ARC VI ROAD TO ELYRIA
Chapter 26 Judgment
"The greatest victories are often won long before the executioner's blade falls."
Morning broke beneath a sky of cold iron. The capital of the United Wastelands, Titanium Core, had awakened long before sunrise.Factory sirens echoed across the sprawling metropolis.Steam hissed from thousands of pressure valves.Endless freight trains thundered through elevated railways carrying ammunition, steel, food, medicine, and replacement parts toward distant fronts.The Iron Reign never rested.It simply changed shifts. At the center of the capital stood the Hall of Justice. Unlike the Iron Citadel, which had been designed purely for war, the Hall of Justice represented law. Its architecture reflected the ideals of the Iron Reign. Not elegance. Not luxury. but Strength. Gigantic pillars of polished black steel rose nearly sixty meters into the air. Massive statues lined the entrance. Heroes. Scientists. Soldiers. Doctors. Ordinary workers. Men and women remembered not because of noble blood, but because they had built civilization after the Collapse. Above the enormous entrance had been carved one sentence into solid titanium.
LAW ABOVE POWER
Thousands gathered beneath those words. The plaza overflowed with civilians. The Free people of the United Wastelands, Steelworkers still wearing soot-covered uniforms. Factory supervisors. Mechanics. Veterans missing arms or legs. Students. Children perched upon their parents' shoulders.Members of every district had come.Not because they wished to celebrate. Because history was unfolding before them. Steelborn soldiers formed disciplined ranks around the square.Their matte-gray armor reflected the weak morning sunlight. Heavy rifles rested across armored chests. Behind them stood several towering Heavy Metals combat frames. Each walking machine exceeded eight meters in height. Their armored bodies remained perfectly motionless. Only glowing blue optics moved. Watching. Waiting. Prepared. No one intended to allow another tragedy.
Rumors spread through the crowd.
"They say he sold military routes."
"They say he worked with Baalania."
"My cousin died because of him."
"They should've hanged him months ago."
Others remained uncertain.
"He served thirty years."
"He saved cities."
"Maybe they're making him a scapegoat."
"No..."
Another veteran quietly answered.
"Einar Winter doesn't accuse people without proof."
That sentence ended the conversation. The enormous bronze doors opened. Silence immediately fell. A procession emerged. At its center walked General Roland Summers. Only weeks earlier he had entered government chambers dressed in immaculate white. Today...Everything had changed. He wore a plain charcoal prison uniform beneath a long black overcoat whose sleeves bore no rank. No medals. No insignia. No gold braid. Heavy steel restraints encircled both wrists. Chains connected them to iron cuffs around his ankles. Yet despite his circumstances... He walked with dignity. Roland Summers remained a handsome man despite the exhaustion now visible across his face. His once perfectly groomed silver-black hair had grown untidy. Dark circles rested beneath intelligent brown eyes. His olive complexion appeared pale from weeks spent imprisoned beneath the Citadel. Still... He held his head high. He refused to look broken.
Escorting him were six Steelborn officers. Their commander was Commander Cassian Wolfe. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dark blond hair cropped short beneath a military cap. A weathered face marked by years of command. His steel-gray eyes never left Summers. Unlike ordinary officers, Cassian wore full ceremonial Steelborn armor polished until every plate reflected the sky. Across his back rested an enormous execution sword nearly as tall as a man. Not for intimidation. For necessity. The procession climbed the granite steps. At the summit waited the Tribunal. Nine judges. Each wearing identical black judicial robes trimmed with silver. None carried weapons. Their authority required none. Behind them stood the enormous steel banner of the United Wastelands.
The Iron Wolf. Watching. General Winter stood nearby. He wore the familiar black military coat bearing only one insignia. The steel wolf above his heart. Nothing more. No medals. No decorations. His blond-gray hair stirred gently in the morning wind. His expression remained unreadable. Beside him stood Darius, Elias, Kael, Orion, and several surviving members of the Iron Wolves. None smiled. Victory felt hollow. Lucien remained missing.Farther back... Almost hidden beneath the shade of the great pillars... stood a small child. Snow drifted lazily around polished black shoes. Tiny frost crystals formed where each snowflake landed. Einar Winter. He appeared no older than ten years old. Short silv er-white hair framed a face of impossible beauty. His pale skin seemed almost translucent beneath the gray sky. His elegant black aristocratic coat reached almost to his boots, embroidered with delicate silver snowflakes that shimmered faintly whenever the wind touched them. White gloves concealed his hands. His icy blue eyes watched everything. Patiently. Anciently. Behind him stood the twins. Petr rested both hands calmly upon twin holstered pistols. His identical brother Pavel stood beside him, one hand resting lightly upon the hilt of his longsword. Both wore immaculate black tactical uniforms beneath officer coats. Neither moved. Neither blinked often. Like statues.
The tribunal's eldest judge finally spoke.
His voice echoed across the silent plaza.
"General Roland Summers."
"You stand accused of treason against the United Wastelands."
"Do you understand these charges?"
Summers answered calmly.
"I do."
"You stand accused of knowingly providing classified logistical information to agents operating on behalf of the Baalanian Empire."
"I understand."
"You stand accused of manipulating refugee policy while concealing intelligence indicating organized enemy infiltration."
"I understand."
"You stand accused of conspiring against military security."
"I understand."
The judge nodded.
"How do you plead?"
Silence filled the plaza. Thousands waited. Summers slowly looked toward the crowd. Then...Toward General Winter. Finally... Toward Einar. The vampire child met his gaze. Smiling gently. Almost kindly.
Summers closed his eyes.
"...Guilty."
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Even many soldiers stiffened. The confession came without argument. Without excuses. Without negotiation.
The judges nodded.
"Present the evidence."
Immediately enormous holographic projectors rose from beneath the plaza. Blue light filled the air. The first image appeared. Secret correspondence. Encrypted communications. Supply routes. Financial transfers. Smuggling networks. One document after another. One witness after another. Everything carefully organized. Every accusation supported. Then... The images changed. The refugee camps. Families crossing borders. Children. Old men. Women carrying infants. The crowd watched silently. Nothing appeared unusual. Then... Hidden footage. The same refugees entering abandoned buildings. Meeting unknown contacts. Receiving concealed packages. Small... Black boxes. The footage accelerated. Days later. Knife attacks. Bombings. The release of imprisoned demons.Citizens screamed as familiar memories returned.
General Winter stepped forward.
His voice carried across the plaza.
"We welcomed those seeking peace."
"They answered with murder."
No anger.
Only disappointment. Another recording appeared. Captured extremists from the sand Empire of Baalania, people who claimed to be refugees only to be found out that they are extremist who want Baalanian expansion of their culture and religion. Interrogations. The prisoners spoke proudly. One fanatical voice echoed through the square.
"Every city belongs to Baal."
"Mercy opens the gate."
"When enough faithful enter..."
"The land becomes ours."
"Then the unbelievers shall kneel."
The recording ended. No one spoke.Even the wind seemed to disappear.
High above the tribunal... Snow began to fall. Not from clouds. From one silent child. Einar's ancient eyes never left Summers. His expression remained almost gentle. As though watching the inevitable conclusion to a lesson he had learned centuries before.And somewhere deep within the gathered crowd...People finally understood why the Ancient Child had warned them.History... Had repeated itself once again.
No one spoke. Not the judges. Not the soldiers. Not even the thousands gathered throughout the plaza. The evidence floating above the tribunal was overwhelming. Every encrypted message. Every intercepted transmission. Every confession. Every recovered black box. Every casualty report. Together they formed a chain that no denial could break. General Roland Summers stood in silence, the steel restraints around his wrists seeming far heavier than iron. He lowered his head. Not in shame. In acceptance.
The eldest judge slowly rose from his seat.
His voice remained calm.
"General Roland Summers."
"You served the United Wastelands faithfully for thirty-two years."
Images appeared above the tribunal. A younger Summers rescuing civilians from burning cities. Leading evacuation convoys. Standing beside soldiers after victorious campaigns. Receiving medals. The crowd watched quietly. Many remembered those days. Many had admired him.
The judge continued.
"Your past service is honored."
A pause.
"But honorable service does not erase treason."
The images vanished.
Only darkness remained behind the tribunal.
General Winter stepped forward. The wind tugged gently at his long black officer's coat. He looked directly at Summers.
"I trusted you."
There was no hatred in his voice. Only disappointment.
"When the food shortages began..."
"I trusted your reports."
"When fuel vanished..."
"I trusted your recommendations."
"When refugee processing accelerated..."
"I trusted your judgment."
Winter's pale blue eyes hardened.
"And because I trusted you..."
"...our people died."
Summers never argued.
"I know."
The plaza remained silent. Even reporters lowered their cameras. Summers slowly lifted his head.
"I never hated my country."
His voice echoed naturally across the square.
"I believed..."
He searched for the right words.
"...that compassion would prove stronger than fear."
He looked toward the holograms showing destroyed neighborhoods.
"I was wrong."
A woman near the front of the crowd shouted through tears.
"My husband died protecting those shelters!"
Another voice followed.
"My daughter!"
"My brother!"
"My father!"
The cries spread. Not angry. Broken. Summers listened to every one of them. He did not attempt to defend himself. The eldest judge raised one hand. Silence returned.
"The tribunal recognizes intent."
"You sought peace."
He looked toward the ruined districts shown above them.
"But leadership is judged by consequences."
"The consequences of your actions are measured not in intentions..."
"...but in graves."
The holograms changed once more. Recovered intelligence from Baalania. Captured maps. Military planning documents. Translations from Kharathi commanders. One sentence appeared across every screen.
THE OPEN GATE IS THE EASIEST FORTRESS TO CONQUER.
Another document followed. It detailed a long-term infiltration strategy. Not conquest through armies. Conquest through settlement. Cells embedded within refugee populations. Sleeper agents. Weapons caches. Religious organizers. Propaganda. Recruitment. Preparation. When enough followers existed... Violence would begin. The attacks were never intended to win. They were intended to destabilize. To divide. To weaken.
General Winter addressed the gathered citizens.
"Our enemy does not always arrive carrying banners."
"Sometimes..."
"...he arrives asking for shelter."
He paused.
"We will never abandon genuine innocents."
"But neither will we ignore those who would exploit mercy as a weapon."
The statement was measured. Neither cruel nor naïve. It drew quiet nods from soldiers and civilians alike. Behind him... Snow continued drifting gently around Einar. The vampire child remained perfectly still. His elegant midnight-blue coat barely stirred despite the breeze. Tiny frost crystals collected upon the marble beneath his polished boots. His silver-white hair shimmered beneath the gray daylight. His ancient blue eyes watched the tribunal with the patience of someone who had witnessed countless kingdoms rise... And countless kingdoms fall.
Petr leaned closer.
"Master."
"The judgment is already decided."
"I know."
Pavel quietly asked,
"Does it satisfy you?"
For several moments...
Einar did not answer.
Finally he spoke.
"No."
The twins looked surprised.
Einar's eyes never left the crowd.
"There is never satisfaction when history repeats itself."
His voice carried no triumph.
Only sadness.
The chief judge stood.
"The tribunal has reached its unanimous verdict."
Every soldier came to attention.
"The defendant..."
"General Roland Summers..."
"...is found guilty on all counts."
No gasps. No shouting. Only silence.
"The sentence is death."
Summers closed his eyes. His shoulders relaxed. Almost... Relieved.
"I expected nothing less."
Commander Cassian stepped forward. The gigantic execution sword resting across his back slid free with a heavy metallic sound. The blade measured nearly two meters long. Not ornate. Not ceremonial. Simply practical. Forged from layered steel. Its edge gleamed like winter ice.
Cassian looked directly at Summers.
"Any final words?"
Summers slowly turned toward the crowd.
His eyes searched thousands of unfamiliar faces.
Workers.
Children.
Veterans.
Families.
Finally...
He spoke.
"Never stop believing compassion matters."
He smiled sadly.
"But never surrender wisdom in pursuit of it."
His gaze drifted toward Winter.
"You were the better leader."
Then...
Toward Einar.
"And..."
"...you were right."
The snow continued falling. The vampire child neither smiled... Nor celebrated. He merely lowered his eyes. Almost respectfully. Summers knelt. Steel restraints clinked softly against stone. He bowed his head. Cassian raised the execution sword. The plaza held its breath. One clean strike. Swift. Merciful. The blade fell. The bells of Titanium Core rang once. Then again. Then across the entire capital. Factories paused. Military units stood at attention. Flags lowered. The trial had ended.
Later... As workers quietly cleaned the now-empty tribunal steps... General Winter stood alone beneath the towering wolf banner. Einar approached him. Snowflakes drifted lazily between them. Winter finally spoke.
"I wish you had been wrong."
The vampire child looked toward the gray horizon.
"So do I..."
His ancient eyes reflected centuries of memory.
"I have spent hundreds of years hoping mankind would stop repeating the same mistakes."
He gently rested one gloved hand upon the cold steel railing.
"They never do."
Winter looked at him.
"What now?"
For the first time that day... A faint smile appeared upon Einar's youthful face.
"Now..."
"We prepare."
Far beyond the borders of the United Wastelands... Across endless deserts... The armies of Baalania were already marching. And somewhere beyond those armies... Lucien walked toward a future neither nation could yet imagine.
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