Training
Yard – The Next Morning
Dawn
bleeds slowly over the Academy, pale and colorless. The training yard
is still mostly empty, the stone slick with dew, the air sharp enough
to bite.
Lucille is already there.
She has been striking the training construct for over an hour. Her
fists slam into reinforced plating again and again, rhythm brutal and
unbroken. Knuckles split. Blood runs in thin lines down her fingers,
streaking the metal, dark against dull gray. Every impact sends fire
up her arms, pain flaring hot and bright. She doesn’t slow. She
doesn’t stop.
She didn’t sleep. Not
really. Not after the ravine. Not after the waiting. Not after seeing
Cain fall into formation and walk away without a word.
The construct shudders
under another blow.
Cain didn’t sleep at all.
Exhaustion weighs on him like lead, his body still screaming from the
climb, from the chase, from the night spent fearing the worst. And
now there is something worse than fear sitting in his
chest...silence.
Lucille hasn’t looked at
him. Hasn’t spoken to him. Not once since the rendezvous.
He knows what that means.
He crosses the yard
quickly, boots scraping stone, heart hammering harder with every
step. He sees the blood. Sees the way her shoulders move, tight,
furious, mechanical. Sees the way she’s punishing herself because
it’s easier than thinking.
When he reaches the edge of
the training mat, he stops. Hesitates. Then….
“Lucille,” he calls.
She doesn’t turn. Her
fist slams into the construct again, harder this time, pain blooming,
blood splattering. The sound echoes across the yard, sharp and
violent, and for a moment it feels like she’s hitting him instead.
Cain tries again.
“Lucille!”
Still no response.
So he does the one thing he
knows he shouldn’t. He approaches from her flank.
“Lucille,” he says
again, closer now, voice low, careful.
She doesn’t slow. Doesn’t
turn. The construct shudders under another brutal strike.
Cain reaches out and grabs
her shoulder.
The world explodes.
Lucille spins on him like a
coiled blade released. Her fist slams into his chest, dead center,
all her weight and fury behind it. The impact knocks the breath clean
out of him, a sharp, strangled sound tearing from his throat as he
stumbles back.
He barely has time to raise
his arm before she hits him again, bone on bone, her knuckles
crashing into his forearm hard enough to make his teeth click. Pain
flares white-hot.
A third strike follows
immediately, vicious and precise, driving into his side just beneath
his guard. It steals what little air he’d managed to claw back.
Cain goes down with a rough
gasp, one knee hitting the mat, then his hand, chest heaving as he
fights for breath.
Lucille stands over him,
shoulders rising and falling, blood dripping from her split knuckles.
Her eyes are hard, unfocused, like she’s still somewhere in the
forest, still alone. She doesn’t look worried. She doesn’t look
relieved.
“Don’t,” she snaps,
voice low and shaking with restrained fury. “Touch me.” She turns
away from him, already walking, already putting distance between them
as if he’s nothing more than another obstacle in her path.
Cain forces himself upright
on one elbow, wincing as his side protests. “Lucille—” His
voice cracks despite his effort to keep it steady. “Please. You
have to listen to me.”
She doesn’t slow. Her
boots crunch against the gravel as she steps off the mat, blood
smearing faint red prints behind her.
He pushes himself up onto
one elbow, pain radiating through his ribs. “I was tryin' to find
you. They pulled me away, I swear, I—”
“You left,” she snaps,
finally looking at him fully. Her eyes are glassy, furious, wounded.
“I checked my map. I checked my compass. I checked the trail. You
were gone.”
Cain shakes his head,
desperation bleeding into his voice. “I ran after you. I followed
every path I could. I didn’t stop. I didn’t sleep. I thought
you’d be dead in a ravine somewhere and I—”
She steps back before he
can finish. Puts distance between them like a wall.
“Enough,” she says
flatly. “I survived without you.”
The words hit harder than
her fists.
Cain swallows, staring up
at her from the mat. “You shouldn’t have had to.”
Lucille looks away first.
Her hands tremble as she clenches them, blood smearing across her
palms. “That’s the lesson, isn’t it?” she mutters. “Don’t
trust anyone.”
For a long moment, the
training yard is silent except for the distant sounds of other cadets
and the faint creak of constructs resetting.
Cain stays where he is. He
doesn’t reach for her again. He watches her go, chest tight, ribs
aching, helplessness settling deep in his bones. For the first time,
no matter how hard he pushes, how fast he runs, he can’t catch up
to her.
Squad Tactics &
Live-Action Team Maneuvers – 10:40
The final door hisses open.
Cain moves through it like a shadow, rail rifle already shouldered.
He slices the corner in a slow, deliberate arc, muzzle steady, breath
controlled. The first construct pivots toward him, too slow. Cain
fires once. The impact node slams into its chest plate and
discharges, dropping it mid-motion. He pivots, heel grinding against
metal, and fires again. The second construct collapses in a crackle
of electricity.
Silence.
A shrill tone sounds
overhead.
The timer freezes.
02:41.
Seven rooms. Twenty-five
targets. Solo.
A murmur ripples along the
catwalks above the killhouse. Even the hardened cadets lean forward
now, helmets tilted, some in disbelief, others tight with resentment.
Captain Darius Vale doesn’t speak immediately. He folds his arms
across his chest, eyes narrowed, replaying the run in his head.
Cain lowers his rifle and
exhales. His shoulders sag just a fraction as the adrenaline bleeds
off. He doesn’t look up at the timer. He doesn’t look at the
others.
His eyes find Lucille.
She stands rigid at the
edge of the viewing platform, helmet tucked under one arm. Her
knuckles are freshly wrapped, white gauze already pinking through.
Her face is blank. Not impressed. Not proud. Not angry in any visible
way.
Nothing.
Cain swallows. She would
usually being smiling at him right now.
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Vale finally speaks.
“Textbook.” His voice carries easily over the metal cavern. “No
wasted motion. No panic under pressure. If this were live, you’d
still be breathing.”
A few cadets scoff quietly.
Tiber Lucan’s jaw tightens. Seraphine Veyra watches Lucille instead
of Cain, eyes sharp, calculating.
Vale taps his wrist
console. “Reset the house. Next cadet.” His gaze flicks to
Lucille. “Domitian. You’re up.”
A ripple of reaction,
quiet, sharp. A few smirks. A few eager looks. This is what they
want. To see her fail. To see her crack after the survival exercise.
After Cain’s run.
Lucille doesn’t
acknowledge them. She steps down the stairs.
Cain and Lucille pass
within arm’s reach.
Cain slows, just a
fraction. “Lucy...” His voice drops, careful, like one wrong word
might shatter something already cracked. “Good luck.”
She doesn’t look at him.
Lucille lifts her helmet and pulls it down over her head, seals
clicking into place with a sharp finality. The visor darkens, hiding
her eyes completely. She steps past him as if he isn’t there at
all.
Cain stops dead.
The words he meant to say,
‘I’m sorry. I tried. I would never leave you,’ die in
his throat. He stands there for a second too long, heart sinking,
then forces himself to move, boots heavy as he climbs the stairs to
the catwalk. He doesn’t sit. He leans forward against the rail,
knuckles whitening around cold metal.
Below, Lucille retrieves
the rifle from the rack. Checks the magazine. Rolls her shoulders
once, like a beast settling into its skin.
The killhouse hums.
Walls slide. Barricades
rise. Old cover sinks away and new angles are born. Doors slam shut.
Somewhere inside, servos whine as the constructs reposition, metal
feet scraping against metal floors.
The timer above the
entrance flashes 00:00.
Vale’s voice cuts clean
and sharp. “Begin.”
Lucille moves. Not
cautiously. Not methodically. She hunts.
She enters the first room
low and fast, not slicing the pie like Cain did, but ghosting
straight through the threshold, rifle already tracking. A construct
swings its weapon toward her, she fires through the doorway frame
without stopping.
The round slams into its
chest plate. The construct drops before it can return fire.
She doesn’t slow.
Lucille vaults a waist-high
barricade instead of taking cover behind it, boots slamming metal as
she lands in a roll that carries her into the next room. Two
constructs there, one high, one crouched behind cover.
She doesn’t hesitate.
She fires blind off a
reflection in a steel panel, tags the high target, then slides across
the floor on one knee and puts a round through the second before it
can pivot.
Vale’s brow lifts.
On the catwalk, someone
mutters, “That’s reckless.”
Seraphine doesn’t blink.
“No,” she murmurs. “That’s intent.”
Lucille moves like pain is
fuel. Like exhaustion sharpened her instead of dulling her. She
shoulder-checks doors instead of opening them, blasts through rooms
in bursts of violence and motion, never lingering, never checking her
back twice.
A construct tags her thigh
with a shock-node, electric agony flares, her leg spasms. She growls
and fires mid-stumble, dropping it anyway.
The timer bleeds seconds.
Room five.
She fires through
a thin wall, reading silhouettes by sound and vibration, dropping two
targets before the door even opens.
Room six.
She uses a rising barricade
as moving cover, pacing it perfectly, firing over the top while it
ascends.
Room seven.
Final room.
Four constructs. Hardest
configuration.
Lucille doesn’t slow.
She charges straight in.
Shock-nodes snap against
her armor. Pain rips through her side, her shoulder, her ribs. She
barely flinches. She plants her feet, breath ragged, and clears the
room in a brutal, efficient arc of fire.
The last construct falls.
The killhouse goes still.
The timer freezes.
For a heartbeat, there is
only the hum of cooling systems and Lucille’s harsh breathing
inside her helmet.
Then the numbers resolve.
They are not just better
than Cain’s.
They obliterate
his.
A full twenty-three seconds
faster.
Silence crashes down over
the viewing platform.
Cain stares. Not with
jealousy. Not with anger. With something broken and aching and awed.
Lucille lowers her rifle
slowly. Her arms tremble now that it’s over. She doesn’t look up
at the timer. She doesn’t look at Cain.
She turns, helmet still on,
and walks out of the killhouse alone.
Captain Vale exhales
through his nose. “Predatory,” he says at last. “Undisciplined.
Effective.” His eyes follow her retreating form. “Very
effective.”
Lucille sets her helmet
down on its designated rack and hooks her exoskeleton up before
undoing its straps and letting its weight settle on the hooks. Cain
steps next to her, doing the same. Lucille doesn't wait like she
usually would. She simply walks away. Cain struggles to catch up to
her.
Lucille doesn’t slow.
Her boots strike the
corridor in a steady, clipped rhythm, posture straight despite the
bruises blooming beneath her sleeves, despite the ache coiled tight
in her ribs from days without rest. Cadets part around her
instinctively. Some glance at her with open hostility. Others with
something closer to fear now.
Cain lengthens his stride,
catching up after a few steps. “Lucy—”
She keeps walking.
“Lu,” he tries again,
softer. “Please.”
That gets it. Not a turn.
Not a look. Just a hard edge creeping into her pace, like she’s
trying to outrun the sound of his voice.
Cain reaches out, not to
grab her this time, not again, but to walk in front of her, forcing
her to stop. He plants himself in her path.
She halts so abruptly they
nearly collide.
For a moment, they stand
there, close enough that he can see the dried blood at the edges of
her bandages, the faint tremor in her hands she’s pretending isn’t
there. Her face is shut down, eyes cold, jaw set like stone.
“What,” she says
flatly, “do you want?”
The words hit harder than
any punch.
Cain exhales, running a
hand through his hair. “I need you to listen to me.”
“I listened,” she
replies. “In the woods.”
“That’s not fair.”
A humorless breath leaves
her. “Fair?” She finally looks at him now, really looks at him,
and there’s something raw under the surface that scares him. “You
weren’t there.”
“I was pulled away,” he
says quickly. “They distracted me, they...Lucille, I didn’t know
you’d gone on without me. By the time I realized—”
“You didn’t follow,”
she cuts in.
“I did. I swear I did.”
She shakes her head once,
sharp. “I waited.”
“Domitian.” Captain
Vale calls from the table of rifles at the front of the killhouse.
His voice catches both
Lucille and Cain’s attention. She immediately steps past Cain, no
longer looking at him. Cain opens his mouth to say something,
anything, but the words die in his throat and he watches her go. His
lips press together, eyes falling to the floor.
Lucille stands beside Vale,
her hands folded at her waist, watching the methodical precision with
which he inspects each rifle. The cold click of metal parts fill the
room. He doesn’t glance at her, doesn’t acknowledge her presence
beyond the occasional motion of his hand. Yet when he finally speaks,
his voice is calm, authoritative, carrying weight that makes every
cadet in the killhouse listen, even those who aren’t supposed to.
“You move like someone
who’s practiced more than necessary,” Vale says, almost to
himself, yet meant for her ears. “I don’t know where you’ve
been training, but whatever it is, keep it up. Skills like yours…
they’ll make you lethal in the field. Deadly, precise, and
efficient. That’s what you need to survive out there. And more than
survive, thrive.”
Lucille swallows, her lips
pressed tight. She hasn’t expected praise from Vale, not in this
cold, measured way. It’s different from the warmth, or the
frustration, she’s used to from Korvin. This is not approval born
of mentorship; it’s approval from a soldier who measures skill with
life and death.
Vale glances at her
finally, a small flicker of acknowledgment in his otherwise
unreadable gaze. “If you want… you can come back tonight. Evening
training. I’ll push you. Refine your marksmanship, your movement,
your speed. You’ll leave nothing to chance. You’ll walk into any
field, any fight, knowing your edge is sharper than anyone else’s.”
Lucille’s eyes widen
slightly. The thought of more training after today’s brutal course
sends a jolt through her. Exhaustion clings to her muscles, but
something deeper ignites, hunger, determination, the need to surpass.
She nods, almost imperceptibly.
“I’ll take it,” she
says quietly, voice barely above the metal hum of the killhouse.
Vale doesn’t smile. He
doesn’t need to. His nod is enough. “Good. Don’t waste my time.
Or yours.”
Lucille steps back, her
mind already spinning with possibilities. This evening, she thinks,
she’ll carve herself sharper than ever before. Even if Cain can’t
see it yet, even if her classmates sneer, she’ll walk this path
alone if she must. And when she returns, she’ll be faster,
deadlier, unstoppable.
She heads for the door
where Cain has been waiting for her. But she pays him no mind and
goes straight by.
Cain watches her shoulders
pass. His chest tightens, every breath shallow, sharp. He opens his
mouth, trying to call after her, to say something, anything, but the
words die before they form.
Lucille doesn’t even
glance at him. Her steps are measured, deliberate, each one pulling
her further away, erecting walls he cannot scale. The distance isn’t
measured in meters, it’s in intent, in the silence she’s carved
between them.
Cain swallows hard. His
hands clench at his sides. The friendly smile he intended vanishes,
replaced by a raw, ragged ache he doesn’t bother to hide. His
shoulders slump, as if the weight of her coldness is enough to pin
him to the floor. Every heartbeat throbs like a hammer striking metal
against metal.
“Lucille…” he begins,
his tone soft, careful. “I didn’t—”
Cain swallows again, the
ache deepening. Memories of years past, the scraped knees he
bandaged, the times he shielded her from bullies, the moments they
laughed and trained together flash through him. He’s fought beside
her, bled for her, and still… she thinks he could willingly leave
her to die.
He bites back a curse,
forcing the words down his throat. He knows chasing her now, trying
to explain, will only make her retreat further. She needs space. She
needs to see, somehow, that he never abandoned her. But the pain in
his chest refuses to loosen its grip.
Step by step, he follows
her at a distance, not daring to close the gap, yet unable to let her
disappear entirely. Each heartbeat is a reminder of the bond they’ve
shared since they were children, and how fragile it has become in the
shadow of a single misperception.
Cain murmurs under his
breath, almost to himself, “I’ll make you see… I’d never
leave you.”
But Lucille remains ahead,
resolute, unbroken in her pace, unaware, or unwilling, to hear him.
And Cain realizes that, for now, all he can do is follow, silently
bearing the weight of her misunderstanding, waiting for the moment
she’s ready to listen.

