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Kidra twisted under the slaver’s desperate swing, a boot connecting against the wretch’s chestplate, slamming him back into the wall for a second time. Between the structure’s already failing integrity and the relic armor he wore, one eventually won.

Pressure exploded as the poorly constructed wall cracked inwards, Kidra’s kick suddenly magnified as the warm air within the room rushed out to meet the night sky, further ripping apart the destroyed wall. And with it, even a four hundred pound armor couldn’t hold its ground.

The man soared backwards onto the surface, slamming against the frozen ice and snow, tumbling uncontrollably. In comparison Kidra flew out as if commanding the very wind herself.

He rolled out of his tumble, blade swinging wildly out. Kidra landed with a half step forward, her own longsword’s occult hilt easily catching the man’s blade and parrying it away with a ripost.

The technique sliced through the enemy’s blade, cutting it down from a dagger to a souvenir. She didn’t let him have a moment to consider his next move.

Her second blade swung down against the slaver’s addled attempt to belay his death, a hand reaching out as if to ask for mercy or to shield his face.

It was promptly cut off, the shield finally failing.

She didn’t care to continue the fight, taking a few steps past the screaming slaver, letting her initial speed from the earlier bleed away. Ice was already freezing the red stump of his hand, cauterizing the wound. It wouldn’t save him, as the white wastes greedily sucked out all the heat of the armor from that small exposed opening, sinking through in exchange. Flowing across the slaver’s arm, freezing the skin and burrowing deeper into his muscles, down to his very bone.

He thrashed, his other hand having already dropped the ruined dagger, desperately trying to cover the wound. That wouldn’t help. A few fingers covering his stump wouldn’t make any kind of permanent seal. Kidra watched in grim satisfaction as the man faced his end. Relic armor was powerful, but besides its ability to shed itself off a trapped user, it had no means to seal off sections of the armor in case of a temperature breach. There were limits to what even golden age armor could do, and the makers had clearly decided stronger overall integrity was preferable to being able to isolate sections.

Some part of the dying slaver remembered the life and lessons he’d learned before donning that armor. The fumbling hand left his wound, and reached for his belt, searching for the field sealant kit all surface dwellers had on hand. It may have been the first time in decades that this man ever even thought of using it again.

The kit opened up, the armored hand reached inside with a trembling hand.

But the coughing had started.

Kidra watched impassively, hands crossed over her chestplate. “You and your kind have grown overconfident with your solen armors, lived for too long as tiny gods. You’ve lost touch with what it is like to walk on the surface. Did you forget?” She walked up to the dying man, kneeling down nearby. “The first step to take when breached isn’t the field kit. It’s to hold your breath.”

The slaver said nothing. Not out of choice. Racking coughs had already started, making him fumble the repair kit onto the snow. The ice air by now had flowed past the arm, reached his shoulders and begun to attack his face. Eyes, nose, cheeks - and mouth.

Some deep part of the man already knew his life was over. Against Kidra, at least he had the illusion he could fight to survive. Still the man desperately clung to life, rational thought fighting against the coughing hacks, hand once more trying to clutch the field repair kit.

He almost made it, aiming the sealant at his missing and half-frozen arm, before another hacking fit made him drop the item.

Against the surface, there was no fight. The moment a single spec of that death sunk into the lungs, the human body was doomed to react. To make futile attempt to expel it. Attempt to breathe further for cleaner warmer air that didn’t exist. And in doing so draw in more death into the lungs, shredding the delicate membrane.

At this point, even if the slaver made it back into a heated shelter, his fate was sealed. Sickness and rot inside the dead fleshy sections of the delicate lungs. More coughing wracked the man, forcing him to curl up against himself on the ground. Weezing, slowly. Turning from a desperate coughing fit to occasional attempts at a breath. And then nothing.

Kidra watched over as the man died a deserved death. She felt nothing. Slavers who robbed people of their lives, happiness, and fate - those deserved only the worst death possible. And she was of the surface clans. Their fated enemy had always been Othersiders of the darker side.

“The compound is cleared, Lady Winterscar.” One of her knights called out over the comms. “Were you successful in claiming the runaway?”

The answer felt almost rhetorical. The two Winterscar knights she’d attacked the compound with knew whoever she followed would die. Kidra had never lost once, and it would certainly never happen against such filth as these. “He is. Dead at my feet within the wastelands. I will collect his armor and return.”

“We are already on our way, leave the armor collecting to us Lady Winterscar.”

“Very well, appreciated.”

The other knight also confirmed they’d taken out any pockets of resistance. All they needed to do now was to wait for the Shadowsong prime to return with evacuation. His airspeeder had passed by soly to drop them before continuing on to his own target.

The slavers were running. Packing up and abandoning the fight. The clan had expected this and planned an all-out assault to take and break every last camp in one fell swoop, or else forever see potential armor slip out of their hands.

Her brother was a clever weapons maker, but armor was not yet something Keith could create. Every last set the clan claimed here would be valuable for where they planned to move next. They couldn’t afford to let the slavers escape with their armor shipments.

“It’s truly done then.” The first knight spoke over comms. “If the other raids all went according to plan, there isn’t another camp to hit anymore. The war should be over.”

“M’laday, do you think there’s any bottles left for any kind of reasonable price back home?” The second asked. “I feel I shall miss having these outings, but at least we might celebrate the end of it properly.”

Kidra laughed, “There is. Where do you believe I continue to find good prices on such things? It is certainly not by their volition. I’ve already paid a few agrifarmer houses months prior.”

She’d seen this shortage coming from the moment Keith had shown her fractals. All the ways the future would unravel and how best to abuse the situation. So she’d paid a few houses enough to cover their transition from standard food crops to the more expensive alcohol production, expecting far more celebrations than normal traditions.

The clan would be destroying far more slavers than most clans could ever dream of. And even Kidra hadn’t been able to predict “Hecate” Wrath’s appearance and subsequent healing of the clan, nor the week long celebrations that happened for the deathless saint. If she had, she’d have gotten more than two arifarmer houses booked in advance.

Those two houses hadn’t been financially solvent enough to do so themselves at the time, but with her insurance seed money, they’d been pre-paid to a handsome profit and felt happy enough following the whims of the strange upcoming new house.

A handsome profit as of a few months prior, before all the shenanigans had actually started. Today, they were contracted to sell her their products at a fixed rate far under what all the other agrifarmer houses were selling at.

Likely they were cursing themselves now that the price of alcohol had skyrocketed far past what Kidra had initially paid for.

Perhaps she should show them some mercy and let them sell off a few bottles to the other Houses at market prices. They had enough to spare.

And once this final celebration was over, the next one would likely be held underground.

In the end, not a single slaver camp had managed to escape. Clan Altosk knew no defeat, not since the knights all bore the winterblossom technique, newly forged weapons and the fourth school of combat that countered all three styles the surface knew of.

Her HUD showed her knights stepping outside, each carrying multiple cut helmets on their belts, trophies that would be regenerated back to full armor soon enough. “Doorways have been sealed, and the chenobis have restored the airspeeder sabotages.” One said, giving her a crisp salute with the hilt of his blade. “They’re organizing the last of the slaves, and assigning pilots. The groups will be on their way soon. Doubtless we may see them again at the clan.”

A repeating pattern. Slaves who’d had their lives taken by these wasteland wretches often ended up driving their newly seized airspeeder directly back to Altosk itself, asking to join in, despite running the traditionally strong risk of being refused entry. A few might even believe they owe a self-imposed lifedebt to House Winterscar itself for having gone and freed them. Or a life-debt to whichever house had been ransacking the compound at the time.

Others sought purpose to fill their lives again, to join and help future slaves escape the same way they had.

And some sought further revenge than they’d been able to mettle out on the day the clan had passed by.

Many would have those wishes fulfilled. Altosk was in good shape for refugees. There were still large sections of the old habitat that hadn’t yet been unsealed and reheated, space wasn’t an issue like most other clans would run into.

The reality was different - it was unlikely they’d ever get to unsealing the full sections of this clan before moving on underground. It wasn’t a handful of elite knights now, Clan Altosk had an army to work with. Enough to rival a minor undersider city.

Atius hadn’t been waiting for events to happen either, he’d already been sending scouts underground to find different locations to settle. His net had been wide, but Kidra knew where they would ultimately settle: Wrath’s domain.

Currently shattered and leaderless, with Capra’Nor abandoned and looted down. A lawless place where once stood a proud human city.

That wasn’t what made the land hospitable. It was the machines there instead. Their experiences with Wrath and her history had marked those mechanical servants deeply.

Many wouldn’t seek to harm humans anymore, making those lands far safer than anyone would assume. And with the clan’s newfound skills, gear and knights, they could easily protect the city with the same finality that a pillar heart could provide.

That meant Clan Altosk didn’t have their migration forced down to only where a pillar heart could be found, instead they could settle anywhere they wished within Wrath’s safer domain.

Perhaps trade and even friendly relations with the machine faction there could be forged, under secret wraps from their machine goddess. Relinquished may never even bother to look into such things, never knowing or believing it could exist.

And where Wrath’s old citizens remained, Kidra knew Wrath herself would soon be sulking around.

And that also meant Keith would be there as well. The two were inseparable, even if they both didn’t quite know how to put it in words.

Eventually, the clan might need to venture out to find a proper pillar heart, but for many years they would be able to live free from the surface air while they found a perfect home. She might even grow old, and see that quest passed down to her children's children.

Kidra looked up into the night sky, where the moon shined down on her. It all looked so deceptively peaceful up here. And yet danger lurked among the stars beyond, flying over with a watchful eye; the very air could kill faster than a blade and with far less mercy. Soon, they’d be free of that. And then she’d no doubt run into her brother once again.

She wondered what kind of stories he would have for her on their reunion.

No doubt there’d be a few that would make her want to pull her hair out.

Comments

BramBora

Thanks for chapter

Planetace

Just realised something with the Slavers death scene, Kidra says "you should have remembered that the first thing with a breach is to hold your breath." However, the frozen "surface" of the Earth is well into the stratosphere, and roughly at the divisive line where people need to wear fully enclosed spacesuits over pressure suits, especially with the deadly wind chill. The one thing you'd think is sensible when facing a (partial) vacuum breach is to hold your breath, but that is further from the truth. As it actually turns out, holding your breath in a near vacuum will actually cause internal rupturing as the bodies insides will be far more pressurised than the surrounding area, thus all that pressure will suddenly burst outward like helium in a balloon. What you want to do is *exhale* all of the air in your lungs, thus letting the pressure equalise and lessening the strain on your body, increasing survival odds if you manage to reach safety after 15 seconds. On another note, why do Undersiders abandon all ties to the surface? Surely some cities maintain at the very least some partial influence on the surface that they descended from, because having a place of evacutation is a good tool if the worst were to pass in their city.

MarkArrows

I'll confirm this one: Mites did have a hand in making the surface habitable under Tsuya's bargain with them for that. It included weather and other items to make the surface livable but just barely. She can't have it be a paradise or else all humans would go live there. The discord had mentions of that when the idea was first rolled around, although I couldn't tell people just how merciless Tsyua's choice of making the surface intentionally dangerous enough. This was when people still thought she was trying everything to help humans and hadn't seen enough breadcrumbs of just how cutthroat things are in her viewpoint or what she's using the clans in truth for. The reason there's little ties from the Undersiders to the surface clans is because there are hardly any to begin with. Clans that grow strong enough to migrate to the underground is nearly a myth in reality, the carrot on a stick. Once a clan is strong enough, they would fragment into smaller clans due to politics and other issues as people no longer feel like they need to struggle together to survive. Some would start calling for a migration before the clan is powerful enough, and then get angry about it over a generation as the rest of the clan knows better. That would start schisms and factions, which eventually break down a clan before they're truly ready. The rise of the Deathless clan leaders have changed that - A demigod telling the radicals they're not yet ready has far more staying power than a mortal clan lord - but they've only been around for five centuries. Many of those clans now stand a good chance of eventually all migrating underground as full cities since they're far more loyal to their leader. Clan Altosk is in a new situation which hasn't happened before in history - Lead by a Deathless, gained power fast enough to remain undivided by the span of generations, is fully ready to migrate before any split in factions or slow ramp up of "Are we actually ready for this now or do we wait a few more years to prepare?", and have far more morale and excitement about it all at once. They're as unified as it could possibly get. The conditions are perfect for them. Woldbuilding doc points that a few times there would be some migrations that do work out prior to Deathless appearing, but the result would have the smaller clan be subsumed by a larger undersider city accepting them in.

Corwin

Having read Planetace and your response. I am curious why the Clan is not leaving a contingent on the surface. As well as not making the Occult more open for Houses to learn. I am just thinking that so far the Atis has shown a large amount of cunning. So if he could leave a contingent on the surface, training with the occult, building up warlocks/wizards who can fight in armor or without, as well as making them safe, he would do so. Not because he was setting himself up for failure. But building up the infrastructure for his future City to have the ability to withstand Relinquished if she comes knocking with Feathers and armies

Pedro Villa

And thus the most cracked army of murder savages gets ready to join the final battle as a bastion of armor ghosts and hyper weasels. The end times are gonna be so fun! Said noone ever haha

MarkArrows

Author error on that one, it's a good idea and I think a character like Atius would have considered how best to pass on what he's learned to other clans that could be trusted with the knowledge. Every point you made fits him to a T. I'll add that in

Corwin

Maybe have Atius have a Deathless Convention. The Deathless can send send a few people to the Clan's surface City to be trained in the Occult, and the Winter blossom technique. In return the Deathless have to share their fractals. It would probably make the Clans add a Warlock Caste though.

lenkite

I never understood the whole push to go underground. They are actually fully safe on the surface now - the worst the feathers can do is hire slaver clans which just got annihilated like we saw now. Underground it is just a matter of time for machine hordes come with multiple feathers to carry out a [Mass Slaughter].

MarkArrows

It's a harsh world on the surface, and not a comfortable one. Imagine growing up in a third world frozen country, that's about as cramped as the Kowloon Walled City. Even if it's safer, only some of the people are going to think that's enough of a reason to stay instead of moving out to sunny california with a full sized house and giant lawn. Lot of Undersiders live free lives, so why shouldn't they? Even knowing the full story isn't going to convince even a quarter of surface clanners due to pride and not realizing just how powerful machines are. 'If the Undersiders could survive just fine all this time vs machines, we can too' is how they'll think about it.

Meghan Hibicke

Really enjoy reading this! Just one thing: "racked" means stacking things, like on a shelf. If you're referring to pain, stress, or searching one's brain, the words "wracked".