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Ash and Iron

  They say command is a ladder made of polished bone—step high enough and you forget whose neck you climbed over to get there. I never liked ladders. Prefer my feet on the ground, my hands on something solid, and my enemies close enough to bleed on me when they fall. That morning, I’d bled enough for three. The command tent stank of damp parchment, boiled leather, and the soft rot of too many bad decisions left out in the rain. I ducked to get through the flap, still had to crouch to stand under the ridge pole. It was made for men. Most things were. Chairs. Rules. Conversations. I didn’t sit. Not just because it would snap the rickety thing they had stationed across from the desk, but because I didn’t want to. I’d been standing since the tunnels collapsed—and I’d keep standing until someone gave me a reason not to.

  Colonel Redmore glanced up like he wasn’t expecting me to fill the doorway. His eyes tightened when he saw the blood still dried on my leathers and the dent in my left pauldron. My braid was a muddy rope down my back. I hadn’t even bothered to clean my face.

  “Sergeant Blackthorn,” he said, trying to sound like he wasn’t swallowing a pebble. “You're early.”

  “I buried two of mine before breakfast,” I said. “Figured I’d get the hard part of the day out of the way first.”

  He didn’t laugh. Paper-shufflers like Redmore never did. He was the kind of man who wore his uniform like armor and his rank like a mask, hoping no one noticed the sag behind his eyes. “The mission was under Crown Intelligence supervision. Per the queen’s directive, you were operating under Major Sturm’s command. I’d like your field account before I file the joint report.”

  I stepped forward, letting the boards creak under me like bones in a crypt. “Field account? You want the pretty version or the truth?”

  He looked down at his desk. “Truth will suffice.”

  “Fine. Here’s your truth: Camden Sturm is a puffed-up mule in a captain’s coat. He led us into those tunnels blind. Didn’t scout the side shafts, didn’t post a rear watch. Just pressed in fast, thinking the smugglers would roll over like kittens.” I leaned in just enough for him to get a sense of scale. “They weren’t kittens. They were bait.”

  Redmore’s jaw twitched. “There’s no mention of a secondary ambush in Sturm’s account.”

  “No surprise,” I said, cracking my knuckles. “The truth gets heavy when you’ve got blood on your hands. Easier to set it down and walk away.”

  He shifted some parchment like he was organizing facts, but we both knew there weren’t any left worth sorting. Nera died first—blown apart by a trap rune etched into the stone. Pollit got dragged down into the dark. I found what was left of him by feel. The mage we were supposed to capture? Never saw him. Probably laughed himself sick as we choked on old dust and bad calls.

  “Sergeant, regardless of your opinion of Major Sturm, he had authority. And your unit deviated from—”

  “My unit was dying.” My voice cut low, sharp. “And Sturm was standing there like a garden statue, muttering about chain of command while the walls were falling in. You want me to follow orders, Colonel? Fine. But you better make damn sure they’re not getting my people killed to cover for someone’s mistake.”

  He stared at me like a man inspecting a blade he didn’t remember forging—trying to decide if it was still his to wield… or if it had grown teeth and a taste for flesh. Not the stare of a comrade. Not even an officer’s gaze. Just the hollow calculation of a bureaucrat who knew he couldn’t kill me without getting blood on his shoes. And I don’t come clean easy.

  I didn’t blink. Didn’t need to. I know the effect I have on people.

  At just shy of seven feet, I was carved by contradictions—my mother’s hill-giant blood gave me size, strength, and the kind of endurance that breaks other soldiers before breakfast. My father, a half-elf, passed down a face too pretty for war and ears that hear lies like thunder. The world doesn’t know what to do with someone like me. Too large to overlook. Too lovely to dismiss. Too dangerous to ignore.

  And I was angry.

  Not the red-hot kind that screams and spits. No—this was slow-burn fury, the kind that seeps through marrow and settles behind your eyes. The kind that makes a colonel’s pen hand tremble when you lean in just a little too close. The stink of blood and broken promises still clung to me. Mine. Theirs. The dirt of the tunnels was ground into the leather of my chestplate, and a smear of Pollit’s blood had dried along the curve of my collar. I didn’t clean it off. Not yet. Not until I could make it mean something.

  “I command thirty-six soldiers,” I said, my voice low and level, a blade being drawn in the quiet. “I took sixteen into those tunnels. Sixteen, because that’s what the order said. I didn’t question it. I’ve never questioned an op, not once—not until yesterday.”

  Redmore looked like he wanted to interrupt, but I leaned in and pressed the full weight of my will on him like a blacksmith’s hammer. I wanted him to feel it—not just my strength, not just the menace in my posture—but the ghosts that walked behind me.

  “I’ve been in Her Majesty’s Army fifteen years,” I said. “Fifteen years of battlefield mud, teeth in the snow, screams in the dark, and burning wagons. I’ve lost soldiers before. And I carry every one of them.”

  I tapped the center of my breastplate, where the dents were deepest.

  “Right here. Ghosts. Names. Faces. I never forget them. Nera and Pollit didn’t have to die. You want a report? Fine. You send me in under Camden Sturm, a man who thinks tactics are something you shout at subordinates while holding a map upside-down. He led us into those tunnels blind, then panicked when the walls started bleeding fire and the smugglers turned out to be armed with more than knives.”

  The wind outside the tent snapped the canvas like a whip. Somewhere beyond the lines, a crow called out—a low, guttural sound like it had been watching me work the graves with a dull blade and a snapped spear shaft.

  “I buried them with my own hands,” I said. “Not because the quartermaster sent shovels. Because the ground deserved the weight of my grief, not the efficiency of a burial detail.”

  Silence stretched between us like a drawn bow. Redmore held the string. I was the arrow. And we both knew it. He finally set his pen down, steepling his fingers, voice as smooth as wet ash.

  “You’ve always been a valuable asset, Sergeant. One of our most effective. But you’re unpredictable. And now the Crown’s Intelligence Division has questions about your conduct. You made a choice to deviate—”

  “I made a choice to keep as many of them breathing as I could.”

  He ignored that. Of course he did. “The final campaign is moving into position. The barbarian horde north of Goldmere has begun to cross the snows. Command intends to meet them in the field, crush them, and end this chapter.”

  “And let me guess,” I said, deadpan. “You want me there.”

  “You and what’s left of your squad. Officer hunters. Ghost wolves. You’ll be deployed at the front—lead the breach, draw their eyes, cut their leadership to pieces.”

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  “And if I die out there,” I said, watching the lie form behind his eyes before he even opened his mouth.

  “There’s always a cost in war,” he murmured.

  “No,” I corrected. “There’s always a plan. And this one stinks of politics. I’m not dying for someone’s promotion, Colonel.”

  He stood, at last, to his full, unimpressive height. “You’re still under oath, Sergeant. You’ll serve where you’re sent.”

  I stepped back and turned, letting the flap open and the wind hit my face like a blessing. My boots hit the frozen boards like war drums. I didn’t look back. Let the war come. Let the horde come. Let every cursed breath of mountain wind blow down across the fields of Goldmere. They wanted to see what a monster looked like when it was useful and disposable. I’d show them.

  The cold hit harder once I left the command tent, like it knew I didn’t have anything left to shield me but old leather and older ghosts. The wind howled down from the Argent peaks, rattling tents and cutting through the seams of my coat like a knife with a grudge. The sun was gone behind the mountains, leaving only that bone-gray light that makes everything look like it's already dead.

  Redmore’s voice was still ringing in my skull. Final campaign. Lead the charge. Officer hunters as bait. He hadn’t said it like that, but I’ve been reading the subtext of suicidal orders for fifteen years. That bastard wanted me buried under barbarian boots and frozen screeches.

  Good luck with that.

  Corporal Brann was leaning against the post outside the barracks tent, chewing on a sliver of rootbark like it owed him money. Thick-shouldered, with a shaven head and a jaw that had been broken twice—once by me, once by a minotaur—he snapped to attention when he saw me. He knew the look in my eyes.

  “Orders?” he asked, low and grim.

  “Battle’s brewing,” I said. “North of Goldmere. The brass wants us to lead the dance.”

  He didn’t flinch. Just spat the root fiber into the snow. “Figures.”

  “Get the squad together,” I told him. “We’ve got two to honor.”

  His jaw tightened. “Nera and Pollit?”

  I nodded once. He gave a low grunt—somewhere between grief and rage—and turned to head inside. But then he paused.

  “Two replacements came in while you were with Redmore.”

  I stopped in my tracks. Turned slow.

  “Replacements?”

  “Fresh from training camp. One’s a dwarven lass—barely past beard-sprouting. Other’s a raccoon-kin, twitchy-eyed, smells like wet onions and shame.”

  I closed my eyes, clenched my jaw.

  “By the bleak breath of Marzanna,” I hissed. “Goddess of graves, may your frozen tits fall off and strike Redmore square in his withered manhood.”

  Brann just smirked and thumbed toward the flap. “Thought you’d want the honors.”

  The barracks tent was hot, loud, and thick with the stink of steel, sweat, and desperation. Rough cots lined the walls like teeth, and a makeshift bar squatted at one end—a plank set on barrels, with a few bottles of rotgut that could double as cleaning solvent or dragon bait. It was our kind of place. Nothing sacred but the rituals. They saw me come in, and silence rolled through the room like a spell had dropped. One by one, the squad stood—not out of formality, but because they knew something had happened. I walked to the center, looked around at the faces. Scarred. Grim. Family. Or what passes for it in a war this long.

  “They’re gone,” I said. “Nera fell to a rune trap. Pollit never made it out of the dark.”

  No one spoke. No one moved. Just the sound of breath and wind.

  “They died serving like they lived—sharp-eyed, smart-mouthed, and too damn loyal for this world. I gave them the best graves the frozen dirt would allow.”

  I reached the bar, slammed a bottle down, uncorked it with my thumb, and filled the nearest mugs with the rotgut. Thick. Dark. Smelled like boiled pine sap and memories lost.

  “Tonight, we drink,” I said. “To their ghosts, and to the enemies who’ll meet them soon.”

  The mugs were passed. Every hand took one—except the two new faces at the edge of the group. The dwarf was short and square, maybe eighty pounds of muscle and nerves with a red scruff that barely qualified as facial hair. She stood at attention like the war could smell fear and she didn’t want to sweat. The raccoon beastkin was lanky, his tail twitching anxiously behind him. His eyes darted, not in fear, but the way a predator checks exits. Smarter than he looked.

  I stepped toward them, drink in hand.

  “You the greenhorns?”

  “Yes, Sergeant,” the dwarf said, her voice steady but tight.

  “Name?”

  “Erla Flintbraid, ma’am.”

  I looked to the beastkin. He gave a half-bow.

  “Pip. Just Pip.”

  I nodded. “You’re replacements. That doesn’t mean you’re part of the squad yet. That means you’ve been given a chance to prove you should be.”

  Erla squared her shoulders. Pip looked ready to bolt, then thought better of it.

  “Now shut up, take a drink, and listen while we toast the dead,” I said.

  They did. I raised my mug, the rotgut burning the back of my throat already.

  “To Nera. The only one of us who could make a grown orc cry with a limerick.”

  “To Pollit,” Brann added, voice cracking. “Who’d share his rations even when he hadn’t eaten.”

  “To the fallen,” the squad echoed.

  And we drank. The burn was real, and it was right. I felt it settle into my bones like a promise. Let Redmore send us into hell. Let the nobles hide their sins behind silver. I would carry my ghosts. I would remember their names. And when the battle came—I would make sure the right people died.

  ****

  The wind off the North Lake cut like a knife, sharp with glacier breath and the stink of pine pitch and wet stone. I’d come out to sharpen my axe, not my temper—but I was failing at both. I sat on an overturned crate behind the barracks tent, steel edge dragging slow and deliberate across a whetstone. Every scrape was a word I didn’t say, every pass an obituary. Pollit. Nera. Every ghost with a name.

  A shuffle of boots in the slush behind me told me I wasn’t alone. I didn’t look up.

  “If you’re here to kill me, at least let me finish honing the edge,” I said. “I’d like to go out with a blade worth remembering.”

  A voice I hadn’t heard in years answered. Weathered. Slowed by regret.

  “I’d rather not die tonight either, Sergeant Blackthorn.”

  I turned then, slow, letting the torchlight catch his face. Thinner than I remembered. Green skin sallow with age, streaks of white through his black hair. His robes were threadbare at the cuffs, patched in places where magic had scorched through.

  “Varin?” I narrowed my eyes. “What in the Nine Hells are you doing crawling around this camp at midnight?”

  He stepped forward, tugging a satchel from beneath his cloak. The leather was stained, the clasp scorched—burn marks from a spell he’d clearly forced open.

  “I have something that belongs to you. From Pollit.”

  That stopped my breath.

  He crouched, easing onto a barrel opposite me like his bones had started arguing with his memories. “He left it with me before the mission. Told me if he didn’t make it back, to get it into your hands. I was supposed to wait. But then I found something else.”

  He pulled a scroll case from his bag—runes still smoldered faintly along the rim. He opened it carefully, reverently, like he was disarming a bomb. Inside was a folded parchment, aged and crisp, sealed with two noble sigils—intertwined: a serpent and a hawk. And beneath that… a name I knew too well.

  Redmore.

  “What is this?” I asked.

  “The reason you’re still breathing,” he said. “And the reason they want that to change.”

  He slid the parchment across. My fingers brushed the edge and the spell sealed on it flickered faintly—Pollit’s mark. The fool had cast a minor locking charm. Rough, clumsy. But it held. Inside was a crude ledger of transactions, notes in shorthand, and a final scrawl in Pollit’s blocky script:

  “If she gets this, I’m probably gone. Sorry, Sarge. You always told me to keep my eyes open. Guess I did. Just too late. Don’t trust the orders. The mission’s not what it seems.”

  I closed my eyes.

  Varin kept talking. “Pollit stumbled onto an old supply route—one the nobles are using to run weapons and spell-ink. Not to our troops. To the enemy. Redmore’s been working with two other highborn officers. War’s profitable, Lena. Too profitable to end.”

  He leaned in, voice low. “The tunnels weren’t a failure. They were a culling. And now that final battle North of Goldmere? You and your squad are walking into a storm meant to bury you all. Make it clean. Just another ‘honorable loss.’”

  I stared at him for a long moment.

  “Why now?” I asked. “Why come to me?”

  He looked down. “Because I owe your father.”

  That burned more than I expected. I let out a breath I didn’t remember holding.

  “I was nineteen,” Varin said, “a half-breed from Aeriestrand with more ambition than sense. I followed the call when the Myrmidons broke through the coast. Your father… he saved me. Pulled me from the mud while everyone else ran. He told me to live long enough to be worth saving.” His voice caught. “I tried. Left Aeriestrand after that battle and followed him as he left for retirement. I joined the Queen’s Army. Worked my way into Intelligence. Thought if I stayed close enough, I could protect him. But when he died… I wasn’t there.”

  I looked down at the letter in my hand.

  “You couldn’t save him,” I said.

  “But I can save you.”

  We sat there, the cold pressing in. I let the axe rest across my knees and looked out into the dark, toward where the battle lines were being drawn, where soldiers sharpened steel not knowing it would never be enough.

  “So,” I said, voice low. “What do you suggest I do?”

  Varin didn’t answer right away.

  Then, finally: “You could run, but I know you won’t, neither would your father. So, start digging, Sergeant. This war’s not over. It’s just changing shape.”

  I stood, tall and silent, the night bending around me.

  “Then I’ll change with it.”

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