The person who ran into the embrace of Janine and Martyshkina might have looked strange to some. Horrifying even. She was a metal skeleton with ribs fused together, an eternal grinning smile, the dim white forever smoldering in the lenses sunk deep into the cranium, often instilling fear in anyone who hadnât spoken to this petulant child. Janine tossed her axe to Impatient One, and, together with Marty, took Lyudochka into a spin.
There was no clever trick about that metal body; no brain case was hidden inside the chest or agile limbs, nor was she an AI. Born as a human, she had been uploaded into circuits and processors. She had âgrownâ during their separation, if such a word could be applied to an ageless machine. Her thoracic cavity expanded; longer, multi-jointed limbs replaced the previous humanoid appendages. A cloak of woven chains and white cloth rustled; its upper ends seamlessly entered the smooth surface of the bones.
âIâve missed you so much, Moms!â The girl, no, the woman, cried, hugging them. âSorry so much for writing so rarely; a bunch of stuff happened, and then even more stuff happened, and then this andâ¦â
âBeat it.â Martyshkina patted her skull. âWe also havenât been the exemplary parents lately.â
âThen we all suck at communicating! Letâs fix it.â Her jaw closed, surprising Janine. She hadnât been able to when they found her in the underground laboratory. âHow have you been doing?â
âExisting,â Janine answered evasively and noticed ornate insignias welded into her cubâs limbs. âYou are an ambassador in Houstad?â
âSorta.â Lyudochka jumped back on the ground and proudly showed them her staff.
The top was made of gold, the bottom of platinum, while the shaft itself was of stainless steel. Letters of spiritual wisdom covered the golden part, while warnings to temper religious fervor and focus on fostering friendship covered the lower end.
âWell, to tell the truth, I worked as a clerk in the embassy.â Lyudochka scratched her chin. âGaining experience, meeting new people, filling out papers for immigration, but then the war broke in, half of our terminals exploded, wounding my colleagues, and Abel ventured on his murder spree, while Mister Wickedbreed was last seen at the Wall. It was scary and stressful when Lord Steward himself had promoted me, but!â She pointed a thumb over her shoulder at the giant standing silently at her back. âUr-Champion arrived after Abel had to be recalled before he joined the Reclaimers to wreak retribution.â
âIs that bad?â Janine ruffled her hair. âLyudochka, sorry if I sound like an ass, but you said your people were wounded. We wouldnât mind welcoming Abel into our ranks for a while.â
âFirst for a while, then forever. At least such was the reasoning of the Communeâs geezers,â the woman dropped her voice volume to imitate hushing. âPlease donât tell them I said it; theyâll scream at me again. I am sure they have valid concerns; itâs just that I donât get them. The Gilded Horde is an enemy to all; we should team up against it, not play politics.â
âOur mouths are sealed,â Martyshkina promised.
Lyudochka gestured, and the two women leaned in so she could whisper in their ears, âIâm sort of freaking out here and really want the real ambassador to return. I donât have the faintest idea if I am doing a good job, and I keep asking the military about the whereabouts of our people, and no one knows anything! Argh!â Her voice modulators conveyed the roaring frustration. âAll I want is to do the job well, but I am not the right person to handle the situation well!â
âBut you are doing your duty, regardless. Take pride in that,â Janine advised her. âAnd let us lighten your burdens, daughter. Anissa!â
âWarlord?â Anissa closed in, watching Lyudochka warily from a distance. âWhy does the machine call you mothers?â
âBecause she is our daughter.â Martyshkina slapped the Oathtaker across the back.
âBut⦠you are women! A girl and a girl cannot produce offspring!â Anissa stammered. âAre you a mutant, Mom? Am I one? Was it an immaculate conception? Or did you eat a chunk of steel before copulating? Is that why she is like this? Or was it Warlord Martyshkina? How did this happen? What did you do?!â
âAnd you never deemed it fit to tell us, why?â asked Impatient One, stepping closer to Lyudochka.
âShamans have their own secrets; we have ours.â Martyshkina shrugged. âLyudochka is not to be treated as a Wolfkin. She is gentler, less rigid than usâ¦â
âShe is literally made of metal,â Anissa noted, baring her neck at Janineâs snarl. âObservation, not an insult, Warlord!â
ââ¦But neither is she an outsider, and her name will be added to the memorial stones.â
âYou are Anissa, right?â Lyudochka shoved herself past the warlords and shook paws with the wolf hag. âMom told me a lot about you. Is it true that you used a spine toâ¦â
âTo club a bastard to death, not my proudest moment,â Anissa finished the sentence, nervously examining the lifeless fingers that touched her and shuddering.
Lyudochka stopped; her head turned smoothly to look at Impatient One, who quickly rubbed her muzzle against the metallic limb and frowned. âWhat⦠what is she doing? Is this a ritual to ward me off?â
âI donât care that you are a soulless abomination and a foul affront to all that is natural; I care that it isnât possible to mark you as part of the Tribe,â Impatient One answered, rubbing her muzzle again. âWhy canât I scent-mark you?â
âMy surface cleans itself, Impatient One.â The ambassador regained her composure. âMom, what about Ignacy, Bogdan, and Marco? Can I meet them?â
âBogdan,â Janineâs voice almost broke, but she held on, accepting Martyâs paw on her shoulder. âI failed him and many others. Ignacy is fine, but Marco is injured.â
âInjured⦠But he is only a child!â The ambassador pressed a hand to her mouth.
âHappens in service. Heâll be fine,â Janine asked in a tone that left no room for argument. âLyudochka, we brought several of your people back with us. Maybe theyâll know about the ambassadorâs fate. Anissa, escort your sister to Ignacy and explain the situation, then report back to us.â
âHow can I explain when I donât even understand... I mean, yes, Warlord.â The wolf hag saluted and rushed to the mobile fortress accompanied by the clanking of Lyudochkaâs legs. On the run, Anissa turned to the metal woman and asked, âCan I have your number, sis? Donât really have enough time to chat right now, not with the war happening.â
âSure thing!â Lyudochka slipped a hand into the bag around her waist.
âBrings back memories,â chuckled Marty. âMommies.â
âAny other cubs you failed to mention?â Impatient One asked icily.
âNone of your business, Shaman,â Martyshkina said.
âIt is a part of my business, as we are charged by the Blessed Mother herself to maintain a chronicle of each family in the Tribe.â The shaman frowned. âCan you imagine the shame if we fail to mention her lineage?â
âI donât think you need to worry about it, Impatient One,â Bertruda said. âItâs unlikely the lady can reproduce.â
âDidnât stop these two from ejecting her somehow, so anythingâs possible. I am just preparing for the worst.â
âTo the command center, at once!â Janine barked, not wanting to have this argument with the shaman right now. What wasnât forbidden was allowed, and adoptions were never added to the list of unworthy sins.
The Inevitable dominated the center of the airport, a palace of steel, tracks, turrets, sensor arrays, missile launchers, and bristly cannons. Its ammunition fully replenished, the centerpiece of the Third stood ready to aid the packs in any way it could, and to rain Abyss down on anyone approaching Houstad.
As they hurried inside, Bertruda flinched, noticing obvious aggression in the air. Usually rowdy, the packs stood unmoved, fully armored including helmets, watching with unblinking lenses at the Ice Fangs standing opposite of them. The Orderâs host outnumbered the Tribeâs three to one, an unnecessary testament to the consequences of betrayal and who had paid the price.
Gone was the usual banter, and a low growl passed through the tense packs as a Sunblade knight-captain gave the command, and the knights raised their banners, hailing the return of the warlords and welcoming Bertruda. A mistake. It would be better for the Order to let the wound heal rather than cutting it wide open with their fake pretense of caring. And the situation will worsen even more when the news of the Ice Fangsâ failure to protect Marco and their refusal to pay the blood debt becomes public.
Janine had considered banning this revelation, but she couldnât find it in her heart to do so, knowing full well that someone would tell the truth and then she would have to murder the disobedient soldier. She did not want to see another Wolfkin die because of the Orderâs either direct or indirect treacherous actions ever again.
No Wolfkin clumsily offered a place at a bonfire and food to the defenders or knights. Hunters and scouts did not sneak into the ranks of another group to tease them. Shamans didnât explain the faith in the Spirits to curious souls, and the sages refrained from educating warriors and males. If the reports spoke true, for the first time since the two groups had united under Ravager, several shamans had banned the ice boys from attending prayers. Lacerated One punished the shamans responsible, but the fact remained.
When they had left this place, a unity had chained them. Now, the threat of violence hung in the air, and any wrong move could spark the irrecoverable. Without the Blessed Mother, the alliance of the Tribe and the Order was falling apart.
âAnissa!â She heard a screeching voice, and the long, segmented body crashed into the wolf hag as she and her companion stepped onto the ramp of the mobile fortress, bringing a flush to Janineâs cheeks. âYouâre alive! Oh honey, I was so worried sick upon hearing about Janineâs capture! Let me just check if everything is fine real quickâ¦â
âWe are tougher than thisâ¦â Anissa giggled, hearing the melody drummed by the toxicognaths on her helmet. Lyudochka raised a finger and stopped, but then Chak whispered words to Anissa, earned a kiss, and slithered off her, pursuing the company.
âAnd you!â Chakâs coils neared the group; his black eyes faced Janineâs. âWhere is my armor, barbarian!â
His outburst drew a couple of chuckles from the rows of soldiers, and Alpha nodded in approval of his game.
âMy armor,â Janine corrected him. âIt broke like a rotten egg under Mad Hatterâs fingers.â
âMy crew maintained and repaired that marvel, you ignorant, savage pest! I spent sleepless nights polishing it, replacing damaged servomotors, bundling fiber muscles, and keeping it clean of dirt!â The black clusters of his eyes shifted. âYour armor? A brute such as yourself wouldnât know how or when to recharge its generator! Your armor. Bah! You piss and drool on it and claim to possess and know these things. Ridiculous. Lost my armor, lost my rifle, but kept that useless axe. Whatever.â He sighed, falling in line. âWhatâs done is done. Itâs good to see you all alive. Visit me at the maintenance bay, Council. Weâll see what we can do to ensure that youâll stay alive. It will be unseemly if my wifeâs mother is not present at our wedding.â
Calmness. Janine bit her tongue at the mocking laughter of Alpha and the congratulations for Martyshkina and Bertruda. Peace and tranquility. You are a whiff of sand carried by a storm, relaxed and unbothered. Her paws clenched, the fingers pressing hard against the palms. You canât murder your daughterâs soulmate even if sheâs completely wrong about choosing this insect!
As they approached the Inevitableâs ramp, Alpha lightly elbowed her sisters and nodded at Jacob, who followed after Lyudochka. Janine didnât understand the meaning of that at first, but then she looked at the ground. Chakâs sharp legs had cracked the stone during his intense stampede, scattering pebbles. One such pebble disappeared⦠Wrong. It had been stepped on and crushed to dust without so much as a crack.
An invisibility field, advanced enough to suppress noises of anything that touched it.
Iterna brought more than just the Problemsolvers. Their deadliest servants, the Shadows, lurked here. A clear violation of the signed treaties, but Alpha didnât raise a fuss. What in the Abyss is going on here?
The group entered the crawler, reached the elevator, and it carried them to the bridge doors, where Lacerated One rose from the floor, bowed low, and then remained at the entrance alongside Impatient One, ready to lay down their lives to protect the war council from any unexpected intrusion.
This tale has been unlawfully lifted from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
Calm discipline prevailed on the bridge. Dragena, her arms folded behind her back, listened to the officers report on the preparations, occasionally ordering relocations as she studied the holographic map of the city. The operators, stationed in the cavities on either side of the main bridge leading to Ravagerâs throne, finished gathering information on the supplies. Jacomie, dressed for battle, sat in Cristoboâs seat, coordinating the regiments of the provincial forces. Zurkov used a walking stick to traverse around and faced the mayor.
âThis isnât over, Jaquan,â he hissed into the mayorâs face. âThe Dynast will hear of it.â
âPlease, Commissioner, none of them died, and we evacuated them to safety as per agreementâ¦â Jaquan spread his hands, smiling sweetly.
âDonât play coy with me. Six of them have burns on their necks!â Zurkov slammed his cane against the table, and Jaquan had to catch him before the man could fall when his leg gave way. âAt attention!â he yelled, spotting the Wolfkins entering.
Anji leaped from her seat, closing the distance and placing a paw on Kalaisaâs shoulder. The two women touched foreheads momentarily, saying nothing as Janine took her place beside Alpha, her back to the viewing screens and the lower deck where the operators worked, while Bertruda flanked First, sheathing the exposed edge of Elegance and pointing it down.
âJanine.â Dragena broke from the map and embraced her. There was no warmth in her voice or passion in the gesture, but Janine appreciated this ritual nonetheless. âAre you capable of fighting?â
âI can murder, Dragena,â the warlord growled. âYou are not keeping me from the battlefield.â
âWouldnât dream of it,â the woman answered coldly. âBertruda. Your arm?â
âWorking, Warlord,â Bertruda replied. âScars already formed.â
âSorry for not being there, sister.â Janine blinked in surprise, finding herself in the iron hug of Ashbringer. Her named sister spoke without spite or the usual mockery, lowering her voice but not dropping it to a whisper and ignoring that the Sword Saints heard it. âI shouldâve returned to the convoy, been at your side.â
âAshbringer. It isnât your fault,â Janine reassured her, embracing the woman, their differences forgotten, and she no longer cared about one-upping the arrogant and prideful soldier.
âHeâll be fine,â Ashbringer said intensely. âMy boys and girls, I have tokens. Weâll find a way to fix him, donât worry.â She lifted her head, looked at Kalaisa, and nodded.
âYou were a fool to take him out of the pits,â Alpha stated bluntly.
âYes.â Janine blinked away tears. It was selfish. So many of her soldiers had died. Bogdan hadnât been avenged, and her soul wailed, torturing her heart over what had happened to Marco. But she couldnât help it. âYes, I was,â she agreed wholeheartedly.
She brought him here. She trusted him to the Ice Fangs and doubted the wisdom of tradition. Brood Lord took the limbs, but it was her hubris that permitted it to happen to begin with.
Ashbringer broke away from Janine and stepped up to Alpha, releasing the claws.
âShut it.â
âAre you challenging me, little sister?â Alpha asked and grinned. A touch of fear spreading from her caused people to shudder.
âI am telling you to shut up.â
âKneel, sister.â The smirk changed into a scowl, and fangs flashed in the lamplight. Muscles bulged at the white neck. âOr be shamed.â
âThere is no shame in protecting kin, sister.â Ashbringer stepped close to Alpha, and their bodies touched. It wasnât just brazen courage. At that close a distance, the taller warlord would have struggled to land the first blow with her longer arms.
Not that it mattered. Not against Alpha.
âSpirits speak through you, Ashbringer,â Alpha snorted, relaxing herself. âI overstepped the bounds. The lesson has been learned.â
âDonât worry, sister!â A paw slapped Janine on the shoulder, and she jumped from the unexpectedness. Onyxia was behind her, her toes gripping the edge of the platform, and she had crept up on her named sister without so much as a crack. Janineâs heavy landing thump brought a smile to the shadowy lips. âWhile I draw breath, no hordemen will approach the kiddo. Andâ¦â She swallowed, glancing aside. âIterna owes me, and we are calling in that debt. Donât argue! Itâs my decision. Their medical services are superior to ours...â She turned to First. âAnd far more trustworthy.â
âEnough.â Dragena stepped between the two groups, silencing any further barbs. âThe Horde is coming. The question is whether theyâll lay siege or attack immediately. Based on the evidence gathered from their previous invasions and the fact that their centerpiece, that Mad Hatter, is coming, the latter is more realistic.â
âTheyâll ram their army into ours, no lubrication,â Martyshkina said.
âFoul,â Dragena said. âNot inaccurate. They gain nothing by being delayed here, so stalled they wonât be. The Commander is not here, but she has never failed to arrive in our toughest times. It wonât be any different now, either. But with or without the Blessed Mother, we are staking our claim in Houstad. The Horde breaks here.â
âIdiotic,â Onyxia said. âWeâre not built for trench warfare. The Third is famous for our swift attacks, ambushes, and fluidity on the battlefields. This place is mere rock, steel, and glass. Let the Horde have it; there is nothing to devour here. What do we care about useless ancient toys or pretty paintings in museums? When our enemies overstretch themselves, the gleam of our claws will greet them in the darkness of the forests, and our shells will deny them the luxury of sleep. Before the First and the Second arrive, we will fertilize the fields with the corpses of those who oppose the state. Weâll haunt their nightmares and poison their reality, never relenting until they break!â
âYou just love forests,â Martyshkina accused.
âI do, and I am tired of pretending otherwise.â Onyxia spun, stepping on the platform. âDarkness is our home, and starless nights keep us safe. When I die, Iâd love to be buried in the densest forest around here, in a place where the sunlight never reaches.â
âNoted. But you miss a crucial point, sister.â Dragena raised her paw, stopping Janine from arguing. The map changed to the image of the terraforming complex. âOur future. The future of our descendants and the future of those we serve and protect. If it is destroyed, the ecosystem of the region will suffer. The damage will be severe enough to set back the restoration project by decades, if not centuries.â She snapped her finger, and the image disappeared, giving way to the regional map.
This model showed the predictions of the geologists and biologists, highlighting forests, parks, farmland, lakes, and rivers. Slowly, the plants withered, and patches of yellow and gray sand ate up large rings among the dead brown fields. These rings of desolation grew and soon covered everything; leaves fell from the trees, and the trunks cracked under the occasional wind. Lakes dried up, leaving hollow craters. Over the course of a year, the thriving region was replaced by nothing but another desert.
âThis is the predicted result if the complex is severely damaged or destroyed, based on several simulations. This outcome we will deny,â Dragena said and addressed Janine. âSister. The northern gates are yours to hold. I will join you shortly after the battle begins.â
âI am joining you,â Jacomie declared, rising to her feet with the whine of working servomotors. She stubbornly met Dragenaâs emotionless eyes. âI refuse to abandon my city or my people, Warlord.â
âAnd what of your wounds, Captain?â Dragena asked. âThe Inevitable will soon be down to a skeleton crew, and the New Breeds capable of blocking teleportation are gathered in the complex. I had planned to put you in charge of our crawler, as it plays the most crucial role in our coordination and support.â
âTo hell with it!â Jacomie fired. âOur citizens have died, been wounded or enslaved. And you expect me to cower in the rear? Jaquan joined the volunteers. Put his unit here and let the professionals fight!â
âAs you wish, Captain,â Dragena said evenly. âJanineâs pack will be reinforced by the mixture of volunteers and soldiers.â
âWell, if thatâs the way it is, then Iâll go get suited up too,â Zurkov said, struggling to get to his feet. âIâ¦â
Jaquan kicked his walking stick, and the policeman fell to the side, almost hitting his head on the table, but Bertruda and Martyshkinaâs paws caught him and helped the man to stand.
âSon of a whore,â the man cursed.
âThat was the practical demonstration,â Jaquan said cheerfully. âCommissioner, I understand your desire, but I do not share it. Personally, Iâd be happy hiding in the back. Houstad will need help to rebuild. Zurkov, we have had our differences, but I hope you can overcome your prejudices and continue to serve our city as bravely in the years to come as you have served it lately. Iâll do my part here.â
Zurkovâs face darkened, but he said nothing and left, supported by Jacomie. Dragena resumed her speech, addressing the warlords and assigning positions in the city for them to defend. Hearing her orders, Janine experienced near despair. The city seemed endless; its sprawling streets, even cut to the most important districts by the walls, stretched on and on, intertwining and forming a colossal labyrinth. Subways, skyscrapers, sewers, and factoriesânot counting apartmentsâpresented a nightmare to try to hold on to. Once the walls shatter, the hordemen will spill across the entire city, doubtless giving them ample opportunities to flank the defenders.
Surely Dragena could see it, too. What good was the clever placement of fortifications if they lacked the numbers to properly man them? In the battle against the New Breeds, the regular troops will not have the luxury of a safe retreat. Everything will be decided in a frontal confrontation.
âWhat about the Hordeâs superweapon?â she voiced her concern. âThe one that wiped Opul off the map.â
âI believe that Mad Hatter intends on capturing this place relatively intact.â Dragena highlighted three possible locations on the map where the Horde could deploy the Skyâs Wrath. âBy the time we change her perception about the feasibility of such a goal, it will be too late to use it. Make no mistake in underestimating our opposition or thinking the victory is granted. We are facing approximately a force of two hundred thousand, much of it New Breeds. The land itself is groaning under the sheer mass of combat vehicles bearing down on us. It is do or die.â
âButcher them all and watch bodies fall.â Alpha gritted her fangs, rumbling out the words. âIf the worst comes to pass, it was an honor, sisters, brothers, allies, and the traitors.â She glared at the Ice Fangs. âIâve never been the best person around, but you accepted me, and for that Iâll give it my all.â
To their credit, the Ice Fangs took the insult in stride. Alpha was testing them, Janine understood. Zero and Dragena always had a positive influence on the strongest warlord, cooling down her violent urges, and right now her named sister was testing the white-furred, guessing how much they could be counted on the battlefield.
âWarlord Dragena,â First said, breaking his silence. âThe Order has received no assignments. May I inquire as to the reason?â
âWhat good are soldiers who cannot follow orders and refuse to cooperate? What good are troops incompetent enough to lose cubs?â asked Ashbringer.
âAshbringer, please, let us be reasonable.â First started in a soothing voice. âWe had our differences and arguments, true, but you canât thinkâ¦â
âCanât think? Are the mindless beasts for your ilk, First?â Alpha interrupted him in a deceptively calm tone. âOr has the Order deemed it fit to tell us what to think now? Give me back my sisters. Return Predaig and Eled. Give Marco his limbs back this instant. Resurrect our every lost kin, then youâll get the right to tell us what to do.â She spat on the floor. âSince the beginning of this war, the Order has done little more than feed its own vain pride, and the packs are now riled up; they are enraged with you, and they have every right to be. We wonât quench that fire; the tales of your betrayal shall survive everyone present. Step outside and count how many of us are left. The Tribe is close to our own Extinction.â
âThis is why you have to accept our aid,â First insisted. âAnd not engage in useless arguments. The demise of the Wolf Tribe was never in our intentions, and weâll sooner die than see our kin disappear.â
âWhat sort of cohesion do you expect of our forces in our current predicament?â Alpha dropped the mocking tone. âFirst, open your eyes and try to see the situation from our point of view. We have tried everything to appease you and to build a kinship with the Order, and yet you still betrayed us. How can we rely on you now, when not a single one of our leaders holds a shred of respect toward your hides?â
A stomp interrupted Firstâs response, and Dragena stepped between the two groups. The impact shook the platform, causing the operators to turn in their seats, and Lacerated One charged in, taking up position at the warlordâs side, looking for any signs of insubordination from the Wolfkins present.
âEnough. We are soldiers. Disagreements and grievances no longer matter. The Wolf Tribe will meet the enemy in the old way, fighting on the side of those we can trust.â She nodded to Alpha. âBut the Order wonât be forgotten either. You wish for glory and triumph, and that shall be given to you in abundance. After interrogating the prisoners and learning all we can about Mad Hatter and her commanders, I believe I know a little of how she thinks. Seeing the city weak, sheâll launch one singular assault to overwhelm everything we have, using her own might to break through the defenses at their strongest point. My guess is that she wonât try any complicated approaches and will come in from the west. That means the north and south will be left unattended. We will weather the brunt of the storm.â Her cold eyes looked at First. âSo that you can secure the destruction of their war machine and stand triumphantly on our corpses at the end of it, Grandmaster.â
âWe do not act in pursuit of glory,â Bertruda said.
âMayhap,â Dragena conceded. âConsider it as a bonus incentive to ensure that no Ice Fang is offended. Think us ungrateful and paranoid if you must.â
âMad Hatter isnât in the command alone,â First cautioned. âWhoever she chose to command the rearguard will bolster the rearâs defenses.â
âThat was accounted for.â Dragena took a terminal from the table and handed it to First. The grandmaster read the information, and a thin smile appeared on his lips. âYes. We know who itâll be and how to bait them.â
âI am afraid I must point out a flaw in your plan, Warlord Dragena,â First said, handing the terminal back. âYou said north. For that to workâ¦â
âI have never made a mistake, Grandmaster,â Dragena answered, watching the observation console showing the crawlerâs corridors. âNow silence. Not a word, thatâs an order.â
The doors to the bridge opened, and Schalk stepped inside, quickly saluting the officers.
âYour will is done, Warlord.â He flashed a smile. âIt took more effort than I am willing to admit, but the unions and my boys have loaded every beast from the zoos onto the trucks. If any of those disgusting animals escape... well, I donât know, shoot me, Maâam.â He noticed Janine. âMy deepest condolences about your children and sisters, Warlord.â
âImpeccably done.â Dragena inclined her head. âWarlord Janine and I will join the defense of the western gates. Your unit will be added to the crawlerâs security. I understand the unusualness of such an order, but the bridge plays a crucial role in our plans.â
âWe get to sit out the fight?â Schalk beamed, then forced a cough. âI mean, yeah, of course you can count on us, Warlord! Smash the bad guys, my girls and boys will keep the place nice and warm; donât you dare worry, maâam!â
He saluted and left the bridge. As the doors sealed them off from the corridors, Dragena calmly returned to the map, issuing orders and outlining strategy. The operators and several officers exchanged glances, too concerned to bother the warlord for clarification. Finally, the youngest of them, a boy of twenty-six and a veteran of two campaigns, left his seat and approached Dragena, baring his throat. The warlord waved away Lacerated One and gestured for the soldier to speak.
âWarlord,â the operator never bowed, holding his throat exposed, imitating the Wolf Tribeâs tradition. âI believe you have made a mistake. You assigned Warlord Janine to defend the north before.â
âNever in my life have I made a mistake, brother,â Dragena assured the man. âThe deaths of Keon and Maxim Puchkov. The ambush on Captain Cristobo. And precise knowledge of our vulnerable locations is available to the Gilded Horde. None of that was an accident.â
âWhich one?â Janine demanded to know.
She sniffed the air and sensed no scent mark from the operator but caught a very familiar scent from an opened recess above them. Overjoyed, she rubbed her snout against the manâs neck, marking him as kin on her own volition and granting him the unofficial privileges of more senior crew members for his bravery.
âOne. Another. Both. Maybe the third. Neither. We will waste no effort guessing,â Dragena said. âOne way or another, the path to your target will be open, Grandmaster First. I advise you to use the southern gates for the majority of the Orderâs units. Allies. The Gilded Horde believes us to be foolish and brutish. They think our civilization is weak and pathetic. It is an apt time to educate them about our cunning.â A snap of her fingers brought back the image of the terraforming complex. âJanine. I have a job for your soldiers.â