Squad
Tactics & Live-Action Team Maneuvers – The Next Day, 10:40
The
bell rings. Cain lifts two fingers, then closes his fist. The
noise dies instantly. Five bodies tighten behind him, rifles up,
safeties off. The killhouse entrance looms, steel door,
scorch-marked, scarred by a thousand breaches before theirs.
Cain doesn’t rush it.
“Stack,” he murmurs.
They move as one. Shield
forward. Shotgun tight behind it. Rifles angled high and low. Cain
plants the charge himself, fingers steady, breath slow. He slaps the
detonator and turns his face away.
The door erupts.
They flow through the
breach on the blast wave, textbook, violent, beautiful. Flashbang
out, smoke rolling, the room turning into white noise and screaming
sensors. Cain’s voice cuts through it all, sharp and calm, calling
angles, calling threats, rotating command without ever sounding
uncertain.
“Left clear. Push. Push.
Move.”
The first construct goes
down in a shower of sparks. The second fires back, hooks bite into
one of Cain’s cadets, electricity detonating through the
exoskeleton. The cadet screams and drops, convulsing, weapon
skittering across the floor.
Cain doesn’t hesitate.
“Man down, ignore him.
He’s dead. Move.”
It sounds cruel. It isn’t.
It’s survival.
They clear room after room,
pressure stacking, resistance escalating. Constructs pour from blind
corners, catwalks, stairwells. Electrical rounds snap and sting.
Another cadet goes down, then another, bodies slumping where they
fall, systems locking them in place, pain pulsing through their
frames.
Cain keeps going.
He shifts roles mid-run,
pulls point when his breacher falters, hands command to his rear when
he needs to clear a stairwell solo. He uses grenades not to kill but
to herd, to force the machines where he wants them. He takes
hits, shoulder, thigh, grimacing as the shocks bite deep, but he
never drops.
By the final room, only
three of them are still moving.
Cain breaches last,
shield-first, eating fire meant for the others. He pivots, fires,
fires again. The final construct collapses in a tangle of limbs and
dead lights.
Silence.
The timer freezes.
Not perfect. Not clean. But
complete.
Above them, on the
catwalks, cadets murmur despite themselves. Even Tiber Tiber doesn’t
scoff this time. Vale says nothing at first, just watches the team
regroup, watches Cain kneel briefly beside one of the downed cadets,
hand on his shoulder, murmuring something too low to hear.
Finally, Vale speaks. “Time
logged,” he says. “Casualty rate unacceptable. Command
discipline, strong. Adaptability, excellent.”
His gaze tracks Cain as the
team limps out of the house.
“You lived,” Vale adds
flatly. “That’s more than most of you will manage today.”
The timer resets.
Vale’s eyes shift to
another team. “Domitian’s team.”
Lucille signals her team
forward.
They break from the railing
and start down the grated stairs, boots ringing sharp against metal.
The catwalk trembles faintly under their combined weight. Below,
Cain’s team is already climbing up, armor scuffed, faces flushed,
some grinning despite the shocks still crawling through their
muscles.
They pass midway.
For a heartbeat, the noise
of the killhouse fades.
Cain meets Lucille’s
eyes.
No words. No bravado. Just
a brief, crooked smile from him, tired, proud, a little worried.
Lucille answers with one just as small, just as private. It’s gone
almost immediately, swallowed by helmets and motion, but it’s
enough. It steadies something in both of them.
Then they’re past each
other.
Cain reaches the top and
steps aside with his squad, peeling off helmets, some of them
collapsing onto benches. He doesn’t sit. He drifts to the rail
instead, resting his forearms against the cold metal, eyes tracking
Lucille as she forms her team at the door below.
Captain Vale stops beside
him.
The captain’s datapad
hums softly as he works. Lines of code and tactical overlays scroll
beneath his fingers. Cain glances down without meaning to and
stiffens.
Enemy density increases.
Reaction time tightens. Patrol paths overlap in ways that shouldn’t.
Weapons upgrade. Angles close. Safe lanes vanish.
Cain swallows. “You’re
tuning it high,” he says quietly.
Vale doesn’t look at him.
“I know.”
Below, Lucille lifts her
shield into place, checks her weapon, speaks to her squad with sharp,
clipped gestures. Cain watches her shoulders settle, her posture
shift; predator calm, the kind that only comes when everything else
has been burned away.
Vale taps one last command.
“Bell,” he says.
The chime rings out, cold
and final.
Lucille moves.
There is no hesitation, no
breath drawn to steady nerves. The door explodes inward under the
cadet’s boot and smoke floods the threshold, thick and chemical,
rolling low across the metal floor. Lucille is already through it,
shield up, compact weapon tucked tight to her shoulder. Her voice
cuts clean through the chaos.
“Left, stack, now.”
They follow because they
have to. Because standing still means getting lit up.
Electrical rounds slam into
her shield almost immediately, snapping and crackling, arcs of
blue-white crawling across its surface. The impacts would have
dropped any one of them. Lucille absorbs them without flinching,
knees bent, center low, pushing forward like a living battering ram.
She hears everything.
The whir of servos behind
the wall. The click of a weapon cycling above. The faint scrape of
metal feet shifting through smoke.
“High right,” she snaps
and fires without looking.
Her submachine gun barks, a
tight, vicious rattle. A robotic head snaps back, plating rupturing,
lights dead before it hits the floor.
She pivots through the
doorway and stabs.
Blind. Instinctive.
The knife punches through
synthetic faceplate and into the core beneath. The construct
convulses once and goes slack as she tears the blade free and keeps
moving, already firing into the far corner where two more targets
break cover.
Her team struggles to keep
up.
They are good. Trained.
Elite by any sane standard. It isn’t enough.
One cadet catches a round
to the thigh and goes down hard, screaming as the shock locks his
muscles. Another is clipped across the chest and collapses, spasming,
weapon skittering away across the floor.
Lucille shifts instantly,
shield angling, body interposed without thought. A burst slams into
her exposed side, too fast, too close.
She grunts as the shock
hits.
For a heartbeat, the world
whites out.
Any other cadet would drop.
Lucille snarls and keeps
going.
She stumbles once, then
plants her feet, dragging the shield back up as if sheer refusal can
hold her spine together. Smoke clings to her, electricity crawling
across her armor, but she pushes through it, firing point-blank into
another construct’s chest until it crumples.
“Move!” she barks at
the last cadet still standing.
He tries.
He doesn’t make it.
The final electrical burst
catches him across the back and he drops, twitching, breath knocked
out of him as the system flags him incapacitated.
Lucille doesn’t slow.
She is alone now.
Vale watches from above,
expression unreadable.
Lucille breaches the final
room by herself.
The door opens. Three
constructs pivot toward her in perfect unison.
She throws herself forward
anyway.
The shield takes the first
volley. Her weapon chews through the second target’s arm, then its
torso. The third lands a clean hit, right into her side agai, —and
this time she stumbles to one knee, breath tearing out of her in a
broken sound.
She roars and
empties the magazine.
Silence crashes down.
Smoke thins. Systems power
down. Targets lie in pieces across the floor.
Lucille stands alone in the
wreckage, chest heaving, armor scorched and sparking, shield hanging
heavy from her arm. Her hands shake, not from fear, but from the
aftermath of refusing to stop.
The timer freezes.
Milliseconds.
Her time rivals Cain’s.
Up on the catwalk, no one
speaks.
Cain exhales slowly,
something like awe twisting painfully in his chest.
Vale finally nods once.
Lucille lowers her weapon
and looks up through the haze, eyes burning, feral and unbroken.
She is the only survivor.
And somehow, that feels exactly right.
Cain is on his feet before
he realizes he’s moved.
So is everyone else.
The catwalk that had been
alive with murmurs and bored shifting goes dead silent, thirty cadets
frozen in place, hands gripping rails, eyes locked on the killhouse
below.
They’ve seen Lucille run
drills before. They’ve seen her dominate. They’ve seen her win.
They have not seen this.
They saw her take the first
hit, center mass, electrical discharge arcing across her exoskeleton,
enough voltage to drop a full-grown cadet screaming. She
staggered…She did not fall.
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They saw the second hit
tear into her open side as she turned to cover a teammate’s
retreat. The kind of strike that ends runs. Ends people. Lucille
snarled and kept moving.
She pushed forward when the
rest of her squad went down one by one, their bodies locking up,
systems screaming, limbs refusing to respond. She dragged them out of
crossfire. She blocked shots meant for them. She cleared rooms alone
when no one else could keep pace.
A five-foot-two wrecking
force in a storm of smoke and steel.
Cain’s hands are clenched
white around the rail. His heart is hammering. Pride and terror coil
together in his chest so tightly it hurts to breathe.
That should have stopped
her.
That should have broken
her.
Captain Vale doesn’t
move.
He stands with his arms
crossed, weight evenly balanced, eyes following Lucille’s path
through the killhouse with clinical precision. No widened eyes. No
sharp intake of breath. Just calculation. Assessment.
As if this outcome was not
a surprise, but a confirmation.
The timer above the
killhouse stops.
Vale’s voice cuts cleanly
through the stunned silence. “Time recorded.” He reads it out.
Calm. Flat. The number hangs in the air.
Lucille’s run comes
within a breath of Cain’s team.
A ripple moves through the
cadets on the catwalk, shock, disbelief, something like fear.
Vale continues, already
logging the data. “All hostile constructs neutralized. Squad
incapacitation rate: total. Survivor count: one.” A pause. “Team
Domitian: exercise complete.”
Down below, the smoke
thins.
Lucille stands alone for a
moment in the wreckage, shield scarred, exoskeleton scorched, chest
rising and falling hard. Then she turns back, not to the exit, not to
the timer, but to her team.
She moves to the first
cadet on the floor and kneels, careful hands finding straps, helping
disengage the locking systems. He groans as sensation creeps back in.
“Saints above,” he
mutters, breathless. “You took that shot for me.”
Lucille just shrugs, as if
it’s nothing. As if she didn’t step into fire without hesitation.
“Get up,” she says
quietly. Not unkind. “You’re not done yet.”
She helps him to his feet,
then moves to the next. And the next. Gentle where she had been
brutal. Steady where moments ago she was lethal.
Up on the catwalk, Cain
finally exhales.
He watches her, this small,
savage, unbreakable thing, and understands something with a cold
clarity that settles deep in his bones.
The Academy didn’t make
Lucille Domitian into a weapon. It only taught the world what she
already was.
Squad Tactics &
Live-Action Team Maneuvers – 11:30
Captain Vale lets the
datapad fall to his side.
Silence stretches.
Thirty cadets stand rigid
in formation, armor scuffed, faces drawn, some still shaking faintly
from the shocks that linger in their nerves. Weapons hang inert
across their chests, safeties engaged, barrels down. No one speaks.
No one dares.
Vale’s gaze sweeps them,
slow, clinical, impersonal.
“You should understand
something,” he says at last. His voice is even. Almost calm.
“Today’s scenarios were not designed to be fair.”
A few cadets stiffen.
“They were not designed
to be winnable.”
That lands harder.
“The enemy density,
reaction time, overlapping kill zones, suppression algorithms,” he
taps the datapad once, “were all calibrated beyond standard
Praevectus tolerances. Even a veteran fireteam would have suffered
catastrophic losses.”
He looks up.
“No team was expected to
survive.”
A murmur ripples through
the formation before dying under the weight of his stare.
Vale turns slightly, pacing
a single step. “And yet. Two teams completed the objective.”
His eyes find Cain first.
“Cain Aurellius’ team.”
A brief pause. “Five incapacitations. Command integrity maintained.
Objective completed under pressure.”
Cain does not move. His jaw
tightens. He stares straight ahead.
Vale’s gaze shifts.
“Lucille Domitian’s
team.”
Lucille stands perfectly
still, shoulders squared despite the bruising beneath her armor. Her
face is unreadable.
“One survivor,” Vale
continues. “Total team loss. Objective completed.”
That earns a few sharp
looks from the other cadets. Awe. Unease. Something closer to fear.
Vale does not soften.
“You all failed,” he
says flatly.
The words hit like a slap.
“Tiber Lucan.” Vale’s
eyes cut left. “You forgot your training. You hesitated. Leadership
collapsed under contact.”
Tiber’s jaw clenches.
“Titus Remus.” Vale
doesn’t even look at him long. “You lost cohesion. You let your
squad fracture. In real conditions, they die screaming.”
Remus swallows.
“Misael McKnight.”
Vale’s tone sharpens. “Your team followed protocol until it
mattered. Then you forgot it. Livia Mornis’ error cost you
momentum. You let it.”
Livia stares at the floor.
“Seraphine Veyra.” Vale
finally turns fully toward her.
She stiffens.
“You panicked.” His
voice is ice. “You froze under simulated fire. You became a
liability.”
Seraphine’s lips part,
but nothing comes out.
“That,” Vale continues,
“is why your scores are failing. And that,” he adds, cold and
precise, “is why people die next to you.”
Seraphine’s face burns
red. She looks like she might scream. She doesn’t.
Vale turns back to the
formation.
“Cain Aurellius and
Lucille Domitian succeeded for the same reason.”
He lifts his head slightly.
“They trusted their
training. They trusted their teams. And when the situation became
impossible, they did not stop.”
His gaze lingers on Lucille
now.
“A Praevectus soldier
does not quit because the odds turn ugly,” Vale says. “They do
not stop because they are alone. They do not stop because they are
hurt.” A pause. “In real war, there is no reset. No medic. No
instructor watching from above.”
His voice hardens. “There
is only the mission.”
The silence is suffocating.
Vale straightens.
“Dismissed.”
The formation breaks with
mechanical precision, cadets peeling away in disciplined silence. No
chatter. No bravado. Just the weight of what they were shown.
Academy Rooftops –
21:00
The
pages rustle softly beneath Cain’s fingers. The book is old,
one of the Academy’s sanctioned histories, margins dense with
doctrine and casualty figures, the victories polished, the failures
sanded down to lessons. He reads it because he’s supposed to.
Because commanders are meant to know the names of the dead who came
before them.
But his eyes keep drifting.
Up to the stars, scattered
like frost across the sky. To the moon, whole and cold and uncaring.
To the edge of the roof, where the light from the Academy dies and
the world becomes a black, endless mouth.
He closes the book without
marking his place.
The wind tugs at his hair.
It smells faintly of stone and pine and the distant tang of oil from
the ranges. Below him, the dorm windows glow in uneven patterns,
laughter in one, silence in another, someone crying behind drawn
curtains.
He waits. He doesn’t know
if she’ll come.
He told himself he wouldn’t
go looking for her tonight. Not after everything. Not after the
killhouse, the scores, the way Vale’s words still echo in his head.
Push forward. Even when all hope is lost.
Cain exhales and pulls one
of the blankets around his shoulders, more out of habit than cold.
Footsteps scrape softly
against stone.
He doesn’t turn right
away. He doesn’t need to.
Lucille stands at the edge
of the rooftop stairwell, half-hidden by shadow. Her hair is loose
tonight, dark against the pale light. She’s changed out of her
exoskeleton and uniform, wearing Academy greys that hang a little too
loose on her battered frame. One sleeve is rolled up, fresh bandaging
visible beneath. She looks tired in a way sleep doesn’t fix.
She hesitates.
Cain finally looks over.
Their eyes meet.
Neither of them speaks.
Lucille takes a step
forward. Then another. Each movement careful, as if the ground might
give way beneath her. She stops a few paces away, arms folded tight
across her chest, shoulders hunched.
Cain sets the book aside
and reaches for one of the blankets, holding it out without comment.
She stares at it for a
moment, then at him.
“…You always plan this
much?” she asks quietly. There’s no bite in it. Just exhaustion.
Raw and frayed.
He gives a small, crooked
smile. “I like being prepared.”
She huffs a breath that
might almost be a laugh. Almost.
Lucille takes the blanket
and sits beside him, close enough that their shoulders nearly touch.
She wraps it around herself, drawing her knees up. For a moment, she
just stares out at the dark fields beyond the Academy lights.
“I hate that class,”
she says at last.
Cain nods. “Yeah.”
“I knew it wasn’t
real,” she continues, voice low. “I knew it. And it
still—” Her fingers curl into the fabric. “It still felt like I
was dying in there.”
He doesn’t interrupt.
She swallows. “I made the
wrong choice.”
Cain turns toward her fully
now. “Lucille—”
“I know,” she cuts in,
sharp, then softer. “I know what they wanted. I know why. But it
still feels wrong. Like I proved them right.”
Her gaze flicks to him,
uncertain. Vulnerable in a way she never allows herself to be in the
daylight.
Cain shakes his head
slowly. “You didn’t break.”
She laughs once, hollow. “I
screamed.”
“So did half the class.”
“I lost control.”
“And then you came out,”
he says. “And you remembered where you were. And you stood back
up.”
She looks away again, jaw
tight.
Silence stretches between
them, filled only by the distant hum of generators and the whisper of
wind.
Cain reaches into the
basket and nudges it toward her. “I brought snacks.”
She blinks at it, startled.
“Why?”
“In case you showed up,”
he says simply.
Another pause.
Lucille reaches in, pulls
out a chocolate bar, and breaks it cleanly in half. She hands one
piece to him.
Their fingers brush.
It’s a small thing. It
feels enormous.
They eat in silence,
watching the moon climb higher.
After a while, Lucille
speaks again, barely above a whisper. “I thought I was alone.”
Cain’s chest tightens.
“You’re not.”
She closes her eyes.
For the first time in days,
she leans into him, not collapsing, not clinging, just resting her
weight there, carefully, as if afraid it might vanish.
Cain stays perfectly still.
Above them, the stars burn
on, indifferent and eternal.
Cain shifts just enough to
settle more comfortably beneath her weight, careful not to jostle her
head from his shoulder. The rooftop stones are cold even through the
blankets, the night air biting, but Lucille is warm. Solid. Real.
He turns a page he isn’t
really reading anymore.
“Did you like that gift
basket my mother sent you?” Cain asks.
“The basket was…
excessive,” she murmurs, voice low, almost shy. “But nice.”
“That’s my mother,”
Cain says. “If she likes you, she likes you.”
Lucille huffs softly,
almost a laugh. Her fingers toy with the edge of the book in his lap.
“There were three different creams that all looked the same. One
said ‘night renewal,’ one said ‘deep hydration,’ and one said
‘restorative essence.’ I used the wrong one, I think.”
Cain smiles despite
himself. “There is no wrong one. That’s part of the
trick.”
She tilts her head,
glancing up at him now. Moonlight catches in her eyes, pale and sharp
even when she’s tired. “You sound like you’ve survived this
before.”
“I have an older sister,”
he says solemnly. “I learned early. You nod. You agree. You never
ask why something costs more than a rifle.”
That pulls a real laugh
from her this time. Quiet, but genuine. It loosens something tight in
his chest.
They lapse into silence
again. Comfortable. The kind that doesn’t demand filling.
Cain looks back to the
book, tracing a line of text with his thumb. “She asked about you,”
he adds after a moment. “After the… incident. I didn’t tell her
details. Just that you were hurt. That you’re stubborn.”
Lucille snorts. “Rude.”
“Accurate.”
Her smile fades a little at
that. She shifts, tucking her knees up, drawing one blanket tighter
around herself. For a moment Cain thinks she’s going to pull away.
Instead, she leans closer.
“I didn’t think I’d
make it through that class,” she says quietly. “The one today.
The pods.” Her voice tightens. “I kept telling myself it wasn’t
real. I knew it wasn’t. But my body didn’t care.”
Cain doesn’t answer right
away. He closes the book gently and sets it aside.
“I know,” he says
finally. “I could still feel it after. Like… I’d actually done
it. Like it counted.”
She nods, jaw clenched. “I
hate that it worked.”
“That’s why it works,”
Cain says.
Lucille exhales, long and
shaky. Her fingers curl into the fabric of his sleeve, just slightly.
Not gripping. Testing.
“I thought I lost you,”
she admits. “Not just in the pod. Before that. I thought… I
thought I was supposed to be alone. That it was safer that way.”
Cain turns toward her fully
now. The stars above them seem impossibly distant.
“You don’t get to
decide that for both of us,” he says gently.
She swallows. Doesn’t
look at him. “I know,” she whispers.
He hesitates, then lifts
one of the blankets and drapes it more securely around her shoulders.
His hand lingers there, warm against the cold night.
Lucille doesn’t pull
away.
She rests her head back on
his shoulder again, heavier this time. Trusting.
They sit like that beneath
the moon, the Academy humming quietly below them, the darkness beyond
the walls vast and waiting, but for now, held at bay.
Cain swallows. The words
sit heavy in his chest, pressing against his ribs like they might
crack him open if he doesn’t let them out. He stares at the page in
his lap, though he hasn’t read a word in minutes.
“Lucille,” he says
quietly.
She shifts, still leaning
against him, still warm, still real. She doesn’t look up. Her
fingers curl slightly in the fabric of his sleeve, as if bracing.
He takes that as
permission.
“I-I don’t really know
how to say this without sounding like an idiot,” he admits. There’s
a faint, nervous breath of a laugh that dies almost immediately. “So
I’m just… going to say it.”
He looks up at the stars
instead of at her. Cowardly. Safer.
“We’ve spent our entire
lives together,” he continues. “Every exam. Every punishment.
Every stupid fight. Every victory. I don’t remember a version of my
life where you aren’t there.” His voice tightens despite his
effort to keep it steady. “And when I thought I’d lost you,
really lost you, I realized something.”
Lucille still hasn’t
moved.
Cain presses on, heart
hammering.
“I don’t just want to
fight beside you,” he says. “I don’t just want to survive with
you. I want to come back to you. Every time. I want a future
where...where we graduate, and we live through whatever hell the
Order throws at us, and when it’s finally over—” He stops.
Breathes.
“I want to marr—”
Cain goes quiet. The words die in his throat, unfinished, fragile
things he never gets to set free. He looks down at Lucille, really
looks at her and sees the slow, even rise and fall of her chest. The
tension has finally drained from her body. Her grip on the edge of
his coat has loosened. Her lashes rest against bruised cheeks,
shadows still clinging beneath her eyes like fingerprints of the day.
She is asleep.
For a heartbeat,
disappointment stabs him, sharp, reflexive. Then it fades, replaced
by something softer and heavier all at once. Relief. Understanding.
Guilt, even. She has been pushed past breaking and dragged back
again. Of course she’s asleep. Of course her body finally gave out
the moment it felt safe.
Cain exhales through his
nose and carefully, painstakingly shifts the book from his lap. He
moves slow, afraid even the sound of breathing too hard might wake
her. He pulls the blanket over her frame. He tucks it close,
shielding her from the bite of the night air.
Cain shifts slightly so
Lucille can rest more comfortably against him. Her breathing evens
out, shallow and slow, the rise and fall of her chest almost hypnotic
under the moonlight. The rooftop is quiet except for the occasional
rustle of wind through the Academy spires and the distant croak of a
night bird.
He lets his hand fall
lightly across her back, not wanting to disturb her, feeling the
warmth radiate through the folds of her uniform. The weight of the
day, the impossible drills, the psychological tests, the endless push
of Vale’s training, presses down on him too, but seeing her here,
alive and finally at rest, it softens him.
Cain glances at the stars
above, the full moon casting silver light across the rooftops. He
lets his thoughts drift, watching constellations he’s known since
childhood, imagining them as battle plans, as formations, as lines of
strategy, everything in his life is tactical, controlled. But
tonight, he realizes, he doesn’t need a plan. He only needs to be
here, with her.
Her hair brushes against
his cheek. He inhales again, cherry blossoms. He murmurs softly,
almost to himself, “You’re insane, you know that?”
A faint, sleepy smile
ghosts across her face in response. She shifts a fraction, still
asleep, and Cain can’t help the warmth in his chest, the way it
twists something inside him that he doesn’t often let surface. He
leans back against the stone parapet, opening his book once more, but
it’s only half-read before he abandons the words, letting his gaze
fall back on her, on the stillness of her face, the rise and fall of
her chest, the quiet peace she’s finally found.
The night stretches on,
endless and intimate in its silence. Cain doesn’t move; he doesn’t
breathe loudly. He only sits, keeping her safe, keeping her here,
letting the world outside, the pain, the tests, the betrayals, fade
into the darkness. And for the first time in weeks, maybe months, he
allows himself to just be.
No words. No plans. Just
her, the night, and the faint scent of cherry blossoms.

