Chapter 63: Chapter 63

Dust hung like crystallized breath in the violet strobed air. Cassiopeia’s heart star pulsed through the barracks, no longer an explosion, but the deep, resonant thrum of a war drum forged in defiance. Its light slicked the obsidian walls wet, painting afterimages that danced like dying stars on the stone.

Mira remained pressed against her pillar, knuckles white where she gripped her crow. Tears glistened on her lashes, freezing into tiny diamonds as the void cold lingering in the air kissed them. Her visible eye, wide and raw, tracked Shiro and Kuro, the Twin Stars reborn, blazing at the room’s centre. They did it. They’re standing After being broken destroyed like dying embers. A fragile, fierce hope bloomed in her chest, warmer than the violet light. "Show them," she whispered, the words swallowed by the thrumming silence but carried by her intent. "Show them all." Her crow ruffled its feathers, a soft kraa echoing her yearning.

Juro stood like a monument carved from the mountain itself. His dagger was half drawn, the knuckles of his gripping hand bone white against the worn leather hilt. His flint chip eyes scanned the twins, not with dismissal now, but the brutal assessment of a master smith studying a freshly quenched blade. Living up to that potential I’ve been counting on time to see if the embers have truly been reborn. Prove it. The tension in his forearm shifted, a subtle coiling like a spring compressed. The hand on his dagger wasn't just ready to strike; it was ready to direct the strike. "Barracks cleared in sixty seconds," he growled, the statement a challenge thinly veiled as logistics. "Targets set. Show me you can hit them without stumbling over yourselves or using that tumour of a power this time." It wasn't faith, it was demand, a demand born of a desperate need to believe the sharpened edge was real.

Haruto, near the cold geometric centre, didn’t flinch. The Polaris dagger at his side hummed, a low, resonant frequency echoing the violet star’s deeper thrum, harmonic confirmation. His diamond tipped gaze absorbed every micro tremor in Shiro’s frame, the precise counterbalance in Kuro’s stance. “Drills are done. Tomorrow we draw live steel. Measure only one thing, do the blades bite clean, or do they bite us?” His gaze, cold as the obsidian itself, held no doubt, only the certainty of a strategist whose ledger is written in blood and frost.

Ryota anchored the room from the dead hearth. Polaris eyes burned not with fury now, but the fierce, banked heat of a star core. The weight of Kaya’s gamble, Elara’s shattered legacy, still pressed upon him, yet beneath it, the feral ember of hope they’d fanned blazed brighter. His voice, when it came, was the sound of continents grinding: “Burn the fucking sky.” It wasn't just permission; it was ignition. "The crucible is hot," he added, his gaze sweeping the room, encompassing the expectant tension. "Strike while the iron bleeds defiance." He craved the proof, the visible manifestation of their rebirth, as much as air. The mountain needed its stars to blaze true.

Mira sucked in a breath sharp enough to cut. “You did it. You’re….”

Juro’s gravel grind voice cut across hers, brutal and immediate: “…almost weapons.” He didn’t sheath his dagger. The half drawn steel caught the violet light, a cold, demanding edge. “Show me the fucking edge. Now. Before the frost remembers how to bite.”

Haruto’s clipped voice cut across Juro’s growl: “The edge is honed. Tomorrow we find out if it holds or shatters.” His gaze raked the twins, one curt nod toward the frost scrawled quadrant on the floor: begin.

Shiro and Kuro stepped forward as one. The faint glow from Shiro’s scarred palm and Kuro’s crimson furnace mark pulsed in time with the heart star, a visible echo of their vow. The air crackled, ozone and defiance mingling with the settling dust. The eagerness radiating from Mira, Juro, and Haruto was a palpable pressure, a silent roar demanding proof. Ryota’s presence was the anvil upon which they would be struck.

Shiro met Juro’s flinty stare, his own eyes burning suns. A ragged snarl tore from his throat, raw with impatience, the agony still screaming in his fused wrists, and the fierce surge to meet their challenge: “Then let’s get to fucking training! These bones scream for it! Light the targets, and see if this Starfire obeys!” His scar flared brighter, responding to the collective will in the room.

Beside him, Kuro’s corrupted arm pulsed grey translucence. Static crackled like ice breaking underfoot, woven into his words, but beneath the distortion was a chilling eagerness: “We’ve got frost to melt and debts to be paid. Time to see if this edge cuts deep enough to draw Volrag’s blood. Set the fucking stage.” He shifted his weight, the dead drag of his corrupted arm momentarily forgotten in the surge of anticipation. The Polaris scar on his forearm pulsed crimson, a contained inferno eager for direction.

From the deepest pool of shadow near the sealed door, a voice colder than the void between galaxies cut through the burgeoning fervour: "Eagerness is a spark. Control is the forge."

Corvin emerged not as a step, but as a coalescence of darkness. His hooded face remained turned towards the twins, the void stone ring on his finger drinking the violet light. "You speak of rebirth. You project defiance. The Haruto sees function. The Stone sees potential." His distorted monotone held no malice, only the terrible weight of absolute zero observation. "But the void cares nothing for declarations. It consumes conviction as readily as fear." His hood tilted minutely. "You forced a word into dead stone. A whisper against the hunger. Tomorrow, you face the scream. Time will tell if you truly have been reborn... or merely polished the coffin."

The challenge hung, colder than Juro's blade, more clinical than Haruto's metrics. It was a splash of liquid nitrogen on the heated anticipation. Shiro's jaw clenched, the fire in his palm flickering not with doubt, but with the fierce desire to prove Corvin wrong. Kuro's static intensified, a crackling counterpoint to the void master's chill. The silence stretched, thick with the unspoken response from the Twin Stars: Watch us burn. The test wasn't just imminent; it was demanded by friend and doubter alike. The crucible awaited.

The violet light strobed again, painting the wet obsidian in fleeting constellations. Before the echo of Kuro’s static laced challenge faded, Haruto’s hand snapped up. Not a gesture. A guillotine falling.

His Polaris dagger flicked out in a minimal, precise arc. Not an attack, but a negation. The intense violet reflections dancing wildly on the walls died instantly, snuffed out as if severed by the blade’s passage. Only the deep, steady pulse from the crypt doorway remained, casting the barracks in stark, unforgiving relief. The sudden shift plunged the space into a deeper, more focused gloom. The tear in Haruto’s sleeve, crusted with his own dried, dark blood, the stark algorithm of their past failure, was a brutal smear in the dimmer light. A visceral reminder: Instability has a cost. Paid in blood. The abrupt dimming felt like a shroud thrown over their defiance, forcing raw urgency into the void left by the vanished light. Google seaʀᴄh novel⦿fire.net

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Shiro’s fists clenched. The grinding shriek of bone on bone in his wrists was audible, a counterpoint to his rising fury. “Every fucking second we wait…” His voice cracked, strained by the effort of containing the stellar fire that wanted to erupt, to act, not plan. The violet pulse seemed to throb in time with his racing heart, a drumbeat counting down to catastrophe.

Haruto’s voice cut across him, flat, cold, and utterly final. It held the sterile chill of a cryo chamber, devoid of inflection, heavy with inarguable fact: “Aki’s pulse is a countdown.” He paused, the weight of those words hanging like an executioner’s blade. “Not a metronome.” The silence that followed was thicker than the mountain’s bones, charged with the unspoken horror: Aki is alive, but her time is measured in stolen breaths, each one a victory for Volrag. Haruto’s diamond sharp gaze didn’t waver from Shiro. "Akuma’s touch is not theoretical. It is documented. Efficient. Calculated to maximize despair before termination. Every delay is a paragraph added to her suffering."

The name Aki hit Shiro like a physical blow. He staggered half a step, the controlled stellar fire in his palm flaring violently, erratically, sending jagged shadows leaping across Juro’s granite face before Shiro wrestled it back down with a gasp that sounded like tearing metal. His face, already etched with exhaustion and pain, contorted. His sister. His blood. The memory wasn't visual; it was visceral, the coppery tang of his own blood crusted on a knife, the phantom sound of her scream, the suffocating helplessness of watching a void entity hover over the shacks door while he lay broken in the throne room. "That frostbitten bastard Akuma touches her…" Shiro’s voice was a raw scrape, trembling with a fury so profound it threatened to unravel his hard won control. "If he lays one fucking finger on her… if he so much as looks at her wrong…" He sucked in a breath that shuddered through his entire frame. "I’ll peel his fucking face off with my dagger and feed it to his own void hounds! I’ll burn his fucking soul!" Rage, raw and primal, vibrated through him, momentarily overwhelming the discipline Haruto had hammered into him. The violet light pulsed, seeming to flare in response to his outburst.

Juro shifted his weight, a subtle grinding of boot on stone. "Save the fire for the plaza. Screaming here just tells the frost where to bite first." His tone was brutal, but it lacked its usual dismissal. It was a reminder, an anchor thrown into Shiro’s storm. Control the burn. Use it.

Kuro didn’t flinch at Shiro’s outburst. Instead, his storm grey eyes narrowed, the static around his corrupted arm intensifying, not in chaos, but in a terrifyingly focused hum that seemed to resonate with the deep thrum of the heart star. His jaw was granite, etched with cold resolve. "Rage is fucking fuel, Shiro," he stated, the static layering his voice like grinding ice. "But Akuma needs a scalpel, not a supernova. Give us the fucking map, Haruto." His gaze locked onto Haruto, devoid of pleading, only iron clad demand. "No more circling the void. Point us at the target. Give us the map to end that fucker." He understood Shiro’s fury, it mirrored the icy pit of dread in his own gut, but the time for volcanic outbursts was over. Precision was their currency now, and Akuma’s life was the price.

Haruto didn’t hesitate. From a fold in his austere tunic he drew a sheet of frost thin vellum. It crackled like dead leaves as he spread it. No ink, only crow scrawl and knife sharp geometry, warped through Mira’s cracked lens. Less map than augury: Frostguard glyphs, patrol lines thick as sinew or thin as dying breath, margins spattered with Haruto’s chilled hand, scent mark at third bell, ward stone flickers at false dawn, Akuma climbs when the wind howls north.

He laid it flat against the frost rimed surface of a nearby supply crate, weighing down the fluttering corners with shards of dark stone. His finger, precise as a laser scalpel, stabbed down onto a single point marked with a harsh, arterial red ‘X’. “Plaza Of Screams.” The words were clipped, surgical, slicing through the tension. “False dawn. Tomorrow.” His finger traced a barely visible, shimmering arc across the vellum, a path that danced between solid patrol lines and areas of fractured uncertainty. “Akuma moves. Personal guard: minimum four Void Touched. Frostforged.” He tapped a point near the 'X'. "Transfer point must be precise as it’s the piece of leverage we have."

Juro materialized at Haruto’s shoulder like a shadow given substance. His own dagger was finally fully sheathed, but his hand remained on the hilt, a constant promise of

Violence coiled in Juro’s stillness, a drawn bowstring no one saw. He stepped to the vellum and let his shadow swallow half the parchment, as if night itself leaned in to read. One calloused finger struck the first inked circle, north west tower, then the second, south east arch, then the third, central stair. Each jab cracked the frost beneath the parchment.

“Black Cloaks,” he growled, voice like gravel dragged over steel. “Three rings of steel and ice. First: brutes with frost glaives and weighted nets. Second: ward keepers and horn blowers ready to pin you with cold iron. Third: roof hawks with bone bows and ice headed quarrels. You breathe wrong, they loose.”

His finger slid to the inked wolf heads ringing the plaza. “Void hounds, three packs. Alpha sits here, by the north spire shaft. They’ve soaked rags in fresh blood, hung them on the stones. They’ll scent your heartbeat before you clear the gutter. One whimper from that wrist, Shiro, and they’ll tear the fear out of you.”

He tapped the spire itself. “Archers perch above the frost banners. No moonlight reaches them; their breath fogs the kill zone. Cross their line and the quarrel finds you before the echo.”

Juro straightened, hand still on his dagger, eyes flat. “Every step you take tomorrow was drawn in blood tonight. Tread soft, strike hard, or the plaza keeps your bones.”

Mira drifted closer, drawn to the map like a moth to a lethal flame. Her crow shifted nervously on her shoulder, letting out a soft, warning kraa. Her visible eye scanned the vellum, wide and straining, while the fractured lens over the other seemed to pulse with a faint, internal light, casting minuscule, shifting prism patterns onto the surface. She traced the converging patrol routes not with her finger, but with the intense focus of her gaze, her breath coming in short, sharp bursts. She pointed, her finger trembling slightly, not at the thick cordon lines, but at two thin, almost imperceptible gaps shimmering like mirages on the vellum, one near a cluster of symbols representing overflow conduits, another beside a stark line denoting a maintenance spire. “I see… two cracks,” she whispered, voice thin as frost brittle parchment. “Flickering. Unstable.” Her fingertip hovered above the vellum, trembling. “West conduit’s overflow grate, iron warped by winter, hinges near breaking. North spire’s shaft, old ward stone split, its rune light guttering. Both will close at true dawn, like frost sealing a cut.”

From the deeper gloom near the sealed door, Corvin’s distorted monotone flowed like liquid nitrogen. "Predictable patterns are traps waiting to be sprung. Volrag delights in predictable prey." He didn’t move closer, a void cloaked silhouette against the pulsing violet light. "The plaza is a killing floor. Those 'cracks' you perceive, Seer… are they paths, or teeth?" His hood tilted fractionally towards Mira. "The void whispers through fractures. It amplifies hope… before extinguishing it." It was a chilling counterpoint to Mira’s fragile insight, a reminder of the abyss waiting to swallow their plans.

Haruto’s gaze swept over them all, the barely leashed rage vibrating through Shiro, the terrifyingly focused ice in Kuro’s storm grey eyes, Juro’s tactical brutality etched in every line of his stance, Mira’s fragile hope warring with Corvin’s chilling doubt. His finger tapped the red ‘X’ one final time, the sound sharp as a gunshot in the tense silence. His final words weren’t an order; they were a cold, surgical pronouncement, the culmination of every brutal drill, every shattered bone, every tear in his sleeve paid for in blood, every ounce of belief and scepticism in the room:

“Training is done. Theory is void.” His diamond sharp eyes locked onto Shiro and Kuro, then swept to include Juro, Mira, even lingering for a microsecond on Corvin’s shadowed form. “Now we bleed them…” He paused, letting the absolute finality settle. “…with the drills we already paid for in bone and frost. Execute the plan. Make the cost count.” The map wasn’t just a plan; it was a verdict. The time for rebirth was over. Now was the time for butchery.