder, and His face held the quiet seriousness of a physician who saw more than torn flesh.

Lysa reached the hatch with vapor rolling behind her. “We have less than two minutes before they regroup.”

Tavik leaned in the doorway, pale and sweating, his rifle held awkwardly in his left hand. “Shield readings are unstable, but not down.”

Kane stood behind him with his bound wrists lowered in front of him. The fight had stripped the sneer from his face. He looked at the central well with the hard attention of a man who understood machinery because he had lived too long under it. “The tower is resisting the command. The old root accepted it, but the Dominion layer is holding the upper grid.”

Sella looked from Kane to the console. “You said the shield was dropping.”

“I said it was breaking unevenly.”

“That sounds like a soldier’s correction.”

“It is an important correction,” Kane said. “If the grid tears unevenly, the fleet above will see a gap where there is not one. They will move in and hit the shield wall at full burn.”

Tavik cursed under his breath. Lysa stepped to the console and scanned the shifting display. Her face hardened with every line she could not read. “Bram is the only one who understands this system.”

Jesus looked down at Bram. “He is not gone.”

Sella tightened her grip under Bram’s shoulders. “Then wake him.”

The words came out sharper than she meant them, but fear had risen too quickly for gentleness. Jesus looked at her, and she felt the rebuke before He spoke. Not anger. Not offense. Only truth, steady and kind enough to make her ashamed.

“He is wounded,” Jesus said.

“I know he is wounded.”

“Then do not speak of him as a tool you are afraid to lose.”

Sella’s mouth closed. The command core trembled around them, and somewhere beyond the gallery, Dominion soldiers shouted through the vapor. A part of her wanted to argue that everything in war became a tool if it kept people alive. The relay key, the rifle, the route, the prisoner, the engineer, even her own pain had been used that way. But Jesus had touched the hidden cruelty in that thought. She did not want Bram reduced to usefulness now, even if usefulness was the only reason he still belonged in the mission.

She lowered her voice. “Can he hear us?”

Jesus placed His hand over Bram’s side. Bram drew a sudden breath, hard and ragged, and his eyes opened halfway. He did not look healed. He looked like a man pulled back from the edge because mercy had work for him and not because the pain had ended.

Sella bent close. “The shield is not down.”

Bram blinked until her face came into focus. “Upper grid?”

“Kane says the Dominion layer is holding it.”

Bram’s eyes moved toward Kane. “He is right.”

“Tell me what to do.”

Bram tried to lift his head and failed. “Outer stabilizer.”

Lysa crouched beside him. “Where?”

“Service gallery ends at a secondary lift. Above that, the stabilizer room feeds the upper grid. If the root command accepted Sella, then her access can release the final hold from there.”

Sella stared at him. “You said the command core was the heart.”

“It is,” he whispered. “But the Dominion added a collar around it.”

Kane nodded once. “Stabilizer room. I have guarded it twice.”

Lysa turned on him. “And you were waiting to mention that?”

“I was waiting to know whether any of us would live long enough to reach it.”

Tavik gave him a dark look. “Your timing remains charming.”

The tower shuddered again. The central well flashed, and the console spilled a new line of red text across the glass. Kane leaned forward to read it, then stiffened. “They are transferring override authority to the tower commander.”

“We killed the commander at the creek,” Tavik said.

“No,” Kane said. “You killed a field captain. The tower commander is above us.”

Sella’s pulse tightened. A tower commander above them was not a new shadow she wanted to chase. It was simply the command structure waking to what they had done. She could feel the story trying to widen, trying to pull more danger into itself. She refused it. The path was not larger now. It was narrower.

“Then we do not go after him,” she said. “We go to the stabilizer.”

Lysa nodded. “Good. Tavik, can you move?”

Tavik straightened with effort. “I can shoot badly and complain well.”

“That will have to do.” Lysa looked at Kane’s bound wrists. “If I cut you loose, do I regret it?”

Kane looked toward the passage where Dominion voices echoed closer. The choice sat plainly in his face. He could still belong to fear. He could still wait for a chance to run back into a uniform and hope obedience would buy safety for his brother. Sella knew that look because she had seen a version of it in Bram’s confession. She had felt her own version when hatred had promised her that pulling the trigger would keep her from hurting.

Kane lifted his hands. “You may regret it. But not because I run to them.”

Lysa did not move.

Jesus looked at Kane. “A man does not become free by changing which side he fears.”

Kane swallowed. “I do not know how to be free.”

“No,” Jesus said. “But you know the next true thing.”

Kane’s jaw trembled once, and he clenched it hard. “Cut the binders. I know the lift codes.”

Lysa held his eyes for one more second, then sliced the restraint. Kane rubbed his wrists, not with relief, but almost with grief. It was a strange thing to watch a man feel the air around his hands and realize freedom had made him more responsible, not less. He took Tavik’s spare sidearm when Lysa offered it grip-first, and he checked the charge with trained speed.

Sella looked at Jesus. “Can You move Bram?”

Jesus did not answer as if the question were a test of power. He answered as if love did not need to display itself to be real. “We will carry him.”

That was how they left the command core. Not with triumph. Not with the tower falling beneath them. Not with Sella healed enough to make anything easy. They left with Jesus supporting Bram’s shoulders and Sella taking his legs because she could not ask anyone else to carry the weight she had spent years wanting buried. Lysa went first into the gallery, firing through the last of the vapor. Kane followed her and shouted a Dominion command code down the passage that made the advancing soldiers hesitate for one precious second. Tavik came behind them, jaw tight, rifle raised, pain turning his face the color of old ash.

The gallery had become worse. The insulated planks were burned and warped from the unstable current. Blue arcs still crawled along the rails, but the rhythm had changed. The shield tower was fighting itself now, old root and Dominion collar pulling against one another while the mission ran across the wound between them. Sella saw the distance to the chamber and felt her arms tighten around Bram’s legs. Carrying him changed every step. It made the crossing slower, harder, more human.

“High pulse in twenty,” Kane called from the far side.

“How do you know?” Tavik asked.

“I listened to men complain about this tower for years.”

“Best use of enemy gossip I have ever seen.”

Lysa crossed first and laid a plank over the broken section near the threshold. Kane stayed low beside her, firing twice into the passage without looking proud of it. That mattered somehow. The shots were not performance. They were refusal. Tavik stumbled halfway across, and Jesus shifted enough to steady him while still bearing Bram’s upper weight. Sella nearly lost her grip when the plank dipped, and Bram groaned, waking just enough to turn his face toward her.

“I am sorry,” he breathed.

Sella’s throat tightened. “Save your strength.”

“I said that to you once,” he whispered.

The memory came back so quickly it hurt. She was sixteen, carrying a battery pack too heavy for her through the station greenhouse because she wanted to prove she could do the work of grown mechanics. Bram had taken one side of it and said, Save your strength for what matters. She had rolled her eyes at him. He had laughed. Her brother had mocked them both from the ladder. That ordinary day had survived inside her without permission, untouched by the fire that came later.

“Do not talk,” she said, but her voice was not hard enough to hide her pain.

They reached the chamber as the next pulse struck the gallery. The floor flashed behind them. The planks smoked and then split. Tavik slammed the hatch control with his good hand, and the gallery door began to close, but not fast enough. Two Dominion soldiers emerged through the vapor at the outer passage and fired. Lysa dropped one. Kane shot the other in the leg. The second soldier fell against the door track, blocking it before it could seal.

“Move him,” Lysa shouted.

Tavik tried to drag the soldier clear but his injured arm failed him. Kane rushed forward, then froze. The fallen soldier’s helmet had cracked against the floor, exposing part of his face. He was young, no older than Kane, with frightened eyes and blood on his mouth.

“Voss,” the soldier gasped.

Kane stopped breathing.

Lysa aimed at the wounded soldier. “Move him now.”

The soldier stared at Kane with desperate recognition. “You are helping them?”

Kane’s face changed. It was not betrayal that moved through him. It was the terrible pain of being seen by the life he was leaving. “I am stopping the tower.”

“They will take my family,” the soldier said.

The sentence struck the chamber like a weapon. Sella saw Kane’s hand tremble on the sidearm. There it was again, the chain made from other people’s lives. The Dominion did not need every man to love it. It only needed each man afraid for someone else, and fear could make prisoners guard the prison.

Lysa stepped closer. “Kane.”

The door groaned against the soldier’s body. Beyond him, more voices came through the vapor. They had seconds.

Kane crouched beside the soldier. “Your name?”

The young man blinked. “Rul.”

“Rul, listen to me. If the tower stays up, everyone outside dies, and the Dominion keeps using your family anyway.”

“They will kill them.”

“They may,” Kane said, and the honesty cost him. “But your obedience will not save them forever.”

Rul shook his head, crying now from pain and terror. “Please.”

Kane looked at Jesus, not because he expected Jesus to solve the military problem, but because the spiritual one had become unbearable. Jesus was still holding Bram, His garment marked with another man’s blood. He did not rush Kane, though the door strained and the soldiers behind it came closer. He simply looked at him with the kind of mercy that did not make fear small but did make it answerable.

Kane lowered his weapon. “I cannot kill him.”

Lysa swore and reached to pull Rul free herself, but Sella moved first. She set Bram’s legs carefully down beside Jesus, rushed to the track, and grabbed the wounded soldier under the arms. Rul cried out as she pulled him clear. Kane helped on the second pull. The door slammed shut just as a blast struck the other side.

For a moment, everyone stood in the sudden quiet, breathing hard.

Lysa turned on Kane. “That hesitation almost killed us.”

Kane nodded. “Yes.”

“That cannot happen again.”

“No,” he said. “It cannot.”

Rul lay on the floor, shaking. Tavik stepped toward him with binders, but Jesus spoke.

“Bind his wound first.”

Tavik stared. “He was shooting at us.”

“He is bleeding now.”

The answer was so simple that no one knew what to do with it. Tavik looked at Lysa. Lysa looked at Sella. Sella looked down at Rul and felt the old easy line refuse to return. Enemy. Prisoner. Threat. Boy. Each word held part of him and not all. She hated the delay, hated the danger, hated that mercy kept arriving with a bill attached.

She knelt and tore a strip from the lower edge of her sleeve. “Give me your med seal.”

Tavik handed it over without comment. Rul watched her with confusion so open it almost made him look younger. Sella pressed the seal against the wound in his leg and tied the cloth tight enough to stop the worst of the bleeding.

“Why?” he whispered.

Sella did not look at him while she worked. “Because I am tired of letting the Dominion decide who I become.”

Jesus’s eyes rested on her, but He did not praise her. She was grateful for that. Praise would have made the act feel cleaner than it was. She was still angry. She still wanted to move. She still knew that if Rul reached for a weapon, she would stop him. But she had bound his wound, and that decision now existed in the world.

They moved again before the soldiers on the other side could cut through. Lysa made the hard call to leave Rul bound but alive in a side alcove with his wound sealed. Kane gave him one last look before turning away. Sella understood that look now. Leaving someone alive did not always feel merciful. Sometimes it felt like trusting God with an unfinished fear.

The secondary lift waited beyond the chamber, tucked behind a sliding service wall Bram had remembered only when Kane pointed out the false seam. It was a cramped vertical cage meant for engineers, not fugitives carrying wounded men through a collapsing mission. The lift rails rose into darkness, pulsing with residual shield energy. Kane entered a code on the side panel, then stopped.

“What?” Lysa asked.

“The lift will ask for Dominion voice confirmation.”

“Can you give it?”

“Yes.”

“But?”

Kane stared at the panel. “It will transmit my voiceprint to tower command. After this, they will know.”

Tavik gave a tired laugh. “I think they know.”

“No,” Kane said. “They know a soldier defected. They do not know which one. My brother is safer if they do not know.”

The lift panel waited, a small red light blinking beside the receiver. Everyone understood the cost without needing it explained. If Kane spoke, he might help them reach the stabilizer. He also might mark his own family for punishment. If he stayed silent, the mission might fail before they found another way. The Dominion had built even the lift as a place where fear could make a man choose against the living.

Sella looked at him. “You do not have to pretend this is easy.”

Kane’s face tightened. “I do not know how to choose my conscience over my brother.”

Bram stirred against Jesus’s shoulder. His voice came weak but clear enough. “I told myself I was choosing my daughter.”

Kane looked down at him.

Bram’s eyes barely stayed open. “I lost her anyway. Not because she died. Because fear taught me to serve the thing that threatened her.”

Kane shut his eyes. The lift hummed, waiting for the voiceprint. Lysa held her weapon toward the passage, giving him the only space she could. Tavik breathed through his pain. Sella stood near the cage with Bram’s blood on her sleeve and Rul’s on her hands. Jesus stood in the middle of them all, not forcing the decision, but making it impossible to call fear by a holy name.

Kane opened his eyes and leaned toward the receiver.

“Security escort Voss, emergency ascent to upper stabilizer,” he said.

The panel flashed. For one second the lift did not move.

Then a green light appeared.

The cage jerked upward.

Kane stepped back from the receiver as if the words had burned him. He did not cry, but something in his face fell open. Sella knew that look. It was the look of a person who had just obeyed and had not yet felt free. She wanted to tell him that the feeling would come, but she did not know if that was true. Maybe obedience did not always arrive with peace. Maybe sometimes it arrived with shaking hands and no promise except that the lie had finally been refused.

The lift climbed through the tower wall, slow and loud. Through the metal grating, Sella saw flashes of the forest through narrow outer slits, deep green under storm-gray light. Far above, distant fire moved across the sky where ships fought around the citadel’s shadow. The shield still shimmered faintly, curving through the clouds like a glass wall between sacrifice and victory. It was weaker now, but not broken.

Bram’s head rested against Jesus’s shoulder. His eyes found Sella’s. “You should have left me.”

Sella looked at him for a long moment. “Yes.”

The answer hurt him, but he accepted it.

Then she said, “But I did not.”

Bram closed his eyes, and one tear slipped through the grime on his face. Sella turned toward the rising lift before her own tears could follow. The stabilizer room waited above them. The shield still held. The Dominion now had Kane’s name. Rul was alive behind them. Bram was breathing. Sella did not know what mercy would cost next, but she was beginning to understand that hatred had been costing her all along.

Chapter Seven

The lift climbed through the shield tower with a slow, uneven pull, as if the cage were dragging all of them upward against the will of the machine. Metal groaned along the rails. Blue light flashed through the grated floor in bursts that made Sella’s hands look pale and strange, marked by Bram’s blood and Rul’s blood and the faint burn where the reader had searched her palm. She closed her fingers around the mark and felt the skin tighten. The tower had accepted her command, but it had not released her from what the command would cost.

No one spoke for the first part of the climb. Silence filled the cage in a way that was almost crowded. Tavik stood with his back against the rear rail, his wounded arm strapped roughly against his chest, his rifle balanced across his good forearm. Lysa kept her eyes on the lift door, still as stone, though her jaw flexed each time the cage jolted. Kane stood near the voice panel, looking down through the grate as if he could still see the words he had spoken falling away beneath him. Jesus supported Bram near the center of the cage, one arm firm behind the wounded man’s shoulders. Sella stood close enough to help if Bram slipped, but not close enough to make the nearness easy.

Through the narrow slits in the tower wall, the moon appeared and disappeared in slices. Forest canopy. Rain mist. Smoke rising from a ridge where something had burned. Far above the clouds, small flashes moved in the dark where ships crossed behind the shield shimmer. Every flash was a life making a decision too far away to know the names of those below. Sella wondered how many of them believed the shield would fall. She wondered how many had already committed themselves to an attack that would become a grave if she failed.

Bram’s breathing changed. Sella heard it over the lift’s grinding motion and looked before she could stop herself. His face had gone waxen beneath the dirt. Jesus felt the change too and shifted His hold to keep Bram upright.

“He needs a medic,” Sella said.

“He needs the tower to fall first,” Lysa answered without turning around.

Sella hated that Lysa was right. She hated the cold order of it. Lives were always being sorted in war by what had to happen before mercy could arrive. Bram had spent years excusing compromise with that kind of reasoning, and Sella had spent years excusing hardness with it. Now the same logic stood in front of her wearing a necessary face. She did not know where wisdom ended and cruelty began.

Jesus looked at her. “Do what love requires in the moment before you. Do not try to carry every moment at once.”

Sella let out a breath she had not known she was holding. “I do not know what love requires.”

“You know more than you did this morning.”

The words were gentle, and that made them harder to answer. This morning she had known exactly what justice looked like. It had looked like a rifle pointed at Bram’s chest. Now justice had become larger than her anger, and mercy had become heavier than pity. She did not know what to call the place she was standing in, only that Jesus had brought her there and had not left.

The lift jolted hard. Tavik caught himself against the rail and bit back a groan. Kane grabbed the side panel, then looked upward. “We are passing into the stabilizer band.”

Lysa lifted her rifle. “How much farther?”

“Two levels.”

A speaker crackled above the door before Kane finished speaking. The sound was harsh, distorted by tower interference, but the Dominion cadence was clear even before the words formed. “Security escort Voss, your ascent has been logged. Confirm prisoner transfer and report rebel breach status.”

Kane went rigid.

Tavik muttered, “That did not take long.”

The speaker hissed again. “Voss, confirm.”

Lysa looked at Kane, then at the panel. “Can you stall them?”

Kane’s face tightened. He had chosen once at the lift panel. Now the choice had followed him, demanding another payment. “If I answer poorly, they stop the lift.”

“If you do not answer at all?” Sella asked.

“They stop the lift faster.”

Bram stirred weakly. “Use protocol uncertainty.”

Kane looked at him. “What?”

Bram opened his eyes halfway. “Conflicting command conditions. You are inside a tower malfunction. Say protocol has split between root authority and upper grid command. It will sound like something bureaucratic enough for them to hate but not ignore.”

Despite the danger, Tavik gave a low breath that nearly became laughter. “The man may be bleeding out, but he still knows how to annoy an empire.”

Kane leaned toward the speaker and pressed the response key. His voice changed when he spoke. Not fully back into the soldier he had been, but close enough that Sella felt her hand drift toward her rifle. “Upper command, this is Voss. Confirming unstable breach environment. Protocol conflict between root authority and upper grid command. Awaiting identity verification before further prisoner transfer.”

A pause followed. Static trembled through the cage.

The voice returned, sharper. “Repeat identity verification request.”

Kane closed his eyes for half a second. “Multiple command signatures detected. Root system generated unauthorized succession event. I require upper grid confirmation before transfer of prisoners to stabilizer custody.”

Lysa glanced at him. Sella could see the question in her face. Was he helping them or building himself a path back? Kane kept his hand on the response key, but his other hand hung open at his side, fingers trembling. He was not calm. That made Sella trust him slightly more.

The speaker crackled. “Hold position. Tower commander is assuming direct authority.”

The lift shuddered and slowed.

Kane slapped the panel. “No.”

The cage stopped between levels.

For one terrible moment there was only the hum of the stabilizer band and the breath of wounded men. The forest slit beside Sella showed nothing but rain and gray sky. They were trapped inside the tower wall, suspended in a narrow cage while the upper grid fought the old root command and the Dominion tried to take the machine back.

Lysa stepped toward Kane. “Can you restart it?”

“I can try.”

“Try quickly.”

Kane opened the side panel with shaking hands and pulled at a bundle of thin control leads. Tavik moved beside him, covering the door with his rifle though there was nothing to shoot yet. Sella helped Jesus lower Bram to the cage floor. Bram winced, then bit down hard on the sound. Sella crouched beside him, not touching the wound, not knowing what else to do.

Bram’s eyes found her hand. “The reader burned you.”

“It is nothing.”

“It is not nothing.”

She looked at him sharply. “This is not the time for fatherly concern.”

Pain moved through his face, but he accepted the boundary. “No. It is not.”

The response was too honest to fight. Sella looked away and hated the small mercy of it. If he had argued, she could have stayed angry more easily. Instead he was learning not to claim what he had forfeited. That humility wounded her because it left space for grief to breathe.

Kane worked the control leads while muttering through possible codes. “They locked ascent authority from above. I can maybe drop us back down.”

“No,” Lysa said.

“I said maybe. I did not say I liked it.”

Bram turned his head toward the panel. “There should be a manual brake release under the floor grate.”

Kane frowned. “That releases the cage from the rail lock.”

“Yes.”

“That could drop us.”

“Not if the stabilizer magnets are still cycling,” Bram said. “They will catch the cage at the next band if the release is timed during a low pulse.”

Tavik stared at him. “I deeply miss every plan that did not include falling inside a tower.”

Sella looked through the floor. Far below, blue light pulsed along the lift shaft. Magnetic bands flashed at intervals down the wall, each one appearing and vanishing like a ring of lightning. She understood enough to dislike it. If Bram was wrong, they would fall. If he was right, they might bypass the command lock and catch at the upper service stop. The line between death and progress had become a timing problem.

Kane shook his head. “Low pulse timing is handled from the stabilizer panel. We cannot see the cycle from inside the cage.”

Jesus knelt beside Bram, and for a moment His face turned upward toward the unseen levels above them. The lift shaft hummed. The tower shook. Gunfire sounded faintly somewhere below, trapped behind walls and distance. Then Jesus looked at Sella.

“You can feel it through the floor,” He said.

Sella blinked. “Feel what?”

“The pulse.”

Kane looked at Him as if the idea was impossible, then glanced down. “Maybe. The floor vibration drops right before the low pulse. But the window would be less than two seconds.”

Lysa crouched and pressed one palm against the metal grate. Her brow tightened. “I feel three rhythms.”

“Outer grid, lift rail, stabilizer band,” Bram whispered.

“Which one matters?”

“The one that feels like breath stopping before it starts again.”

Sella looked at him. That was not engineering language. It was something he had once taught her when she was young and listening to machines through walls. Motors spoke before they failed. Pumps hesitated before pressure changed. Systems had breath if a person was patient enough to hear it. She had forgotten that, or thought she had. The memory entered not as warmth this time, but as skill.

She placed her burned palm flat against the floor.

The metal hummed under her hand with several competing vibrations. One was high and sharp. One was slow and heavy. Beneath both was a third rhythm, deeper and harder to isolate, not steady exactly, but returning again and again to a point of stillness before the next surge. Sella closed her eyes. The cage, the tower, the battle, the years, the blood, the fear, all of it pressed in. She wanted to push it away. Instead she breathed and listened.

Jesus’s voice was quiet beside her. “Do not force what must be discerned.”

She kept her eyes closed. The deep rhythm rose through her palm. It built, strained, trembled, and then eased for the smallest fraction of time before beginning again. She waited through one cycle, then another. The third time, she felt the stillness more clearly. It was not absence. It was the moment before power chose its path.

“There,” she said.

Kane slid his hand beneath the loosened floor grate and found the brake release. “Call it.”

Sella listened again. The rhythm climbed. Her body wanted to hurry, but hurry was fear wearing a useful mask. She waited until the hum thinned beneath her palm and the deep vibration drew back.

“Now.”

Kane pulled.

The cage dropped.

Lysa hit the side rail. Tavik swore. Bram’s body slid against Jesus, and Sella threw one arm across him without thinking. The shaft blurred upward around them in streaks of blue and black. For two seconds the drop became everything. Sella’s stomach rose into her throat. The lift screamed along the rails. Then a magnetic band caught the cage with such force that every joint in her body seemed to crack at once. The cage bounced, dropped another few feet, and caught again.

Then it stopped.

No one moved.

Tavik was the first to speak. “I would like to formally object to doing that again.”

Kane gave a breathless laugh, then clamped it down as if joy itself might be unsafe. The door in front of them clicked. A green light appeared above it. They had reached the upper service stop.

Lysa rose and rolled one shoulder. “On your feet.”

The door opened into a narrow antechamber outside the stabilizer room. The air was colder here, with a dry electric bite that made Sella’s burned palm throb. Unlike the lower levels, this part of the tower was clean. Too clean. The walls were white composite panels without stains, without old settler markings, without any sign that ordinary hands had once built the place. The Dominion had covered history here. It had made the upper tower look as if no one had ever lived before it ruled.

Kane stepped out first, weapon raised. “Clear.”

Lysa followed and swept left. Tavik moved right. Jesus and Sella lifted Bram between them, though Sella took more of his weight than she had before. She did not know whether Jesus allowed that or whether she simply stepped in without being asked. Bram tried to help and failed. His feet dragged over the polished floor.

The stabilizer door stood ahead, wide and sealed, with a black command panel beside it. Blue light pulsed beneath the door frame. Kane approached the panel, but it lit before he touched it.

The speaker returned. “Security escort Voss, stand down. Rebel prisoners are to be contained. Engineer Arven is to be terminated. Succession candidate is to be preserved for interrogation.”

Sella’s blood went cold at the phrase succession candidate.

Kane lifted his weapon toward the speaker, then lowered it because shooting the wall would only waste charge. “They know.”

Lysa said, “Open the door.”

Kane entered a code. The panel flashed red.

“Again,” Lysa said.

He entered another. Red again.

Bram’s head lifted weakly. “Command lock.”

“Can Sella open it?” Tavik asked.

Bram looked at the panel. “Maybe. Her succession access may outrank the lock if the root command reached this level.”

Sella stepped toward the panel. The surface recognized her before she touched it. A thin white line appeared where her palm should go. She hesitated. The burn on her skin tightened. The tower had marked her once. Now it wanted her again.

Jesus stood near her, Bram’s weight still held against Him. “You are not less free because obedience asks twice.”

Sella looked at Him. “It feels like the tower owns every step now.”

“No,” Jesus said. “The tower asks for fear. God asks for faithfulness.”

She placed her palm against the panel.

Pain shot through the burn, sharper than before. The panel scanned her blood, her heat, the emergency access the command core had given her. Words appeared in narrow light.

Succession authority recognized. Stabilizer access permitted. Command liability active.

The door opened.

The stabilizer room was vast compared to the passages below. It formed a circular chamber around an upper shaft where the final shield current rose toward the sky. Three huge stabilizer arms extended from the walls into the center, holding rings of blue energy in place. Each arm bore Dominion plating over older framework, like armor nailed over bones. Control stations ringed the chamber. Two uniformed technicians stood frozen beside one of them, their hands half raised, faces drained of color.

Lysa aimed at them. “Step away from the controls.”

They obeyed at once. One was an older woman with silver-threaded hair tucked under a station cap. The other was a young man with a grease mark across his cheek and terror in his eyes. They did not look like commanders. They looked like people who had been told the tower was safer than the battlefield and were now discovering that the battlefield had climbed to them.

Kane shut the door behind them. “No guards.”

“That worries me,” Tavik said.

“It should,” the older technician said. Her voice shook, but she forced it to work. “The guards were pulled to the roof level when the upper grid began failing.”

Lysa kept her rifle trained. “Names.”

The woman swallowed. “Iven Sor. This is Perrit.”

Sella felt the old pattern waiting. Names turned enemies into people. People made decisions harder. She almost resented the woman for answering.

Bram looked toward the stabilizer arms. “How long before tower command regains the upper grid?”

Iven stared at him, recognition dawning. “Arven?”

“Answer him,” Lysa said.

Iven’s eyes moved from Bram’s wound to Sella’s face to Jesus holding the dying man upright. Something in the sight unsettled her more than the rifles. “Maybe four minutes. Maybe less. The root command disrupted the Dominion collar, but the commander is forcing a remote seal from above.”

“How do we stop it?” Sella asked.

Perrit spoke before Iven could. “You cannot. Not from here.”

Kane stepped toward him. “Do not lie.”

“I am not lying.” Perrit’s voice cracked. “You can lower the shield from here, but the commander installed a deadfall circuit. If the stabilizer arms release without his code, the upper grid vents through the tower spine.”

Tavik frowned. “Meaning?”

Bram closed his eyes. “The tower explodes.”

Perrit nodded miserably. “Not the whole tower, maybe. But enough to kill everyone in the upper levels and maybe everyone near the base.”

Lysa’s expression did not change, but the room felt the blow. The rebels below. Rul in the alcove. Any prisoners or workers in lower service levels. The team itself. The shield could fall, but the fall might take the tower and everyone around it. The Dominion had built another chain. If control failed, destruction would punish the disobedient and the trapped alike.

Sella looked at Jesus. She did not ask the question aloud. She did not need to. Why was every path toward life guarded by someone else’s death? Why did evil get to make mercy complicated? Why did obedience never arrive alone?

Jesus looked at the stabilizer arms, then at the frightened technicians. “Who can vent the grid safely?”

Iven’s hands trembled. “In theory, two stations must be worked together. One releases the upper grip. The other redirects the surge into the ground sinks. But the deadfall circuit has to be held open manually at the central bridge.”

Tavik looked toward the narrow metal bridge that stretched from the room’s outer ring to a small control pedestal near the central shaft. Blue energy moved below it in slow coils. “Of course it does.”

Sella understood before anyone said it. One person would have to stand at the center while the others lowered the shield and redirected the surge. That person would be closest to the current if anything failed. It was not a new plot opening. It was the same wound reaching its next demand. Fear, control, survival, mercy, responsibility. The tower kept asking who would be spent so others could live.

Bram lifted his head from Jesus’s shoulder. “I can hold the bridge.”

“No,” Sella said.

He looked at her. “I know the old circuit.”

“You can barely breathe.”

“I can still press a control.”

“That is not redemption,” she said, and her voice broke harder than she wanted. “Dying because you feel guilty is not the same thing as obeying God.”

The room went quiet around the words. Even the stabilizer hum seemed to fall back for a breath. Bram looked at her with tears standing in his eyes. Sella had not known she believed what she had said until it was out. She had been afraid he wanted to die because death would be easier than living with what he had done. She had wanted him punished, and now she was furious that he might try to turn punishment into escape.

Jesus looked at Bram. “She has spoken truly.”

Bram’s face crumpled. “Then what am I to do with all this guilt?”

Jesus’s voice was firm, and mercy in it did not make the firmness smaller. “You bring it to God. You tell the truth. You repair what you can. You accept that some sorrow will remain with you. You do not worship guilt by letting it choose your death.”

Bram bowed his head, and Sella saw a different kind of surrender in him. Not the surrender of a man giving up. The surrender of a man being forbidden to use despair as his final act of control.

Kane stepped forward slowly. “I can hold the bridge.”

Lysa turned. “No.”

Kane gave a tired, sad smile. “You do not trust me enough to say no that fast.”

“I trust that you are still learning the difference between courage and panic.”

“That may be true.” He looked toward the central bridge. “But I know Dominion deadfall circuits. And if my voiceprint already marked me, I do not have much left to protect by hiding.”

Sella watched him and saw the danger Jesus had named in Bram. Guilt could wear courage’s clothes. Fear could wear love’s. Despair could speak in the language of sacrifice. She stepped closer to Kane.

“Is this obedience,” she asked, “or are you punishing yourself because you spoke your name into the lift?”

Kane looked at her, and the question struck him deeply enough that he did not answer at once. His eyes moved toward the closed door, down toward the unseen lower levels, then back to the central bridge. When he finally spoke, his voice was smaller.

“I do not know.”

Jesus nodded once, as if honesty had opened the only usable door. “Then do not move until you do.”

The tower alarm shifted again. Iven looked at the station display and went pale. “Remote seal in ninety seconds.”

Lysa stepped toward the controls. “We do not have time for everyone to become spiritually healthy.”

“No,” Jesus said. “But there is time to tell the truth.”

The words were calm, but they carried such authority that no one argued. Sella looked around the stabilizer room. Bram wounded and unable to stand alone. Kane torn between fear and responsibility. Lysa carrying command because command had no room for collapse. Tavik bleeding and still making room for humor because pain needed somewhere to go. Iven and Perrit trapped between systems they served and lives they did not want to lose. Jesus at the center of it all, holy and steady, not removing the pressure but refusing to let fear define the answer.

Sella looked at the central bridge.

“I will hold the deadfall open,” she said.

Bram’s head snapped up. “No.”

She did not look at him first. She looked at Jesus. “Not because I want to die. Not because I need to prove I am better than him. Not because I am not afraid.”

Jesus held her gaze. “Then why?”

Sella swallowed. The answer was not clean in her, but it was true enough to stand on. “Because I accepted command liability. Because I said the shield should fall so people can live free of fear. If someone has to hold that bridge, I cannot hand that cost to someone else only because I am tired of losing.”

Jesus looked at her for a long breath. Then He said, “Walk in that truth.”

Bram reached for her, but his strength failed before his hand found her sleeve. “Sella.”

She turned to him then. “I am not doing this to leave you.”

His face twisted with pain that had nothing to do with his wound. “That is what I am afraid of.”

“I know,” she said. “I am afraid too.”

The remote seal warning dropped to sixty seconds. Lysa moved to the left station. Tavik limped to the right with Perrit helping him read the controls. Iven took her place beside Kane at the ground-sink relay. Bram stayed with Jesus near the door because his body could do no more, and because perhaps obedience for him now was to remain alive under mercy instead of dying under guilt.

Sella stepped onto the central bridge. Blue light rose on both sides, bright enough to blind if she looked directly into it. The metal under her boots vibrated with the upper grid’s rage. She walked carefully, one hand near but not touching the rail. Halfway across, she heard Bram whisper her name, not as command, not as apology, but as prayer.

She reached the center pedestal.

The deadfall control waited there, a simple lever beneath a glass guard. She broke the guard with the butt of her rifle and wrapped her burned hand around the lever. Pain shot through her palm, and the tower’s light surged up around her.

Lysa shouted, “On my mark.”

Jesus stood at the edge of the bridge, His face lifted toward Sella through the blue fire. He did not look afraid. He did not look distant either. He looked present in a way that made even the tower seem temporary.

Sella pulled the lever down.

The stabilizer arms began to open.

Chapter Eight

The stabilizer arms opened like enormous hands releasing something they had been forced to hold too long. Blue current leaped between them and the central shaft, then stretched thin, then thickened again as the Dominion collar fought the old root command below. Sella held the deadfall lever down with both hands. The burned palm screamed first, then went strangely numb beneath the pressure. Her boots vibrated against the bridge, and the metal under her feet grew warm enough that she felt it through the soles.

Lysa called commands from the left station, her voice sharp and steady over the rising roar. Tavik answered from the right, reading the pattern Perrit shouted beside him while his injured arm hung useless against his chest. Iven worked the ground-sink relay with Kane, and the two of them moved with the tense unity of people who would never have chosen each other but had run out of time to remain separate. Bram stood near the door with Jesus beside him, one hand pressed against his bleeding side, the other clenched around the frame because his body wanted the floor and his heart would not let him take it.

“Upper grip releasing,” Lysa shouted.

“Ground sink one is open,” Iven answered.

“Sink two is dragging,” Kane said. “The relay is resisting.”

Perrit looked from the right station to the central shaft and went pale. “If sink two does not open, the surge comes back through the bridge.”

Sella heard him. Everyone heard him. No one said what that meant because the meaning was already in the room, bright and merciless. The bridge was where she stood. The deadfall lever was beneath her hands. If the surge came back through the central line, her body would be the nearest living thing to the path of release.

“Fix it,” Lysa said.

“I am trying,” Kane snapped, then caught himself as if anger had become an old uniform he did not want to put on again.

The tower commander’s voice broke into the room through every speaker at once. “Unauthorized release detected. Succession candidate, remove your hand from the deadfall control and stand down.”

Sella did not move.

The voice continued, calm enough to sound inhuman. “You have been identified as Sella Arven, daughter of engineer Bram Arven, recorded rebel operative, station survivor, armed insurgent. Your action is punishable under Dominion emergency law. Remove your hand from the control.”

Bram’s face changed when the voice said her full name. Sella felt it too, the cold exposure of being named by a power that wanted to reduce her whole life to a file. Daughter. Survivor. Operative. Insurgent. Each word was true and not enough. The Dominion could name facts, but it could not speak the truth of a soul. That thought came with surprising clarity, and she knew it had not begun in her alone.

Jesus looked toward the speaker but spoke to Sella. “You are seen by God before you are named by fear.”

The tower shook. The stabilizer arms opened another degree, and the shield current outside the upper windows thinned into visible waves. Through the narrow view beyond the chamber, Sella saw the sky flicker. For one breath the citadel above appeared sharper, no longer hidden behind the full shimmer of the shield. A cheer almost rose in Tavik’s throat, but he swallowed it when the right station spat sparks across the console.

“Sink two is still jammed,” Perrit shouted.

Iven tried to reroute from her station. “It is locked behind commander authority.”

Kane leaned over her shoulder. “I know that lock. It is not mechanical. It is waiting for a command refusal.”

Lysa fired a glance at him. “Explain fast.”

“The commander built it so lower operators could not redirect the surge unless they had already received and refused a direct order to stop. It marks rebellion before allowing emergency venting.”

Tavik stared at him. “This tower has a punishment built into the safety system.”

“Yes,” Kane said. “That is what the Dominion does.”

The commander’s voice returned. “Security escort Voss, you are ordered to detain Sella Arven and terminate engineer Bram Arven. Comply and family review status may remain deferred.”

Kane went still. Those last words did not strike the room generally. They struck him by name, by blood, by the small place fear still had permission to hurt him. Family review status may remain deferred. It was a clean phrase for a filthy threat. Sella looked at him from the bridge, and for a second she saw the whole war inside his face. Obey and maybe your brother lives. Refuse and maybe your brother pays. The Dominion never asked a man to choose between good and evil when it could make evil wear the face of someone he loved.

Kane lifted his weapon very slowly and pointed it toward Sella.

Lysa turned her rifle on him. Tavik did the same from the other side, though his aim was poor and his face twisted with pain. Iven backed away from the station. Perrit froze with both hands above the right controls. Bram made a sound that was almost a plea. Sella held the lever and did not move because there was nowhere to go.

Jesus looked at Kane. “Do not make your brother the altar where you offer your conscience.”

Kane’s arm shook.

The commander spoke again. “Voss, comply.”

Kane’s eyes filled, though his face remained hard. “My brother is seventeen.”

Jesus’s voice was quiet. “God sees him too.”

“You do not know where they keep him.”

“I know he is not saved by your surrender to darkness.”

Kane’s weapon drifted lower by an inch, then rose again as panic surged back through him. “If I do nothing, they will take him apart.”

Sella heard herself answer before she knew the words were coming. “If you obey them, they take you apart first.”

Kane looked at her, and the weapon trembled more violently. She held his gaze from the center bridge. Blue light rose around her, and the deadfall lever pulled against her hands as if the tower itself wanted to throw her free. She did not hate Kane in that moment. She feared him. She might have to fight him. But she did not hate him. That absence startled her more than the gun.

“I spent years letting one threat decide who I became,” Sella said. “It did not bring my family back. It did not make me safe. It only gave the Dominion another room inside me.”

Bram lowered his head, receiving the sentence as his own judgment too. Kane stared at Sella as if she had reached across the chamber and touched the hidden chain around his throat.

The commander’s voice sharpened. “Voss, final order.”

Kane turned the weapon toward the ceiling and fired into the speaker above him. The device exploded in a shower of sparks. At the same instant, Iven’s console flashed green.

“Command refusal registered,” she shouted. “Sink two unlocking.”

Kane lowered the gun. He looked sick, terrified, and alive in a way he had not looked before. The tower had made his refusal part of the mechanism, which meant the Dominion had believed fear would hold every time. It had not imagined that truth might move through a wounded soldier, a rebel daughter, a bleeding engineer, and a holy Man who carried no weapon.

“Open it,” Lysa said.

Iven slammed both hands onto the relay. “Sink two open.”

The stabilizer arms widened. The chamber filled with a sound like mountains tearing loose from the sky. Sella held the lever with all her strength. The current surged through the central shaft, dove toward the ground sinks, then struck a resistance beneath the floor that threw heat up through the bridge. She cried out and dropped to one knee but kept both hands locked around the control.

Bram took one step toward the bridge before Jesus caught his arm.

“She is burning,” Bram said.

Jesus did not release him. “She is holding.”

“I should be there.”

“You are not asked to replace her obedience with your guilt.”

Bram’s face twisted as if those words hurt worse than his wound. Sella heard enough to understand, and the understanding steadied her more than comfort would have. Her father wanted to run to her because he loved her. He also wanted to run because guilt hated standing still. Jesus would not let either of them confuse love with control.

The current climbed the bridge. Pain shot through Sella’s hands and up both arms. She bent over the lever, teeth clenched, and watched the shield current outside the upper windows flicker again. The sky opened in pieces. Beyond the thinning shimmer, ships moved through fire and darkness. The citadel’s vast understructure glowed with weapon light, still terrible, still capable of death, but no longer unreachable.

“Shield density falling below forty percent,” Perrit shouted.

“Ground surge is holding,” Iven said. “Barely.”

The commander’s voice came again from a lower speaker this time, distorted but still cold. “Succession candidate, you are being deceived. Bram Arven surrendered his family once. He will surrender you too. Release the control and he will be executed. Continue and he will watch you die.”

Bram closed his eyes. The words entered him exactly where they were meant to. Sella could see it from the bridge. The Dominion did not only threaten bodies. It studied guilt and spoke through it. It knew Bram feared being the reason she died. It knew Sella feared being left again. It drove the old wound like a blade between them.

Sella tightened her grip on the lever. “Do not answer him,” she called.

Bram opened his eyes.

“Do not let him use me,” she said.

A tremor passed through Bram, not weakness this time, but recognition. For years he had obeyed fear when it wore Sella’s face. Now she was telling him not to do it again. The command was mercy, though it did not feel gentle. It gave him no hiding place. It also gave him a way to love her without controlling the cost.

Bram turned toward the remaining speaker. His voice was thin but clear. “You used my love to teach me cowardice.”

The commander answered, “Your cowardice was already there.”

“Yes,” Bram said. “And I repent of it.”

The chamber seemed to hold that word. Repent. Not regret. Not shame. Not the endless self-punishment that had tempted him at the stabilizer door. Repentance was different. It turned its face toward truth and stopped calling the old master by softer names.

The tower shook harder. The speaker crackled with static. “Repentance is not a command category.”

Jesus said, “No. It is a door.”

Sella heard Him, and the words went through her with the force of light entering a sealed room. She had thought repentance belonged to Bram because he had sinned. She had thought mercy belonged to those who did not know how much evil cost. But on the bridge, with her hands burning around the lever and the shield falling above them, she saw something that made her tremble. Repentance was not only for the traitor. It was also for the wounded person who had built a throne out of righteous pain. She had not caused the gate to open. She had not caused her mother’s death. She had not caused her brother to fall near the pumps. But she had let hatred become the only voice allowed to explain her life.

The truth did not excuse Bram. It freed the dead from being used as fuel.

The realization struck so deeply that for a moment the tower blurred. Sella saw her mother not as smoke and scream, but as hands dusted with flour. She saw her brother not as a body near the pumps, but as a boy laughing with a stolen coil spring in his pocket. She had kept them alive in anger because she was afraid grief without anger would lose them completely. Now, in the blue-white fire, she understood that love had been there before hatred and could remain after it. The Dominion had not given her love. It had only taught her to guard it with fire.

“Sella,” Jesus said.

She looked toward Him.

“Let them be loved without being chained to your vengeance.”

The lever fought her hands. The bridge burned under her knees. Tears ran down her face, and this time she did not hide them. She thought of her mother. She thought of her brother. She thought of the girl in the grain chute waiting for someone to come back. She could not change who had not come. She could not make the past holy by hating it hard enough.

“I do not want to carry them this way anymore,” she whispered.

No one in the room could have heard her over the roar. Jesus did.

The central shaft flared. The stabilizer arms locked open.

Perrit shouted, “Shield density under ten percent.”

“Ground surge stable,” Iven cried. “It is working.”

Kane was still staring at the ruined speaker, breathing hard. Lysa stepped beside him, not lowering her rifle completely, but no longer aiming it at his heart. “Stay with the relay,” she said.

He nodded and returned to Iven’s station.

The commander’s voice returned again, now fractured through damaged circuits. “All upper units, terminate breach team. Execute tower purge. Repeat, execute tower purge.”

Perrit’s face went white. “Purge?”

Bram looked toward the ceiling. “He is venting the roof-level coolant into the upper corridors.”

Tavik gripped his rifle. “Why is that bad?”

“It will poison anyone above the stabilizer band,” Iven said. “Workers, guards, prisoners if they have any. Everyone.”

Lysa’s eyes hardened. “Can we stop it from here?”

Iven shook her head. “Not while the shield release is active.”

The room tightened around the new horror. They had lowered the shield far enough for the assault above to matter, but the commander was killing his own upper levels to stop the breach team or to punish failure. It would have been easy to say those people had chosen their side. It would have been easy to say the mission came first. Some of them were guards. Some had fired at them. Some would fire again if given the chance. But Rul’s frightened face rose in Sella’s mind, and Kane’s brother, and the technicians who had raised their hands because they wanted to live.

Mercy did not let the world stay simple.

“The shield is almost down,” Lysa said, but her voice had changed. She was not arguing against rescue yet. She was measuring whether rescue would cost the mission.

Jesus looked toward the upper access door on the far side of the chamber. “Where does that lead?”

Perrit answered quickly. “Roof service corridor. Then coolant control.”

Kane said, “It will be guarded.”

Tavik shifted his rifle. “Everything is guarded.”

Sella looked at the shield current outside. It had thinned to a pale shimmer, shaking in the sky. The fleet above had surely seen it now. The mission that began in the forest had reached its first great turn. The shield would fall. But a new choice had arrived inside the same central wound, not a new story, but the old question in a harder form. Would fear decide who mattered? Would hatred decide who deserved breath? Would they break the machine only to become shaped like it?

The bridge heat began to ease.

“Shield density under three percent,” Perrit said. “Final release in twenty seconds.”

Sella held the lever down. Her hands were shaking now from pain and exhaustion. The metal under her knees no longer burned as fiercely, but the damage had been done. Her palms felt raw and far away. She looked at Bram. He was watching her with tears on his face, not because she had forgiven him fully, but because he had seen the first lock open.

The commander’s purge alarm wailed through the ceiling.

Lysa looked at Jesus. “If we go after coolant control, we risk being trapped above.”

“Yes,” Jesus said.

“If we do not, people die.”

“Yes.”

She gave a hard, tired breath. “You do not make command easier.”

“No,” Jesus said. “I make truth clear.”

Sella almost smiled through the pain. It was not happiness. It was the strange recognition that Jesus had never promised ease, and somehow His honesty felt kinder than comfort that lied.

The shield current outside the window flashed once, twice, then collapsed into the sky like glass turning to rain. Far above the moon, ships surged through the opening. The citadel’s shadow no longer sat untouched above them. The chamber filled with a distant thunder as the battle changed.

Perrit cried out, “Shield down.”

For a moment no one moved. The words seemed too large for the room.

Then the tower lights shifted to emergency violet, and the purge alarm grew louder.

Sella released the deadfall lever. Her hands would not open at first. She had to peel her fingers away from the metal one by one. When she stood, the bridge swayed under her, or maybe she did. She took one step toward the outer ring and nearly fell. Bram lurched forward despite Jesus’s grip, but Jesus was already crossing the first part of the bridge toward her.

Sella looked past Him toward the upper access door.

“People above us are going to die,” she said.

Jesus reached her and steadied her by the shoulders. His hands were gentle, but His eyes carried the weight of the next truth. “Then the question before you has changed.”

“No,” she said, breathing hard as the purge alarm wailed. “I think it is the same question.”

Jesus held her gaze.

Sella turned toward the others. Her voice shook, but it did not break. “We opened the sky. Now we go open the doors.”

Chapter Nine

The upper access door did not open when Kane struck the panel. It gave one hard chirp, flashed red, and sealed itself deeper into the frame with a sound like a bolt being driven into bone. The purge alarm screamed through the stabilizer room, and violet emergency light swept over every face in repeating waves. Beyond the door, somewhere above them, coolant gas was already flooding corridors where workers, guards, and frightened people who had trusted the wrong power were finding out that the Dominion did not spare its own when control began to fail.

Kane entered another code. The panel rejected it before he finished. He swore under his breath and struck the side of the casing with the heel of his hand. “The commander locked roof access from the upper control nest.”

Lysa moved beside him. “Can Sella override it?”

“Maybe. But if she touches another panel, her succession trace may trigger every remaining security node between here and the roof.”

Sella stood at the end of the bridge with Jesus’s hand still steadying her shoulder. Her palms throbbed so deeply that each heartbeat seemed to reach through the burns. The shield was down. The mission they had come to finish had been done, or at least done enough that the sky above had opened and the fleet could strike. Every practical instinct in her said they should leave the tower now. Get Bram out. Get Tavik to a medic. Take Kane and the technicians and descend before the Dominion commander turned the whole place into a tomb.

Then the purge alarm wailed again, and the thought became unbearable.

“How many above us?” Sella asked.

Iven looked at Perrit, then at the ceiling as if she could count lives through steel. “Minimum twenty on roof service. Maybe more if they moved wounded from the gallery fight upward.”

“Dominion?”

“Some,” Iven said. “Technicians too. Signal clerks. Lift operators. Two kitchen workers if the shift schedule did not change.”

Tavik leaned against the right station, his face gray. “They put kitchen workers in a shield tower?”

Iven gave him a strained look. “Soldiers still eat.”

The plainness of that answer did something to the room. It tore away the grand shape of war and left a smaller picture behind. Someone carrying broth. Someone washing cups. Someone sweeping under tables while engines thundered above the moon. The Dominion had built itself on uniforms and commands, but ordinary hands kept its towers alive. Sella thought of her mother feeding mechanics before herself, and the comparison hurt because she had no place to put it.

Lysa looked toward Jesus. “We cannot save everyone.”

“No,” Jesus said.

“We may not save anyone.”

“That may be true.”

“Then why does it feel like walking away would be wrong?”

Jesus’s face held the answer before His words did. “Because you have heard their blood calling from behind a door.”

Lysa closed her eyes for half a second. Command had not made her cruel. It had made her tired of choosing between impossible losses. When she opened her eyes, the decision was there. “Kane, find me another route.”

Kane nodded and moved to the side console with Iven. Perrit helped Tavik lower himself to the floor before the rebel fell trying to pretend he could stand. Bram remained near the bridge entrance, one shoulder against the wall, breathing shallowly. Jesus turned from Sella and went to him, but Sella followed more slowly than she wanted, each step pulling at the raw nerves in her hands.

Bram saw her palms and flinched. “Sella.”

“Do not.”

“I only wanted to say—”

“I know what you wanted to say.” Her voice was tired, not sharp. That frightened her more than anger would have. “I do not have room for it right now.”

Bram nodded and lowered his eyes. The restraint was new. It mattered in a quiet way. He did not reach for fatherhood as if the pain of the moment entitled him to it. He let her boundary stand, and by letting it stand, he made something possible later that force would have broken.

Jesus looked at Bram’s wound. “You must sit.”

Bram shook his head. “I can still help.”

“You can help by living.”

The words were firm enough that Bram obeyed. He sank against the wall, jaw tight, and Jesus crouched beside him long enough to press a torn strip of cloth more securely over the wound. Sella watched His hands. They were steady, gentle, unhurried, though everything around them demanded panic. She had seen those hands hold back a collapsing beam, touch Tavik’s wound under fire, steady Bram without excusing him, and rest on her shoulder when the bridge nearly took her strength. She did not understand Him. Yet the longer He stayed, the more everything else revealed what it truly was.

Kane called from the side console. “There is a maintenance crawl above the stabilizer coolant return. It bypasses the locked door and exits near the roof service corridor.”

Lysa turned. “Can people fit?”

“Barely.”

Tavik gave a weak laugh from the floor. “I am beginning to suspect every path in this tower was designed by people who hated shoulders.”

Perrit pointed toward a panel behind the left stabilizer arm. “The crawl runs over the surge baffles. It is hot, and the purge gas may be leaking into it already.”

“How long to reach coolant control?” Sella asked.

“Three minutes if no one gets stuck,” Kane said. “Longer in the real world.”

Lysa looked at Tavik, then Bram. “Wounded stay here.”

Tavik immediately tried to object, then winced so hard that the objection became a breath through clenched teeth. “Fine. But I hate agreeing with you.”

“I know,” Lysa said. She handed him a spare charge pack. “Keep the technicians alive if the door opens from the wrong side.”

Tavik took it. “That I can do badly but sincerely.”

Kane checked his sidearm and moved toward the crawl panel. Lysa followed. Sella took one step after them and felt Jesus’s gaze on her. She turned before He spoke.

“Your hands,” He said.

“They still work.”

“Pain can make obedience unsteady.”

“So can waiting while people die.”

Jesus did not deny it. He came closer and looked at her palms, not as injuries alone, but as if they were part of the truth the day had written into her. “Let them be wrapped.”

Sella almost refused because refusal had become familiar. Then she thought of Bram trying to make guilt look like sacrifice and Kane almost making fear look like love. Pride could wear useful clothing too. She held out her hands.

Jesus tore clean cloth from an unused field dressing Tavik had pushed toward Him. He wrapped her palms carefully, leaving her fingers free enough to grip a weapon and work a panel. The touch hurt. She breathed through it. Jesus did not rush. His nearness made the alarm seem less powerful, not quieter exactly, but less able to define the room.

“You are not saving them to prove that you are merciful,” He said.

Sella looked at Him.

“You are going because they are in danger.”

She swallowed. The difference mattered. Her heart had already tried to turn the rescue into evidence, as if one costly act could prove she was no longer ruled by hatred. Jesus did not let her use mercy as a mirror. He turned it outward, toward the people behind the sealed door.

“I know,” she said, though she had only fully known it after He spoke.

He finished the wrapping. “Then go.”

The crawl panel came loose with a metallic pop. Heat rolled from the opening in a thick wave. Kane ducked his head inside and recoiled, coughing. “Gas traces. Not lethal yet.”

“Comforting,” Lysa said.

Sella slung her rifle awkwardly, flexing her wrapped fingers against the pain. Kane went first. Lysa followed. Sella entered third, and Jesus came behind her. She heard Bram say something low as they left, but the crawl swallowed the words before she could tell whether it was a plea or a prayer.

The space was worse than the tunnels below because it had no history in it. The lower causeway had been damp and old, cracked by roots and memory. This crawl was clean, hot, and narrow, lined with insulated conduit that pulsed under the walls like veins carrying fever. Sella moved on elbows and knees, every contact sending pain through her wrapped palms. Ahead, Kane pushed fast, then slowed whenever the heat thickened. Lysa moved with controlled precision, never wasting a breath. Behind Sella, Jesus followed in silence, and His presence in that cramped place felt impossible and deeply real.

The gas reached them halfway through. It came as a sharpness in the throat first, then as a sting in the eyes. Kane pulled a filter strip from his belt and passed it back. Lysa tore it in half and gave one part to Sella. Sella looked back toward Jesus.

“You take it,” she said.

Jesus shook His head. “Use it.”

She wanted to argue, but the gas burned again, and she pressed the strip over her mouth. It helped only a little. The crawl trembled as something struck the tower above them. The fleet had begun its attack. The shield’s fall had changed the battle, and now every delayed second carried another kind of cost. Sella kept moving.

They reached the exit panel as shouts rose beyond it. Kane paused and held up one hand. Through the metal, voices came strained and panicked.

“The door is sealed.”

“Coolant level is rising.”

“Commander ordered purge.”

“He ordered us to hold the roof.”

“He is killing us.”

A cough broke the last voice. Someone pounded on metal nearby. Another person shouted for a cutter. Then a shot rang out, muffled through the panel, and the voices scattered into fear.

Kane looked back at Lysa. “They are fighting each other.”

Lysa shifted her rifle forward. “Open it.”

Kane pushed the panel loose. It dropped outward and clattered onto the floor of a white service corridor already filling with pale vapor. He slid out low, weapon raised, then helped Lysa through. Sella followed and landed hard on one knee. The gas was thicker here. Emergency lights painted the corridor violet and red. Two technicians were crouched by a sealed blast door, one trying to pry open a control plate while the other held a cloth over her mouth and coughed violently. A Dominion guard lay on the floor nearby, wounded or dead. Another guard stood fifteen feet away with his rifle trained on a cluster of workers pressed against the wall.

“Back from the door,” the guard shouted at them. “Commander’s order.”

One of the workers cried, “We will die in here.”

“Back from the door.”

The guard was afraid. Sella saw it now before she saw the uniform. His aim kept shifting because his hands shook. The gas had reddened his eyes. He looked at the workers as if they were enemies because command had told him they were disobedient, and he was clinging to that order the way a drowning man clings to wreckage.

Lysa stepped from the vapor. “Drop the rifle.”

The guard turned. Kane fired once, striking the weapon from the guard’s hands before the man could aim. The rifle spun across the floor. The guard stumbled back, clutching burned fingers, and Lysa closed the distance before he recovered. She slammed him against the wall and pinned him there.

“Coolant control,” she said.

The guard coughed. “Commander locked it.”

“Where?”

He flicked terrified eyes toward the end of the corridor. “Control alcove. But you cannot open the roof vents without command seal.”

Kane shoved past him toward the alcove. Sella went to the workers by the blast door. There were six of them there, none armed, all coughing. One older man had collapsed against the wall, his lips faintly blue. The woman working the panel looked up at Sella with raw distrust.

“You are rebels.”

“Yes,” Sella said.

“Are you here to kill us?”

The question should not have surprised her, but it did. Sella looked down at her wrapped hands, her rifle, the blood drying on her clothes, and wondered how many times she had entered a room looking exactly like the end of someone else’s hope.

“No,” she said. “We are here to open the doors.”

The woman searched her face as if deciding whether truth could come from someone holding a weapon. Then she moved aside and pointed at the control plate. “Manual release is fused. If we get this door open, there are twelve more people trapped in the roof prep bay.”

“Soldiers?”

“Some. Mostly crew.”

Sella nodded. “Then help me.”

Jesus emerged from the crawl last. The vapor moved around Him, and for a moment everyone in the corridor looked at Him as if they had forgotten how to speak. He went first to the older man on the floor. He knelt beside him, lifted his head gently, and placed a hand against his chest. The man dragged in a breath that sounded like life returning through a narrow gate.

The woman beside Sella stared. “Who is He?”

Sella looked at Jesus through the gas and the emergency light. “The reason we are still here.”

Kane shouted from the control alcove. “The roof vents are locked behind a two-person seal. One command input here and one manual release at the blast door.”

The technician beside Sella coughed. “That is this panel.”

“Can you work it?” Sella asked.

“If your friend can break the command lock.”

Lysa dragged the disarmed guard toward the alcove. “Can his seal break it?”

Kane looked at the guard’s insignia. “Not high enough.”

The guard laughed once, bitter and scared. “Nobody here has commander seal. That was the point.”

Sella stared at the fused manual release. The panel was old beneath the Dominion casing. Not as old as the command root, but old enough that the added lock had seams. Her father would have seen them faster. She hated that she wanted him there and was grateful that he was not, because his body could not survive another climb.

“Can the succession authority open this?” she asked.

Kane looked back at her. “Maybe, but the moment you touch it, the commander will know we reached the roof corridor.”

“He already knows enough.”

“That is not what I mean. He can redirect the purge through this section.”

The workers around them heard that and began talking at once. Fear rose fast in the corridor. One man shoved himself away from the wall and staggered toward the crawl opening as if escape could be found in a burning maintenance duct. Lysa caught him before he fell.

Jesus stood from beside the older man. “Listen.”

His voice was not loud, but it gathered the corridor. The coughing did not stop. The alarm did not stop. The tower did not stop shaking. Yet the people turned toward Him.

“Fear is telling each of you to save yourselves alone,” Jesus said. “That is how darkness keeps many people trapped behind one door.”

No one answered. The disarmed guard stared at Him with tears running from gas-burned eyes. The technician beside Sella pressed a cloth to her mouth and trembled. Kane stood in the alcove with his hand above a lock that might kill them if he guessed wrong.

Jesus looked at the guard Lysa had pinned. “You know another way to the command seal.”

The guard shook his head too quickly. “No.”

Jesus took one step toward him. “You know.”

The man’s face crumpled with panic. “If I tell you, he will execute me.”

“The commander has already chosen death for you,” Jesus said. “Tell the truth while there is still time for life.”

The guard slid down the wall until Lysa’s grip was the only thing keeping him upright. “There is a roof bridge key,” he whispered. “Emergency command seal in the prep bay. He keeps it there in case the upper nest is breached.”

Kane’s eyes sharpened. “The prep bay is behind the blast door.”

The guard nodded.

Sella looked at the fused panel. “So we open the door to reach the key, but we may need the key to open the door.”

The technician beside her shook her head. “Not if we cut the manual release and hold the circuit open by hand.”

Lysa turned. “What happens to the hand?”

The woman did not answer, which answered enough.

Sella looked at her wrapped palms. Jesus had told her not to go because she wanted to prove mercy. He had also told her to go because people were in danger. That truth held now. The corridor narrowed around the next act of obedience. The manual release needed a hand. Hers was already burned, already marked by the tower, already shaking from the bridge.

“No,” Lysa said before Sella spoke.

Sella looked at her.

Lysa’s face hardened. “You held the deadfall. You opened the shield. You can barely close your fingers.”

“Can you do it?”

Lysa looked at the panel, then at the people by the door. Her silence was honest. She had the steadier hands, but she was needed to hold the corridor if guards came through. Kane was needed at the alcove. The technician knew the release but did not have succession authority if the circuit asked for it. Jesus could have done what no one else could imagine, but Sella already understood He was not there to turn their obedience into theater. He was there to lead them through truth, not around it.

Jesus came beside her. “You are not alone in the cost.”

“I know,” she said.

This time she did know. Not fully, not cleanly, not without fear, but enough. She was not the girl in the chute anymore. She was not a rifle aimed at her father. She was not a file in the Dominion system. She was a wounded woman with burned hands standing in a poisoned corridor because mercy had become more real than vengeance.

The technician opened the panel and exposed two glowing contact rails behind the fused release. “You have to bridge these and hold steady until the door clears. If you pull away too soon, it seals again.”

Kane called from the alcove. “Ready on command input.”

Lysa raised her rifle toward the far bend as footsteps sounded through the vapor. “Do it now.”

Sella placed her wrapped hands into the panel.

Pain tore through the cloth and up her arms so fiercely that her knees buckled. Jesus caught her from behind, not taking her hands from the rails, but holding her steady while the current passed through the release. She cried out once and bit down on the next sound. The blast door began to unlock, slow and heavy.

The workers pulled the older man away from the opening. Kane shouted codes from the alcove. The technician counted the door’s movement through coughs. Lysa fired twice into the vapor at shapes appearing near the bend. The disarmed guard covered his head and wept.

Sella held the circuit.

The door opened enough for one person to crawl through. Then two. Pale vapor poured from the prep bay beyond, thicker than before. Voices shouted from inside. People began crawling out, coughing, dragging one another, some in uniforms, some in work clothes. Sella saw a young soldier help a kitchen worker through the gap before collapsing beside her. She saw a clerk with blood on his forehead pull a wounded guard by the belt. She saw fear loosen its categories because breath mattered more than rank when the air was poison.

“Keep holding,” the technician shouted. “Almost clear.”

Sella’s vision blurred. Jesus’s arm remained firm around her, His voice near her ear.

“Stay with the living before you.”

She held.

A final man crawled through with a black command case strapped to his wrist. Kane seized the case, opened it, and pulled out a seal rod marked with the tower commander’s crest.

“Got it,” he shouted.

Sella wanted to release the rails, but the technician cried, “Wait. Door clear in three, two, one.”

“Now,” Jesus said.

Sella pulled her hands free and fell back against Him. The blast door slammed open the rest of the way and locked against the wall. Air began to move as Kane drove the command seal into the alcove receiver. The roof vents opened with a deep mechanical roar. The pale gas streamed upward, pulled away from the corridor, the prep bay, and the people sprawled across the floor.

For a few seconds, no one spoke. They only breathed.

Then the tower shook from a blast above, and the distant voice of the commander came through the remaining speakers, no longer cold, no longer controlled, but furious.

“Seal all lower exits. If they want mercy, bury them with it.”

Lysa looked at Sella, then at Jesus. The shield was down. The trapped people were breathing. But now the tower itself was becoming a cage.

Jesus looked toward the corridor leading back down.

“Then we lead them out,” He said.

Chapter Ten

They did not move like an army when Jesus said to lead them out. They moved like people who had been almost dead and were not sure they had been given permission to live. Some crawled first because their legs would not answer. Others stumbled to their feet and reached for the nearest wall, the nearest sleeve, the nearest breathing body. The corridor filled with coughing, metal groans, the hiss of clearing vents, and the awful confusion that comes when enemies realize they have survived the same room.

Lysa took command because command still had to exist, even when mercy had made the categories difficult. She pointed the wounded to one side of the corridor and those able to walk to the other. Tavik had been left below, Bram had been left below, and every instinct in Sella pulled toward them, but the roof corridor was now full of people who would die if no one gave them direction. She stood with wrapped hands against her chest, breathing through pain, while Jesus moved among the fallen and touched shoulders, lifted heads, and spoke quietly to men and women who looked at Him as if they had forgotten that kindness could enter a tower.

Kane held the command seal rod in one hand and his sidearm in the other. He had not pointed the weapon at anyone since the speaker ordered him to detain Sella, but the people in the corridor still stared at it. Some of the Dominion workers looked at him with betrayal. A few rebels among the rescued roof prisoners looked at him with disgust. He stood between both groups and belonged cleanly to neither, which made him look more alone than he had when his wrists were bound.

The disarmed guard who had told them about the roof bridge key sat against the wall with his hands open on his knees. His name, he told Jesus when asked, was Oran Kel. He kept repeating that he had only followed orders until the sentence lost its shape. Jesus did not argue with him. He simply knelt close and said, “Then begin following truth.” Oran wept harder at that than he had under threat.

Sella heard the exchange while helping the technician who had opened the blast door. The woman’s name was Mara Cale, and she had burned two fingers trying to keep the manual release from fusing again. Sella wrapped the fingers as well as she could with hands that barely obeyed her. Mara watched her work with a strange mixture of suspicion and gratitude.

“You are Bram Arven’s daughter,” Mara said.

Sella tightened the cloth. “Yes.”

“My husband died in the lower station raids after the east gate failed.”

Sella’s hands paused.

Mara looked at her, not cruelly, but without pretending the past was not in the corridor with them. “For years I hated his name.”

Sella finished the wrap slowly. “So did I.”

Mara’s eyes shifted toward the emergency lights pulsing along the ceiling. “And now?”

Sella did not know how to answer that in a hallway that still smelled of poison. “Now I am trying to get people out before the tower buries all of us.”

Mara received that answer because it was all Sella honestly had. There was no perfect speech that could untangle a dead husband, a guilty father, a rebel daughter, and a tower full of people who had served, resisted, hidden, obeyed, or simply survived. The truth had become too large for slogans. Maybe it always had been.

Kane returned from the control alcove with Iven beside him. “Lower exits are sealing level by level. The commander is forcing everyone toward the tower spine.”

Lysa’s face tightened. “Why?”

Iven answered before Kane could. “Because the spine can be vented with reactor heat.”

The rescued people heard enough to panic. Voices rose in the corridor. A young soldier tried to push past two clerks toward the crawl opening. A kitchen worker shouted that the service lift would still run. Someone else cried out that the rebels had brought the purge on them. The fear became physical, spreading through the group like fire through dry brush.

Lysa fired one shot into the ceiling.

The sound cracked through the corridor and stopped everyone.

“We move together,” she said. “Anyone who tramples the wounded will answer to me. Anyone who raises a weapon against the person beside them will answer faster. The shield is down. That means the tower has already lost what it was built to protect. Do not die for its panic.”

Her voice held the corridor for one breath, then two. Sella felt the effect of it. Not comfort. Order. Sometimes mercy needed order the way a wound needed pressure. But order alone would not carry people who had spent years being trained to fear one another. She saw that as the groups shifted, still dividing themselves without being told. Uniformed people near uniforms. Workers near workers. Rebels near rebels. Each cluster looking at the others as if the next danger might come from the nearest human hand.

Jesus stood in the middle of them. “Look at the person nearest you.”

No one moved at first.

He spoke again, not louder, but with authority that made refusal feel smaller. “Look.”

Heads turned slowly. A rebel prisoner with a bloodied brow found himself facing a Dominion signal clerk. A kitchen worker looked at Kane’s uniform and then at his face. Oran looked at Mara. The young soldier who had tried to run stared at Sella’s burned hands and seemed ashamed of how quickly he had reached for his own escape.

“You will not leave this place as prisoners of the tower’s categories,” Jesus said. “The strong will help the weak. The uninjured will carry the wounded. Those who know the passages will guide those who do not. Those who are afraid will speak truth instead of obeying panic. If you want life, you will not step over the living to reach it.”

The corridor remained still. Then the older kitchen worker bent down and pulled one of the wounded guards up by the shoulders. A rebel prisoner took the guard’s other side after a moment of visible struggle. Mara stood and helped Oran rise. Iven moved to organize those who understood the tower layout. Small acts began, not beautiful enough for songs, but real enough to change the shape of the hallway.

Sella watched it happen with an unsteady breath. She had thought mercy would feel soft if it ever came. It did not. It felt like people lifting weight they did not want to lift. It felt like choosing not to abandon someone while every selfish instinct offered a good reason. It felt like hands reaching across categories while alarms screamed that there was no time.

Kane stepped beside her. “The fastest route is back through the stabilizer and down the lift shaft to the lower maintenance band.”

“The lift was locked,” Sella said.

“It will stay locked. We use the shaft ladder.”

“With wounded?”

His expression said he knew. “The other option is the spine.”

Sella looked down the corridor toward the crawl that would take them back to the stabilizer. “Then we move before the spine heat starts.”

Kane hesitated. “There is another problem.”

She gave him a tired look. “Of course there is.”

“The command seal can open some lower junctions, but it may also broadcast our position every time I use it.”

Lysa overheard and stepped closer. “Can we avoid using it?”

“Not if the commander sealed the maintenance bands.”

“Then we use it only when the door in front of us is worse than being found,” Lysa said.

Sella nodded. The decision was ugly but clear. She had begun to appreciate clear things, even when they hurt.

They pushed the first group into the crawl, sending the smallest and least injured ahead to help pull others through. The route that had been miserable with four people became nearly impossible with more than thirty. Heat still clung to the conduit walls. Gas traces burned in the throat. The frightened pressed too close to one another until Lysa threatened to drag the next panicked fool out by the ankles. Jesus entered the crawl among the wounded, somehow making the cramped line steadier by His presence alone. Sella went near the middle this time, close to Mara and Oran, with Kane moving ahead to reach the stabilizer first.

Every motion tore at her palms. She kept her hands curled around her forearms when she could and pushed with her elbows when the crawl allowed it. Sweat soaked the cloth wrappings. Once, the tunnel narrowed around an insulated pipe, and the young soldier who had tried to run became stuck with a wounded worker pressed behind him. Panic seized him so violently that he began kicking.

“I cannot,” he gasped. “I cannot move.”

People behind him cried out. The line stopped. Heat thickened. Sella crawled forward until she was close enough to see his face turned sideways against the pipe, eyes wide, teeth clenched.

“What is your name?” she asked.

He shook his head, unable to answer.

“Tell me your name.”

“Dain,” he choked out.

“Dain, listen to me. You are not trapped. Your fear is making your body fight the opening. Breathe out and turn your left shoulder down.”

“I cannot.”

“You can,” Sella said, and then she heard her own father in the words. Not the father at the gate. The father under the greenhouse beams, telling a frightened girl that machines were easier to understand when she stopped shouting at them in her head.

The memory did not destroy her. It steadied her.

“Breathe out,” she said again. “Turn your left shoulder down.”

Dain obeyed poorly at first. Then better. His shoulder slid under the pipe, and the rest of him followed with a scraped cry. The line began moving again. Mara crawled behind Sella and whispered, “You sound like someone who has been taught how to survive tight places.”

Sella looked forward into the hot dark. “I was.”

The answer carried more than Mara knew, and less than Sella could have said. She kept moving.

They spilled back into the stabilizer room in slow, exhausted waves. Tavik was still on the floor near the right station, rifle across his lap, alive and angry about it. Perrit had kept the technicians organized, and Iven’s absence had frightened him enough that relief almost knocked him over when she emerged. Bram sat against the wall where Jesus had left him, face pale, eyes open. When Sella came out of the crawl, his gaze went straight to her hands, then to her face.

“You went up,” he said.

She crouched beside him, careful not to let her burned palms touch the floor. “We brought them down.”

His eyes moved beyond her to the people filling the stabilizer room. Dominion workers, guards, clerks, prisoners, rebels, technicians, all coughing and frightened and alive. Bram’s expression broke under the sight. Sella wondered if he was seeing the east gate in reverse. Not doors opened to let death in, but doors opened to let the endangered out. The comparison was not clean. Nothing in the day was clean. But it was there.

Oran came through the crawl near the end, helping Mara with a wounded guard between them. When he saw Bram, he froze. Recognition moved across his face.

“Arven,” he said.

Bram looked at him without hiding. “Yes.”

“My older brother was at Korrin Ridge.”

Bram closed his eyes briefly. “I am sorry.”

Oran’s mouth twisted. “Everyone is sorry when the tower starts falling.”

Sella began to rise, but Bram lifted one weak hand, asking her not to defend him. The restraint stopped her. Oran’s anger had a history too. It deserved to speak without being struck down just because Bram was wounded now.

Bram opened his eyes. “You are right to hate what I helped build.”

Oran stared at him, thrown off by the absence of defense.

“I cannot give your brother back,” Bram said. “I cannot make my regret equal to his life. But if God allows me to leave this tower alive, I will spend what remains telling the truth about every door I opened and every order I obeyed.”

Oran looked as if he wanted to spit on him. Maybe he would have if there had been time. Instead another alarm sounded, lower and more urgent than the purge warning. The floor beneath them warmed.

Perrit looked at the central display and lost color. “Spine heat is rising.”

Kane moved to the lower access panel. “The commander started venting reactor heat into the main shaft. We have to get below the maintenance band before it peaks.”

Lysa looked at the crowded room. “How far?”

Kane pointed toward a service hatch on the lower wall. “Down two bands through the ladder shaft, then out through the same causeway level if it is not sealed.”

“If it is sealed?”

“We cut through or die discussing it.”

Tavik tried to stand and failed. “I object to the second option.”

Two rescued workers moved to help him before Lysa ordered it. Tavik looked surprised, then embarrassed, then grateful in a way he hid by grumbling about their technique. Iven and Perrit took charge of the technicians. Mara organized those who could walk into pairs with those who could not. Oran ended up near Bram, not because anyone assigned him there, but because the flow of bodies left him closest when Jesus bent to lift Bram again.

“I can carry part of him,” Oran said suddenly.

Sella looked at him.

Oran did not meet her eyes. “I am not forgiving him.”

“No one asked you to,” Sella said.

Bram looked up at Oran, and the old guard’s face hardened. “Do not thank me either.”

“I will not,” Bram said softly.

Oran took one side of Bram’s weight. Jesus took the other. Sella watched the three of them move toward the lower hatch and felt something deep inside her tremble. Mercy did not erase anger. It gave anger a boundary it had never wanted. Oran still hated Bram, yet he would not let him burn in the tower. That was not reconciliation. It was obedience before reconciliation was possible.

The ladder shaft below the service hatch was narrow, hot, and lined with metal rungs that vibrated under the rising spine heat. The first group descended slowly. Too slowly. Lysa went down ahead to manage the lower band, while Kane remained at the top using the command seal only when forced. Each use made the panels flash with warnings that their location had been logged. The commander’s voice returned twice through damaged speakers, each time more furious and less controlled. He promised clemency to those who handed over Sella. He promised punishment to those who helped rebels. He promised that the Dominion remembered names.

By the third announcement, nobody in the shaft seemed to believe him the same way.

Fear remained. Sella saw it in hands slipping on rungs, in workers flinching at every sound, in Kane’s jaw tightening each time his brother might have been implied. But the commander’s voice had lost some of its spell. People who had helped one another breathe poisoned air did not hear categories quite as easily afterward.

Sella descended near Bram’s group. Her hands made the ladder agony, so she wrapped her forearms around the side rails and lowered herself rung by rung. Heat rose beneath them. Sweat ran into her eyes. Twice, someone above slipped and almost caused a fall. Each time, hands reached faster than fear. A rebel caught a guard by the belt. A technician steadied a prisoner’s boot. Mara talked Dain down when the tightness of the shaft nearly seized him again.

Halfway down, Bram lost consciousness.

Oran swore and nearly lost his grip. Jesus tightened His hold, bracing Bram against the ladder with strength that should not have fit the angle. Sella pressed herself against the rail, heart hammering.

“Father,” she said.

The word moved through the shaft. Bram did not answer.

Jesus looked up at her. “He breathes.”

Sella nodded, but her eyes burned. There was no time to feel what the word had cost, no room to examine whether she had spoken from fear, love, habit, or some mercy not yet whole. She only knew that it had come again, and this time she did not hate it as much.

They reached the lower maintenance band with seconds to spare. Heat roared above them as the spine vent opened fully, turning the upper shaft into a furnace glow. The last two technicians dropped through the hatch and rolled onto the floor just before Kane slammed it shut. The metal door glowed dull orange at the edges.

No one cheered. They were too tired, too frightened, and still not outside.

The lower band was darker than the levels above. Emergency power flickered along the wall, revealing old pipes, cracked supports, and a long corridor that sloped toward the causeway junction. Sella recognized the smell of damp concrete. They were close to the route they had used earlier, though the collapse behind them had changed everything. Somewhere beyond these walls was the alcove where Rul had been left wounded and alive.

Kane seemed to remember at the same time. “Rul.”

Lysa looked down the corridor. “If he is still there, we take him.”

Kane gave her a quick glance, and something like gratitude crossed his face before he buried it. They moved faster now, though the group could barely hold together. The old corridor forced them into a long, uneven line. Sella walked near Jesus, Oran, and Bram because she could not make herself move farther away. Bram’s head hung forward. His breathing was shallow but present. Oran carried his side without speaking.

They found Rul in the alcove, still bound, feverish from pain and terror, but alive. When he saw Kane, he began crying without shame.

“You came back,” Rul said.

Kane knelt and cut the bindings from his wrists. “Not cleanly. Not quickly. But yes.”

Rul clutched Kane’s sleeve. “They said you defected.”

Kane swallowed hard. “I did.”

Rul stared at him as if the word itself had no place in his mind.

Kane did not soften it. “I helped bring the shield down. I refused the commander’s order. I do not know what happens to my brother now. I do not know what happens to any of us. But I am done letting them make fear sound like honor.”

Rul looked past him at the mixed group filling the corridor, at Jesus standing beside a wounded traitor, at rebels helping Dominion workers, at Sella with burned hands and a rifle she could barely hold. Confusion moved over his face, then pain, then a fragile understanding that had not yet become courage.

“I am scared,” Rul whispered.

Kane nodded. “So am I.”

Jesus stepped closer. “Then do not lie to your fear. Bring it into the truth and walk.”

Rul looked up at Him, and something in the young man quieted. Kane and another worker lifted him, and the line moved again.

At the causeway junction, the final door was sealed.

Kane tried the command seal. Red. He tried again. Red. The commander’s voice came through the speaker above the door, ragged now, full of hatred stripped of ceremony.

“Sella Arven,” he said. “You opened my shield. You stole my tower. You turned my own personnel against command. You will not leave.”

Sella stepped toward the speaker, exhausted beyond anger. “You still think people are things that belong to you.”

“They belong to order.”

Jesus came to stand beside Sella.

The speaker crackled. “Whoever you are, you have infected them with weakness.”

Jesus looked at the sealed door. “No. I have called them to life.”

The corridor fell silent except for the failing lights and the breathing of frightened people. The commander gave a harsh laugh through the speaker. “Life is outside. They will never reach it.”

The door controls went dark.

Kane stared at the dead panel. “He cut power to the lock.”

Lysa looked at the door, then at the gathered people. “Can we blast it?”

Perrit shook his head. “Not without bringing the ceiling down.”

Sella looked at her burned hands, then at the door. The tower had narrowed them to one final barrier before the forest. No new maze. No new thread. Just a sealed door and a crowd of living souls behind it.

Bram stirred in Oran’s hold. His eyes opened weakly and fixed on the dead panel. “Old hinge pins,” he whispered.

Sella turned. “What?”

“The door is powered dead, but the frame is old settler work beneath the plating. Hinge pins on the inside. Manual extraction if the right side casing comes off.”

Kane moved to the right side and scraped at the edge. “I see the seam.”

“We need tools,” Lysa said.

Mara lifted a cutter from her belt. Perrit had a pry bar. Tavik, pale and barely upright, offered his knife with a weak grin. “I knew carrying too many sharp things would become a virtue.”

People crowded forward. Not all at once. Not in panic. One by one, those who had tools brought them. Those without tools held lights. Those too weak to work supported the wounded. The sealed door became surrounded by hands that had belonged to enemies an hour before.

Sella stood back for one breath and watched them. Kane cutting the casing. Mara prying the seam. Oran holding Bram and giving instructions he barely understood. Iven directing the order of work. Rul sitting on the floor beside a rebel prisoner who held pressure on his leg wound. Lysa guarding the corridor. Tavik pretending not to lean on a kitchen worker. Jesus standing near the door as if all of it, every trembling act, mattered before God.

The first hinge pin came loose.

Then the second.

When the third began to shift, the corridor shook from a blast somewhere above. Dust rained down. The ceiling cracked near the junction. Lysa shouted for speed. Kane and Mara drove the final pin out together. The door sagged inward, still too heavy to move.

“Push,” Sella said.

Everyone who could stand put their hands against the door.

Sella stepped in too, though her palms screamed when they touched the metal. Jesus stood beside her and placed His hands against the same door. Bram, barely conscious, pressed one weak shoulder from Oran’s hold. Kane pushed. Lysa pushed. Oran pushed. Mara pushed. Workers, prisoners, rebels, guards, frightened boys and hardened adults pushed until the sealed thing began to move.

The door opened a few inches. Damp forest air entered the corridor.

People began to weep before the opening was wide enough to pass through.

They pushed again, and the moon’s green darkness appeared beyond the frame, wet with rain, alive with trees, smoke, and distant battle thunder. The tower had not vanished. The war had not ended. The citadel still burned in the sky above them. But outside air touched Sella’s face, and for the first time since dawn, she felt the world beyond walls.

Jesus stepped back and let the others pass first.

Chapter Eleven

The first people through the door did not run far. They spilled into the wet forest and stopped beneath the trees as if the open air itself had stunned them. Rain clung to the leaves overhead and fell in slow drops onto faces streaked with ash, sweat, and fear. The shield tower rose behind them, wounded and groaning, its upper bands flashing with emergency fire while the sky above it shook from the battle that had finally reached through. Far overhead, the citadel no longer looked untouchable. It burned along one side, and pieces of light fell from it like stars being torn loose.

Jesus waited at the threshold until the weak had passed and the wounded had been carried clear. He did not hurry the terrified, though the tower still trembled behind Him. He did not force the grieving to stop looking back at the place that had nearly buried them. Sella stood beside the open door with her wrapped hands trembling at her sides, helping direct people away from the tower’s base because the ground still shook when deep systems failed inside the walls. Every time someone passed her, she saw what mercy had dragged into the forest. A guard who had fired at rebels. A clerk who had kept tower records. A kitchen worker with soot in her hair. Rul leaning on Kane. Mara supporting Iven. Oran carrying one side of Bram’s weight with a face that said he still hated him and still would not drop him.

Lysa came out last from the corridor, walking backward with her rifle raised toward the darkness behind them. Tavik followed her with help from the kitchen worker he had tried very hard not to need. When his boots touched mud, he looked up at the trees and breathed in like a man who had forgotten air could smell alive.

“I have decided,” Tavik said, voice rough, “that I prefer forests to towers.”

The kitchen worker snorted despite herself. It was not laughter exactly. It was the first crack in the terror that had held her mouth tight.

The tower door shuddered behind them. Something heavy collapsed inside the corridor. Dust and orange light burst through the opening. Lysa stepped away from the frame and motioned everyone deeper into the trees.

“Move toward the cedar hollow,” she said. “Stay under cover. No lights unless I say.”

Some of the rescued personnel hesitated at taking orders from her. A few looked at Kane as if he still represented the authority they knew, even after he had broken from it in front of them. Kane saw the look and did not take command. He only lifted Rul more securely under one shoulder and nodded toward the trees.

“She is right,” he said.

That was enough for some. Jesus walking forward was enough for the rest.

The group moved unevenly through the forest, not as prisoners and captors now, but not as friends either. Sella understood the difference. Shared danger had not erased the years behind them. The rebel prisoner with the bloodied brow still would not walk near a guard unless someone wounded needed both of them. Mara still watched Bram with a guarded anger that did not soften because he was barely conscious. Oran still carried him, but his grip was rigid and impersonal. Kane stayed close to Rul, while Rul kept looking at him as if trying to understand how one person could be both traitor and rescuer in the same day.

Sella walked near Jesus because she could not hold her rifle well with her hands and because she did not want to walk near Bram yet. That was the truth, and she let it stand without dressing it up. She had called him Father twice. She had kept him alive. She had let his memory help her open doors. None of that meant she was ready to sit beside him and speak like the years had not burned. Mercy had opened a path, but the path was not the same thing as arrival.

Jesus looked at her hands as they moved beneath the wet branches. “The pain is worsening.”

“It is not important.”

“It is important because you are not a machine.”

She almost answered sharply, but the tower behind them groaned, and the words died. She had accused the Dominion of turning people into tools. She had done the same to herself so many times that it felt like discipline. Jesus’s sentence found that hidden place with quiet force.

“I do not know how to stop,” she said.

He walked beside her, His garment dark with rain and smoke, His face lit now and then by fire in the sky. “You begin by telling the truth when you are tired.”

“I am tired.”

“I know.”

She swallowed. The simple answer touched her more than advice would have. The forest floor sloped down, forcing them around a root tangle where two of the rescued workers helped Tavik without waiting for him to ask. He pretended not to notice. Sella did notice, and something in her softened before fear hardened it again.

The sky flashed. A deep boom rolled across the forest, not from the tower this time but from above. Everyone stopped and looked up through the canopy. The citadel burned brighter along its lower edge. Ships moved around it like sparks around a furnace. The sight should have filled the group with triumph, but victory at that distance looked too much like more death. Sella saw faces turned upward, rebel and Dominion alike, and realized many of them were watching people they knew fight on opposite sides of the same sky.

Kane lowered Rul carefully against a tree. “If the citadel falls, command structure across this moon collapses.”

Lysa kept scanning the forest. “Good.”

Rul looked at her. “There are medical crews aboard.”

Lysa’s expression did not change, but her eyes did. “There are weapons aboard too.”

“My cousin serves in lower maintenance,” Rul said, voice small. “He did not choose the cannons.”

No one answered. The forest held the sentence. Sella felt again the cruel widening of mercy. They had opened the shield so the citadel could be struck. They had saved people from the tower because they were within reach. But the sky held thousands of lives they could not sort, could not rescue one by one, could not judge cleanly from the mud below. War made distance convenient. Jesus had spent the whole day destroying convenience.

Bram coughed hard near a fallen trunk. Oran lowered him to the ground with more care than his face wanted to show. Blood had soaked through every layer of cloth near Bram’s side. His eyes opened briefly, then slid unfocused toward the burning sky.

Sella’s body moved before her anger could vote. She crossed to him and knelt, careful of her hands. “Bram.”

He blinked. The name seemed to reach him, but not enough.

“Father,” she said, lower.

His eyes found her.

Oran looked away as if the word was too private for him to witness. Mara stood a few feet off, watching with the complicated face of someone who had lost because of this man and still knew she was watching a daughter try not to lose him.

Bram’s mouth moved. No sound came at first. Then he whispered, “Did they all get out?”

“From the roof corridor, yes,” Sella said. “Not everyone from the tower. But those we reached.”

He closed his eyes. A tear slipped into the dirt on his cheek. “Good.”

Sella looked at the blood beneath him and felt anger rise again because fear needed somewhere to go. “Do not make that your last word.”

His eyes opened with effort. “I do not command last words.”

“No. You only choose terrible moments to become honest.”

A faint breath left him. It might have been almost a laugh if pain had not caught it. “That is fair.”

Jesus knelt on Bram’s other side. He placed one hand near the wound and looked toward Sella. “He needs pressure held here.”

Sella looked at her wrapped palms. They were already stained through, the cloth dark where burns had reopened. Jesus did not ask again. He let her see the cost and choose. She pressed both hands against the wound.

Pain shot through her so sharply that her vision went white. She bowed over Bram and breathed hard through her teeth.

Bram tried to pull away. “No.”

Sella pressed harder. “Be quiet.”

“You are hurt.”

“So are you.”

“That is not the same.”

“It is close enough for now.”

Jesus’s hand came over hers, not taking the pressure away, but steadying it. The pain did not vanish. It changed. It became something she was not holding alone. Sella did not know what to do with that, so she kept her eyes on Bram’s face.

Lysa moved through the group, placing the strongest along the outer ring and the wounded near the center. She spoke quietly with Iven and Kane about alternate paths through the forest. Tavik sat with his back against a tree, watching the tower with pale concentration. The rescued people had begun to understand they were not safe just because they were outside. The tower still had soldiers. The commander still had authority over whoever remained loyal. The forest was cover, not deliverance.

A sound moved through the trees to the east. Not the heavy march of walkers. Not the scattered panic of fleeing personnel. This was organized movement, smaller and faster. Lysa raised her hand. Everyone lowered themselves into the brush as much as they could. Sella kept pressure on Bram’s wound and listened.

Kane crouched near Lysa. “Roof security patrols use that pattern.”

“How many?” she whispered.

“Maybe six. Maybe more.”

“Can we avoid them?”

“Not with this many wounded.”

Lysa’s eyes moved to the group. The same hard command math returned. Hide and risk discovery. Run and lose the weak. Fight and expose everyone. Sella felt the old impatience rise. If she had been alone, she would have known what to do. With so many lives around her, every option had hands and faces attached.

Jesus stood.

Sella looked up sharply. “What are You doing?”

He did not answer with explanation. He stepped past Lysa and walked toward the sound of the patrol.

Lysa whispered, harsh and urgent, “Get down.”

Jesus kept walking.

The forest seemed to quiet around Him. Rain fell through the leaves. Fire flickered in the sky. The patrol emerged between the trees, seven Dominion soldiers in smoke-marked armor, rifles raised, breath hard from pursuit. Their leader stopped when he saw Jesus standing unarmed in the open path.

“Hands visible,” the leader ordered.

Jesus’s hands were already visible.

The soldiers spread into a firing line. Behind Jesus, everyone in the brush went still. Sella’s heart pounded so hard she felt it in her burned palms. Bram’s blood warmed beneath her hands. Kane’s face tightened with recognition, perhaps of the leader, perhaps only of the pattern. Lysa had her rifle aimed, but there were too many rescued workers in the line of fire. If the soldiers fired first, the clearing would become a slaughter.

The leader stepped closer. “Where are the rebels?”

Jesus looked at him. “You are looking for people to control while your tower dies behind you.”

The soldier’s jaw tightened. “Answer.”

“You have heard enough orders today.”

The soldier lifted his rifle higher. “I said answer.”

Jesus’s face remained calm, but the air around Him seemed to fill with a weight the soldiers did not understand. “Lay down your weapons.”

One of the younger soldiers laughed nervously. The leader did not. His finger tightened against the trigger.

A voice spoke from the brush.

“Captain Oren.”

Kane stepped out slowly with his sidearm lowered and his empty hand raised. Rul made a small sound behind him, but Kane did not look back. The patrol leader turned sharply.

“Voss,” he said. “You are under arrest.”

“No,” Kane answered. His voice trembled, but he did not retreat. “I am under truth now. It is worse for fear and better for my soul.”

The strange sentence confused the soldiers enough that no one fired. Sella stared at Kane, half amazed and half afraid for him. Jesus looked at him with quiet approval that did not need words.

Captain Oren’s face hardened. “You helped bring down the shield.”

“Yes.”

“You condemned the citadel.”

Kane swallowed. “The citadel condemned too many before today.”

“You think rebellion will spare your brother?”

There it was again. The old chain. Kane flinched, but did not break. Rul began to rise from behind the tree, and Lysa caught his sleeve to hold him down. Sella felt Bram’s breathing shift under her hands. Everyone seemed to know that the whole clearing had narrowed to the place where Kane’s fear would either take command again or lose its throne.

Kane lowered his weapon to the ground.

The movement startled Oren. “Good. Now step forward.”

Kane did step forward, but not as surrender. He stepped closer to Jesus, then stopped beside Him in the open path. “I will not shoot men I served with if I do not have to.”

Oren’s mouth twisted. “Noble.”

“I will not hand over wounded people so the commander can bury his failure.”

“Traitor.”

“Yes,” Kane said. “To him.”

The word moved through the soldiers. One shifted his rifle. Another looked past Kane into the brush, where the outlines of rescued tower personnel were visible now. They saw Mara. They saw Iven. They saw Oran. They saw Rul leaning against the tree with a bandaged leg. This was not only a rebel escape line. It was the tower’s own life spilled into the forest.

Rul pushed Lysa’s hand away and struggled upright. “Captain.”

Oren’s eyes flicked toward him. “Rul, get away from them.”

“They saved me.”

“They used you.”

Rul shook his head. “No. They came back.”

Oren’s face twitched. That detail did not fit the command story. Sella saw the discomfort spread through the patrol. Dominion certainty had worked best inside the tower, where speakers could define reality and doors could seal dissent away. In the forest, under a burning sky, with breathing witnesses in front of them, the story did not hold as easily.

Jesus spoke to Oren. “You can still choose the living before you.”

Oren looked at Him with anger that was close to fear. “And if I lower my weapon, what happens when command returns?”

Jesus’s voice remained steady. “You have called command your refuge. It has made you afraid of mercy.”

Oren’s rifle shook once. He caught the motion quickly, but not quickly enough. The other soldiers saw it. So did Sella. The captain was not only hard. He was terrified of the world that would exist if the tower’s voice stopped telling him who to be.

The sky erupted above them.

A wave of light rolled across the clouds, followed by a sound so deep it seemed to press the entire forest toward the ground. People cried out. Birds burst from the canopy in dark streams. The citadel above the moon split with fire along its central line. For a few seconds the burning shape hung in the sky, vast and impossible, then began to fall apart in silence before the thunder reached them.

Everyone looked up. Rebels, guards, workers, prisoners, all of them. The symbol that had ruled the sky was breaking.

Sella felt Bram’s hand weakly touch her wrist. She looked down. His eyes were open, reflecting fire through the trees.

“The shield fell,” he whispered.

“Yes,” she said.

His face crumpled, not with victory, but with grief that had finally found somewhere to bow. “Then let that be enough for me if it must.”

“No,” Sella said, and pressed harder against the wound. “You do not get to turn every sentence into goodbye.”

Jesus looked from Bram to the sky and then toward Oren, who still held his rifle but no longer aimed it cleanly.

The captain seemed smaller beneath the burning heavens. “All units,” he said into his shoulder comm, voice strained. “Hold position.”

Static answered him. No command voice came through. No tower order. No commander threat. Only static, distant explosions, and the rain.

Kane stepped closer to him. “It is over.”

Oren’s eyes flashed. “No. The tower remains. The commander remains.”

Jesus said, “Then you must decide whether he remains in you.”

Oren stared at Him. The rifle in his hands lowered by a fraction, then another. One soldier beside him lowered first, not fully, but enough. Another followed. The youngest began to cry silently, his weapon pointed at the mud.

Then the shoulder comm on Oren’s armor crackled with a new voice, furious and distorted.

“Captain Oren, execute the prisoners and return to tower perimeter.”

The commander was alive.

Oren closed his eyes.

The clearing held its breath.

Kane whispered, “Do not obey him.”

Oren opened his eyes and looked at Jesus. Whatever he saw there, it reached past training, past terror, past the last grip of a dying authority. He removed the comm from his shoulder, stared at it for one long second, then crushed it under his boot.

The patrol lowered their weapons.

No one cheered. The choice was too fragile for noise. Lysa rose slowly from the brush, rifle still in hand but pointed down. The rescued people began to stand. Rul wept openly. Kane looked as if his knees might fail him.

Sella bowed over Bram, still holding pressure, and breathed for the first time in what felt like hours. Jesus returned to them through the wet leaves. His face was lit by the burning sky, but His eyes were on the wounded man and the daughter beside him.

Bram looked at Sella. “I do not deserve your hands holding me here.”

Her tears came again, but her voice held. “I know.”

The honesty did not harden the moment. It made it clean.

“But I am holding you,” she said.

Jesus knelt beside them. Around them, weapons lowered, the tower burned, the sky changed, and the forest received people who had stepped out of fear one trembling decision at a time.

Chapter Twelve

The lowered weapons did not make the forest safe. They only made the next breath possible. Captain Oren stood with rain running down the side of his face and his crushed comm beneath his boot, while his patrol looked from him to Kane, then to Jesus, then to the wounded people gathered under the trees. No one seemed to know what to do after disobedience. The Dominion had trained them for orders, punishment, pursuit, and control, but it had not trained them for standing in wet mud with mercy in front of them and no voice left to tell them who they were allowed to spare.

Lysa moved first. She walked toward Oren with her rifle lowered but ready, and the whole clearing watched the distance between them. Oren did not raise his weapon again. He looked tired suddenly, as if crushing the comm had not ended his fear but had removed the wall that had held it upright. Lysa stopped a few feet from him and held out one hand.

“Power packs,” she said.

Oren looked at her hand, then at her face. “You want us disarmed.”

“I want everyone alive long enough to get clear of that tower.”

The answer was not soft, but it was not cruel either. Oren removed the power pack from his rifle and set it in her hand. One by one, his soldiers did the same. The youngest had trouble unclipping his because his fingers shook, and Kane stepped forward to help him. The boy flinched at first, then let him. It was such a small act that Sella might have missed it on another day, but after the tower, small acts had become the only honest way anything large began.

The tower groaned behind them. A band of orange light burst through one of the upper levels, and hot vapor pushed into the damp air. Everyone turned toward it. The shield tower had not fallen, but it was dying from the inside. Sella imagined the commander somewhere above or below, sealed in his authority, still issuing orders into broken systems because control had become his last form of breath.

“We need distance,” Kane said. “If the spine heat reaches the lower fuel banks, the blast radius will take this slope.”

Oren looked toward the southern tree line. “The ravine path is watched, but there is a drainage cut west of here. It will take us under the sensor field.”

Lysa studied him. “Why should I believe you?”

“Because if I wanted you dead, I could have ordered fire before I crushed the comm.”

“That only proves you hesitated once.”

Oren accepted the answer with a slight nod. “Then send one of yours ahead with one of mine. If I lie, you will know before the wounded are committed.”

Lysa turned toward Sella as if asking for judgment without saying it. Sella did not want the responsibility. Her hands throbbed, Bram was still bleeding, and the sky kept flashing with pieces of the citadel’s ruin. But she understood why Lysa looked at her. The day had made Sella the uncomfortable bridge between too many people who did not trust each other.

“Send Kane with him,” Sella said.

Kane looked up.

“He knows Dominion routes,” she continued. “He also knows what it costs to stop lying for them.”

Oren’s mouth tightened, not offended exactly, but struck. Kane did not look proud. He only nodded once and moved to Oren’s side. The two men entered the trees together, not as friends, not even as allies yet, but as men who had both heard a command and refused it in different ways.

The rest of the group began moving slowly toward the west. Jesus walked near Bram, who was now being carried between Oran and one of Oren’s former soldiers, a broad-shouldered woman named Tessa who had lowered her rifle before her captain did. Oran had objected when she offered, not because he wanted to carry Bram alone, but because he did not trust her hands on a man she had been ordered to execute. Tessa had simply said, “Then watch me,” and took the weight carefully. Oran watched. He did not stop her.

Sella walked beside them for a while, close enough to hear Bram’s breathing. His eyes opened only once, and when they did, he looked at Tessa’s armor, Oran’s old guard coat, Jesus’s rain-darkened garment, and Sella’s bandaged hands. Something like sorrow moved across his face, but he did not speak. Perhaps he had finally understood that not every sorrow needed words the moment it appeared.

Mara came up beside Sella with a small field kit she had taken from the roof prep bay. “Your hands need more than cloth.”

“They need time,” Sella said.

“They need cleaning before infection joins the war.”

Sella almost refused, then remembered Jesus’s words. She was not a machine. She held out one hand while they walked, and Mara unwrapped the outer layer carefully. The air hit the burns, and Sella’s whole body tightened. Mara glanced at her face but did not offer pity. Sella was grateful for that. Pity would have made the pain feel public.

“My husband’s name was Edrin,” Mara said after a few steps.

Sella looked at her.

“At Korrin Ridge,” Mara continued. “He was not a soldier. He repaired grain pumps. When the Dominion came through, they said the tunnel maps were wrong. They said someone had tampered with them.” She kept her eyes on the bandage as she spoke, wrapping clean cloth around Sella’s palm. “For years I imagined Bram Arven laughing somewhere behind a warm desk while men like Edrin died in the dark.”

Sella swallowed. “He was not laughing.”

“I know that now.”

“That does not make Edrin less dead.”

“No,” Mara said, and pulled the wrap firm. “It only makes the hatred less useful.”

Sella looked at the woman’s face. It was not softened into easy forgiveness. It was drawn, tired, and honest. Maybe that was why her words reached farther than comfort would have. Mara had no reason to excuse Bram. She had no reason to protect Sella. She was simply naming the same ugly discovery Sella had been forced to face all day. Hatred could keep you standing, but it could not bring the dead home, and eventually it began asking for the living too.

A rustle moved ahead. Lysa raised a fist, and the whole line stopped. Kane returned first through the wet brush, followed by Oren. Both men were breathing harder than they should have been from scouting alone.

“The drainage cut is clear,” Kane said. “But the rebel assault team has moved into the western hollow.”

Lysa’s eyes narrowed. “Our people?”

“Yes,” Kane answered. “And they are not alone. Survivors from the lower strike cell are with them.”

Sella heard what his careful tone held back. Lower strike survivors had lost people in the tower assault. If they saw Dominion uniforms coming through the trees, mercy would not be their first instinct.

Oren looked at his disarmed patrol. “They will shoot us.”

“Not if they listen first,” Lysa said.

Tavik, supported by the kitchen worker and a young rebel prisoner, gave a weak snort. “Listening first has never been our strongest military tradition.”

Lysa ignored him, but not because he was wrong.

They entered the drainage cut single file. The ground dropped into a narrow channel lined with stones slick from runoff. Roots hung along the sides, and the canopy thickened overhead until the burning sky appeared only in broken flashes. The path forced everyone close together. Boots slipped. Wounded people groaned. Twice the line stopped so someone could be lifted over fallen timber. Each stop made Sella listen for pursuit, but behind them the tower only groaned and vented fire into the rain.

Jesus moved up and down the line with quiet attention. He did not seem hurried, though everyone else felt hunted by time. He helped Tessa and Oran lower Bram over a root wall, then steadied Rul when Kane’s strength faltered. He spoke once to Dain, the frightened young soldier from the crawl, and the boy’s breathing eased. He touched Tavik’s shoulder when the rebel’s steps became uneven, and Tavik stopped joking for several minutes afterward, which told Sella more than words.

At the end of the drainage cut, Lysa signaled for everyone to stay low. Voices carried from the western hollow. Sella recognized the clipped cadence of rebel command and the sharper sound of fear disguised as readiness. She crouched behind a moss-covered trunk and saw movement through the leaves. About twenty rebels held the hollow, some wounded, some dirt-streaked, all armed. Two light cannons were positioned toward the tower road. A medic shelter had been thrown together beneath a slanted tarp. The assault team had survived, but not whole.

A man stepped from behind the nearest cannon when he saw Lysa. His left cheek was bandaged, and his coat was torn at the shoulder. “Lysa,” he called. “You are late.”

“Good to see you too, Renn.”

His relief lasted only until he saw the people behind her.

Weapons rose across the hollow.

“Down,” Renn shouted. “Dominion personnel in the trees.”

Lysa stepped into the open with both hands visible. “Hold fire.”

“They are with us,” Tavik called, though his voice was weak.

Renn stared at him. “You have lost too much blood to make decisions.”

“They are with us,” Lysa repeated.

The hollow did not accept the words. Rebels shifted behind cover. Wounded men lifted rifles from the ground. Someone saw Bram being carried between Oran and Tessa and shouted his name with such hatred that Sella’s stomach tightened.

“Arven,” another voice cried. “That is Bram Arven.”

The name moved through the hollow like fire finding dry leaves. Sella saw faces change. These people knew the stories. East gate. Korrin Ridge. Tower work. Betrayal told and retold until Bram had become less a man than a symbol for everything the Dominion had stolen through human fear. Now he was in front of them, bleeding but alive, and for many of them alive was the problem.

Renn lifted his rifle toward Bram. “Put him down.”

Sella stepped in front of her father before she thought through the cost.

The hollow went still.

Renn’s eyes moved to her bandaged hands, then to her face. “Move.”

“No.”

Lysa said, “Renn, the shield is down because of her.”

“The shield is down because we bled for it.”

“Yes,” Lysa said. “And because she held the deadfall bridge while Bram opened the command root and Kane broke the upper lock.”

Renn looked at Kane. “Kane?”

Kane stepped forward slowly. He had set his sidearm away before entering the hollow, but his uniform still made every rebel see an enemy first. “I served the tower. I helped bring it down.”

A rebel woman near the medic shelter spat into the mud. “Convenient timing.”

Kane lowered his eyes. “No. Terrible timing. But true.”

Renn’s rifle did not lower. “And Arven?”

Sella felt Bram shift weakly behind her. She knew he wanted to speak. She also knew he might not remain conscious long enough. Her burned hands trembled at her sides. She could barely hold a weapon, but she stood between him and twenty rifles because the clean old story had broken, and truth demanded more from her than anger ever had.

“He opened the east gate,” Sella said.

A murmur moved through the hollow. Lysa looked at her sharply, perhaps afraid she had just surrendered him to their rage.

Sella continued. “He opened it because the Dominion made him believe they had me and would kill me if he refused. He was wrong. They used him. Afterward he kept obeying them while telling himself he was trying to find me. He helped build things that killed people. He sabotaged what he could too late and at more cost than he understood. None of that makes him innocent.”

Renn’s face hardened. “Then move.”

“No,” Sella said again, and this time her voice carried farther. “Because killing him in the mud will not raise your dead either.”

The rebel woman near the shelter shouted, “You do not get to tell us that.”

Sella turned toward her. “You are right.”

That stopped the woman more than argument would have.

Sella’s throat tightened, but she kept speaking. “I do not get to tell you what your grief should become. I do not get to spend your loss for my mercy. If you want judgment, then let there be judgment when people can tell the truth without bleeding out under rifles. Let every name be spoken. Let every record be opened. Let the living answer for what they did. But do not call revenge justice only because the man in front of you is finally weak enough to kill.”

Renn stared at her. “He is your father.”

“Yes.”

“So this is blood talking.”

Sella’s eyes burned, but she did not look away. “This morning my blood wanted him dead.”

The hollow quieted again. Rain fell through leaves. Far behind them, the tower shook with another internal blast.

Jesus stepped into the open then. No one had noticed Him at first, or perhaps everyone had avoided noticing because He did not fit any category in the hollow. He walked beside Sella and stopped near Bram. The rifles did not turn toward Him with the same certainty. Something in His presence made the act feel suddenly smaller.

Renn looked at Him. “Who are You?”

Jesus did not answer the way Renn expected. “You have carried names like stones.”

Renn’s jaw tightened. “I asked who You are.”

“And I have seen what those stones have done to your hands.”

The rebel commander flinched. It was slight, but Sella saw it. So did Lysa. Renn’s bandaged cheek twitched, and his eyes hardened to cover what had been touched.

“My wife died at Korrin Ridge,” Renn said.

Bram made a broken sound behind Sella.

Jesus looked at Renn with sorrow that did not weaken truth. “Then her name must not be used to make you less than the man who loved her.”

Renn’s rifle dipped by a fraction, then rose again. “You think mercy fixes this?”

“No,” Jesus said. “Mercy tells the truth without becoming the evil it judges.”

The words moved through the hollow, and Sella felt them enter people differently. Some resisted. Some lowered their eyes. Some grew angrier because truth often hurts most when it blocks the road to a desired sin. Renn stood very still, his rifle aimed past Sella’s shoulder at Bram’s failing body.

Bram lifted his head. “What was her name?”

Renn’s face changed. “Do not.”

Bram’s voice was barely audible, but the hollow had grown quiet enough to hear it. “Please.”

Renn looked as if he might fire simply to stop the question from existing. Then his mouth opened. “Elya.”

Bram closed his eyes. “Elya,” he repeated, and the name came out like confession rather than information. “I cannot ask you to spare me because of my sorrow. My sorrow has not earned your mercy. But if I live, I will speak her name in every testimony I give about Korrin Ridge. I will not hide behind the Dominion’s files or my own excuses.”

Renn’s rifle trembled.

Mara stepped forward from the rescued group. “My husband Edrin died there too.”

Renn looked at her, startled.

“I hated Arven before I saw him,” she said. “I still do not know what forgiveness would even mean. But I know the tower almost made us leave people to die because they wore the wrong clothes. I know this woman held a door open with burned hands for people who would have arrested her yesterday. I know whatever justice comes next should not be decided by the part of us the Dominion trained.”

The rebel woman near the shelter looked away, breathing hard. Renn lowered the rifle another inch.

Then the tower behind them erupted.

A column of fire burst from its upper spine and lit the forest in orange. The shock rolled through the trees seconds later, knocking several people to the ground. Leaves tore loose and spun through the air. The western hollow broke into shouts as rebels scrambled for cover and rescued tower personnel cried out. Sella stumbled backward, and Jesus caught her before she fell. Bram slipped in Oran and Tessa’s hold, but they kept him from the mud.

Kane shouted over the thunder. “Fuel banks are going.”

Lysa turned toward Renn. “We need your medics and your evacuation route now.”

Renn looked from Lysa to Sella, then to Bram, then toward the burning tower. The decision before him had become brutally practical, which sometimes made mercy easier and sometimes made it harder. He could refuse treatment to the people he hated and call it justice. He could help them and face the anger of his own wounded later. Sella saw the battle in him and recognized it because she had stood in its fire all day.

Renn finally lowered his rifle.

“Medic shelter,” he said. “All wounded. Dominion included. But they remain guarded.”

Lysa nodded. “Fair.”

Renn looked at Sella. “This does not absolve him.”

“No,” she said. “It does not.”

His eyes moved to Jesus. “And it does not heal what was done.”

Jesus answered, “Not in one day.”

Renn swallowed, and the rifle hung at his side as if it had become heavier. “Then why does lowering this feel like losing?”

“Because hatred has told you it was the last thing you had left of her,” Jesus said.

Renn looked away sharply, but not before Sella saw tears in his eyes.

The hollow began to move again. Not peacefully, not perfectly, but toward life. Medics rushed to Bram, Tavik, Rul, and the others. Rebels took power packs from Oren’s patrol and placed them under guard, but they did not strike them. Mara helped carry Iven to the shelter. Kane stayed with Rul until a medic ordered him aside. Oran finally released Bram to two medics and stood with empty hands, looking as if he did not know what to do now that he had stopped carrying the man he hated.

Sella remained near Jesus while the tower burned behind the trees and the citadel fell in pieces above the breaking clouds. Her hands hurt. Her body shook. Her father might still die. The people around her might yet turn on one another when the immediate danger passed. Nothing was finished simply because one rifle lowered in the rain.

But something had changed in the hollow. The dead had not been forgotten. The guilty had not been declared clean. The wounded had not been told to hurry their healing. Yet a door had opened that vengeance could never have opened, and people were walking through it with mud on their boots and fear still in their bones.

Jesus looked toward the medic shelter where Bram had been carried. “The truth is still working.”

Sella watched the canvas flap close behind her father. “I know.”

For the first time, she did not say it with resentment.

Chapter Thirteen

The medic shelter in the western hollow had been built for rebel wounds, not for the strange harvest that arrived under the burning sky. Tarps sagged between trees. Lanterns were hooded under damp cloth. Supply crates had been turned into tables, and torn blankets lay over roots to keep the wounded from sinking into mud. The first medics who reached Bram did not ask whether he deserved help. They only saw blood, shock, and a body losing warmth too quickly, and for that moment their training reached him before their history did.

Sella stood outside the shelter flap because there was no room for her inside and because part of her was afraid to enter. She watched shadows move across the canvas, bending over her father’s body. Mara had gone in to help because she knew enough field medicine to be useful. Renn stood a few steps away with his rifle lowered and his face turned toward the tower fire, though Sella knew he was listening for every word from inside. Oran sat on a fallen log, elbows on knees, staring at his open hands as if they had done something he had not given them permission to do.

Jesus stood near the entrance, not blocking anyone, not demanding space, but somehow becoming the quiet center around which fear did not spin as violently. When a wounded guard cried out from the ground, Jesus went to him and knelt in the mud. When a rebel medic hesitated before treating one of Oren’s soldiers, Jesus looked at him, and the medic’s face changed before he reached for the bandage. No one was forced. No one was excused. Yet the hollow kept being called toward life one difficult motion at a time.

Lysa came to Sella with rain dripping from her hair and ash on one cheek. “We have to move before the tower finishes breaking.”

“How long?”

“Kane says the lower fuel bank may burn slow, or it may not. That is the most comfort anyone has offered me.”

Sella looked toward the shelter. “Bram cannot be moved far.”

“None of them can.” Lysa’s voice lowered. “Renn has a concealed evacuation lane west of the hollow. It leads to a landing flat where his cell hid two transports under camo netting. If we get there, we can move the wounded out before tower debris reaches this ridge.”

“Will the transports hold everyone?”

“No.”

The answer stood between them with the old cruelty of limited rescue. Sella looked over the hollow. Rebels guarded disarmed soldiers under the trees. Tower workers crouched beside prisoners. Medics moved from one body to another without having time to ask whose uniform had caused whose injury. The sky kept flashing, and each flash showed more faces than any transport could carry easily.

Lysa followed her gaze. “We can make two runs if the pilots come back.”

“If?”

“If the air stays clear. If the citadel debris does not fall across the flat. If no loyal tower units find us first. Choose your favorite uncertainty.”

Sella almost smiled because Tavik would have said it that way if he had been standing. Instead he lay under a tarp ten yards away, arguing weakly with a medic who wanted him quiet. The sound of his complaint gave the hollow a human edge that the alarms had not been able to destroy.

A movement near the prisoner line caught Sella’s eye. Oren had stepped away from his patrol and stood facing two rebels who had recognized him. One pointed at him with a shaking hand. The man’s voice rose enough to carry.

“That captain ordered the lower ridge sweep. My sister was in those trees.”

Oren did not deny it. “I led the sweep.”

The rebel lunged, and Lysa moved, but Jesus was already closer. He did not seize the man. He only stepped into the space between him and Oren, and the rebel stopped as if he had come against a wall he could not see. His face twisted with grief and rage.

“He led them,” the rebel said to Jesus. “He was there.”

Oren’s shoulders sank. “I was.”

Jesus looked at Oren. “Tell the truth without hiding behind command.”

Oren swallowed. “I led the sweep. I gave the order to fire when movement broke east of the ridge. I was told armed rebels were using civilians as cover.” His voice shook, but he kept going. “I did not verify. I did not stop when the first voices sounded wrong. If your sister was there, my order may have killed her.”

The rebel’s face crumpled. His fist remained clenched, but the force behind it changed. It did not vanish. It became grief without a target clean enough to strike.

“What was her name?” Jesus asked.

The man breathed hard. “Savil.”

Oren lowered his head. “Savil.”

The name entered the hollow like another body brought from the war. Sella felt it from where she stood. Elya. Edrin. Savil. Her mother and brother. Names were returning from under reports, rumors, orders, and hatred. They did not make the guilty innocent. They made judgment harder to turn into appetite.

Renn walked over before the moment could break into violence. He placed a hand on the rebel’s shoulder. “Not here.”

The rebel glared at him through tears. “Then where?”

Renn did not answer quickly. His eyes moved toward Jesus, then toward the medic shelter where Bram lay. “Where the truth can stand longer than our anger.”

The sentence seemed to surprise him as much as it surprised Sella. Renn looked away as if he had accidentally spoken from a place he did not fully trust yet. The rebel shook under his hand, but he did not strike Oren. He turned and walked into the trees, stopping only when another rebel followed and stood beside him.

Sella felt the weight of that restraint. It was not peace. It was pain choosing not to become another wound in the same hour. She was beginning to understand that mercy often looked unimpressive while it was happening. It looked like someone not pulling a trigger. It looked like someone letting a name be spoken. It looked like judgment delayed so truth could be fuller.

Mara pushed through the shelter flap and looked directly at Sella. “He is conscious.”

Sella’s stomach tightened. “How long?”

“I do not know. The wound is deep, and he lost too much blood. We sealed what we could, but he needs surgery beyond what we have here.”

Renn heard and turned. “The transports can get him to the river med ship if the pilots make the first run.”

Several rebels nearby reacted at once. One muttered that Bram should not take space from better men. Another said nothing but looked at Renn with disbelief. Mara’s face hardened, and Sella could not tell whether she agreed with the anger or was angry at it. The question came into the open before anyone asked it plainly. Who deserved the first transport? Who counted as worth carrying when there were fewer seats than wounds?

Renn looked at his people. “We are not sorting souls by who we hate most.”

The muttering did not stop, but it changed. Authority still mattered, though Renn’s sounded different now. It no longer leaned on rage alone.

Sella entered the shelter.

The air inside was warm from too many bodies and sharp with antiseptic, blood, wet cloth, and smoke. Bram lay on a folded tarp with his coat cut open and bandages packed against his side. His face was almost colorless. Someone had cleaned the dirt from one cheek, which made him look more like the father she remembered and less like the man dragged through the creek bed. That hurt enough that Sella had to stop just inside the flap.

Jesus entered behind her but stayed near the opening.

Bram turned his head slowly. “You came.”

Sella sat beside him because standing felt too much like guarding herself. “Mara said you were conscious.”

“I thought maybe you would not want to see me.”

“I do not know what I want.”

“That is fair.” He closed his eyes for a moment, gathering strength. “I need to say something before I lose the chance.”

Sella felt herself tense. “If this is goodbye, I do not want it.”

“It is not goodbye if God gives me more breath.” His eyes opened again. “It is confession.”

She looked toward Jesus. He did not rescue her from listening. He only remained near the entrance, present and quiet, as if this was holy ground because truth was about to stand without armor.

Bram looked at the canvas above him. “After the east gate, I told myself the first sin was the only real one. I told myself everything after that was survival. I told myself if I could find you, if I could prove you lived, if I could undo one piece of it, then maybe the rest would become less mine.”

Sella swallowed. “Did it?”

“No.” His voice broke, but he did not turn from the truth. “It became more mine every time I used your name to excuse another day of obedience. I loved you, Sella. That part was true. But I loved you through fear, and fear taught my love to serve evil.”

The words settled into her with terrible precision. She had spent years thinking he had not loved her enough. Now she had to face something more complicated. He had loved her, but not freely. He had loved her inside fear, and that fear had poisoned the shape of his choices. It did not make the loss smaller. It made the warning sharper.

Bram lifted his burned hand a fraction from the tarp. “If I live, I will answer publicly. Not only to rebel command. To families. To names. To records. I will not hide behind secret files or useful intelligence. If they imprison me, I will speak there. If they execute me after judgment, I will not call it persecution. But I do not want to die in this shelter having only told you.”

Sella stared at him. She had thought his confession would ask something from her. Forgiveness. Release. A daughter’s blessing. Instead he was offering to carry truth beyond their private wound, into the public place where his sin had harmed more than his family. That mattered. It did not heal everything. But it mattered.

“Why are you telling me?” she asked.

“Because I forfeited the right to ask you to protect me from consequence.”

Her throat tightened.

He continued, weaker now. “And because if fear comes back to me, I want you to know I named it while I could.”

Sella looked down at her wrapped hands. The cloth was stained again. She had held doors, circuits, wounds, and now this confession. She did not feel noble. She felt exhausted and raw, as if the day had stripped her down to a place where only honest things could survive.

“I wanted you dead this morning,” she said.

Bram closed his eyes. “I know.”

“I imagined it for years.”

“Yes.”

“I thought if I killed you, I would finally stop being trapped under that floor.”

A tear slipped down his temple into his hair. “My sin left you there.”

“Yes,” she said.

The word was not vengeance. It was truth. Bram received it without defense.

Sella breathed in and felt the old room inside her, the grain chute, the smoke, the waiting. It was still there. Jesus had not erased it. But the door was no longer locked from the outside. That difference was small and enormous.

“I cannot forgive you all at once,” she said.

“I know.”

“I do not even know what forgiveness will require.”

“You owe me nothing.”

The answer hurt in a way she did not expect. Part of her had wanted him to ask too much so she could refuse him safely. Instead he lay there giving her space, and the space made love possible without forcing it to become whole before its time.

Jesus stepped closer. “Forgiveness is not pretending the wound is gone. It is releasing the wound from its throne.”

Sella looked at Him. “What if I can only release it a little?”

“Then bring that little into the light.”

She turned back to Bram. His breathing had grown shallow again. She wanted to tell him she forgave him. She wanted the moment to become clear and beautiful because stories were supposed to know where to place the light. But she could not say what was not yet true. Jesus had not taught her to lie in mercy’s name.

So she reached out with her bandaged hand and touched two fingers lightly to Bram’s wrist.

“I am not leaving you alone in this shelter,” she said.

Bram’s mouth trembled. “That is more mercy than I deserve.”

“Yes,” she said, and this time the honesty did not feel cruel. “It is.”

Jesus’s face held a quiet sorrow and joy together, as if heaven could receive an unfinished mercy without despising its smallness.

Outside the shelter, voices rose. Lysa called Sella’s name, sharp with warning. Sella pulled her hand back and stepped through the flap with Jesus behind her. The hollow had shifted into alarm. Kane stood near the western edge with Oren and Renn, all three looking toward the tower road. Through the trees came the sound of engines, not large walkers, but smaller pursuit craft skimming low over broken ground.

Kane turned when he saw Sella. “Loyalists. Two patrol skimmers, maybe more behind them.”

Renn cursed. “They found the hollow.”

Lysa started giving orders before anyone asked. “Wounded to the drainage lane. Medics first. Disarmed soldiers carry stretchers. Rebels on the ridge line. Do not fire until I call it.”

Oren stepped toward her. “My patrol can stand between the skimmers and the medics.”

Renn gave him a hard look. “With no power packs?”

“There are other ways to slow men I trained beside.”

“You expect me to trust you with that line?”

“No,” Oren said. “I expect you to watch me.”

Renn stared at him for one tense breath, then nodded once. “Take three of mine with you.”

Oren accepted the command without pride. That too was a sign. A captain who had crushed his comm now obeyed a rebel commander because life required it. The world had turned in ways no speech could have managed.

Sella moved toward the medic shelter to help with Bram, but Jesus touched her arm. “Not yet.”

She looked at Him, startled. “He has to be moved.”

“He will be.”

“Then why—”

Jesus turned her gently toward the ridge line. Through the trees, the engine sound grew louder. The loyalists were not only pursuing. They were herding something ahead of them. Sella heard cries now, scattered and panicked. A moment later, people broke through the brush from the tower road. Not soldiers. Lower-level workers. Some limping, some carrying children from the tower residences, some coughing from smoke. Behind them, skimmer lights flashed between the trunks.

Renn’s rebels lifted their weapons.

“No,” Sella shouted. “They are running.”

The first workers stumbled into the hollow, terrified at the sight of rebel rifles and Dominion uniforms mixed together. One woman fell to her knees with a child in her arms. A boy no older than ten clung to the back of a clerk whose sleeve was on fire at the cuff. The loyalist skimmers slowed behind them, using the fleeing people as confusion, maybe as cover, maybe as bait. The commander’s final cruelty had reached the forest.

Lysa’s face went white with controlled fury. “Hold fire.”

Kane moved toward the fleeing workers, waving them left toward the drainage lane. “This way. Down, down, stay under the trees.”

A skimmer burst through the brush. Its front cannon swept toward the hollow.

Oren stepped into the open and shouted a command code at the pilot. The skimmer hesitated for half a second, enough for Renn’s left cannon team to fire into the ground ahead of it. Mud and stone exploded upward. The skimmer veered, struck a root shelf, and spun sideways into a tree. The pilot crawled out dazed, and Oren’s former soldiers tackled him before rebels could shoot.

The second skimmer came wider, firing as it moved. Red bolts tore through the hollow, striking a supply crate and ripping one tarp loose. People screamed. Sella dropped beside the woman with the child and pulled them behind a fallen trunk. Her hands flared with pain when she hit the mud, but she kept moving.

Jesus walked into the chaos.

Not away from danger. Into it.

He crossed between the fleeing workers and the line of fire with a calm so complete that the world seemed to bend around Him. The skimmer’s cannon swung toward Him. The pilot had a clear shot. Sella saw it, screamed His name, and knew the sound would not reach in time.

The cannon did not fire.

The skimmer lurched, engine whining. The pilot fought the controls, but the machine shuddered as if some deeper authority had entered the air around it. Jesus stood in the rain, hands at His sides, looking at the pilot through the windshield.

“Enough,” He said.

The word was not shouted. It carried anyway.

The skimmer’s engine died.

The sudden silence after it was almost frightening. The craft settled into the mud. The pilot sat frozen behind the glass, face drained, hands still gripping dead controls. No one moved until Lysa shouted for him to get out. He obeyed slowly, shaking so badly that he nearly fell from the cockpit.

Renn stared at Jesus. Oren did too. The fleeing workers huddled near the drainage lane, sobbing, coughing, alive. Sella stayed behind the fallen trunk with the child pressed against her side and felt her own breath come ragged. She had seen Jesus hold a beam, speak through a sealed hatch, steady the wounded, and command fear without raising a weapon. Yet this silence over the machine struck her differently. It was not display. It was judgment held in mercy.

The child beside her whispered, “Who is that man?”

Sella watched Jesus turn from the dead skimmer toward the wounded hollow.

“He is Jesus,” she said.

The name sounded simple in the rain. It also sounded large enough to hold the burning tower, the fallen shield, the guilty, the grieving, the frightened, and the small beginning of a mercy that had not finished its work.

The tower road quieted, but the danger had not passed. The loyalists who survived the crash would be bound. The new refugees would strain the evacuation plan past breaking. Bram still needed the first transport if he was going to live. Tavik, Rul, and half a dozen others needed it too. The commander had not been seen, and Sella knew enough of the day to understand that the final pressure had not yet fully arrived.

Lysa came to her, breathing hard. “We cannot carry everyone in two transports.”

Sella looked at the child, then at the shelter where Bram lay, then toward Jesus standing in the rain.

“No,” she said. “So we stop thinking like the tower.”

Lysa frowned. “Meaning?”

Sella stood slowly, pain running through both hands and up her arms. “The transports carry the critical wounded and children first. Everyone who can walk goes through the drainage lane on foot. Rebels, workers, soldiers, all mixed together. No group gets to protect only its own.”

Lysa studied her. “That will be ugly.”

“Yes.”

“It may break.”

“Then we keep it from breaking.”

Lysa looked toward Jesus, then back at Sella. “You sound different.”

Sella did not know whether that was true. She only knew she could not go back to the person who had woken with a blade under her blanket and a death rehearsed in her heart. “Maybe I am tired of sounding like the tower too.”

Lysa held her gaze, then nodded. “Then help me make them hear it.”

Sella looked across the hollow at people who feared one another, needed one another, and had no clean way out unless mercy became more than a feeling. The sky rumbled overhead. The forest steamed around the wrecked skimmers. Jesus stood in the rain, holy and quiet, and the next hard obedience waited to be spoken aloud.

Chapter Fourteen

Sella did not shout at first. She stood in the western hollow with rainwater running from her hair into the soot along her neck, and she let the people see her before she tried to make them listen. That mattered more than she would have understood that morning. A voice thrown over fear could become one more command in a day already ruined by commands. A body standing where the cost could be seen was harder to dismiss. Her bandaged hands were held slightly away from her sides because closing them hurt too much, and the cloth around them had darkened with blood, mud, and burned skin beneath.

Lysa climbed onto a fallen trunk near the center of the hollow and raised one hand for silence. It took longer than it should have, because the hollow had become too crowded for quiet to arrive cleanly. Children cried under tarps. Wounded men groaned while medics tightened bandages. Rebels argued with former tower guards over who should stand where. The two captured skimmer pilots sat bound beside the wreckage, watched by Oren’s disarmed patrol and three rebels who trusted them only because they had rifles pointed at their backs. The tower behind the trees still vented fire into the rain, and every deep boom from its body made the crowd flinch as one frightened creature.

“Listen,” Lysa said. Her voice cut through the hollow because people were used to obeying tone before they trusted words. “We have two transports hidden west of here. They cannot carry everyone in one run. The critical wounded and children go first. Everyone who can walk moves on foot through the drainage lane. Nobody travels by faction. Every group will be mixed so the strong carry the weak, and nobody gets to abandon people because of a uniform.”

The hollow broke open at once.

A rebel near the cannon shouted that Dominion soldiers could walk behind them if they walked at all. A tower clerk yelled back that rebels had brought the battle to the tower. Someone else cried that children should not be placed beside armed prisoners. Oran said something harsh to one of Oren’s men. Tessa answered with a stare that made her hand drift toward a weapon she no longer had. The fear did not become violence, but it showed how close violence waited under the skin.

Sella stepped up beside Lysa. She did not raise her hands because they hurt, and because she did not want to look like she was pleading. She looked first at the rebels, then at the workers, then at the soldiers who had lowered weapons and the soldiers who had been dragged from skimmers. She let her eyes move over faces until the shouting thinned from discomfort.

“If you choose only your own right now,” she said, “you are still inside the tower.”

That quieted them more than volume would have. The tower was not only a place anymore. Everyone knew it. They had breathed its gas, heard its orders, obeyed or resisted its fear, and watched it try to sort human beings by usefulness until the sorting nearly killed them all.

Sella continued, and her voice shook only at the edges. “I am not asking anyone to pretend trust exists where it does not. I am not asking victims to forget who harmed them. I am not asking guilty people to walk away clean because today became frightening. But the next path is narrow. If we walk it like the Dominion taught us, some of us will survive with the tower still ruling inside us.”

Renn stood near the medic shelter with his arms crossed, watching her with a look she could not read. Kane stood beside Rul, supporting him under one shoulder. Oren kept his eyes lowered until Sella’s words reached him, then lifted them slowly. Mara held the child from the fleeing worker family against her hip while the child’s mother helped a medic sort supplies. Bram could not be seen behind the shelter flap, but Sella felt his presence there like an unfinished sentence.

A rebel woman stepped forward. She was the same one who had spat into the mud when Kane spoke earlier. Blood had dried across one sleeve, and her left eye was swollen nearly shut. “My brother died taking the south ridge so that shield could fall,” she said. “Now you want me to carry people who kept it standing.”

Sella looked at her. “What was his name?”

The woman’s mouth tightened. She seemed angry that the question had reached for grief instead of debate. “Joret.”

“Joret,” Sella repeated.

The woman’s face changed. Not softened, but struck by the sound of his name in another person’s mouth.

“I will not spend Joret’s death for you,” Sella said. “I will not tell you what it should mean. I will only say this. If his death helped open the sky, do not let the tower use your pain to close your heart around everyone still breathing in front of you.”

The woman looked away, breathing hard. “You talk like that because your father is one of them.”

Sella felt the blow, and for a moment the whole hollow seemed to lean toward the answer. She could have defended Bram. She could have explained again. She could have made the entire crowd walk through the complicated truth of a scarf, a false capture, a gate opened under threat, and years of compromise afterward. But the woman was not asking for information. She was asking whether Sella’s mercy was only blood protecting blood.

“My father is guilty,” Sella said.

The words left the hollow still.

“He is also wounded. He also helped bring the shield down. He also has to answer for what he did if he lives. All of that is true at the same time.” Her throat tightened, but she held the woman’s gaze. “And if another child in this hollow needs the transport seat more than he does, I will not pretend his blood matters more because it is mine.”

Lysa turned sharply toward her, but said nothing. Renn’s arms lowered. Mara’s eyes moved to the shelter flap. Even Jesus, standing near the wrecked skimmer with rain along His shoulders, looked at Sella with a sorrowful steadiness that told her the words had been heard in heaven before the hollow knew what to do with them.

The rebel woman stared at Sella. “Could you really do that?”

Sella did not answer quickly. She looked toward the shelter where Bram lay beyond canvas and blood and the first unfinished mercy she had ever wanted to protect. Her body wanted to say no. Her fear wanted to call no by the name of love. She knew that old trick now.

“I do not know,” she said honestly. “But I know I cannot ask you to carry your pain truthfully if I lie about mine.”

The woman stepped back without another word.

Jesus walked toward Sella then, not to praise her, but to stand near her in the place where truth had made her weaker and cleaner at once. “The truth has room to breathe now,” He said quietly.

Sella looked at the crowd. “It still has to move.”

“It will,” Jesus said. “One obedience at a time.”

The first transport arrived five minutes later, though it felt longer because the hollow spent every second arguing with itself. The small craft came low under the canopy, engines muffled by storm and damage, its hull painted with mud and leaf markings. It settled on the landing flat beyond the ridge with a tired whine, and two rebel pilots jumped out before the engine fully cycled down. One of them took in the mixed crowd and swore so sincerely that Tavik, pale under his tarp, lifted his head and said, “That is the first sensible thing anyone has said today.”

The pilots reported that the river med ship had moved farther west to avoid falling debris from the citadel. That meant longer flight time, fewer possible runs, and less certainty that anyone sent away would return quickly with help. Lysa absorbed the news without blinking. Renn looked toward the burning tower and recalculated the evacuation with his eyes. Sella felt the decision tightening before anyone spoke it. The first transport could carry twelve if they packed the wounded hard. Fifteen if some were children and no one cared about comfort. More than that, and the craft might not lift cleanly under canopy.

The first list formed badly. Medics named Bram, Tavik, Rul, the older man Jesus had helped in the roof corridor, two children with smoke in their lungs, a rebel with internal bleeding, a guard whose leg wound had turned gray, and three workers burned by coolant. Every name brought a protest. Every protest carried a reason. Joret’s sister wanted the rebel first. Oren wanted Rul placed ahead of his own guard. Mara argued for the older man who could barely breathe. Kane said nothing, but his eyes kept going to the children.

Then the medic stepped from Bram’s shelter and said, “Arven dies without the med ship.”

The sentence landed exactly where everyone expected it to. Renn looked away. Oran closed his eyes. Mara’s jaw tightened. Joret’s sister stared at Sella. Lysa’s expression hardened into command because if feeling took over, no one would move.

The mother of the child Mara had been holding stepped forward with her daughter wrapped in a soaked blanket. The child’s breathing had grown worse, a shallow pull that made her small ribs work too hard. The mother did not speak at first. She simply held the girl out toward the medics with eyes too frightened to beg properly.

The medic looked at the child and went pale. “She needs oxygen.”

“How many seats?” Lysa asked.

The pilot answered from the edge of the flat. “One too few if Arven goes.”

Nobody moved.

Sella felt the hollow vanish around the question. She saw only the child’s face, gray around the lips, and the shelter behind her where Bram was dying more slowly but just as truly. Her earlier words returned to her, not as noble speech, but as a blade. If another child in this hollow needs the transport seat more than he does, I will not pretend his blood matters more because it is mine.

She wanted to take the words back. Not because they were false, but because truth had come to collect them too soon.

Kane spoke softly. “There may be room if I stay off and walk.”

“You were not on the critical list,” Lysa said.

“Then Tavik stays and I carry him on foot.”

Tavik lifted his head again. “I object to being volunteered by a man who shot at me this morning.”

“You were not my best target,” Kane said, with a grim attempt at humor.

“Rude, but oddly comforting.”

The moment almost broke the tension, but only almost. The medic shook her head. “Tavik cannot make the foot route without bleeding out. Rul cannot either. The child cannot wait. Arven cannot wait. Someone critical gets left if we do not reduce weight another way.”

“I will not go,” Bram said from the shelter flap.

Everyone turned.

He stood only because two medics were holding him upright. His face had gone nearly white, and the bandage at his side had already soaked through again. For a second Sella could not breathe. He should not have been conscious, much less standing. Jesus moved toward him, but Bram lifted one trembling hand, not refusing help, only asking for one moment to speak before his body failed.

“I will not take the child’s place,” Bram said.

Sella crossed the hollow toward him. “You do not get to decide alone.”

“I know.” His eyes found her. “That is why I am saying it where everyone can hear.”

Her anger rose fast because fear came with it. “This is not repentance if you are using death to make people admire you.”

Bram shook his head weakly. “No. It is consequence.”

“You said you would answer if you lived.”

“I want to.”

“Then live.”

His face twisted, and for one moment father and daughter looked at one another across all the years that had been stolen, twisted, and returned to them wounded. “I want to,” he said again, quieter. “More than I deserve to want it.”

That honesty struck Sella harder than a noble farewell would have. He wanted to live. He wanted more time. He wanted judgment, truth, maybe even some long road where daughter and father could speak without a tower burning behind them. This was not guilt seeking a grave. It was a man choosing not to buy life with a child’s breath.

Jesus stood beside them now. “Truth is here.”

Sella looked at Him with tears in her eyes. “I hate it.”

“I know.”

The child coughed behind her, a dry, failing sound. The mother began to sob softly. No one else spoke. The entire hollow had become witness, and Sella understood with terrible clarity that the climactic wound was no longer hidden. It had come into the open. She had wanted her father dead. Then she had wanted him alive because mercy had begun. Now love was asking whether she could release even the life she had just begun to stop hating, not to vengeance, not to despair, but to God.

Bram reached for her. His hand shook so badly that it barely found her sleeve. “Sella, look at me.”

She did.

“I am not leaving you as I did before,” he said. “I am choosing not to make another daughter die for my fear.”

The words broke through her. She had no defense against them. He was right, and he was not right enough to make it stop hurting. She gripped his hand with her bandaged fingers and nearly cried out from the pain.

“I do not forgive you fully yet,” she said.

“I know.”

“But I do love you.”

Bram’s face crumpled, and for a moment the hollow, the war, the tower, and the burning sky seemed to fall away from him. He received the words not as something earned, but as mercy too large to hold. “I love you,” he whispered. “I loved you badly through fear. But I love you.”

Sella leaned her forehead against his hand. “Then do not make me regret saying it.”

A faint, broken smile crossed his face. “I will try to obey that if God gives me breath.”

Jesus looked toward the pilots. “There is another way.”

The words moved through the hollow like air returning. Everyone turned toward Him.

The lead pilot frowned. “If You know how to make my transport hold more people safely, I am listening.”

Jesus looked at the unloaded skimmer wrecks near the trees. “The dead machines still have lift cells.”

Kane turned sharply. “Not enough for flight.”

“No,” Jesus said. “Enough to reduce weight.”

Perrit, who had been quiet near the supply crates, stared at the wrecked skimmer, then at the transport. “If we strip the lift cells and mount them under the stretcher rack, we can offset load during takeoff.”

The pilot shook his head. “That is insane.”

Tavik raised one weak hand. “In fairness, insanity has been our most consistent engineering method today.”

Perrit was already moving. “It does not need full integration. It only has to assist for the first thirty seconds. The transport’s own stabilizers can handle the rest if the pilot keeps low speed.”

The pilot looked at Renn. “This is a terrible idea.”

Renn looked at the child, then at Bram, then at the wrecked skimmer. “Can it work?”

Perrit answered before the pilot could. “Maybe.”

The pilot threw both hands up. “I hate that word.”

“So do we,” Lysa said. “Start stripping the cells.”

The hollow burst into motion. Rebels and tower technicians ran together toward the wrecked skimmers. Oren and two of his former soldiers helped Perrit tear open the rear lift housings. Tavik shouted unwanted but occasionally useful advice from his tarp. Mara helped the medics prepare an extra stretcher rack. Kane and Rul, despite Rul’s wound, worked on securing straps from supply crates. Even Joret’s sister joined the effort, cutting insulation cords with a short blade while refusing to look at Bram.

Sella stayed with her father and Jesus.

Bram’s strength faded the moment the crowd moved away from the decision. The medics lowered him back to a tarp, and Sella knelt beside him. The child’s mother came near, holding her daughter. For a moment she seemed afraid to approach Bram, as if gratitude and guilt had tangled in her throat.

Bram looked at the little girl. “What is her name?”

“Ena,” the mother said.

Bram closed his eyes briefly. “Ena.”

The mother’s lips trembled. “Thank you.”

Bram opened his eyes. “Do not thank me yet.”

“I heard what you said.”

He looked at the child, then at Sella. “I should have said something like it years ago.”

The mother did not know the full meaning of that. She did not need to. She bowed her head once and returned to the medics.

Jesus crouched beside Sella. “You spoke love without making it cheap.”

She wiped her face against her shoulder because her hands were useless for tears. “It feels like it is tearing me in half.”

“Love often reveals how divided fear made the heart.”

She looked at Bram. “Will he live?”

Jesus did not answer quickly. That silence frightened her more than any alarm. “His life is in the Father’s hands.”

“I wanted a better answer.”

“I know.”

Sella looked toward the frantic work around the transport. Sparks flew as Perrit and Oren stripped the second lift cell. Lysa directed workers to redistribute supplies. Renn argued with the pilot and won because the pilot cared more about living people than winning arguments. The hollow had become something the tower could never have produced. Not unity without conflict. Not trust without scars. Something rougher and truer. People who still carried anger were working side by side because a child and a guilty man might both live if they did.

The lift cells were mounted under the stretcher rack with ugly brackets, strap webbing, and three prayers muttered by people who did not all know they were praying. The pilot inspected the work, cursed twice, and said it might lift. The second pilot said it would either save them or turn the transport into a burning leaf. Tavik told him to be more inspiring. Nobody laughed loudly, but several people breathed differently afterward.

The loading began at once. Children first. Ena and another child with smoke-darkened lips were placed near the front under a portable oxygen hood. Tavik was lifted in next, complaining until Lysa told him she would personally remove him from the manifest if he wasted breath. Rul went beside him. The older man from the roof corridor was secured near the side. The burned workers followed. Then came Bram.

A murmur passed through the hollow when the medics lifted him.

Joret’s sister stepped forward. Sella stiffened, but the woman did not block the stretcher. She stood beside it and looked down at Bram with a face full of pain.

“My brother’s name was Joret Vale,” she said.

Bram’s eyes opened halfway. “Joret Vale,” he repeated.

“If you live, you say it.”

“I will.”

“If you lie, I hope the truth finds you harder than we did.”

Bram swallowed. “So do I.”

She stepped back, and the medics carried him to the transport.

Sella followed to the ramp. The pilot looked at her and shook his head before she asked. “No more weight.”

“I am not going.”

Bram heard and turned his head. “Sella.”

“You go,” she said. “You live if God allows it. You answer if God allows that too.”

His eyes filled again. “Will you come after?”

“If I can.”

“That is not enough.”

“It is what we have.”

He looked past her toward Jesus, who stood at the edge of the landing flat. “Take care of her.”

Jesus’s gaze rested on Bram. “She is loved by the Father before she is held by any man’s promise.”

Bram received that with a trembling breath. Then he looked back at Sella. “I wanted to be the one who kept you safe.”

“You could not.”

“No,” he whispered. “I could not.”

She leaned close, ignoring the pain as she touched her wrapped fingers to his cheek. “Then tell the truth and stop hiding. That is what you can do now.”

“I will try.”

“Do more than try.”

For the first time, a small hint of the old father appeared in his eyes, not the carefree man before the gate, but something humbled and still familiar. “Yes, Sella.”

She stepped back before leaving became impossible. The ramp lifted. Bram’s face remained visible through the narrowing gap until metal sealed him inside with the children, the wounded, and the fragile chance that mercy had made room for more than one life.

The transport engines rose. For one terrifying second the craft dipped under the extra weight. The added lift cells flared unevenly, whining like furious insects. Everyone on the flat held their breath. The transport shuddered, lifted six feet, dropped one, then caught the air and climbed under the canopy. Branches whipped in the engine wash. Rain scattered in silver sheets.

Then it cleared the trees and vanished west.

The hollow remained silent after it left.

Sella stood with empty, burning hands and watched the place where the transport had gone. She had not chosen her father over the child. She had not lost him to the choice either, not yet. Mercy had not solved the pain. It had made more life possible inside it.

Jesus came beside her.

“I feel like something was pulled out of me,” she said.

He looked toward the west, where the transport had disappeared into rain and smoke. “Something was released.”

Sella closed her eyes. The tower burned behind her. The path on foot waited ahead. Her father was no longer in her hands. The child was breathing because people who did not trust each other had worked anyway. For the first time since she crawled out of the grain chute years ago, Sella did not feel alone in the place where loss might still come.

Chapter Fifteen

After the transport vanished into rain and smoke, the hollow felt larger and emptier at the same time. Sella stood on the landing flat until the last engine tremor faded from the branches, and then the forest seemed to return around her with all its wet leaves, mud, wounded breathing, and unfinished fear. Bram was gone from her sight. The child was gone with him. Tavik, Rul, and the most fragile had been lifted into the sky by a craft held together with stripped lift cells and desperate hands. Everyone left behind had to walk.

No one said that aloud at first. They did not need to. The people remaining in the hollow looked at the western drainage lane the way tired souls look at a road they are not sure they can survive. Some were wounded but not enough to earn a transport seat. Some had carried others until their arms shook. Some had lowered weapons and now did not know whether the people beside them would remember mercy once the danger thinned. The tower still burned behind them, and the broken citadel still fell in pieces beyond the cloud cover, but the immediate work had become brutally simple. Move the living farther from the things that were coming down.

Lysa reorganized the line with Renn. The children who remained were placed near the center. The slowest wounded were paired with the strongest walkers. Oren’s disarmed patrol was split among rebel groups, not as punishment alone, but to prevent any old command pattern from reforming if panic returned. Kane stayed near the front with Oren because they knew the route and because neither trusted the other enough to walk behind him. Sella remained near the middle with Jesus, Mara, Oran, Dain, and the woman whose brother Joret had died taking the south ridge.

The woman’s name was Vel. She gave it only after Mara asked twice and Jesus looked at her as if her silence deserved patience, not pressure. Vel kept a short blade at her belt and one hand near it whenever a former tower guard stumbled too close. Her anger did not make her reckless. It made her painfully alert. Sella understood that kind of anger. It was the kind that called itself protection because grief needed a guard dog.

The foot column entered the drainage lane just as another blast rolled from the tower. The ground shook under them, and a hot wind moved through the trees from behind, carrying ash that stuck to wet faces. Someone cried out that the tower was falling, but Kane shouted back that it was venting another upper section and they still had time if they kept moving. The word time did not comfort anyone. Time had become a thin rope stretched between fire and exhaustion.

The drainage lane sloped down into thicker forest where the roots rose across the ground in tangled shelves. Rainwater had turned the low places into black mud. The wounded slipped often. Those with free hands reached without asking. Sometimes they reached for people they hated. Sometimes they pulled away too quickly afterward, embarrassed by mercy that had acted before memory could object. Jesus walked among them, not at the front and not at the rear, but wherever the line began to break. He lifted a child over a root. He steadied Oran when the older man’s knee buckled. He placed a hand on Dain’s shoulder when the boy’s breathing grew shallow in the narrow cut. Each touch seemed ordinary until the person receiving it found just enough strength to continue.

Sella’s hands had become a steady field of pain, but the deeper hurt was harder to name. She kept looking west, though the transport was long gone. She wondered if Bram was conscious. She wondered if Ena was breathing. She wondered if the lift cells had held after takeoff or if the transport had gone down beyond the ridge where no one could see it. Her mind tried to punish her with possibilities because her hands were empty and could not hold anything else. Each time fear opened another picture, she forced her eyes back to the person directly ahead.

Jesus noticed. Of course He did.

“You keep leaving this path for a sky you cannot see,” He said softly.

Sella looked down at the mud. “My father is in that sky.”

“So is the child.”

“I know.”

“And neither is held more safely by your fear.”

The words were not harsh, but they took away the only thing she could still pretend to do for them. She had no control over the transport, the pilots, the med ship, the weather, or whether Bram’s wound would close before his strength failed. Fear offered a false labor. It told her that if she worried hard enough, she was still helping. Jesus stripped that lie gently, which almost made it worse.

“I do not know how to wait without fear,” she said.

“Then begin by waiting with prayer.”

Sella almost said she did not know how to pray. That was not completely true. She had prayed in childhood. She had prayed in the grain chute until the smoke took her voice. After that, prayer became something she distrusted because no one had opened the grate in time for her mother or her brother. She had not stopped believing God existed. She had stopped knowing how to speak without accusing Him.

Jesus walked beside her without rushing the answer.

At last she said, “What if prayer feels like standing in the same place where I was abandoned?”

Jesus looked ahead through the rain-dark trees. “Then let Me stand there with you.”

She did not answer. She could not. The path narrowed, and the line slowed as the first group crossed a half-collapsed root bridge over a flooded channel. Water rushed below, brown and fast from the storm. Oren crossed first, then Kane, then Renn’s scout. On the far side, they turned and helped others across. The root bridge was wide enough for one person at a time, and every crossing seemed to take too long.

Vel stood just ahead of Sella with her blade hand tense. A former tower guard named Hask was helping an older worker across when his boot slipped. The worker fell against him. Hask grabbed her, but the motion threw his own balance. For a second both of them hung sideways over the water. Vel moved before anyone else, dropping to one knee and catching Hask’s belt with one hand while a rebel behind her seized the worker’s sleeve. Together they dragged them upright.

Hask stumbled onto the far bank and looked back at Vel. “Thank you.”

Vel’s face hardened as if gratitude had insulted her. “Keep walking.”

He did. But Sella saw Vel’s hand shaking afterward.

When Sella crossed, the root bridge shifted under her weight. Her burned hands could not grip well, so she held her arms out slightly and moved with slow, careful steps. Halfway across, a deep rumble came from the tower behind them. The roots trembled. Sella dropped to one knee, and pain shot through both palms when she struck the wet wood. The water below roared louder. For one flash of a moment, she was in the grain chute again, trapped in a narrow place while the world broke overhead.

A hand reached from the far side. Vel’s hand.

Sella looked at it.

Vel’s face carried no warmth. “Take it before we both regret this.”

Sella reached. Their hands met, Vel’s grip strong around the bandage without pressing the burns. She pulled Sella forward until Jesus, standing just behind on the bridge, steadied her from the other side. Sella reached the bank and stood breathing hard.

Vel released her at once. “I am not doing this because I like you.”

“I did not think you were.”

“My brother would have hated this.”

“Maybe.”

Vel looked at her sharply. “Do not make him merciful because it suits you.”

“I will not.”

That answer seemed to land differently than Vel expected. She glanced toward the line ahead, then back at Sella. “He was not soft.”

“I believe you.”

“He would have fought until the end.”

“I believe that too.”

Vel’s mouth tightened. “He also once carried an injured enemy pilot six miles because the man had a little boy’s name tattooed on his wrist. He complained the whole way.”

Sella felt something loosen in her chest. “That sounds like a brother worth remembering truthfully.”

Vel looked away fast, but not before tears reached her eyes. “I hate that you are making me remember more than how he died.”

“I am not making you.”

“No,” Vel said, and wiped her face roughly with her sleeve. “That is the problem.”

The line moved again. They climbed out of the drainage lane into denser woods where the ground rose toward a western ridge. The path was harder now. The weakest walkers began to fail. Mara helped the mother whose child had gone on the transport because grief and relief had left the woman lightheaded. Oran carried a supply crate until his knee gave out, and Hask, the guard Vel had saved, took it from him without asking. Oran looked ready to refuse on principle, then saw that refusing would only slow everyone. He let the man carry it and seemed angry at the usefulness of the choice.

Near the ridge, they heard engines again.

This time everyone dropped quickly, even the children. The sound came from above the canopy, passing east to west. Not skimmers. Larger craft. Sella looked through the leaves and saw dark shapes moving low, trailing smoke. One was a rebel transport, damaged but flying. Another was Dominion-marked and on fire, veering away from the tower in a wobbling descent. The battle in the sky had broken into fragments, and those fragments were now falling into the world below.

Kane crouched beside Lysa and Oren. “If that Dominion craft lands west of the ridge, it may cut off the evacuation lane.”

Renn shook his head. “Or crash before it matters.”

“It matters if survivors come armed and loyal,” Lysa said.

Oren listened to the fading engine tone. “That pilot is not landing under control.”

Seconds later, the forest beyond the ridge lit white-orange. A crash rolled through the ground, followed by a rising column of black smoke. Several children screamed. The line crouched in place while burning debris fell somewhere ahead with dull thuds. The path west had not closed, but it had changed. Every step now carried them toward a crash site that might hold fire, wounded, enemies, or nothing but wreckage.

Lysa looked at Sella. “We can turn south and add an hour.”

Kane answered before Sella could. “Spine blast will reach the southern lowland if the tower goes.”

Oren nodded reluctantly. “West is still best.”

Renn looked at Jesus. “And You?”

Jesus’s eyes were on the smoke beyond the ridge. “There are survivors.”

No one asked how He knew. By then, even those who did not understand Him had stopped treating His words as guesses.

Vel gave a bitter breath. “Of course there are.”

Lysa closed her eyes briefly. “We are not equipped to rescue another crash crew.”

Jesus looked at her. “You are equipped to decide whether they are people.”

The words did not shame loudly. They simply revealed the next door. Lysa’s face tightened because she had heard truth and hated the timing. Sella understood. Every mercy had come when they were already exhausted. Every person saved made the road heavier. Yet leaving survivors to burn after everything that had happened would turn the day backward inside them.

Renn made the practical call. “Small team checks the crash. The rest keep moving to the ridge shelter. If survivors can walk, they walk. If they cannot, we mark the site for the second transport if it comes.”

“If they are armed?” Oren asked.

“Then you speak first,” Renn said. “And I aim second.”

Oren accepted that.

Sella knew she should stay with the main group. Her hands were damaged, her body was shaking, and she had no weapon control worth trusting. Still, she found herself stepping forward. Lysa saw it and started to object. Jesus did not.

“I am going,” Sella said.

Vel looked at her. “You can barely hold your own fingers straight.”

“Then I will not hold a rifle.”

“That was not a compliment.”

“I did not receive it as one.”

Vel stared at her, then cursed softly and stepped forward too. “Someone has to make sure you do not turn this into another speech.”

Sella almost smiled, but the crash smoke rose thicker, and the moment passed.

The crash team became six. Sella, Jesus, Vel, Oren, Kane, and a rebel scout named Brinn who knew the ridge path. They moved quickly through the trees while the rest of the group continued toward the ridge shelter under Lysa and Renn’s command. The ground grew warmer as they neared the crash. Smoke thickened, carrying the sharp smell of fuel and scorched insulation. Sella wrapped part of her sleeve over her mouth, though it did little good.

The Dominion craft had gone down nose-first in a shallow ravine. Its left wing was torn away, and its hull had split along the side, exposing a narrow crew compartment full of sparks and smoke. The markings on it belonged to an upper command shuttle, not a troop carrier. Sella felt Kane and Oren both stiffen when they saw it.

“What?” she asked.

Oren’s face had gone gray. “That is the tower commander’s shuttle.”

Vel drew her blade. “Then maybe we are done.”

Jesus looked toward the broken hull. “Not yet.”

A man coughed inside the wreckage. Another voice groaned. Kane moved closer with Oren, both careful, both visibly fighting old instinct. Brinn covered the opening with his rifle. Vel stayed beside Sella, blade low, eyes hard.

Kane peered through the split hull. “Two alive.”

“The commander?” Sella asked.

Kane’s jaw tightened. “Yes.”

Vel’s grip on the blade changed. “Pull the other one out first.”

Oren climbed into the smoke and dragged out a pilot whose face was burned along one side. The man was barely conscious, too wounded to fight. Kane pulled him clear while Brinn checked him for weapons. Then the voice inside the wreck came again, weaker but furious.

“Voss,” it rasped. “You faithless insect.”

Kane froze at the opening.

Oren looked at him. “Do not answer.”

The commander coughed hard. “Oren too. I should have vented your patrol with the rest.”

Vel’s face went cold. “Let him burn.”

Sella felt no immediate objection rise in her. That frightened her. After everything, after bridge and door and transport, some part of her still saw this man and wanted the world simpler. He had ordered executions, purges, seals, poison, and death for his own people. He had used Kane’s brother as a chain. He had turned the tower into a trap. He had tried to bury mercy with the ones who offered it. If anyone in the day represented the voice that had to be silenced, it was him.

The wreckage cracked as fire moved along the rear line.

Jesus stepped toward the opening.

Sella reached for Him with her bandaged hand and winced before she touched His sleeve. “He will kill us if he can.”

Jesus turned to her. “Yes.”

“He is not like the others.”

“He is a man.”

“He is the one who kept choosing this.”

Jesus’s eyes held hers. “And you must not let his darkness choose for you.”

Vel made a raw sound. “You cannot ask this.”

Jesus looked at her with deep sorrow. “I am not asking you to call him innocent.”

“Then what are You asking?”

“To not become obedient to his image.”

The wreck shifted again. Oren swore and climbed halfway back through the split hull. Kane went with him, though every line of his body resisted. They dragged the commander out as fire reached the rear compartment. He was older than Sella expected, with iron-gray hair, a bloodied temple, and one leg twisted beneath him at a wrong angle. Even injured, he carried command like a sickness. His eyes moved over them, measuring weakness, searching for fear.

When he saw Jesus, his face tightened. “You.”

Jesus stood over him. “Yes.”

The commander coughed and smiled with bloody teeth. “You ruined my tower with softness.”

“No,” Jesus said. “Your tower fell because it was built against truth.”

The commander laughed, then groaned from pain. “Truth belongs to whoever survives to record it.”

Sella stepped closer. “That is why you are afraid.”

His eyes snapped to her. “Sella Arven. Blood of a coward. Daughter of a traitor. You think one day of borrowed righteousness cleans your name?”

The words hit, but not where they would have hit that morning. She felt them strike the old wound and fail to enter as deeply. Blood of a coward. Daughter of a traitor. The tower had named her. The commander tried to name her again. But Jesus had already spoken a truer thing. She was seen by God before she was named by fear.

Sella crouched near him, keeping enough distance that he could not reach her. “My name is not clean because of what I did today.”

His smile widened. “Good.”

“It is not ruined because of what he did either.”

The smile faltered.

“I am Sella Arven,” she said. “I am Bram’s daughter. I am my mother’s daughter too. I am the sister of a boy who should have lived. I am wounded. I am angry. I am not yours to define.”

The commander stared at her, and for the first time fear crossed his face plainly. Not fear of death. Fear that his language had lost power.

Vel looked at Sella with something like grief and respect together. Kane lowered his eyes, breathing hard. Oren stood over the commander with fists clenched, every muscle begging for permission to end the man who had ordered his patrol to execute prisoners and then die with the rest.

Jesus looked toward the burning wreck. “We move.”

Brinn stared. “We are taking him?”

“We are not leaving him to burn,” Jesus said.

The rebel scout looked at Vel, then Sella, then Oren, hoping someone would make the decision less costly. No one did.

Vel sheathed her blade with shaking hands. “If he speaks again, I may forget everything I learned today.”

Sella looked at the commander. “Then gag him.”

Oren tore a strip from the pilot’s ruined outer coat and bound the commander’s mouth. The commander fought weakly, but his leg made real resistance impossible. Kane and Oren lifted him between them, not gently, but not cruelly. Brinn and Vel carried the injured pilot. Sella walked beside Jesus as they turned back toward the ridge path, leaving the command shuttle burning behind them.

For a while, no one spoke. The smoke followed them. The heat faded. The forest closed around the crash site, and rain began to win over fire in the leaves.

Sella’s whole body shook now, and she could not hide it. Jesus walked close enough that if she stumbled, He would catch her, but He did not hold her up before she needed it.

“I wanted him dead,” she said.

“I know.”

“I still do.”

“I know.”

“But I did not leave him.”

“No,” Jesus said.

She looked at Him through tears she had not felt begin. “When does that become forgiveness?”

Jesus’s voice was gentle. “Today, let it be obedience.”

That answer was enough for one step, then another. It did not ask her to feel what she could not feel. It did not call her anger holy or unholy in a way that flattened the truth. It gave the moment a name she could carry. Obedience. Not perfection. Not closure. Not a heart suddenly made simple. Obedience with burned hands, shaking legs, and a rescued enemy gagged between men he had tried to own.

They reached the ridge shelter as the main group prepared to move again. Lysa saw the commander and went still. Renn lifted his rifle halfway before Jesus’s presence stopped the motion more than any order. The hollow of the ridge path filled with stunned silence.

Kane and Oren lowered the commander to the ground.

Vel dropped the injured pilot beside the medics. “Do not ask me to explain it.”

Lysa looked at Sella. “You brought him.”

Sella met her eyes. “Jesus would not leave him to burn.”

Lysa’s jaw worked. “And you?”

Sella looked down at the commander, then toward the west where the first transport had disappeared. “I am trying not to let the worst man here decide what mercy means.”

The tower behind them gave one final, massive groan. The upper spine collapsed inward, and fire rose through the rain like a pillar. The shockwave reached them softer this time because distance had begun to do its work. People turned to watch the tower’s light fade behind the trees.

The path ahead remained hard, crowded, and uncertain. But the tower was no longer standing over them in the same way. Its voice had been carried out gagged and wounded, no longer a speaker in the walls, no longer a command that filled the sky. Just a man on the ground, still guilty, still dangerous, still seen by God.

Sella looked at Jesus.

He looked west. “Keep walking.”

Chapter Sixteen

The western path did not welcome them. It sloped through wet stone, tangled roots, and low branches that slapped at faces already streaked with ash. The ridge shelter fell behind them within minutes, swallowed by rain and smoke, and the column stretched into a long, uneven line beneath the trees. Those who could still carry weight carried it. Those who could barely walk were placed between stronger bodies. The wounded commander was dragged and lifted more than carried, his gag dark with rain, his eyes still bright with the hatred of a man who had lost the tower but not the desire to rule whatever space remained around him.

Sella walked near the middle again because the line needed steadiness there. Jesus stayed close, sometimes beside her, sometimes a few paces away where someone’s strength failed. The commander was ahead of them between Oren and Kane, his injured leg bound roughly to a broken branch to keep it from dragging. Vel walked several steps behind him with her blade visible at her side, not raised, not hidden. She had not forgiven anyone. She had only kept moving, and that had become its own form of obedience.

The tower burned behind them in broken intervals. Sometimes the trees blocked the view, and the only sign of it was a low red pulse through the mist. Other times the canopy opened, and the collapsing spine could be seen glowing above the forest like a judgment that had finally turned inward. The citadel above the moon was no longer whole. Pieces of it fell somewhere beyond the horizon in slow trails of fire. The sky looked wounded, but open. Sella kept thinking that should have felt like victory. Instead it felt like the world had exhaled after holding pain too long and did not yet know what breathing would become.

They had been walking nearly half an hour when the signal runner returned from the west. He was a young rebel named Corven, thin as a rail, with mud up to his knees and one sleeve torn open at the elbow. He came down the path so quickly that Lysa raised her rifle before she recognized him. Corven stopped with both hands up, bent over, and tried to speak through his breathing.

“The first transport reached the med ship,” he said.

Sella forgot the pain in her hands for one second. “The wounded?”

“Alive when they landed.” Corven swallowed and looked at her, which told her he knew whose life she was really asking about. “The child was breathing under oxygen. Tavik is in surgery. Rul is stable enough to be angry. Bram Arven was taken straight to the lower surgical bay.”

Sella closed her eyes. The relief did not come cleanly. It entered her and found all the rooms fear had been occupying, and the two wrestled there until she could barely stand. Jesus’s hand touched her shoulder, steady but not possessive. She breathed once, then again, and opened her eyes to the wet path ahead.

“Thank you,” she said.

Corven nodded, then turned to Lysa. “Second transport cannot land at the ridge flat. Too much debris coming down. They are moving to the river shelf, west by the old water towers. Maybe forty minutes on foot if the line holds.”

Lysa looked over the column, then toward the red glow behind them. “And if it does not?”

Corven had no answer. His silence was enough.

The news moved through the column in pieces. The wounded on the first transport had reached help. The child lived. Tavik lived. Rul lived. Bram lived, at least for now. For some, that brought relief. For others, especially those whose dead could not be carried to any surgical bay, it brought a new bitterness. Sella heard a man mutter that traitors always found a way to survive. Mara turned toward him with such force that he looked away before she spoke. Oran did not look at anyone. Vel kept walking with her eyes on the mud.

The commander heard the report too. Though gagged, he smiled.

Kane saw it first. He stopped so abruptly that Oren nearly lost his grip on the commander’s arm. “What is funny?”

The commander’s eyes flicked toward the command seal rod hanging from Kane’s belt. He could not speak, but the gesture was enough to draw attention. Kane looked down, then went still.

Lysa stepped close. “What?”

Kane removed the seal rod slowly and turned it in his hand. A small light had begun blinking near the base, faint under the rain but steady. “It is transmitting.”

Oren’s face drained. “He activated it before the crash.”

The commander’s smile widened behind the gag.

Vel drew her blade. “I knew we should have let him burn.”

Panic rippled through the nearest walkers. If the seal rod had been transmitting since the crash, loyal tower units could be following them, or worse, the beacon could be guiding aerial fire to the foot column. Kane twisted the base of the rod, searching for a release. Oren reached to help him, but his hands shook with anger.

“Can you shut it off?” Lysa asked.

“I should be able to,” Kane said, though his voice made the answer weaker than the words. “The seal has a command pulse. If it is tied to his authority, it may require his voice.”

The commander raised his eyebrows slightly, almost amused.

Renn stepped toward him. “Remove the gag.”

“No,” Vel said.

“We need him to speak.”

“He will use every word to poison this line.”

Jesus stood a few paces away, looking at the commander with a sorrow that did not soften the danger. “He has already been speaking through what you fear he might do.”

Vel’s face tightened. “That does not mean he deserves a voice.”

“No,” Jesus said. “It means fear is already giving him one.”

Sella understood before she wanted to. The commander’s silence had not made him powerless. People had been imagining his next move, his next threat, his next cruelty, and those imagined words had begun shaping decisions. He was ruling through suspicion because suspicion needed no speaker. She looked at Kane. He was staring at the blinking seal rod like it contained his brother’s life.

Lysa made the decision. “Remove the gag. Two rifles on him. If he says anything except what is needed, we stop his mouth again.”

Oren untied the gag with a roughness that drew a small groan from the commander. The older man worked his jaw, then spat blood and rainwater into the mud. His first breath as a free speaker seemed to please him.

“You are all walking toward a slaughter,” he said.

Lysa stepped forward and struck him across the mouth with the back of her hand. “That was not needed.”

The commander laughed softly, though pain twisted it. “You need the voice code.”

Kane held up the seal rod. “Deactivate the beacon.”

“No.”

Oren grabbed the front of his coat. “Do it.”

The commander looked at him with contempt. “Captain Oren, who broke his comm and now thinks himself reborn because rebels have not shot him yet. You were always too sentimental for command.”

Oren’s grip tightened. “And you were always too afraid to stand anywhere without machinery between you and consequences.”

That answer landed. Not enough to change the commander, but enough to strip pleasure from his face.

Sella stepped closer. “Deactivate it.”

The commander turned his eyes toward her. “Ah. The daughter who discovered mercy only after she needed it for her father.”

Sella felt the words strike, and for one moment the old instinct rose. Defend. Cut back. Make him smaller before he made her ashamed. But she had been walking too long with Jesus to miss the trap entirely.

“My father is not why I pulled you from the wreck,” she said.

“No. Your pride is. You wanted to prove you were better than me.”

Vel looked at Sella, and the accusation found some hidden question in her too. Sella felt that. It was not wholly false. Somewhere inside her, there had been a desire not to be like the commander, not to be like the tower, not to let the worst man define mercy. Jesus had already warned her not to use mercy as a mirror. The commander had found the same door and tried to force it open.

Sella breathed in. “Part of me did.”

The commander blinked, not expecting agreement.

Sella continued. “Part of me wanted proof that you had not made me like you. That part was not clean.”

Lysa looked at her sharply. Vel’s blade lowered a fraction. Kane stood very still.

“But you were still in a burning wreck,” Sella said. “And Jesus would not leave you there. So I obeyed before I understood all of myself.”

The commander’s face hardened because the answer gave him less to seize. “Then obey this. Remove my restraints. Give me the seal. I can stop the beacon and call off the pursuit.”

Kane’s jaw clenched. “There is pursuit.”

“Of course there is.”

“How close?”

“Close enough that your walking wounded will not reach the river shelf unless I speak.”

Lysa studied him. “Why would you call them off?”

“Because I have command authority and I prefer being alive.”

“You ordered the tower to bury you with us.”

“I ordered it to bury you,” he said. “I intended to be above the blast.”

Oren looked away in disgust.

The commander’s eyes moved over the group, measuring the new pain his words caused. “Your mercy saved me from an inconvenience. I can reward it with usefulness.”

Jesus looked at him. “You mistake being spared for being unchanged.”

The commander turned toward Him with open hatred. “And You mistake weakness for holiness.”

“No,” Jesus said. “I know what holiness costs.”

Something in the words struck the air differently. The commander opened his mouth and closed it again. For a moment, his face showed something almost like fear, though he buried it quickly under contempt.

The beacon kept blinking.

Corven climbed a low root to scan the eastern path. “Movement behind us. Not close enough to see. Engines maybe.”

Lysa pointed to the west. “The column keeps moving. Renn, take the front. Corven guides to the river shelf. Sella, Jesus, Kane, Oren, with me. We deal with the seal while walking.”

Vel stepped forward. “I stay with him.”

Lysa did not argue.

They moved again, but the center of the column had changed. Fear now had a blinking light. The commander was carried forward with his mouth uncovered and two rifles near his head. Kane worked at the seal rod while walking, trying combinations and low-level command codes, each failure marked by a dull red pulse. Oren gave him old security phrases from memory. None worked. The commander remained quiet for several minutes, saving his strength or his poison.

The forest began to slope toward lower ground. Water ran along the path in thin streams. The trees grew taller and farther apart, opening glimpses of a swollen river below. Across it rose a shelf of dark stone where the second transport would try to land if it came. Sella saw the distance and understood Corven’s warning. Forty minutes if the line held. The line was not holding well. The new refugees had slowed them. The wounded needed more pauses. The beacon might be shortening the enemy’s route with every pulse.

Kane stopped at another failed code and looked at the commander. “If your men catch this line, they will kill tower workers too.”

The commander’s mouth curved. “Disobedient workers.”

“Children.”

“Collateral disobedience.”

Vel lunged so fast that Sella barely saw the blade move. Jesus caught her wrist before the knife reached the commander’s throat. He did not wrench it. He simply held her there, and Vel shook with the force of everything she wanted to do.

“He is poison,” she said through clenched teeth.

Jesus looked at her. “Then do not drink what he offers.”

“He deserves death.”

“Yes,” Jesus said.

The answer broke through the moment the same way it had in the creek bed with Sella. Vel stared at Him, stunned by the absence of denial.

Jesus continued. “But you are not commanded to become death’s servant.”

Vel’s face twisted. “My brother became death’s victim.”

Jesus’s voice softened without weakening. “Then do not let this man command what remains of your brother in you.”

Vel’s grip loosened. The knife lowered. She turned away abruptly, breathing hard, and Sella saw tears and fury together on her face. Jesus released her wrist. She did not thank Him. She did not need to. She had not killed the commander, and sometimes that was the only prayer a person could manage.

The commander watched the exchange with narrowed eyes. “You are collecting broken people.”

Jesus looked at him. “I came to seek and to save the lost.”

The commander laughed under his breath. “Then You have chosen a generous hunting ground.”

Sella expected Jesus to answer. He did not. His silence made the commander’s mockery sound smaller than it wanted to be.

The path widened briefly near a cluster of old stone water towers, half collapsed and covered in vines. Corven signaled that the river shelf was close. The column gathered in the shadow of the structures to rest for three minutes, though three minutes felt dangerous with the beacon still alive. The river could be heard now, swollen by rain, rushing hard against stone. Beyond it, the shelf lay open enough for landing but also open enough to be seen from the air.

Kane crouched beside the seal rod with both hands around it. “There is one possible way.”

Lysa knelt. “Say it.”

“If I overload the command pulse, it may burn the transmitter. But it will also send one final burst strong enough to confirm our exact location.”

“Meaning pursuit comes faster.”

“Yes.”

“What happens if we do nothing?”

“They keep following the beacon anyway.”

Oren looked toward the eastern trees. “A final burst might pull them straight here before the transport lands.”

The commander smiled again. “Or you can let me speak.”

Sella looked at him. “What would you say?”

“I would order them to halt.”

Kane shook his head. “No, you would not.”

“I might.”

“You would order them to fire on the landing shelf.”

The commander did not deny it quickly enough.

Lysa stood and looked at the surrounding people. The choice was ugly. Burn the transmitter and reveal their location, or let the beacon keep guiding pursuit. Trust the commander and be betrayed, or silence him and remain hunted. Sella felt the old pressure to choose the least terrible answer before the weight crushed everyone.

Jesus looked at the seal rod. “Who hears the beacon?”

Kane frowned. “Any loyal command receiver within range.”

“And who else can hear a command burst?”

Kane looked down at the rod again. Slowly, understanding entered his face. “Any receiver. Not only loyalists.”

Oren leaned closer. “You could broadcast to the med ship.”

“Maybe. If the final burst opens all channels for a second, I could attach a distress code.”

Lysa’s eyes sharpened. “Can you include our numbers and pursuit status?”

“In one second? No. But I can include evacuation priority and hostile beacon compromise.”

Corven looked toward the river shelf. “The transport pilot might pick it up.”

“The med ship might too,” Kane said. “Or no one does.”

Tavik would have hated the word maybe again, but he was not there to complain. Sella missed his voice in that moment more than she expected.

The commander’s face darkened. “If you overload that seal, you destroy the only authority keeping my remaining units organized.”

Kane looked at him. “Good.”

“No,” the commander snapped, and for the first time real panic broke through. “You do not understand what disorganized armed men will do.”

Oren’s face changed because he did understand. “He is not wrong.”

Vel gave a bitter laugh. “Now we care about his organization?”

Oren looked at her. “Armed men without command can become worse in the first hour after collapse.”

Renn came back from the front, having heard enough to join the decision. “Then we need the med ship to know where we are before that first hour reaches us.”

Lysa looked at Kane. “Do it.”

The commander surged against his restraints. Pain from his leg made him gasp, but he fought anyway. “Voss, I will have your brother stripped from every registry. I will erase his name before he dies.”

Kane froze.

There it was again. The chain. Even after the tower fell, even gagged, wounded, dragged through mud, the commander found the one place fear still had a hook. Sella saw Kane’s hand tremble over the seal rod. Oren started to speak, but Jesus lifted one hand slightly, and Oren stopped.

Jesus stepped close to Kane. “What is your brother’s name?”

Kane’s eyes filled. “Elias.”

“Say it.”

“Elias Voss.”

“Is he kept alive by this man’s mercy?”

Kane’s jaw worked. “No.”

“Is he protected by your obedience to evil?”

Kane closed his eyes. “No.”

“Then speak his name into truth, not fear.”

Kane opened his eyes and looked at the commander. The trembling did not stop, but something beneath it steadied. “His name is Elias Voss. If I live, I will find him. If I die, God sees him. But I will not keep feeding you pieces of my soul and call it protection.”

The commander’s face twisted with rage. “God sees nothing.”

Jesus answered, “He sees you now.”

The words silenced him. Not because he believed them, perhaps, but because some part of him feared they might be true.

Kane turned back to the seal rod. He worked quickly now, entering an overload chain with one hand while setting the distress burst with the other. Oren helped stabilize the rod against a flat stone. Lysa and Renn ordered everyone down under the old water tower walls in case the final pulse drew fire. Sella crouched beside Vel, whose blade remained sheathed but whose whole body shook from restraint.

“Do you ever get tired of not killing him?” Vel muttered.

“Yes,” Sella said.

Vel looked at her, startled.

Sella kept her eyes on Kane. “I am tired of almost everything today.”

Vel’s mouth trembled. “That may be the first thing you have said that I fully trust.”

Kane looked up. “Ready.”

Lysa nodded.

He triggered the overload.

The seal rod screamed. A burst of white light shot from its core, so bright that everyone turned away. Static cracked through every loose comm, scavenged receiver, and damaged helmet in the column. For one second, the forest filled with fragments of voices. Loyalist commands. Medical chatter. Rebel flight calls. A child crying through someone’s open channel. Then Kane shouted into the burst with a voice that tore from the deepest part of him.

“Evacuation priority. River shelf west of tower. Mixed survivors. Children and wounded. Hostile beacon compromised. Tower command fallen. Send aid.”

The seal rod exploded in his hands.

Kane fell backward. Sella moved toward him, but Jesus was already there. The rod lay in pieces, smoking in the mud. Kane’s hands were burned, though not as badly as Sella’s. He stared at them in shock, then laughed once, a broken sound that became a sob.

“I said it,” he whispered. “I said tower command fallen.”

Jesus knelt beside him. “Yes.”

The commander stared at the shattered seal with a face emptied of its old certainty. For the first time since they dragged him from the wreck, he looked not merely defeated, but lost. His tower was gone. His voice was cut off. His seal was ash. The people he had named as assets, traitors, collateral, or disobedient were crouched together under old stone while the rain put out the smoke from the thing that had carried his authority.

A distant engine sounded from the west.

Then another.

Corven climbed the water tower base and looked toward the river. “Transport incoming.”

The sound grew louder, joined by a second craft and then a lower, heavier hum beyond both. Kane’s distress burst had reached someone. The column rose cautiously, afraid to hope too quickly. Through the trees over the river shelf, lights appeared in the rain. Not one transport. Three. Behind them, farther west, the broad glow of a med ship hovered low over the river valley.

People began crying before the craft landed.

Sella looked at Jesus. The relief was so large it hurt.

He did not say anything at first. He simply stood beside her as the lights came through the rain.

Then the commander laughed. It was weak, but sharp enough to cut through the first fragile hope. “You think this ends because transports arrive? You think your mercy survives courts, hunger, revenge, names, records, widows, orphans, and men like me telling the world you lied?”

Sella turned toward him slowly.

His eyes fixed on hers. “You saved bodies. You have not changed human nature.”

The words entered the open place where exhaustion made hope tender. Sella felt the weight of them. The commander was wrong, but not entirely. The transports would not finish forgiveness. The med ship would not heal every memory. Courts might fail. Records might be altered. People might return to fear tomorrow. Bram might die, or live long enough to suffer public hatred. Kane’s brother was still somewhere under Dominion reach. Vel still grieved Joret. Renn still carried Elya. Mara still missed Edrin. The world had not become simple because rescue lights came through the trees.

Jesus stepped between Sella and the commander, not to shield her from truth, but to answer the lie inside it.

“The kingdom of God does not begin because men become trustworthy,” Jesus said. “It begins because God is.”

The commander’s face tightened.

Jesus continued, “You are right that mercy will be tested. You are wrong that darkness owns the test.”

The first transport settled onto the river shelf with engines roaring rain sideways across the stone. Medics jumped out, followed by armed escorts who stopped in confusion at the sight of rebels, tower workers, disarmed soldiers, and prisoners gathered together. Lysa stepped forward to meet them. Renn went with her. Oren lowered his head as if unsure whether he would be arrested or treated. Kane tried to stand and nearly fell. Vel grabbed his elbow, then looked annoyed that she had done it.

Sella stayed with Jesus as the evacuation began again, larger now, more ordered, but still rough. The commander was lifted onto a stretcher under guard. He stared at Jesus the whole time, as if trying to hate Him enough to become certain again. Jesus looked at him with the same mercy He had given everyone else, and that seemed to trouble the man more than contempt would have.

As they carried him toward the transport, the commander turned his head toward Sella one last time. “Your father will still answer.”

Sella met his gaze. “So will you.”

He smiled faintly. “And you?”

The question struck deeper than he knew. Sella looked down at her bandaged hands, then toward the med ship lights glowing through rain. She thought of the rifle in the creek, the bridge lever, the blast door, the burning wreck, the child on the transport, her father’s cheek under her fingers.

“Yes,” she said. “Me too.”

The commander looked away first.

Jesus stood beside her while the river roared below and the rescue craft filled the shelf with light. For the first time all day, the next step did not feel like running from the tower. It felt like walking toward judgment, healing, grief, consequence, and maybe the first hard shape of peace.

Chapter Seventeen

The river shelf became a place where every person had to be named again. Medics came down from the transports carrying stretchers, oxygen hoods, trauma wraps, and bright lamps that turned the rain into silver lines. Armed escorts followed them, tense at first, because the scene in front of them did not match any report they had been trained to trust. Rebels stood beside disarmed tower soldiers. Dominion workers held children who had fled the purge. Former guards lifted wounded prisoners from mud. The commander of the shield tower lay gagged on a stretcher under the same emergency blanket as the people he had tried to bury.

Lysa met the lead medic with Renn and explained the situation in words so brief they sounded impossible. Shield down. Tower collapsing. Mixed survivors. Hostile commander in custody. Critical wounded already aboard the med ship. More coming on foot. Children first. Respiratory cases second. Severe bleeding third. Prisoners under guard but treated. The medic stared at her for half a breath, looked beyond her at the line of soaked and shaking people, then stopped trying to make the story fit and started giving orders.

That saved them from the worst kind of argument. People will argue about meaning when no one tells them where to stand. The medics created lanes with glow strips on the stone. The first lane took children and those who could not breathe well. The second took severe injuries. The third moved those who could walk toward the larger transport. The fourth held detainees who needed medical care but required guard. Even that word, detainees, sounded strange after the day. It was more orderly than enemies, less dishonest than friends, and not large enough for what some of them had become to one another in the forest.

Sella was placed in the second lane until she stepped out of it.

Mara caught her arm carefully below the burns. “Where are you going?”

“To help.”

“You are in the injury lane because you are injured.”

“My legs work.”

“Your hands do not.”

Sella looked down at the bandages. The cloth had darkened again, and the pain had settled into a deep throb that made her arms feel hollow from wrist to shoulder. She had stopped noticing the worst of it while they were moving because fear had been louder. Now that rescue lights surrounded them, her body had begun telling the truth without asking permission.

Jesus stood a few feet away beside Kane, whose burned hands were being wrapped by a medic who kept scolding him for trying to answer questions at the same time. Jesus looked toward Sella, and she knew before He spoke that He had heard every excuse forming inside her.

“You can receive care without abandoning the living,” He said.

Sella almost argued. The argument felt old before it reached her mouth. She thought of all the ways she had confused usefulness with worth. She thought of Bram lying in the first transport, unable to earn breath and still carried. She thought of Ena under oxygen, of Tavik forced to let others lift him, of Kane with his hands shaking after the seal exploded. The tower had measured life by function. Jesus had spent the day refusing that measurement.

She stepped back into the injury lane.

Mara’s expression softened only a little. “Good.”

“Do not sound pleased.”

“I am too tired to hide it.”

A medic led Sella to a portable shelter near the largest transport and began cutting the outer bandages from her palms. The air struck the burns, and Sella had to look away toward the river. The water below was swollen and dark, rushing between stone banks with pieces of ash floating on the surface. Across the valley, the med ship hovered low, its underside lit with emergency white, receiving wounded by lift cradle faster than the smaller transports could cycle. It looked impossible that anything so full of pain could also be a place of rescue.

The medic cleaned her hands. Sella did not cry out, but she came close. Jesus had moved nearer without making her feel watched. He stood outside the shelter with rain beading along His hair, speaking quietly with a boy who had lost track of his mother in the column. Within moments, the mother appeared from the second transport line, and the boy ran into her arms so hard they both nearly fell. Jesus watched them with a joy so quiet that Sella felt tears rise unexpectedly. She turned back toward the river before the medic could see.

The lead transport lifted with the first group from the river shelf. The second began loading almost immediately. The commander was carried toward the detainee lane, still glaring at anyone who looked at him long enough. When the medics tried to examine his leg, he jerked away and spat an insult through the gag until Lysa ordered it removed for treatment only. The moment his mouth was free, he began again.

“You think medical rules protect you from what comes next?” he said to the medic. “When order returns, every name here will be reviewed.”

The medic, a broad woman with gray hair cut short at the jaw, tightened the brace on his leg harder than necessary but not hard enough to harm him. “Breathe through it.”

His eyes flashed. “Do you know who I am?”

“Yes,” she said. “You are the man whose pulse I am checking. Be still.”

Sella heard it and almost laughed, though the sound died before it formed. The commander looked smaller under clinical hands. Not harmless. Never harmless. But reduced from a voice in the walls to a patient who could be told to be still. It was a kind of judgment he seemed less able to bear than pain.

Kane stood nearby while his own hands were wrapped. He had not taken his eyes from the commander. Oren came to him after speaking with one of the rebel escorts. The two men stood in silence for a moment, both stripped of the structures that had once told them how to relate. Oren had been a captain. Kane had been a security escort. Now one had crushed his comm, and the other had destroyed the seal rod. Their ranks hung around them like wet paper.

Oren said, “I heard the med ship has access to evacuation registries.”

Kane looked at him sharply.

“Elias may be in one of them,” Oren continued. “If your brother was held under family leverage status, he might have been moved when the tower collapsed.”

Kane’s face tightened with hope so sudden it almost looked like pain. “You know how to search that?”

“I know what tags they used.”

“Why would you help me?”

Oren looked toward the commander, who was now arguing with the medic about restraint straps. “Because I obeyed men like him long enough. And because if I start telling the truth, I should not stop at the parts that make me look brave.”

Kane lowered his eyes. For a moment he looked too tired to speak. Then he nodded. “Thank you.”

Oren received the words without pride. “Do not thank me until we find him.”

Jesus heard them. He did not interrupt. He only watched the small beginning of reparation form between two men who had served fear differently and were now trying to learn a new language without enough words.

When the medic finished cleaning Sella’s hands, she wrapped them in a cooling seal and ordered her to keep them elevated. Sella almost asked how she was supposed to do that while evacuation was still underway, but Mara appeared with a folded sling cloth and raised one eyebrow.

“Do not make me enjoy being right again,” Mara said.

Sella let her bind the sling around her shoulders so both hands rested against her chest. The position made her feel useless and strangely exposed. She could no longer reach for a rifle quickly. She could no longer grab, pull, hold, or shove. She had to walk through the river shelf with empty arms while others carried weight around her. It took more courage than she wanted to admit.

Vel came to stand beside her while the next group loaded. The rebel woman’s face was streaked with rain and exhaustion, and her eyes were fixed on the detainee lane where the commander lay under guard.

“I still want him dead,” Vel said.

Sella looked at her. “I know.”

“I thought saving him would make me feel cleaner somehow. It does not. I did not even help pull him out, and I still feel angry that he is breathing.”

“You did help keep walking after he was pulled out.”

Vel gave her a sideways look. “That is a very small mercy.”

“Small mercies may be all we can tell the truth about today.”

Vel was quiet for a while. A child laughed once near the transport ramp because a medic gave him a sweet tablet to keep him awake, and the sound seemed almost shocking under the ruined sky. Vel looked toward it, then away.

“Joret would have mocked me for becoming this serious,” she said.

Sella waited.

“He was the one who carried that enemy pilot years ago. I told you that. What I did not say is that I yelled at him for it the whole way. I told him the pilot would have left him in a ditch. Joret said maybe so, but he was not going to let the worst man in the story write his part.” Her mouth trembled, and she looked angry that grief had found her again. “I forgot that until today.”

Sella thought of Jesus’s words about letting the dead be loved without chaining them to vengeance. “Maybe you did not forget. Maybe it was buried under how he died.”

Vel wiped her face with the back of her wrist. “I do not forgive the people who killed him.”

“No one is forcing you to say you do.”

“But if I live long enough, I may have to remember him better than my rage does.”

Sella looked toward Jesus, who was helping lift an older worker into the transport because the man trusted Him more than the medics. “Yes.”

Vel breathed in shakily. “I hate how much work truth is.”

Sella almost smiled. “So do I.”

The second transport took off with the wounded from the river shelf and climbed toward the med ship. The third remained grounded for those who could sit upright. Everyone else would walk down to the lower river crossing where additional craft could load more safely. The immediate crisis had turned into movement again. That had been the shape of the whole day. Door, path, crossing, choice. Another door, another path, another crossing, another choice.

When Sella’s turn came to board the third transport, she hesitated. The craft smelled of wet metal, smoke, and field disinfectant. People sat shoulder to shoulder inside, some wrapped in blankets, some still guarded, some too tired to care who leaned against them. She saw Oran seated across from Tessa, both refusing to make conversation while sharing a crate between them for balance. Mara sat near the ramp with a child asleep against her side. Oren and Kane remained near the commander’s stretcher because the escorts wanted both of them available for identification and because neither trusted the commander out of sight.

Jesus stepped onto the transport last.

Sella sat near the side hatch, hands bound against her chest, looking out as the river shelf dropped away. The transport lifted roughly and banked west toward the med ship. Through the open view slit, she saw the tower in the distance. Its upper spine had collapsed into a red wound, and smoke rose through the rain in twisting columns. The shield shimmer was gone from the sky. Where it had once curved over them like invisible control, there was now only storm, battle smoke, and the first faint clearing of dawn-colored light beyond the clouds.

The craft crossed the river, and the med ship opened beneath them like a floating harbor of light. Its landing bay was crowded with wounded from the first transport, rebel crews, rescued tower personnel, and medics running between stretchers. The moment the ramp lowered, noise rushed in. Names being called. Equipment rolling. Orders given. Someone praying. Someone cursing. Someone crying for a brother. Sella stepped down carefully and looked for Bram before she could stop herself.

A medic guided her toward triage, but she asked about him.

“Bram Arven,” she said. “He came on the first transport.”

The medic’s face changed in the guarded way of someone who had heard the name more than once already. “Surgical bay two.”

“Alive?”

“In surgery.”

That was all they would give her. It had to be enough.

Jesus walked beside her through the landing bay. People turned when He passed. Some recognized Him from the tower. Some did not, but looked anyway because suffering knows when peace has entered a room. He stopped beside Tavik’s stretcher, where Tavik lay pale but conscious with a tube in one arm and a medic trying to keep him from sitting up.

“I am not built for beds,” Tavik said when he saw Sella.

“You are barely built for standing,” Sella answered.

He smiled weakly. “Cruel but accurate.”

“How bad?”

“They keep saying words like internal bleeding and fortunate timing. I am choosing to focus on fortunate.”

Lysa stood beside him, arms crossed, looking more shaken than she would ever admit. “He almost died before they got him into surgery prep.”

Tavik gave her a look. “I was trying to make the day memorable.”

“You succeeded.”

Sella wanted to touch his shoulder, but her hands were bound. Tavik saw the movement fail and his expression softened. “You look terrible.”

“So do you.”

“Yes, but I make it charming.”

For the first time all day, Sella laughed. It was small, cracked, and close to tears, but it was real. Tavik looked pleased with himself, then winced and decided the laugh had cost him too much.

Rul lay a few beds away, with Kane standing beside him. The younger soldier was pale but awake, and Oren was speaking to a med ship clerk at a nearby console. Sella approached as the clerk brought up a registry screen. Kane’s wrapped hands hovered uselessly near the console, as if he wanted to seize the information by force.

Oren leaned over the display. “Search family leverage status. Name Elias Voss. Age seventeen. Possible transfer from capital holding to outer labor registry.”

The clerk worked quickly. Lines of names moved across the screen. Kane stopped breathing. Jesus stood nearby, His face full of compassion and no false promise. Sella found herself praying without words. Not because she had suddenly become good at it, but because there was nowhere else for the hope to go.

The clerk stopped scrolling.

Kane whispered, “What?”

Oren read first. His face shifted. “Alive.”

Kane closed his eyes and nearly collapsed. Rul grabbed his sleeve from the bed.

“Where?” Kane asked.

“Transferred three days ago to a transport depot,” the clerk said. “Not tower custody. It looks like the file was flagged for review but never completed.”

Kane laughed and sobbed at the same time. He pressed his wrapped hands against his forehead and bent over as if the news were too heavy to hold upright. Rul cried too, quietly. Oren stepped back and looked away, giving Kane the dignity of not being watched too closely.

Jesus placed a hand on Kane’s shoulder. “God saw him before you knew where to look.”

Kane nodded, unable to speak.

The news moved through Sella in a strange way. Elias was alive. Bram was in surgery. Ena was breathing under oxygen. Tavik was making foolish jokes under tubes. Not all had survived. Not all would. But life had appeared in places fear had tried to seal. She felt prayer shift inside her, not into ease, but into something like a wounded trust taking its first breath.

A commotion rose near the detainee area. The commander had been placed under restraint beside two loyalist pilots, and a rebel officer was arguing with a med ship security chief about where to hold him. The commander saw Sella across the bay and spoke loudly enough to carry.

“Ask your healer if God sees the dead I ordered into the ground.”

The bay quieted near him.

Jesus turned toward the commander.

The man’s face was pale from pain, but his eyes burned with bitter challenge. “Does He count them too? Or only the ones You managed to make useful today?”

Jesus walked to him slowly. No one stopped Him. The commander seemed to draw strength from the attention, as if he could rebuild a small tower out of one cruel question.

Jesus stood beside the stretcher. “He counts them.”

The commander’s smile faltered.

“Every one,” Jesus said.

The bay grew still around the words.

The commander’s mouth tightened. “Then He counted while they died.”

“Yes,” Jesus said, and there was such sorrow in Him that Sella felt the whole room change. “And He will judge every evil done to them, including yours.”

For the first time, the commander did not have a quick answer.

Jesus continued, His voice low but clear. “The mercy that spared you from the fire does not hide you from truth. It gives you breath in which to repent.”

The commander stared at Him, and something like terror moved under the hatred. “I do not need repentance.”

Jesus looked at him with a grief deeper than anger. “That is the most dangerous wound in you.”

The commander turned his face away. The exchange ended there, not because he had changed, but because truth had been spoken and left standing beside him like a witness.

Sella felt a medic touch her elbow. “Your burns need fuller treatment.”

She looked toward surgical bay two.

The medic followed her gaze. “You cannot see him yet.”

“I know.”

Jesus came back to her side. “Let them care for you.”

This time she did not argue. She let the medic lead her to a treatment cot near the edge of the bay. Jesus walked with her. When she sat, the exhaustion she had outrun since dawn finally arrived with its full weight. Her body shook. Her eyes burned. Her hands throbbed inside the cooling wraps. She had thought rest would feel like relief. Instead it felt like the moment when all the things she had not felt came looking for her.

Jesus sat beside the cot on a low metal stool. He did not fill the silence. He let it open.

Sella stared at the floor. “I prayed without words when they searched for Elias.”

“Yes.”

“I do not know if that counts.”

“It was heard.”

She looked at Him. “I am still angry at God for the grain chute.”

“I know.”

“I do not know how to pray from there.”

Jesus’s eyes held hers. “Then begin there honestly.”

Her breath caught. “What would I even say?”

“The truth.”

The medic worked on her hands, but Sella barely felt the first touch. She looked past Jesus to the landing bay full of the wounded, guilty, rescued, grieving, and guarded. She thought of the girl she had been, hidden under the floor while smoke stole the world above. She thought of all the years she had made her anger stand watch over that child. Then she looked at Jesus, who had walked with her through tower, fire, judgment, and mercy without once asking her to pretend.

Her voice came out low. “Father, I am still under the floor in some part of me.”

Jesus bowed His head slightly, as if receiving the prayer with reverence.

Sella continued, and tears slid down her face freely now. “I do not know how to come out all at once. I do not know how to forgive all at once. I do not know how to stop being afraid that love will leave through a locked door. But I am here. I am tired. I am angry. I am listening.”

No light split the med ship ceiling. No voice thundered over the bay. No pain vanished from her hands. But something in her chest loosened, not enough to make the wound disappear, enough to let air reach it.

Jesus looked at her with a tenderness that did not rush healing. “That is prayer.”

Sella closed her eyes. Around her, the med ship carried the living through rain toward whatever judgment and mercy waited after battle. She did not know if Bram would survive surgery. She did not know if Elias would be found before fear reached him again. She did not know what courts, records, grief, or forgiveness would demand from any of them. But for the first time since the east gate, she had spoken to the Father from the place she had hidden, and she had not been alone there.

Chapter Eighteen

The surgery light above bay two stayed red long after Sella’s hands had been treated and bound in clean white wraps. She sat on the edge of the treatment cot with both arms resting in a sling against her chest, watching the far door as if her eyes could hold Bram’s life in place. The med ship moved through storm and smoke, its engines steady beneath the floor, carrying the wounded away from the shielded moon toward a river outpost where larger care waited. Around her, people slept in pieces. Some lay under blankets. Some sat upright because pain would not let them lie down. Some stared at nothing while the battle kept ending inside them after the weapons had gone quiet.

Jesus remained near her, though He had moved often through the bay. He sat with Ena’s mother when the child’s breathing strengthened. He stood beside Kane when the first message came back that Elias Voss had been located in a transport depot registry and marked for recovery by rebel medical command. He placed a hand on Tavik’s shoulder when the rebel’s jokes finally ran out and fear showed through the cracks. He spoke quietly to Oren when the former captain gave his testimony to a recorder and named the ridge sweep without hiding behind orders. He did not make the day less painful. He made it impossible for pain to be alone.

When the surgical light finally changed from red to white, Sella stood too fast and nearly fell. Mara caught her by the elbow before Jesus needed to. The surgeon stepped through the door still wearing blood-streaked gloves, his face drawn with exhaustion. Sella tried to ask the question, but her voice did not come. The surgeon understood anyway.

“He is alive,” he said. “The wound was worse than we hoped and better than it could have been. He will need more surgery when we reach the outpost, but he is alive.”

Sella closed her eyes. The relief did not come as joy. It came as collapse. Her knees weakened, and Mara held her until she could breathe again. Somewhere behind her, Vel let out a sound that was not approval and not anger. Oran lowered his head. Renn, who had come aboard the med ship to coordinate the wounded, turned away and pressed one hand over his eyes. None of them were happy exactly. They were witnesses to a life spared that still had to answer for lives lost, and there was no easy place to put that.

“Can I see him?” Sella asked.

“For a few minutes,” the surgeon said. “He may not stay awake.”

Jesus walked with her to the recovery bay. Bram lay under a warming sheet with tubes running from his arm and a breathing line resting near his face. He looked small in the way wounded parents look small to grown children, and that hurt Sella more than she expected. For years he had been too large inside her pain, a figure big enough to explain every locked room in her heart. Now he was only a man on a bed, guilty, loved, weak, alive.

His eyes opened when she came near.

“Sella,” he whispered.

She sat beside him carefully. “Do not try to talk too much.”

A faint movement touched his mouth. “You sound like your mother.”

The words almost broke her. Not because they were wrong, but because they brought her mother into the room without smoke. Sella looked down at her bandaged hands. “I prayed today.”

Bram’s eyes filled.

“I prayed from the place under the floor,” she said. “I told God I was still there in some part of me.”

Bram closed his eyes, and tears slipped down both sides of his face. “I am so sorry.”

“I know.” She breathed in slowly. “I believe you now.”

His eyes opened again.

“That does not mean I know how to carry everything,” she continued. “It does not mean I am ready to call the past healed. It does not mean there will not be judgment. You still have to tell the truth. You still have to say their names. You still have to answer.”

“I will,” he whispered.

“I will not protect you from that.”

“Good.”

“But I do not want hatred to be the only thing connecting me to you anymore.”

Bram looked at her as if mercy had become almost too bright to look at directly. “That is more than I hoped for.”

“It is not everything.”

“It is enough for this breath.”

Sella nodded because that was true. Maybe healing would come like that now, not as one grand crossing, but breath by breath. One honest word. One name spoken. One memory returned without being forced to serve anger. One prayer from under the floor. One day where love did not have to pretend it was whole to be real.

Jesus stood near the end of the bed, quiet as the med ship hummed around them. Bram looked toward Him with the fear of a man who had no argument left.

“Lord,” Bram whispered, and the word seemed to cost him more than any confession before it. “What do I do if I live?”

Jesus came closer. “You walk in the light you have been given. You tell the truth. You make repair where repair is possible. You bear consequence without calling it abandonment. You receive mercy without using it as a hiding place.”

Bram wept silently. “And if she never fully forgives me?”

Jesus looked at Sella before He answered, not placing weight on her, only honoring that the question touched her life too. “Then you love her without demanding her healing serve your peace.”

Bram nodded with a grief that looked almost like worship. Sella reached out and placed her wrapped fingers lightly against the edge of his blanket. It was the closest she could come to holding his hand. He understood and did not ask for more.

By the time dawn touched the med ship windows, the battle above the moon had become distant thunder. The citadel had fallen beyond the far horizon, and the shield tower was a smoking ruin behind them. Reports came in broken fragments. Some units surrendered. Some fled. Some kept fighting because fear does not always die when its symbols fall. The work ahead would be long, painful, and full of arguments no one in the med bay had strength to begin. Records would be opened. Testimonies would be taken. Prisoners would be guarded. Families would search lists for the living and the dead. Mercy had not ended justice. It had made justice answer to truth instead of rage.

Sella stood later near a narrow window with her hands bound against her chest, looking down at the river valley as the med ship descended toward the outpost. Mist rose from the water. Broken sunlight touched the treetops. The shielded moon looked almost gentle from above, which felt unfair after all it had held. Kane stood across the bay reading Elias’s registry confirmation again and again, as if the letters might vanish if he trusted them too quickly. Vel sat near Joret’s sister tags, which she had taken from her neck and held open in her palm while she spoke quietly to Mara about the brother she was trying to remember better than his death. Oren gave another statement. Renn listened. The commander lay under guard in silence, no longer speaking, though his eyes still resisted everything mercy had revealed.

Jesus came to stand beside Sella.

“I do not feel finished,” she said.

“You are not.”

She looked at Him. “I thought endings were supposed to feel more complete.”

“Some endings are doors.”

She watched the river widen beneath them. “Will I always feel the grain chute?”

Jesus’s voice was gentle. “You may remember it. But it will not always hold you.”

Her eyes filled again. She was tired of crying, but the tears came differently now. They did not feel like defeat. They felt like something frozen learning how to move.

“I do not know how to thank You,” she said.

“Follow Me in the next true thing.”

She turned toward Him. “And if I am afraid?”

“Then bring fear with you, but do not let it lead.”

The med ship settled at the river outpost as morning opened over the wet valley. The landing was rough, and several people woke with startled cries, but no one died in the landing. That felt like grace enough for the moment. When the ramp lowered, clean air entered the bay. Sella breathed it in and thought of the forest, the tower, the bridge, the door, the wreck, the transport, the surgery light, and the first prayer she had spoken from the buried place inside her.

Jesus walked down the ramp before the others. He helped the medics unload the wounded. He carried Ena for a few steps so her mother could climb down safely. He steadied Tavik’s stretcher while Tavik complained that he had lost all dignity and Lysa told him he had never owned much. He stood beside Kane when a confirmation arrived that Elias was being moved under protection. He looked once toward the guarded commander, not with hatred, not with weakness, but with the terrible mercy of One who still offered repentance to a man who hated needing it.

When the last of the wounded had been moved into the outpost tents, Jesus walked away from the noise toward the riverbank. Sella saw Him go and followed at a distance, not because she wanted to interrupt Him, but because the day had begun with Him in prayer and some part of her knew it had to end there too. The river moved wide and dark beneath the morning light. Smoke still marked the sky behind the trees, but birds had begun to call from the wet branches as if creation had not forgotten its song.

Jesus knelt on the damp ground near the water.

Sella stopped beneath a tree and did not go closer. She watched Him bow His head, holy and quiet, with the river before Him and the wounded world behind Him. He prayed without performance, without hurry, without needing anyone to hear. The same hands that had steadied the guilty, touched the wounded, stopped a machine, wrapped burned skin, and lifted children now rested open before the Father.

Sella bowed her head too.

She did not have many words yet. She only had enough.

“Father,” she whispered, “I am here.”

The river kept moving. The morning kept widening. Jesus remained in quiet prayer, and the shielded moon, the broken tower, the grieving, the guilty, the rescued, and the girl who had waited under the floor were all seen by God.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Della Wren

The Philosophy of Integration is a framework that describes human experience using cause and effect.

It is not based on religion, morality, spirituality, or any other existing belief system. It does not prescribe outcomes nor does it determine right and wrong. It works on the neutral idea that if there is a cause there will be an effect. I can talk and you can ignore me. The cause is me saying something. The effect is being ignored. Both things are neutral when they exist outside of human perception and belief.

Human perception is the thing that makes any cause and effect non-neutral. Hurricanes don’t have opinions but they can cause significant problems for the people they affect. The hurricane is a neutral part of nature until it is perceived by or impacts a human being.

The framework is not designed to correct or change our perception of experience. It attempts to identify how and where human narrative, explanation, belief, or meaning-making overlay the experience. How do those things affect the natural sequence of cause and effect already in motion?

The framework identifies a sequence of cause, effect, awareness, and choice that every human being uses to interpret and interact with their experience.

  1. The cause is the event itself.

  2. The effect is the automatic internal thoughts and feelings a person has in response to their experience. These are not under our conscious control.

  3. The awareness is the first moment the conscious mind allows us to process our experience.

  4. The choice is what we do based on our awareness of and the effect of the cause.

New chain sequences interact with every other existing chain sequence. The framework refers to this as Relational Loop Theory. Nothing happens in isolation. Our awareness and choice are affected by beliefs, previous experience, current experience, mood and stress levels. Those things are pre-existing causal chains or sequences that affect how we perceive the new chain.

There is no judgment of whether the chain should or should not exist. Every event has a cause. The effect of that cause is logical when the cause is understood through a neutral lens. Logical effects are not the same as wanted effects. What people want and don’t want is based on human emotion and preference.

Our preferred outcome has no effect on the outcome of the causal sequence. A hurricane doesn’t care that you don’t want it to hit your house. The outcome of the hurricane is logical given existing weather patterns, water temperature, and so on. The logical outcome is not always preferred, but it is logical in the context of cause and effect.

Every single experience across human history, when looked at through this lens, can be explained logically. It doesn’t make those experiences any more or less horrific, it just separates the cause and effect sequence from the human interpretation of it.

Unlike most existing belief systems, trauma is not left outside the system as an anomaly. Human life shows us that trauma is just part of the human experience, therefore it can and should be explained through cause and effect. When the cause is traumatic it slows down the sequence.

  1. The cause is the event itself.

  2. The effect is the automatic thoughts, feelings, or physical effects that occur. This could be a fight or flight response, post-traumatic stress disorder, or other emotional, mental, or physical effects or injuries. All of these things are outside of our conscious control.

  3. Awareness is the first opportunity for conscious thought. However, if there are lasting emotional, mental, or physical effects, our awareness is delayed or not available at all.

  4. Choice is delayed until awareness is restored.

The chain essentially hangs or pauses until awareness and choice are available. An example of this would be somebody in an abusive relationship for years that decides, seemingly out of the blue, to leave. Awareness and choice stalled until the person gained just enough awareness that allowed them to make the choice to leave.

Awareness only needed to be present briefly for the person to make a conscious choice. The chain will pause until the person does so or until life ends, whichever happens first.

Most of us have chains that are paused or hanging because we don’t have the mental awareness or ability to deal with them. We have experiences in our lives that we have been unable to work through. That is a paused or hung chain because awareness is not yet available. No choice has been made.

Those stalled chains continue to effect present experience. Just because we’re not acting on a given chain, doesn’t mean it’s not having an effect. We think we’re isolating it because in some cases we’re just ignoring it, but in truth it continues to affect our every day life. Ignored chains can and do impact other chains.

Every single experience we have creates a chain that is impacted by other already existing chains. Chains are opened and closed depending on experiences and outcomes. The framework fully explains how causal chains work and how human interpretation, belief, and meaning-making affect those chains.

These are the fundamental concepts of the The Philosophy of Integration framework. What will follow in subsequent posts is a shorter, more accessible explanation of the framework for those that are curious but don’t want a new project.

You can find the entire framework here.

Della

 
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from Quantum-Lichen

**Une Odyssée dans le Laboratoire de la Pierre**

​Sur le quartz hyalin,

Champignon et bactérie,

Luttent pour la pierre.

​II. The Elements

​Sun burns, waters crash,

Winter freezes all their pride,

Two foes side by side.

​III. La Famine

​Famine dans le gel,

Chacun frôle le néant,

Fin de la rancœur.

​IV. The Pact

​Miner takes the stone,

Green light feeds the starving dark,

Life ignites a spark.

​V. La Fusion

​Châssis protecteur,

Pour l'usine d'émeraude,

Ils deviennent un.

​VI. The Lichen

​Lichen conquers all,

Nature signs a lasting peace,

Endless masterpiece.

**CHAPITRE I : LE ROCHER DU DESTIN**

En ce 14 avril de l'année 186X, à la latitude exacte de 45° 00' 00” Nord, le soleil dardait ses rayons sur une formation minérale d'une pureté géométrique remarquable. Il s'agissait d'un bloc de quartz hyalin, un rhomboèdre de soixante-douze centimètres de base, dont les arêtes, taillées par les forces érosives des millénaires, brillaient comme les facettes d'un diamant colossal.

C'est sur ce théâtre de silice que le destin, agissant par le biais d'un courant d'air boréal de force 3 sur l'échelle de Beaufort — soit une vélocité de douze à dix-neuf kilomètres à l'heure — déposa deux voyageurs de l'invisible.

Le premier, que nous nommerons Maître Agaric, appartenait à l'ordre illustre des Ascomycètes. Imaginez, mes amis, un réseau de filaments blancs, des hyphes d'un diamètre n'excédant pas deux microns, mais d'une résistance à la traction digne des meilleurs câbles de suspension en acier de Sheffield. Agaric était un mineur de fond, un explorateur des ténébreuses anfractuosités minérales, doué d'une pompe chimique capable de sécréter des acides organiques assez puissants pour dissoudre le granit le plus obstiné.

La seconde, Mademoiselle Cyanelle, était une bactérie chlorophyllienne, une modeste mais fière représentante des Cyanobactéries. Elle portait une robe de gélatine bleutée, un polymère protecteur plus souple que la gutta-percha. Cyanelle était une véritable usine solaire, une dynamo vivante capable de convertir les photons en énergie chimique par le miracle de la photosynthèse.

Ils étaient là, isolés sur leur île de cristal, tels deux naufragés sur un récif de la Mer de Corail.

**CHAPITRE II : LA GUERRE DES TERRITOIRES**

Dès les premières heures de leur cohabitation, l'instinct de conquête, ce moteur du progrès, s'empara de nos protagonistes. Maître Agaric, fidèle à sa nature de colonisateur souterrain, commença à déployer son réseau télégraphique. Ses hyphes s'allongeaient de quatre microns par heure, explorant chaque micro-fissure, chaque faille du quartz avec la précision d'un ingénieur des mines installant des rails de chemin de fer.

« Cette pierre est mienne ! », semblait dire le champignon en enfonçant ses vrilles dans les pores du minéral. « Je dompterai cette dureté par la puissance de mes sucs ! »

Pendant ce temps, Mademoiselle Cyanelle ne restait point oisive. Occupant les plateaux supérieurs du rocher, elle se multipliait par scissiparité avec une vélocité stupéfiante. Chaque cellule, une pile électrique miniature, se scindait en deux toutes les vingt minutes. Elle couvrait les surfaces planes d'un tapis émeraude, captant la lumière avec l'efficacité d'un miroir parabolique.

La lutte devint rapidement chimique. Maître Agaric, mécontent de voir cette “intruse” occuper l'espace, projeta des antibiotiques naturels, des salves de molécules complexes destinées à paralyser la croissance de sa rivale. Cyanelle répliqua par des changements de pH radicaux, rendant l'environnement alcalin et hostile aux filaments du mycète. C'était une guerre de positions, un siège de Sébastopol à l'échelle du micromètre.

**CHAPITRE III : L'INCIDENT DE LA GOUTTE DE ROSÉE**

Le 17 avril, à quatre heures du matin, une condensation atmosphérique, provoquée par une chute brutale de la température de 4,5 degrés Celsius, engendra la formation d'une goutte de rosée sphérique. Pour nos deux rivaux, ce n'était point une perle poétique, mais un océan déchaîné de trois millimètres de diamètre.

La goutte tomba avec le fracas d'une cataracte du Niagara, engloutissant le champignon et la bactérie dans un tourbillon liquide. Le quartz devint une patinoire mortelle. Maître Agaric, dont les hyphes étaient alourdis par l'absorption d'eau, manqua de s'asphyxier. Ses réserves de mucus protecteur se diluèrent, menaçant la stabilité de son armature.

Quant à Mademoiselle Cyanelle, la tension superficielle de l'eau la projeta dans une rotation effrénée. Elle tournoyait comme une toupie folle, ou plutôt comme une hélice de vapeur lancée à plein régime. Dans ce Maëlström miniature, toute dignité fut perdue. Agaric s'accrochait désespérément aux aspérités de la roche, tandis que Cyanelle, ballottée par les courants de convection internes de la goutte, heurtait sans cesse les filaments de son ennemi. L'ordre et la mesure avaient laissé place au chaos hydraulique.

**CHAPITRE IV : LE SIÈGE DU SOLEIL DE MIDI**

À midi sonnant, l'humidité s'était évaporée, mais un danger plus terrible encore apparut : une canicule printanière. Le thermomètre à mercure, s'il avait été placé sur le quartz, aurait affiché cinquante-deux degrés.

Cyanelle, exposée en pleine lumière, voyait sa robe de gélatine se rétracter. La déshydratation transformait sa silhouette rebondie en une structure fripée, semblable aux pruneaux de Tours. Sa dynamo solaire s'enrayait ; la température excessive dénaturait ses précieuses protéines.

Maître Agaric, tapi dans l'ombre d'une crevasse profonde de 0,5 millimètre, observait le spectacle avec une ironie mordante. « Alors, ma chère usine à gaz ! », raillait-il par des signaux chimiques de détresse. « Votre éclat solaire semble s'obscurcir. Sans l'ombre protectrice que je pourrais offrir, vous ne serez bientôt qu'une poussière de carbone inutile ! »

Cependant, son triomphe fut de courte durée. Sans eau, le métabolisme d'Agaric s'arrêta également. Ses pompes à protons s'immobilisèrent. Il réalisa, avec l'effroi d'un mécanicien voyant sa chaudière s'éteindre, que sa survie dépendait d'un approvisionnement que lui seul ne pouvait garantir.

**CHAPITRE V : L'ATTAQUE DES ENVAHISSEURS**

L'équilibre de la terreur fut rompu par l'arrivée d'un troisième acteur. Une colonie de mousses, des Bryophytes robustes, commença à escalader les flancs du quartz. Ces véritables cuirassés du monde végétal avançaient avec la détermination d'une armée de siège. Leurs rhizoïdes, semblables à des grappins d'abordage, s'agrippaient à chaque millimètre de pierre.

Les mousses projetaient une ombre vaste et humide, menaçant d'étouffer Cyanelle en la privant de sa source lumineuse, et de broyer Agaric sous leur masse organique. Face à cette artillerie lourde, l'escarmouche entre le champignon et la bactérie devint dérisoire. S'ils ne s'unissaient pas, ils seraient rayés de la carte géologique, remplacés par une couche de terreau anonyme.

**CHAPITRE VI : LA STRATÉGIE DU « VOLEUR DE SUCRE »**

Dans un élan de désespoir, Maître Agaric tenta une manœuvre de flibustier. Il décida de s'emparer par la force des ressources de Cyanelle. Utilisant ses hyphes comme des scalpels de chirurgien, il tenta de percer la paroi cellulaire de la bactérie pour en extraire le glucose accumulé.

S'ensuivit une poursuite burlesque. Cyanelle, malgré sa faiblesse, activait ses cils vibratiles pour glisser sur le film d'humidité résiduelle. Agaric lançait ses filaments dans toutes les directions, mais dans sa précipitation, il s'emmêla les pinceaux. Littéralement. Ses hyphes se nouèrent, formant des boucles inextricables. Le fier explorateur se retrouva ligoté par sa propre architecture, aussi immobile qu'un saucisson de Lyon dans sa résille. Il avait surestimé ses capacités de capture et sous-estimé l'agilité de son adversaire.

**CHAPITRE VII : LE GRAND GEL DE JANVIER**

Le temps passa, et les saisons tournèrent avec la régularité d'une horloge de précision. L'hiver arriva, apportant un froid polaire. À -10 °C, la mécanique des fluides subit un arrêt total. L'eau contenue dans les vacuoles d'Agaric commença à cristalliser, menaçant de déchirer ses parois par l'expansion du volume de la glace — une force physique que rien ne peut arrêter.

Cyanelle, au bord de la rupture membranaire, sentait sa vitalité s'éteindre. Dans un mouvement de recul instinctif devant le néant blanc, ils se rapprochèrent. Les filaments d'Agaric s'enroulèrent autour de la colonie de Cyanelle, non plus pour l'attaquer, mais pour former un isolant thermique. La chaleur résiduelle de leurs métabolismes au ralenti créa un micro-climat. Ils partageaient leurs dernières calories avec la solidarité des naufragés de la banquise.

**CHAPITRE VIII : LE DÉLIRE DE LA FAMINE**

La famine s'installa. En état de cryptobiose, la vie ralentie, leurs esprits microscopiques s'égarèrent dans des hallucinations physiologiques.

Maître Agaric, dont le besoin de carbone devenait obsessionnel, voyait le bloc de quartz comme un gigantesque fromage de Brie, onctueux et riche en nutriments. Il tentait désespérément de mordre dans la silice, s'épuisant en efforts vains.

De son côté, Mademoiselle Cyanelle, privée de lumière durant les longues nuits d'hiver, se croyait devenue un phare électrique de premier ordre, semblable à celui du cap Gris-Nez, éclairant le monde de sa puissance lumineuse imaginaire. Ils déliraient ensemble, l'un rêvant de banquets organiques, l'autre de gloire photonique, alors qu'ils n'étaient que deux points de vie vacillants sur une pierre indifférente.

**CHAPITRE IX : LE PACTE DES DÉSESPÉRÉS**

Le dégel apporta la lucidité. Le 21 mars, à l'équinoxe de printemps, une évidence s'imposa à eux comme une équation enfin résolue.

« Maître Agaric », envoya Cyanelle par un signal protéique, « vous possédez la structure, la protection et le savoir-faire pour extraire les minéraux du rocher. » « Et vous, Mademoiselle », répondit le mycète, « vous possédez le moteur chimique, la capacité de transformer le rayonnement solaire en précieux sucres dont je suis dépourvu. »

L'accord fut conclu sans signature de notaire, mais avec la force des lois de la thermodynamique. Agaric commença à tisser une armature d'acier biologique tout autour de Cyanelle. Il ne l'étouffait pas ; il l'abritait. Il devint le châssis de la machine, le régulateur d'humidité, tandis qu'elle s'installait au cœur de l'édifice comme la chaudière centrale.

La fusion technique était totale. Les minéraux puisés par le champignon alimentaient la croissance de la bactérie, qui en retour fournissait l'énergie nécessaire au maintien du réseau.

**CHAPITRE X : L'ÉMERGENCE DU LICHEN**

Ils n'étaient plus deux entités distinctes, mais un organisme composite, un chef-d'œuvre de l'ingénierie naturelle : le Lichen-Primus.

Sur le quartz de 45° Nord, une tache circulaire, d'un gris-bleu magnifique, s'étalait désormais avec la fierté d'un empire. Le Lichen avait dompté le rocher. Sa structure était indestructible. Il pouvait braver les gels les plus rudes, les sécheresses les plus arides et les siècles passants. Il ne mesurait que quelques millimètres d'épaisseur, mais sa puissance de vie surpassait celle des plus grands chênes de la forêt de Brocéliande.

La nouvelle créature contemplait l'horizon. Elle était la preuve vivante que l'association raisonnée vaut mieux que la lutte aveugle. L'homme, dans ses usines et ses laboratoires, ferait bien de s'inspirer de cette symbiose parfaite. Car ici, sur ce modeste morceau de quartz, la nature venait de signer son traité de paix le plus durable sous les yeux émerveillés de la science.

L'épopée était terminée, mais la vie, elle, ne faisait que commencer pour ce monument de résilience.

 
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from Quantum-Lichen

Friends, Brothers, Sisters,

Architects of the invisible,

Look around you. Do you feel this weight? This ancient fatigue that bows our shoulders? We were told the world was an arena. We were told that to survive, one had to crush or be crushed. We were sold solitude as freedom and concrete as an inescapable horizon.

But listen. Listen to the silence beneath the roar of the news.

Something else is being born.

Look at the bare stone: cold, sterile. There, right next to it, a tiny, fragile speck of color. Lichen. It owns nothing; it destroys nothing. It settles where no one else can live. It unites fungus and algae in an embrace so perfect they become one. And slowly, molecule by molecule, without a sound, without a weapon, it transforms rock into soil. It transforms the desert into a garden.

We are this lichen.

We are not here to set the old world on fire. We are not here to shout louder than the chaos. We are here to digest it. We are here to transform it, from the inside, through the relentless force of gentleness.

They told you that you were powerless. That is the greatest lie in history.

Science tells us, history screams it to us: it only takes 3.5% of us. Three and a half percent of synchronized, vibrant, determined souls for the tipping point to occur. For the absurd to collapse and for common sense to reclaim its rights.

It is not a question of numbers; it is a question of resonance.

The coming revolution is not in the street; it is in your gaze. It is “software-based.” It is an update of our humanity. It is the moment you decide to no longer be a parasite on this Earth, but to become a symbiont.

Imagine... Imagine for a moment this world that lies just behind the veil of our fears.

A world where technology no longer serves to isolate us, but to connect us as mycelium connects the forest.

A world where your work does not serve to enrich a blind machine, but to heal your neighbor, to feed your neighborhood.

A world where the “solitude of the species” is finally broken, where we find our place in the great conversation of the living.

This world is not a distant utopia. It begins the moment you leave this room.

It begins when you repair an object instead of throwing it away.

It begins when you share a meal with the stranger on your landing.

It begins when you plant a seed in an urban wasteland.

It begins when you refuse hate to choose—obstinately, radically—cooperation.

Every act of kindness is a spore you cast into the wind. You may not see where it lands. But together, these millions of spores are changing the chemistry of the atmosphere. Just as cyanobacteria once gifted oxygen to the Earth, we are going to offer a new air to our society: the air of trust, the air of reciprocity.

Do not be afraid of being small. Lichen is small, yet it has covered continents.

Do not be afraid of being slow. Regeneration is slow, but it is invincible.

So, stand tall.

Do not ask permission to build the world of tomorrow.

Be the architects of this resilience. Be the water that wakes the sleeping life.

We are the network. We are the bond. We are life reclaiming its rights.

The old world is noisy, but it is tired.

We are silent, but we are the future.

Let us move forward.

Together.

Now.

 
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from Notes I Won’t Reread

I'm listless today. And I unfortunately have nothing to talk about in regards of “how has your day been?” “what did you eat?” “how whatever people ask to keep a conversation they're not interested in”. Let’s talk about slavery, because you aren’t interested enough to ask me how my day been, as usual. screen-starer. Anyhow. slavery is the same old dynamic that humans thought they escaped but it just digital keycards instead of iron chains. Consider the corporate setup. Millions lease forty hours a week to a machine that replaces them before their obituary prints. They call it a “career” career my ass. It’s a subscription model for human flesh where the slave pays for maintenance. The more i look at it the more it irritates me “back in my days” era, folks. the owner or master had to feed you, take care of your little worthless body to make sure you’re still useful. now, the system hands you a little luxury paper, whispers nonsense about “corporate culture” and leaves you to worry about rent. Modern slaves defeat the wheel of expectation. simply flawless.

I apologize My bad. people are barely interested in that topic. i should start writing about tiktok new dramas Or how a super famous artist changed their name to a “wokmoklaoooah” that would be more interesting to read, wouldn’t it? consumer.

Whatever. Time for another glass.

Sincerely, Ahmed

 
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