Honus Redtree
Character
Chapter 1 – Ashes in the Foundry
The air in the foundry was thick with iron and smoke, a living blackness that crept into the lungs like it had a memory of everyone who had ever breathed there. Honus Redtree worked with a rhythm that had become instinct, hammer striking molten steel, sparks flicking like tiny stars swallowed by the dark. He was a man whose name once stirred awe and fear, now reduced to calluses, soot, and the monotony of service.
He had saved a world once. The banners of victory still hung in dusty archives, but outside the walls of government, outside the gleaming spires of order, the people no longer remembered—or cared. Safety had become obedience, and obedience was rewarded with enough food and shelter to keep bodies alive while spirits rotted.
Mara appeared at the edge of his vision, moving with a grace that was cruel in its precision. She didn't speak; she didn't need to. The corners of her mouth hinted at amusement, a subtle twist that felt like a knife. She had always known how to cut deeper than the enemy ever could. Her presence was a reminder, a tether to a life Honus no longer controlled.
He glanced at her, feeling the years of erosion in himself. Honus remembered the battles, the victories, the faces of those who had fought beside him. They had faded, or worse, they had bent to the new order. And now he bent too, quietly, invisibly, hoping that surviving was enough.
The clang of metal against metal echoed through the cavernous hall, a heartbeat in the dark. Sparks flew, and for a moment, Honus let his mind drift—not to memories, but to the faint whisper of rebellion buried beneath the ash. Somewhere, buried beneath years of control and cruelty, there was still fire in him.
But to rise, he would have to first look at the world and ask if it was even worth saving.
And the answer… was not yet clear.
The bell sounded three times.
Not the shift bell. Not the meal bell. Not the dull iron clamor that told the foundry men when to lower their hammers and shuffle toward the ration troughs with their burnt hands and hollow eyes.
Three clean notes.
High. Silver. Official.
Every hammer stopped.
The foundry became a beast holding its breath.
Honus lowered his tongs slowly, letting the orange bar of heated steel rest inside the cradle. Around him, men and women stared at the floor. No one looked toward the western doors, though everyone knew what waited beyond them.
Mara did look.
She stood near the inspection rail above the work floor, hands folded before her, pale face untouched by soot. Somehow the smoke did not cling to her. It never had. Even in their little apartment, where rust bled down the pipes and the vents coughed black dust every morning, Mara remained clean, sharp, and preserved.
A woman made of glass and verdicts.
The western doors opened.
Cold air swept through the foundry, cutting the heat in half. It carried the sterile scent of the upper city: rainwater scrubbers, polished stone, electric ozone, and the faint chemical sweetness of the Ministry's uniforms.
Six Wardens entered first.
Their armor was smooth black ceramic, jointed at the elbows and knees, each chestplate marked with the white sigil of the Directorate: an open eye inside a gear. Their faces were hidden behind mirrored masks. They moved without hurry because everyone knew hurry belonged to people who could be stopped.
Behind them came a man in a dove-gray coat.
Auditor Caldus Venn.
Honus knew him. Not personally. Men like Venn did not know men like Honus personally. But he had seen him before, twice in the past year, walking the foundry floor with his ledger slate and soft smile, selecting names from the labor rolls. Those selected were always told they had been chosen for advancement.
No one ever returned advanced.
Foreman Pell stepped forward, removing his cap so quickly he nearly dropped it.
"Auditor Venn," Pell said, bowing his head. "Foundry Nine is honored by your presence."
Venn smiled. He was thin, neat, almost delicate, with silver hair combed flat against his skull. His eyes moved over the workers the way a butcher's thumb moved over meat.
"Honor is inefficient, Foreman," Venn said. "Compliance is preferred."
"Yes, Auditor. Of course."
Venn lifted his slate. Pale light washed his face from below.
"We are conducting an emergency requisition under the Safety Continuance Act. Industrial output in the northern defense sectors has fallen three percent below acceptable projections. The Directorate requires bodies."
No one breathed.
Bodies.
Not workers. Not citizens. Not souls.
Bodies.
Honus felt the old part of himself stir beneath the ash, that ancient inner thing with its scarred knuckles and bright teeth. He pushed it down. Hard.
Venn tapped his slate. "Names will be called. Those selected are to report immediately for transport. Refusal will be recorded as civic sabotage."
A woman three rows over began to shake. Her husband put one hand on her wrist, not to comfort her, but to stop her from making noise.
Venn read the first name.
"Arlen Vos."
A young man near Furnace Two went white. He could not have been more than nineteen. His arms were roped with new muscle, his face still soft in places the foundry had not yet burned away.
"No," someone whispered.
His mother.
Honus knew her by sight. Sella Vos. She cleaned slag drains on the lower level and sang old cradle hymns when she thought the vents were loud enough to hide her voice.
A Warden turned its mirrored face toward her.
The whisper died.
Arlen stepped out of line. His jaw trembled, but he walked.
Venn read another name.
Then another.
Each one struck the room like a hammer blow.
Honus kept his eyes lowered.
He had learned the geometry of survival: do not look too long, do not stand too straight, do not let pity become visible. Pity was heat. Heat drew instruments. Instruments drew blood.
"Lio Marrick."
This time, no one moved.
Venn glanced up.
"Lio Marrick," he repeated.
A small figure stood beside the coal lift, half-hidden behind a cart of scrap rivets. A boy. Fourteen, maybe fifteen, with a shaved head and hands too large for his wrists. His left sleeve was pinned empty at the elbow.
Honus knew him.
Everyone knew Lio.
The boy had lost the arm in a gear press six months before. The foundry had charged his mother for equipment disruption. When she couldn't pay, Lio's remaining service term had been doubled.
The boy stared at the Wardens.
"I can't go," Lio said.
His voice cracked in the middle.
The room seemed to shrink around him.
Venn's smile did not change. "You can walk, can't you?"
Lio swallowed. "My mother needs me."
"That is not relevant."
"She's sick."
"That is also not relevant."
"I only have one arm."
Venn looked down at his slate, then back at the boy. "The Directorate requires bodies, not excuses."
A Warden moved toward Lio.
The boy stepped back, knocking over the rivet cart. Metal scattered across the floor in a glittering spill. The sound was enormous.
The Warden reached for him.
And Honus moved.
Not far. Not dramatically. He did not roar. He did not leap into legend.
He simply stepped between the boy and the Warden.
The foundry changed.
Not in sound. There was no sound.
But in pressure.
Every worker felt it. Even the furnaces seemed to lower their flames.
The Warden stopped.
Honus stood with his hammer hanging at his side, shoulders bent from years of labor, beard threaded with gray, hair dark with sweat and soot. He looked like any other broken foundry man.
Almost.
Venn studied him.
Mara's eyes narrowed from the inspection rail.
"Worker," Venn said softly. "Move."
Honus did not.
He could feel Lio behind him, trembling like a wire in a storm.
The old heat rose again, spreading through Honus' chest, filling old cracks, touching scars that no doctor had ever seen. Once, that heat had answered prayers. Once, it had split the sky above the Black Fen and burned the wings from the god-engine called Vhor.
Once, men had screamed his name not in anger, but hope.
Redtree.
Redtree.
Redtree.
Now his name was a file sealed beneath six layers of Ministry denial.
Honus forced his fingers to relax around the hammer.
"He's damaged," Honus said.
His own voice startled him. Low. Rough. Unused to defiance.
Venn tilted his head. "A damaged tool may still be useful."
"He'll die in the northern works."
"Many do."
"He's a child."
Venn's smile thinned into something more honest. "There are no children under the Safety Continuance Act. Only dependents, contributors, and burdens."
The Warden took one step closer.
Honus looked into its mirrored mask and saw himself reflected there: old, soot-black, eyes sunken, spine bowed by invisible chains.
Then Mara spoke.
"Honus."
One word.
Not loud.
It cut through him all the same.
He turned his head slightly.
She had descended the iron stairs and now stood at the edge of the work floor. Her expression was calm, but her eyes carried the private venom she saved for closed doors.
"Don't embarrass yourself," she said.
A few workers glanced at Honus, then quickly away.
Mara walked toward him with measured grace. "You're tired. You're confused. You've been having spells again."
Honus felt the trap closing.
Spells.
That was what she called them. His moments of anger. His memories. His nightmares. His grief. Anything in him that had not yet been domesticated.
She turned to Venn. "My husband served during the old conflicts. His mind is unstable when provoked. I apologize for him."
The words landed soft as snow, cold as execution.
Venn's eyes sharpened.
"Your husband?" he asked.
Mara bowed her head slightly. "Honus Redtree."
There it was.
His name entered the room like a ghost with mud on its boots.
Foreman Pell flinched.
One of the older workers made a strangled sound and covered it with a cough.
Venn stared at Honus for a long moment.
Then he laughed.
Not loudly. That would have been less cruel.
"A relic," Venn said. "How quaint."
Honus said nothing.
Venn stepped closer, close enough that Honus could smell mint on his breath.
"I read your file when I was a student," the Auditor said. "Edited, of course. Sanitized. Full of patriotic exaggeration. The last hero of the old age. The man who broke the enemy at Aerrowdeep. The man who carried the Dawn Standard through the burning gate."
His smile returned.
"And here you are. Government property in a furnace room."
Honus' jaw tightened.
Mara touched his arm. To anyone watching, it might have looked gentle.
Her fingers dug into the tendon above his wrist.
"Come away," she whispered.
Only he could hear the rest.
"Or they will remember what you are."
The threat was not for him alone.
Honus knew that. He knew the machinery of punishment. The Directorate rarely struck the stone when the roots were easier to poison. If he resisted, they would not only take him. They would take Lio, Sella, Pell, half the row, anyone who had seen too much hope flicker and failed to report it.
That was how tyranny survived.
It made courage expensive for everyone nearby.
Honus looked back at Lio.
The boy's face was wet now, though he made no sound.
"Please," Lio mouthed.
Honus had once faced armies that blotted out valleys.
This was worse.
Slowly, Honus stepped aside.
Something inside him broke with a quiet, familiar sound.
The Warden seized Lio by the collar and dragged him forward. The boy stumbled, tried to keep his feet, failed, rose again. No one helped him.
No one could.
Venn tapped his slate. "Continue."
More names followed.
Honus heard none of them clearly. They reached him through water. Through years. Through the roar of a battlefield where better people had died believing the future would be clean.
At last, the requisition ended.
Fourteen workers taken.
Fourteen holes left in the foundry.
Venn turned before leaving. His gaze found Honus one final time.
"The Directorate honors your past service, Redtree," he said. "By allowing you to remain useful."
The Wardens marched out with the selected workers between them.
Lio looked back once.
Then the western doors closed.
The foundry stayed silent.
Foreman Pell cleared his throat, eyes fixed on nothing. "Back to work."
No one moved.
His voice cracked. "Back to work!"
The hammers rose.
The furnaces growled.
The world continued, obscene in its obedience.
Honus returned to his station. The steel bar he had left in the cradle had cooled too much. It was ruined now, dark and brittle at the edges.
He lifted it anyway.
Hammered it anyway.
Again.
Again.
Again.
Each strike rang wrong.
Mara remained beside him.
"You almost made a spectacle," she said.
Honus did not answer.
"You should be grateful I intervened."
The hammer fell.
"You're not built for noble gestures anymore."
The hammer fell.
"You're old, Honus."
The hammer fell.
"You're tired."
The hammer fell.
"And whatever you were, whatever songs they sang about you, that man is dead."
Honus stopped.
For one dangerous moment, he looked at her fully.
Mara's expression did not change, but something cautious moved behind her eyes.
There he was, beneath the soot and defeat.
Not dead.
Buried.
The difference mattered.
Honus leaned close enough that she could hear him over the furnace roar.
"Dead men don't dream," he said.
Mara's lips parted slightly.
Then the shift bell screamed.
Workers lowered their tools and began filing toward the ration hall, heads bowed, bodies bent. Honus hung his hammer on its hook and walked past Mara without waiting for permission.
Outside the foundry, evening had settled over the city of Vael Turog.
Once, it had been called Vael-Tura, the Valley of Lanterns. In Honus' youth, thousands of prayer lights floated above its river every dusk, each one carrying a wish, a grief, a promise, a blessing. The river had shone like a second sky.
Now the river was covered in steel grating.
The lanterns were illegal.
Above the foundry district, the upper city rose in tiers of white stone and black glass, its towers crowned with signal arrays and surveillance halos. Patrol lights drifted between buildings. Ministry announcements crawled across enormous screens in calm blue letters.
SECURITY IS MERCY.
SERVICE IS PEACE.
MEMORY IS A PRIVILEGE.
Honus stood in the street, soot cooling on his skin.
Far ahead, at the checkpoint where the Wardens had taken the requisitioned workers, someone began to sing.
A small voice.
Thin.
Defiant.
The words were old, older than the Directorate, older than the foundries, older even than the war that had made Honus into a weapon.
"Root below and star above…"
The song faltered as a Warden shouted.
Then another voice joined.
"Carry us through ash and blood…"
Honus closed his eyes.
A third voice rose.
Then a fourth.
The Wardens barked commands. There was the crackle of shock batons. A cry of pain.
Still, for a few breaths, the song lived.
Honus opened his eyes.
Across the street, beneath a broken drainage arch, someone watched him.
A woman in a hood the color of rainwater.
She was there for only a heartbeat. But before she vanished into the steam, she lifted two fingers to her brow, then touched them to her heart.
The old salute.
The salute of the Dawnbound.
Honus' breath caught.
They were dead.
They had to be dead.
He had buried them in his mind because the alternative was madness.
Mara appeared beside him, her voice low and polished.
"What are you looking at?"
Honus stared at the empty archway.
"Nothing," he said.
But beneath the city, beneath the iron, beneath the years of shame and silence, something had shifted.
A root had found water.
And far away, in some locked chamber of the world, the past opened one ember-bright eye.
Honus did not go home by the main stair.
Mara noticed.
Of course she noticed. Mara noticed the smallest rebellions. A cup set too sharply on a table. A silence held one breath too long. A glance toward a locked door. She collected such things the way old priests had once collected bone charms, turning them over in private, naming their sins.
"The south lift is faster," she said.
Honus kept walking.
"The south lift has light," she added.
Still, he walked.
The foundry district was a maze of brick corridors, steam gutters, ash alleys, and overhead pipes sweating black condensation. It had not been designed for beauty. It had been designed for output, containment, and easy surveillance. Yet there were corners where the cameras had gone blind from age and grime. Corners where old stone still showed through the poured concrete. Corners where the city remembered itself.
Honus knew them all.
Or he had once.
He turned into Cinder Lane, a narrow passage between the slag silos and the wall of Furnace House Three. The ground sloped downward. Water dripped from pipes overhead, hissing where it struck warm metal grates.
Mara followed him.
Her shoes clicked behind him with irritating precision.
"You saw someone," she said.
Honus said nothing.
"Under the arch."
Nothing.
"A woman?"
The word entered him like a needle, searching.
Honus stopped beneath a dead lamp. Its glass was cracked. Moths gathered inside it anyway, battering themselves against darkness with idiot devotion.
Mara smiled faintly.
"There it is."
He turned.
"What?"
"That look." She took one step closer. "You were always terrible at hiding hope."
Honus stared at her.
The foundry noise had faded behind them. Down here, the city sounded different. Pipes groaned in the walls. Somewhere far below, machinery churned with the slow appetite of an underground god. Above them, the patrol lights moved across the smog clouds in pale, searching sweeps.
"I saw a stranger," Honus said.
Mara's smile sharpened. "No. You saw a ghost, and you wanted it to be real."
He almost answered.
Almost.
That was the danger with Mara. She could make silence feel like surrender and speech feel like self-harm. Every conversation with her was a room with knives hidden in the furniture.
"You should be careful," she said. "The Directorate has been merciful with you."
Honus laughed once. It came out dry and ugly.
Mara's face hardened.
"Mercy," he said. "That's what we call cages now?"
"That is what we call restraint."
"Whose?"
"Harlon Pike raised his voice at a ration audit last month," Mara said. "His daughters were reassigned to ceramic processing by morning. Nessa Vey hid a banned hymn sheet under her mattress. Her husband lost his work allotment. You stood between a Warden and a requisitioned laborer today."
"A boy."
"A laborer." Her voice was flat now, stripped of perfume. "And you did it in front of witnesses."
Honus stepped toward her.
For a moment, Mara's eyes flicked to his hands.
Good, he thought.
Let her remember something too.
"I stepped aside," he said.
"Yes." Her mouth barely moved. "You did. And that is why we are walking home instead of being dragged to an extraction room."
He looked away first.
It tasted like rust.
Mara adjusted the cuff of her sleeve. "You think restraint makes you a coward. It does not. It makes you manageable."
There it was.
A word too cleanly chosen.
Honus looked at her again.
Mara realized the mistake a heartbeat too late.
"Manageable," he repeated.
Her expression softened at once, but the machine behind it had already shown through.
"You know what I mean."
"No," Honus said. "I don't think I do."
She came closer and touched his cheek. Her hand was cool. Her eyes were wet now, or pretending to be. She had many faces and kept them polished.
"I mean I worry for you," she said. "I mean I am tired of watching you bleed against walls you cannot break. I mean I have buried enough of you already."
A passing patrol light swept over the alley, painting them both in white.
Honus did not move until it passed.
Then he took her wrist and lowered her hand from his face.
Gently.
That gentleness angered her more than force would have.
They walked the rest of the way in silence.
Their apartment was on the twenty-third tier of Block Halberd, a workers' habitation stack bolted to the eastern side of the foundry hill. The building was a vertical bruise of concrete, iron balconies, laundry wires, and surveillance nodes. Every window was identical. Every door bore a number. Every number belonged to the state before it belonged to a person.
Their door read: H23-19.
Inside, the apartment smelled of boiled grain, sterilizing acid, and the faint lavender Mara rubbed into her wrists each morning. The rooms were small but orderly. Too orderly. There were no loose papers, no old photographs, no useless beloved objects. Mara disliked clutter, especially the kind that carried memory.
Honus removed his boots by the door.
Mara removed her gloves.
A domestic ceremony. Two prisoners pretending the ritual meant home.
On the wall above the cooking unit, the Ministry screen flickered awake. A woman with copper hair and dead blue eyes smiled down at them.
"Good evening, citizens. Today's Harmony Index has risen by point-four percent across the lower industrial sectors. Your obedience has saved lives."
Honus reached for the switch.
Mara spoke without looking at him. "Leave it."
His hand stopped.
The screen continued.
"Reminder: unauthorized songs, ancestral rites, pre-Directorate symbols, and unregistered gatherings remain punishable under civic destabilization statutes. Report irregular sentiment. Care is vigilance."
Mara set water to boil.
Honus stood in the middle of the room and watched the screen until the smiling woman's face blurred into light.
Unauthorized songs.
Root below and star above.
He remembered the rest.
Not because he wanted to.
Memory came anyway, dragging its chains.
Carry us through ash and blood,
Keep the names beneath the flood,
When the tyrant crowns the flame,
Wake the root and speak the name.
He had heard it first as a child in Redtree Hollow, sung by his grandmother while she carved prayer marks into bark. Back then, the world had still believed in small holy things. Bread left beneath stones for the burrowing spirits. Bells rung at dusk for the dead. Children taught that every river had a temper and every mountain a memory.
The Directorate called those beliefs primitive now.
Honus called them roots.
Mara set a bowl in front of him.
Gray mash. Protein oil. Salt if one felt decadent.
He sat.
She sat across from him, watching him eat before touching her own food. That too was ritual. She liked to see whether his hands shook.
They did not.
Not tonight.
That worried her.
"You should request a neural rest assessment," she said.
Honus swallowed. "No."
"You haven't been sleeping."
"No one in this building sleeps. The pipes scream."
"That is not what I mean."
"I know what you mean."
Her spoon clicked against the bowl.
"Do you?" she asked. "Because from where I sit, you seem determined to invite scrutiny."
Honus looked around their immaculate little room.
"No shrine," he said. "No books. No relics. No visitors. No missed shifts. No excess speech. I go to work. I come back. I eat what they give me. I sleep when I can. What more do they want?"
Mara's eyes did not blink.
"Your peace."
His laugh came again, quieter this time.
"They took that before they sent you."
The room changed.
Only slightly.
A tightening in Mara's jaw. A stillness in her shoulders. A thread pulled too hard through cloth.
"What did you say?"
Honus leaned back.
The chair creaked under him.
"I said they took my peace."
"No." Mara's voice dropped. "You said before they sent me."
The Ministry screen filled the silence with its gentle poison.
"Tomorrow begins Civic Gratitude Week. Citizens are encouraged to submit testimonies honoring the Directorate's protection."
Honus should have denied it.
He should have looked confused. Tired. Apologetic. Manageable.
Instead, he watched Mara watch him.
A strange calm entered him. Not courage exactly. Something older and less clean. The calm of a man finally hearing the floor crack beneath a house he already knew was rotten.
"How long?" he asked.
Mara stood.
The movement was too quick.
"You're unwell."
"How long, Mara?"
She took his bowl and carried it to the sink though he had not finished eating.
"You need sleep."
"Were you assigned before the wedding?"
Her hand tightened around the bowl.
"Stop."
"After Aerrowdeep?"
The bowl struck the counter. Mash slopped over the rim.
"Stop."
"After I refused the Directorate seat?"
That did it.
Her face lost every mask at once.
For a heartbeat, Honus saw the woman beneath: not wife, not caretaker, not wounded companion. An operative in a plain apartment, holding a life in both hands and squeezing until it stopped resisting.
Then she gathered herself.
But he had seen it.
And she knew he had.
"You think you refused power," she said softly. "That is the story you tell yourself because it lets you feel noble. You did not refuse power, Honus. You abandoned responsibility. Men like you break the world and then wander off when it needs governing."
Honus rose.
The chair scraped the floor.
"I saved it."
"You saved a battlefield." Her eyes flashed. "You did not save the future. Others had to do that. Others had to build systems, laws, walls, surveillance, punishments. Others had to keep frightened people from tearing each other apart while you hid inside your grief."
He stared at her.
There was conviction in her voice.
That was the worst of it.
Not all monsters know they are monsters. Some sleep beautifully because they call the cage a cradle.
"You believe them," he said.
Mara lifted her chin.
"I believe order is kinder than chaos."
"You believe chains are kinder than choice."
"I believe most people do not know what to do with choice."
"Then you never knew my people."
"Your people are gone."
The words hit harder than he expected.
Mara saw it and pressed.
"The old world is gone. The valley rites, the wandering councils, the Dawnbound, the little songs sung to trees and stones. Gone. And perhaps they deserved to go, because when the iron came down from the north and the sky opened, all their lovely beliefs could not save them."
Honus crossed the room so fast she stepped back.
The old heat flared in him. The light above them buzzed. The Ministry screen stuttered.
For one moment, the apartment smelled not of grain and acid, but of storm rain on split cedar.
Mara went pale.
Honus stopped himself inches from her.
His hands were open.
His voice, when it came, was barely human.
"They saved me."
The screen crackled.
The smiling announcer's face warped, dissolved, returned.
Mara looked at the light. Then at him.
Fear moved through her.
Not fear of a husband.
Fear of a file coming alive.
Honus felt it then. Beneath his ribs. Beneath scars and age and all the careful ruin. A pulse.
Small.
Furious.
Impossible.
He stepped back, breathing hard.
Mara's fear vanished behind calculation.
"Do you know what happens," she whispered, "if they detect a resurgence?"
He said nothing.
"They will not send Wardens next time. They will send a Saint Engine."
Honus' blood cooled.
The words had weight. Old weight. War weight.
Saint Engine.
He had not heard that term in twenty years.
The original Saint Engines had been built during the Last War, when desperation gave engineers permission to commit theology with tools. Machines wrapped around harvested relics. Steel bodies powered by murdered miracles. They had fought for the old coalition at first.
Then the Directorate inherited them.
Then they improved them.
Mara watched recognition pass across his face.
"Yes," she said. "You remember. So remember this too: you are not what you were. You cannot stand against one now."
"Why?" Honus asked.
Her brow tightened. "Why what?"
"Why warn me?"
She did not answer.
"Is that in your assignment too?"
The slap came hard enough to turn his head.
Silence followed.
The Ministry screen continued smiling.
Honus slowly faced her again.
Mara's hand trembled at her side.
Not from remorse.
From anger that she had lost control of the room.
"You will go to bed," she said.
"No."
"You will go to bed, and tomorrow you will go to the foundry, and you will forget whatever you think you saw under that arch."
"No."
A muscle jumped in her cheek.
"Honus."
He walked past her into the smaller room.
Their sleeping quarters contained one bed, two metal lockers, and a narrow window looking out over the lower city. Honus opened his locker.
Inside were folded work clothes, two spare shirts, a shaving blade, and nothing else.
At least, nothing visible.
He knelt and pressed his thumb against a small dent near the back corner.
The locker's false bottom clicked.
Behind him, Mara entered the doorway.
"What are you doing?"
Honus lifted the panel.
Beneath it lay a strip of red cloth, faded almost brown with age.
Mara inhaled sharply.
Not because it was a weapon.
Because it was worse.
A memory.
Honus lifted the cloth with both hands.
It had once been tied around the haft of the Dawn Standard. Not the banner itself, not anything grand enough for archives, just a torn binding strip he had taken from the battlefield after Aerrowdeep. Red for the valley clay. Red for the tree sap that bled when cut. Red for the dead who had bought morning with their bodies.
Mara stared at it.
"You told me you burned everything."
"I lied."
Her face twisted. "You kept contraband in our home?"
"Our home?" he asked.
That landed.
She looked away.
He stood and wrapped the cloth once around his wrist.
It barely fit. His hands had grown thicker with labor, knuckles swollen from years of hammer work. The cloth was old and weak, but when it touched his skin, the pulse beneath his ribs answered.
Not loudly.
Not yet.
But enough.
From somewhere outside came a distant sound.
A shout.
Then another.
Honus turned to the window.
Down below, in the street near the checkpoint, people were gathering. Not many. A dozen, perhaps. Maybe less. Shadows in work coats. Heads bowed. One held a lantern cupped in both hands, its light hidden beneath cloth.
Illegal.
Beautiful.
Madness.
Mara moved beside him and looked down.
"No," she said.
The word had no command in it now.
Only dread.
The gathered figures began to sing.
Softly at first.
Root below and star above.
Honus closed his eyes.
Carry us through ash and blood.
More voices joined from nearby windows. One from the stack across the alley. Another from the walkway above. A woman's voice. An old man's. A child's.
Keep the names beneath the flood.
The Ministry screen in the other room shrieked.
"Unauthorized civic gathering detected. Remain indoors. Remain peaceful. Report participants. Security response is mercy."
Mara seized Honus' arm.
"Do not move."
He looked at her hand.
Then at her.
For years, that grip had been enough.
Not tonight.
He removed her fingers one by one.
She backed away as though he had burned her.
"Honus," she whispered, and for the first time in years, his name sounded less like a leash and more like a plea.
He opened the apartment door.
The hall outside was full of faces.
Workers stood half in shadow, doors cracked open behind them. No one spoke. No one dared. But they saw the red cloth on his wrist.
An old woman across the hall covered her mouth.
A man with a scarred scalp began to weep without sound.
Honus walked past them toward the stairwell.
Mara followed only as far as the threshold.
"Saint Engines," she called after him.
He paused.
"They will send Saint Engines."
Honus looked back.
The hall light flickered over his soot-dark face.
"Then they should send more than one."
He descended.
Each step downward felt impossible, then less impossible, then inevitable.
By the time he reached the street, the patrol sirens had begun.
The singers did not scatter.
They should have.
Any sensible person would have run. Any living person with a taste for remaining living would have vanished into alleys and doorways and vents.
But grief had fermented into something stronger than sense.
Fourteen workers had been taken.
A boy with one arm had been taken.
And perhaps, Honus thought, there are numbers tyranny cannot count because they do not fit inside a ledger.
He stepped into the street.
The song faltered.
People turned.
The lantern bearer lowered her cloth.
Warm gold light spilled over the wet stones.
The hooded woman from the arch stood at the center of the gathering.
Now Honus saw her clearly.
She was older than he had first thought, perhaps fifty, with dark skin lined by weather and worry, her hair braided close to her scalp and threaded with bits of copper wire. One side of her face bore a burn scar shaped like a wing. Her eyes were bright, merciless, alive.
She looked at the cloth on his wrist.
Then she dropped to one knee.
Honus froze.
One by one, the others knelt.
Not in submission.
In recognition.
The hooded woman spoke the words forbidden by law, erased from schoolbooks, buried in sealed records and old blood.
"Dawn returns to root."
Honus' throat closed.
He knew the response.
Of course he knew it.
Twenty years of silence had not killed it.
He looked at the kneeling workers, the illegal lantern, the patrol lights converging through the smog.
Then he answered.
"Root remembers dawn."
The city seemed to hear him.
Somewhere high above, alarms changed pitch.
The hooded woman rose.
"My name is Edda Vale," she said. "Dawnbound, last cell of the eastern quarter."
Honus could barely breathe.
"How many?"
Her smile was grim.
"Enough to die badly."
"That's not enough."
"No," Edda said. "But it is enough to begin."
A patrol skimmer swept around the corner, lights blazing white. Wardens spilled from its open sides before it fully stopped, batons alive with blue current.
A command voice thundered through the street.
"Disperse immediately. This gathering is unlawful. Kneel and place your hands behind your heads."
A few singers flinched.
None moved.
Honus turned toward the Wardens.
There were eight of them.
Mara had been right.
He was old.
He was tired.
He was not what he had been.
But the first Warden came too close.
It reached for Edda.
Honus caught its wrist.
The armor was cold and smooth beneath his fingers. Stronger than bone. Stronger than flesh.
The Warden's head snapped toward him.
"Release."
Honus tightened his grip.
Something inside the armor began to grind.
The Warden swung its baton.
Honus moved before thought could catch him.
His shoulder dipped. His left foot slid. The old forms rose through his body, not graceful, not untouched by age, but present. He drove his palm into the Warden's chestplate.
The impact cracked ceramic.
The Warden flew backward into the skimmer hard enough to dent its side.
For one bright, stunned second, no one moved.
Honus stared at his hand.
Pain bloomed through his wrist.
Real pain.
Human pain.
He almost laughed.
Then the remaining Wardens charged.
The street erupted.
Edda threw the lantern.
It shattered at the feet of the second Warden, and fire rushed outward in a golden sheet. Someone screamed. Someone else swung a length of pipe. A woman leapt from a stair rail onto a Warden's back and drove a mining pick into the joint below its helmet.
Honus took the next baton strike across his ribs.
Agony flashed white.
He staggered.
The Warden raised its weapon again.
Honus caught the second blow on his forearm, stepped in, and slammed his forehead into the mirrored mask.
The mask cracked.
Behind it, something wet gasped.
Not machine.
A person.
The realization sickened him, but he did not have room for sickness.
He hooked his hand behind the Warden's neck and drove it down into his rising knee. Armor buckled. The body fell.
Another baton struck his back.
He dropped to one knee.
Old injuries opened their mouths. His spine screamed. His lungs forgot their task.
Too slow, he thought.
Too old.
A Warden aimed its baton at Edda's skull.
Honus reached for heat.
Nothing came.
Only pain.
Only breath.
Only the terrible distance between legend and man.
Then the singers rose behind him.
Root below and star above.
The words struck the street like rain on buried seed.
Carry us through ash and blood.
Honus felt the pulse again.
Small.
Furious.
Not in him alone.
In the stones.
In the people.
In the forbidden song passing from mouth to mouth like fire learning to walk.
The red cloth on his wrist tightened.
No, not tightened.
Rooted.
Fine red fibers sank into the cracks of his skin. Not cutting. Remembering.
Honus stood.
The Warden turned.
The baton came down.
Honus caught it barehanded.
Blue current crawled over his arm, burning through sleeve and skin.
He did not let go.
The Warden tried to pull back.
Honus pulled harder.
The baton snapped in half.
The street went quiet around the broken sound.
Honus drove the shattered end through the Warden's knee joint. It collapsed. He struck again, crushing the baton housing against the pavement until sparks died like insects under glass.
The last three Wardens hesitated.
That saved them.
A siren wailed from the upper road.
Heavier.
Deeper.
Edda's face changed.
"Saint," she said.
Honus looked toward the rise.
At the top of Cinder Lane, something vast stepped through the steam.
It was shaped like a man only in the way a gallows is shaped like a tree. Nine feet tall. White armor plated over black synthetic muscle. Its shoulders bore scripture etched in machine-cut lines. Its head was smooth, featureless, crowned by a halo of rotating brass blades.
In the center of its chest, behind glass, something glowed.
Not a reactor.
Not a battery.
A relic.
A caged holy thing.
The Saint Engine lifted one hand.
The air filled with pressure.
Windows cracked along the habitation stack. The illegal lantern fire guttered flat. People cried out and dropped to the ground.
A voice emerged from the Saint Engine, layered and calm.
"Honus Redtree."
His name rolled through the street with cathedral weight.
"By authority of the Directorate, you are recalled for containment."
Honus felt every year of his life settle onto his bones.
Behind him, Edda whispered, "Can you fight it?"
He looked at the Saint Engine.
At the caged glow in its chest.
At the people huddled behind him.
At the upper windows where hundreds of faces now watched from darkness.
Mara stood on the balcony twenty-three stories above, one hand at her throat.
Honus raised his right hand.
The red cloth fluttered though there was no wind.
"No," he said.
Edda's face fell.
Then Honus smiled, and it was a grim old thing with blood in its teeth.
"But I can make it remember me."
The Saint Engine charged.
And Honus Redtree, last hero of a world that had forgotten how to kneel to anything but fear, stepped forward to meet it.
The air in the foundry was thick with iron and smoke, a living blackness that crept into the lungs like it had a memory of everyone who had ever breathed there. Honus Redtree worked with a rhythm that had become instinct, hammer striking molten steel, sparks flicking like tiny stars swallowed by the dark. He was a man whose name once stirred awe and fear, now reduced to calluses, soot, and the monotony of service.
He had saved a world once. The banners of victory still hung in dusty archives, but outside the walls of government, outside the gleaming spires of order, the people no longer remembered—or cared. Safety had become obedience, and obedience was rewarded with enough food and shelter to keep bodies alive while spirits rotted.
Mara appeared at the edge of his vision, moving with a grace that was cruel in its precision. She didn't speak; she didn't need to. The corners of her mouth hinted at amusement, a subtle twist that felt like a knife. She had always known how to cut deeper than the enemy ever could. Her presence was a reminder, a tether to a life Honus no longer controlled.
He glanced at her, feeling the years of erosion in himself. Honus remembered the battles, the victories, the faces of those who had fought beside him. They had faded, or worse, they had bent to the new order. And now he bent too, quietly, invisibly, hoping that surviving was enough.
The clang of metal against metal echoed through the cavernous hall, a heartbeat in the dark. Sparks flew, and for a moment, Honus let his mind drift—not to memories, but to the faint whisper of rebellion buried beneath the ash. Somewhere, buried beneath years of control and cruelty, there was still fire in him.
But to rise, he would have to first look at the world and ask if it was even worth saving.
And the answer… was not yet clear.
The bell sounded three times.
Not the shift bell. Not the meal bell. Not the dull iron clamor that told the foundry men when to lower their hammers and shuffle toward the ration troughs with their burnt hands and hollow eyes.
Three clean notes.
High. Silver. Official.
Every hammer stopped.
The foundry became a beast holding its breath.
Honus lowered his tongs slowly, letting the orange bar of heated steel rest inside the cradle. Around him, men and women stared at the floor. No one looked toward the western doors, though everyone knew what waited beyond them.
Mara did look.
She stood near the inspection rail above the work floor, hands folded before her, pale face untouched by soot. Somehow the smoke did not cling to her. It never had. Even in their little apartment, where rust bled down the pipes and the vents coughed black dust every morning, Mara remained clean, sharp, and preserved.
A woman made of glass and verdicts.
The western doors opened.
Cold air swept through the foundry, cutting the heat in half. It carried the sterile scent of the upper city: rainwater scrubbers, polished stone, electric ozone, and the faint chemical sweetness of the Ministry's uniforms.
Six Wardens entered first.
Their armor was smooth black ceramic, jointed at the elbows and knees, each chestplate marked with the white sigil of the Directorate: an open eye inside a gear. Their faces were hidden behind mirrored masks. They moved without hurry because everyone knew hurry belonged to people who could be stopped.
Behind them came a man in a dove-gray coat.
Auditor Caldus Venn.
Honus knew him. Not personally. Men like Venn did not know men like Honus personally. But he had seen him before, twice in the past year, walking the foundry floor with his ledger slate and soft smile, selecting names from the labor rolls. Those selected were always told they had been chosen for advancement.
No one ever returned advanced.
Foreman Pell stepped forward, removing his cap so quickly he nearly dropped it.
"Auditor Venn," Pell said, bowing his head. "Foundry Nine is honored by your presence."
Venn smiled. He was thin, neat, almost delicate, with silver hair combed flat against his skull. His eyes moved over the workers the way a butcher's thumb moved over meat.
"Honor is inefficient, Foreman," Venn said. "Compliance is preferred."
"Yes, Auditor. Of course."
Venn lifted his slate. Pale light washed his face from below.
"We are conducting an emergency requisition under the Safety Continuance Act. Industrial output in the northern defense sectors has fallen three percent below acceptable projections. The Directorate requires bodies."
No one breathed.
Bodies.
Not workers. Not citizens. Not souls.
Bodies.
Honus felt the old part of himself stir beneath the ash, that ancient inner thing with its scarred knuckles and bright teeth. He pushed it down. Hard.
Venn tapped his slate. "Names will be called. Those selected are to report immediately for transport. Refusal will be recorded as civic sabotage."
A woman three rows over began to shake. Her husband put one hand on her wrist, not to comfort her, but to stop her from making noise.
Venn read the first name.
"Arlen Vos."
A young man near Furnace Two went white. He could not have been more than nineteen. His arms were roped with new muscle, his face still soft in places the foundry had not yet burned away.
"No," someone whispered.
His mother.
Honus knew her by sight. Sella Vos. She cleaned slag drains on the lower level and sang old cradle hymns when she thought the vents were loud enough to hide her voice.
A Warden turned its mirrored face toward her.
The whisper died.
Arlen stepped out of line. His jaw trembled, but he walked.
Venn read another name.
Then another.
Each one struck the room like a hammer blow.
Honus kept his eyes lowered.
He had learned the geometry of survival: do not look too long, do not stand too straight, do not let pity become visible. Pity was heat. Heat drew instruments. Instruments drew blood.
"Lio Marrick."
This time, no one moved.
Venn glanced up.
"Lio Marrick," he repeated.
A small figure stood beside the coal lift, half-hidden behind a cart of scrap rivets. A boy. Fourteen, maybe fifteen, with a shaved head and hands too large for his wrists. His left sleeve was pinned empty at the elbow.
Honus knew him.
Everyone knew Lio.
The boy had lost the arm in a gear press six months before. The foundry had charged his mother for equipment disruption. When she couldn't pay, Lio's remaining service term had been doubled.
The boy stared at the Wardens.
"I can't go," Lio said.
His voice cracked in the middle.
The room seemed to shrink around him.
Venn's smile did not change. "You can walk, can't you?"
Lio swallowed. "My mother needs me."
"That is not relevant."
"She's sick."
"That is also not relevant."
"I only have one arm."
Venn looked down at his slate, then back at the boy. "The Directorate requires bodies, not excuses."
A Warden moved toward Lio.
The boy stepped back, knocking over the rivet cart. Metal scattered across the floor in a glittering spill. The sound was enormous.
The Warden reached for him.
And Honus moved.
Not far. Not dramatically. He did not roar. He did not leap into legend.
He simply stepped between the boy and the Warden.
The foundry changed.
Not in sound. There was no sound.
But in pressure.
Every worker felt it. Even the furnaces seemed to lower their flames.
The Warden stopped.
Honus stood with his hammer hanging at his side, shoulders bent from years of labor, beard threaded with gray, hair dark with sweat and soot. He looked like any other broken foundry man.
Almost.
Venn studied him.
Mara's eyes narrowed from the inspection rail.
"Worker," Venn said softly. "Move."
Honus did not.
He could feel Lio behind him, trembling like a wire in a storm.
The old heat rose again, spreading through Honus' chest, filling old cracks, touching scars that no doctor had ever seen. Once, that heat had answered prayers. Once, it had split the sky above the Black Fen and burned the wings from the god-engine called Vhor.
Once, men had screamed his name not in anger, but hope.
Redtree.
Redtree.
Redtree.
Now his name was a file sealed beneath six layers of Ministry denial.
Honus forced his fingers to relax around the hammer.
"He's damaged," Honus said.
His own voice startled him. Low. Rough. Unused to defiance.
Venn tilted his head. "A damaged tool may still be useful."
"He'll die in the northern works."
"Many do."
"He's a child."
Venn's smile thinned into something more honest. "There are no children under the Safety Continuance Act. Only dependents, contributors, and burdens."
The Warden took one step closer.
Honus looked into its mirrored mask and saw himself reflected there: old, soot-black, eyes sunken, spine bowed by invisible chains.
Then Mara spoke.
"Honus."
One word.
Not loud.
It cut through him all the same.
He turned his head slightly.
She had descended the iron stairs and now stood at the edge of the work floor. Her expression was calm, but her eyes carried the private venom she saved for closed doors.
"Don't embarrass yourself," she said.
A few workers glanced at Honus, then quickly away.
Mara walked toward him with measured grace. "You're tired. You're confused. You've been having spells again."
Honus felt the trap closing.
Spells.
That was what she called them. His moments of anger. His memories. His nightmares. His grief. Anything in him that had not yet been domesticated.
She turned to Venn. "My husband served during the old conflicts. His mind is unstable when provoked. I apologize for him."
The words landed soft as snow, cold as execution.
Venn's eyes sharpened.
"Your husband?" he asked.
Mara bowed her head slightly. "Honus Redtree."
There it was.
His name entered the room like a ghost with mud on its boots.
Foreman Pell flinched.
One of the older workers made a strangled sound and covered it with a cough.
Venn stared at Honus for a long moment.
Then he laughed.
Not loudly. That would have been less cruel.
"A relic," Venn said. "How quaint."
Honus said nothing.
Venn stepped closer, close enough that Honus could smell mint on his breath.
"I read your file when I was a student," the Auditor said. "Edited, of course. Sanitized. Full of patriotic exaggeration. The last hero of the old age. The man who broke the enemy at Aerrowdeep. The man who carried the Dawn Standard through the burning gate."
His smile returned.
"And here you are. Government property in a furnace room."
Honus' jaw tightened.
Mara touched his arm. To anyone watching, it might have looked gentle.
Her fingers dug into the tendon above his wrist.
"Come away," she whispered.
Only he could hear the rest.
"Or they will remember what you are."
The threat was not for him alone.
Honus knew that. He knew the machinery of punishment. The Directorate rarely struck the stone when the roots were easier to poison. If he resisted, they would not only take him. They would take Lio, Sella, Pell, half the row, anyone who had seen too much hope flicker and failed to report it.
That was how tyranny survived.
It made courage expensive for everyone nearby.
Honus looked back at Lio.
The boy's face was wet now, though he made no sound.
"Please," Lio mouthed.
Honus had once faced armies that blotted out valleys.
This was worse.
Slowly, Honus stepped aside.
Something inside him broke with a quiet, familiar sound.
The Warden seized Lio by the collar and dragged him forward. The boy stumbled, tried to keep his feet, failed, rose again. No one helped him.
No one could.
Venn tapped his slate. "Continue."
More names followed.
Honus heard none of them clearly. They reached him through water. Through years. Through the roar of a battlefield where better people had died believing the future would be clean.
At last, the requisition ended.
Fourteen workers taken.
Fourteen holes left in the foundry.
Venn turned before leaving. His gaze found Honus one final time.
"The Directorate honors your past service, Redtree," he said. "By allowing you to remain useful."
The Wardens marched out with the selected workers between them.
Lio looked back once.
Then the western doors closed.
The foundry stayed silent.
Foreman Pell cleared his throat, eyes fixed on nothing. "Back to work."
No one moved.
His voice cracked. "Back to work!"
The hammers rose.
The furnaces growled.
The world continued, obscene in its obedience.
Honus returned to his station. The steel bar he had left in the cradle had cooled too much. It was ruined now, dark and brittle at the edges.
He lifted it anyway.
Hammered it anyway.
Again.
Again.
Again.
Each strike rang wrong.
Mara remained beside him.
"You almost made a spectacle," she said.
Honus did not answer.
"You should be grateful I intervened."
The hammer fell.
"You're not built for noble gestures anymore."
The hammer fell.
"You're old, Honus."
The hammer fell.
"You're tired."
The hammer fell.
"And whatever you were, whatever songs they sang about you, that man is dead."
Honus stopped.
For one dangerous moment, he looked at her fully.
Mara's expression did not change, but something cautious moved behind her eyes.
There he was, beneath the soot and defeat.
Not dead.
Buried.
The difference mattered.
Honus leaned close enough that she could hear him over the furnace roar.
"Dead men don't dream," he said.
Mara's lips parted slightly.
Then the shift bell screamed.
Workers lowered their tools and began filing toward the ration hall, heads bowed, bodies bent. Honus hung his hammer on its hook and walked past Mara without waiting for permission.
Outside the foundry, evening had settled over the city of Vael Turog.
Once, it had been called Vael-Tura, the Valley of Lanterns. In Honus' youth, thousands of prayer lights floated above its river every dusk, each one carrying a wish, a grief, a promise, a blessing. The river had shone like a second sky.
Now the river was covered in steel grating.
The lanterns were illegal.
Above the foundry district, the upper city rose in tiers of white stone and black glass, its towers crowned with signal arrays and surveillance halos. Patrol lights drifted between buildings. Ministry announcements crawled across enormous screens in calm blue letters.
SECURITY IS MERCY.
SERVICE IS PEACE.
MEMORY IS A PRIVILEGE.
Honus stood in the street, soot cooling on his skin.
Far ahead, at the checkpoint where the Wardens had taken the requisitioned workers, someone began to sing.
A small voice.
Thin.
Defiant.
The words were old, older than the Directorate, older than the foundries, older even than the war that had made Honus into a weapon.
"Root below and star above…"
The song faltered as a Warden shouted.
Then another voice joined.
"Carry us through ash and blood…"
Honus closed his eyes.
A third voice rose.
Then a fourth.
The Wardens barked commands. There was the crackle of shock batons. A cry of pain.
Still, for a few breaths, the song lived.
Honus opened his eyes.
Across the street, beneath a broken drainage arch, someone watched him.
A woman in a hood the color of rainwater.
She was there for only a heartbeat. But before she vanished into the steam, she lifted two fingers to her brow, then touched them to her heart.
The old salute.
The salute of the Dawnbound.
Honus' breath caught.
They were dead.
They had to be dead.
He had buried them in his mind because the alternative was madness.
Mara appeared beside him, her voice low and polished.
"What are you looking at?"
Honus stared at the empty archway.
"Nothing," he said.
But beneath the city, beneath the iron, beneath the years of shame and silence, something had shifted.
A root had found water.
And far away, in some locked chamber of the world, the past opened one ember-bright eye.
Honus did not go home by the main stair.
Mara noticed.
Of course she noticed. Mara noticed the smallest rebellions. A cup set too sharply on a table. A silence held one breath too long. A glance toward a locked door. She collected such things the way old priests had once collected bone charms, turning them over in private, naming their sins.
"The south lift is faster," she said.
Honus kept walking.
"The south lift has light," she added.
Still, he walked.
The foundry district was a maze of brick corridors, steam gutters, ash alleys, and overhead pipes sweating black condensation. It had not been designed for beauty. It had been designed for output, containment, and easy surveillance. Yet there were corners where the cameras had gone blind from age and grime. Corners where old stone still showed through the poured concrete. Corners where the city remembered itself.
Honus knew them all.
Or he had once.
He turned into Cinder Lane, a narrow passage between the slag silos and the wall of Furnace House Three. The ground sloped downward. Water dripped from pipes overhead, hissing where it struck warm metal grates.
Mara followed him.
Her shoes clicked behind him with irritating precision.
"You saw someone," she said.
Honus said nothing.
"Under the arch."
Nothing.
"A woman?"
The word entered him like a needle, searching.
Honus stopped beneath a dead lamp. Its glass was cracked. Moths gathered inside it anyway, battering themselves against darkness with idiot devotion.
Mara smiled faintly.
"There it is."
He turned.
"What?"
"That look." She took one step closer. "You were always terrible at hiding hope."
Honus stared at her.
The foundry noise had faded behind them. Down here, the city sounded different. Pipes groaned in the walls. Somewhere far below, machinery churned with the slow appetite of an underground god. Above them, the patrol lights moved across the smog clouds in pale, searching sweeps.
"I saw a stranger," Honus said.
Mara's smile sharpened. "No. You saw a ghost, and you wanted it to be real."
He almost answered.
Almost.
That was the danger with Mara. She could make silence feel like surrender and speech feel like self-harm. Every conversation with her was a room with knives hidden in the furniture.
"You should be careful," she said. "The Directorate has been merciful with you."
Honus laughed once. It came out dry and ugly.
Mara's face hardened.
"Mercy," he said. "That's what we call cages now?"
"That is what we call restraint."
"Whose?"
"Harlon Pike raised his voice at a ration audit last month," Mara said. "His daughters were reassigned to ceramic processing by morning. Nessa Vey hid a banned hymn sheet under her mattress. Her husband lost his work allotment. You stood between a Warden and a requisitioned laborer today."
"A boy."
"A laborer." Her voice was flat now, stripped of perfume. "And you did it in front of witnesses."
Honus stepped toward her.
For a moment, Mara's eyes flicked to his hands.
Good, he thought.
Let her remember something too.
"I stepped aside," he said.
"Yes." Her mouth barely moved. "You did. And that is why we are walking home instead of being dragged to an extraction room."
He looked away first.
It tasted like rust.
Mara adjusted the cuff of her sleeve. "You think restraint makes you a coward. It does not. It makes you manageable."
There it was.
A word too cleanly chosen.
Honus looked at her again.
Mara realized the mistake a heartbeat too late.
"Manageable," he repeated.
Her expression softened at once, but the machine behind it had already shown through.
"You know what I mean."
"No," Honus said. "I don't think I do."
She came closer and touched his cheek. Her hand was cool. Her eyes were wet now, or pretending to be. She had many faces and kept them polished.
"I mean I worry for you," she said. "I mean I am tired of watching you bleed against walls you cannot break. I mean I have buried enough of you already."
A passing patrol light swept over the alley, painting them both in white.
Honus did not move until it passed.
Then he took her wrist and lowered her hand from his face.
Gently.
That gentleness angered her more than force would have.
They walked the rest of the way in silence.
Their apartment was on the twenty-third tier of Block Halberd, a workers' habitation stack bolted to the eastern side of the foundry hill. The building was a vertical bruise of concrete, iron balconies, laundry wires, and surveillance nodes. Every window was identical. Every door bore a number. Every number belonged to the state before it belonged to a person.
Their door read: H23-19.
Inside, the apartment smelled of boiled grain, sterilizing acid, and the faint lavender Mara rubbed into her wrists each morning. The rooms were small but orderly. Too orderly. There were no loose papers, no old photographs, no useless beloved objects. Mara disliked clutter, especially the kind that carried memory.
Honus removed his boots by the door.
Mara removed her gloves.
A domestic ceremony. Two prisoners pretending the ritual meant home.
On the wall above the cooking unit, the Ministry screen flickered awake. A woman with copper hair and dead blue eyes smiled down at them.
"Good evening, citizens. Today's Harmony Index has risen by point-four percent across the lower industrial sectors. Your obedience has saved lives."
Honus reached for the switch.
Mara spoke without looking at him. "Leave it."
His hand stopped.
The screen continued.
"Reminder: unauthorized songs, ancestral rites, pre-Directorate symbols, and unregistered gatherings remain punishable under civic destabilization statutes. Report irregular sentiment. Care is vigilance."
Mara set water to boil.
Honus stood in the middle of the room and watched the screen until the smiling woman's face blurred into light.
Unauthorized songs.
Root below and star above.
He remembered the rest.
Not because he wanted to.
Memory came anyway, dragging its chains.
Carry us through ash and blood,
Keep the names beneath the flood,
When the tyrant crowns the flame,
Wake the root and speak the name.
He had heard it first as a child in Redtree Hollow, sung by his grandmother while she carved prayer marks into bark. Back then, the world had still believed in small holy things. Bread left beneath stones for the burrowing spirits. Bells rung at dusk for the dead. Children taught that every river had a temper and every mountain a memory.
The Directorate called those beliefs primitive now.
Honus called them roots.
Mara set a bowl in front of him.
Gray mash. Protein oil. Salt if one felt decadent.
He sat.
She sat across from him, watching him eat before touching her own food. That too was ritual. She liked to see whether his hands shook.
They did not.
Not tonight.
That worried her.
"You should request a neural rest assessment," she said.
Honus swallowed. "No."
"You haven't been sleeping."
"No one in this building sleeps. The pipes scream."
"That is not what I mean."
"I know what you mean."
Her spoon clicked against the bowl.
"Do you?" she asked. "Because from where I sit, you seem determined to invite scrutiny."
Honus looked around their immaculate little room.
"No shrine," he said. "No books. No relics. No visitors. No missed shifts. No excess speech. I go to work. I come back. I eat what they give me. I sleep when I can. What more do they want?"
Mara's eyes did not blink.
"Your peace."
His laugh came again, quieter this time.
"They took that before they sent you."
The room changed.
Only slightly.
A tightening in Mara's jaw. A stillness in her shoulders. A thread pulled too hard through cloth.
"What did you say?"
Honus leaned back.
The chair creaked under him.
"I said they took my peace."
"No." Mara's voice dropped. "You said before they sent me."
The Ministry screen filled the silence with its gentle poison.
"Tomorrow begins Civic Gratitude Week. Citizens are encouraged to submit testimonies honoring the Directorate's protection."
Honus should have denied it.
He should have looked confused. Tired. Apologetic. Manageable.
Instead, he watched Mara watch him.
A strange calm entered him. Not courage exactly. Something older and less clean. The calm of a man finally hearing the floor crack beneath a house he already knew was rotten.
"How long?" he asked.
Mara stood.
The movement was too quick.
"You're unwell."
"How long, Mara?"
She took his bowl and carried it to the sink though he had not finished eating.
"You need sleep."
"Were you assigned before the wedding?"
Her hand tightened around the bowl.
"Stop."
"After Aerrowdeep?"
The bowl struck the counter. Mash slopped over the rim.
"Stop."
"After I refused the Directorate seat?"
That did it.
Her face lost every mask at once.
For a heartbeat, Honus saw the woman beneath: not wife, not caretaker, not wounded companion. An operative in a plain apartment, holding a life in both hands and squeezing until it stopped resisting.
Then she gathered herself.
But he had seen it.
And she knew he had.
"You think you refused power," she said softly. "That is the story you tell yourself because it lets you feel noble. You did not refuse power, Honus. You abandoned responsibility. Men like you break the world and then wander off when it needs governing."
Honus rose.
The chair scraped the floor.
"I saved it."
"You saved a battlefield." Her eyes flashed. "You did not save the future. Others had to do that. Others had to build systems, laws, walls, surveillance, punishments. Others had to keep frightened people from tearing each other apart while you hid inside your grief."
He stared at her.
There was conviction in her voice.
That was the worst of it.
Not all monsters know they are monsters. Some sleep beautifully because they call the cage a cradle.
"You believe them," he said.
Mara lifted her chin.
"I believe order is kinder than chaos."
"You believe chains are kinder than choice."
"I believe most people do not know what to do with choice."
"Then you never knew my people."
"Your people are gone."
The words hit harder than he expected.
Mara saw it and pressed.
"The old world is gone. The valley rites, the wandering councils, the Dawnbound, the little songs sung to trees and stones. Gone. And perhaps they deserved to go, because when the iron came down from the north and the sky opened, all their lovely beliefs could not save them."
Honus crossed the room so fast she stepped back.
The old heat flared in him. The light above them buzzed. The Ministry screen stuttered.
For one moment, the apartment smelled not of grain and acid, but of storm rain on split cedar.
Mara went pale.
Honus stopped himself inches from her.
His hands were open.
His voice, when it came, was barely human.
"They saved me."
The screen crackled.
The smiling announcer's face warped, dissolved, returned.
Mara looked at the light. Then at him.
Fear moved through her.
Not fear of a husband.
Fear of a file coming alive.
Honus felt it then. Beneath his ribs. Beneath scars and age and all the careful ruin. A pulse.
Small.
Furious.
Impossible.
He stepped back, breathing hard.
Mara's fear vanished behind calculation.
"Do you know what happens," she whispered, "if they detect a resurgence?"
He said nothing.
"They will not send Wardens next time. They will send a Saint Engine."
Honus' blood cooled.
The words had weight. Old weight. War weight.
Saint Engine.
He had not heard that term in twenty years.
The original Saint Engines had been built during the Last War, when desperation gave engineers permission to commit theology with tools. Machines wrapped around harvested relics. Steel bodies powered by murdered miracles. They had fought for the old coalition at first.
Then the Directorate inherited them.
Then they improved them.
Mara watched recognition pass across his face.
"Yes," she said. "You remember. So remember this too: you are not what you were. You cannot stand against one now."
"Why?" Honus asked.
Her brow tightened. "Why what?"
"Why warn me?"
She did not answer.
"Is that in your assignment too?"
The slap came hard enough to turn his head.
Silence followed.
The Ministry screen continued smiling.
Honus slowly faced her again.
Mara's hand trembled at her side.
Not from remorse.
From anger that she had lost control of the room.
"You will go to bed," she said.
"No."
"You will go to bed, and tomorrow you will go to the foundry, and you will forget whatever you think you saw under that arch."
"No."
A muscle jumped in her cheek.
"Honus."
He walked past her into the smaller room.
Their sleeping quarters contained one bed, two metal lockers, and a narrow window looking out over the lower city. Honus opened his locker.
Inside were folded work clothes, two spare shirts, a shaving blade, and nothing else.
At least, nothing visible.
He knelt and pressed his thumb against a small dent near the back corner.
The locker's false bottom clicked.
Behind him, Mara entered the doorway.
"What are you doing?"
Honus lifted the panel.
Beneath it lay a strip of red cloth, faded almost brown with age.
Mara inhaled sharply.
Not because it was a weapon.
Because it was worse.
A memory.
Honus lifted the cloth with both hands.
It had once been tied around the haft of the Dawn Standard. Not the banner itself, not anything grand enough for archives, just a torn binding strip he had taken from the battlefield after Aerrowdeep. Red for the valley clay. Red for the tree sap that bled when cut. Red for the dead who had bought morning with their bodies.
Mara stared at it.
"You told me you burned everything."
"I lied."
Her face twisted. "You kept contraband in our home?"
"Our home?" he asked.
That landed.
She looked away.
He stood and wrapped the cloth once around his wrist.
It barely fit. His hands had grown thicker with labor, knuckles swollen from years of hammer work. The cloth was old and weak, but when it touched his skin, the pulse beneath his ribs answered.
Not loudly.
Not yet.
But enough.
From somewhere outside came a distant sound.
A shout.
Then another.
Honus turned to the window.
Down below, in the street near the checkpoint, people were gathering. Not many. A dozen, perhaps. Maybe less. Shadows in work coats. Heads bowed. One held a lantern cupped in both hands, its light hidden beneath cloth.
Illegal.
Beautiful.
Madness.
Mara moved beside him and looked down.
"No," she said.
The word had no command in it now.
Only dread.
The gathered figures began to sing.
Softly at first.
Root below and star above.
Honus closed his eyes.
Carry us through ash and blood.
More voices joined from nearby windows. One from the stack across the alley. Another from the walkway above. A woman's voice. An old man's. A child's.
Keep the names beneath the flood.
The Ministry screen in the other room shrieked.
"Unauthorized civic gathering detected. Remain indoors. Remain peaceful. Report participants. Security response is mercy."
Mara seized Honus' arm.
"Do not move."
He looked at her hand.
Then at her.
For years, that grip had been enough.
Not tonight.
He removed her fingers one by one.
She backed away as though he had burned her.
"Honus," she whispered, and for the first time in years, his name sounded less like a leash and more like a plea.
He opened the apartment door.
The hall outside was full of faces.
Workers stood half in shadow, doors cracked open behind them. No one spoke. No one dared. But they saw the red cloth on his wrist.
An old woman across the hall covered her mouth.
A man with a scarred scalp began to weep without sound.
Honus walked past them toward the stairwell.
Mara followed only as far as the threshold.
"Saint Engines," she called after him.
He paused.
"They will send Saint Engines."
Honus looked back.
The hall light flickered over his soot-dark face.
"Then they should send more than one."
He descended.
Each step downward felt impossible, then less impossible, then inevitable.
By the time he reached the street, the patrol sirens had begun.
The singers did not scatter.
They should have.
Any sensible person would have run. Any living person with a taste for remaining living would have vanished into alleys and doorways and vents.
But grief had fermented into something stronger than sense.
Fourteen workers had been taken.
A boy with one arm had been taken.
And perhaps, Honus thought, there are numbers tyranny cannot count because they do not fit inside a ledger.
He stepped into the street.
The song faltered.
People turned.
The lantern bearer lowered her cloth.
Warm gold light spilled over the wet stones.
The hooded woman from the arch stood at the center of the gathering.
Now Honus saw her clearly.
She was older than he had first thought, perhaps fifty, with dark skin lined by weather and worry, her hair braided close to her scalp and threaded with bits of copper wire. One side of her face bore a burn scar shaped like a wing. Her eyes were bright, merciless, alive.
She looked at the cloth on his wrist.
Then she dropped to one knee.
Honus froze.
One by one, the others knelt.
Not in submission.
In recognition.
The hooded woman spoke the words forbidden by law, erased from schoolbooks, buried in sealed records and old blood.
"Dawn returns to root."
Honus' throat closed.
He knew the response.
Of course he knew it.
Twenty years of silence had not killed it.
He looked at the kneeling workers, the illegal lantern, the patrol lights converging through the smog.
Then he answered.
"Root remembers dawn."
The city seemed to hear him.
Somewhere high above, alarms changed pitch.
The hooded woman rose.
"My name is Edda Vale," she said. "Dawnbound, last cell of the eastern quarter."
Honus could barely breathe.
"How many?"
Her smile was grim.
"Enough to die badly."
"That's not enough."
"No," Edda said. "But it is enough to begin."
A patrol skimmer swept around the corner, lights blazing white. Wardens spilled from its open sides before it fully stopped, batons alive with blue current.
A command voice thundered through the street.
"Disperse immediately. This gathering is unlawful. Kneel and place your hands behind your heads."
A few singers flinched.
None moved.
Honus turned toward the Wardens.
There were eight of them.
Mara had been right.
He was old.
He was tired.
He was not what he had been.
But the first Warden came too close.
It reached for Edda.
Honus caught its wrist.
The armor was cold and smooth beneath his fingers. Stronger than bone. Stronger than flesh.
The Warden's head snapped toward him.
"Release."
Honus tightened his grip.
Something inside the armor began to grind.
The Warden swung its baton.
Honus moved before thought could catch him.
His shoulder dipped. His left foot slid. The old forms rose through his body, not graceful, not untouched by age, but present. He drove his palm into the Warden's chestplate.
The impact cracked ceramic.
The Warden flew backward into the skimmer hard enough to dent its side.
For one bright, stunned second, no one moved.
Honus stared at his hand.
Pain bloomed through his wrist.
Real pain.
Human pain.
He almost laughed.
Then the remaining Wardens charged.
The street erupted.
Edda threw the lantern.
It shattered at the feet of the second Warden, and fire rushed outward in a golden sheet. Someone screamed. Someone else swung a length of pipe. A woman leapt from a stair rail onto a Warden's back and drove a mining pick into the joint below its helmet.
Honus took the next baton strike across his ribs.
Agony flashed white.
He staggered.
The Warden raised its weapon again.
Honus caught the second blow on his forearm, stepped in, and slammed his forehead into the mirrored mask.
The mask cracked.
Behind it, something wet gasped.
Not machine.
A person.
The realization sickened him, but he did not have room for sickness.
He hooked his hand behind the Warden's neck and drove it down into his rising knee. Armor buckled. The body fell.
Another baton struck his back.
He dropped to one knee.
Old injuries opened their mouths. His spine screamed. His lungs forgot their task.
Too slow, he thought.
Too old.
A Warden aimed its baton at Edda's skull.
Honus reached for heat.
Nothing came.
Only pain.
Only breath.
Only the terrible distance between legend and man.
Then the singers rose behind him.
Root below and star above.
The words struck the street like rain on buried seed.
Carry us through ash and blood.
Honus felt the pulse again.
Small.
Furious.
Not in him alone.
In the stones.
In the people.
In the forbidden song passing from mouth to mouth like fire learning to walk.
The red cloth on his wrist tightened.
No, not tightened.
Rooted.
Fine red fibers sank into the cracks of his skin. Not cutting. Remembering.
Honus stood.
The Warden turned.
The baton came down.
Honus caught it barehanded.
Blue current crawled over his arm, burning through sleeve and skin.
He did not let go.
The Warden tried to pull back.
Honus pulled harder.
The baton snapped in half.
The street went quiet around the broken sound.
Honus drove the shattered end through the Warden's knee joint. It collapsed. He struck again, crushing the baton housing against the pavement until sparks died like insects under glass.
The last three Wardens hesitated.
That saved them.
A siren wailed from the upper road.
Heavier.
Deeper.
Edda's face changed.
"Saint," she said.
Honus looked toward the rise.
At the top of Cinder Lane, something vast stepped through the steam.
It was shaped like a man only in the way a gallows is shaped like a tree. Nine feet tall. White armor plated over black synthetic muscle. Its shoulders bore scripture etched in machine-cut lines. Its head was smooth, featureless, crowned by a halo of rotating brass blades.
In the center of its chest, behind glass, something glowed.
Not a reactor.
Not a battery.
A relic.
A caged holy thing.
The Saint Engine lifted one hand.
The air filled with pressure.
Windows cracked along the habitation stack. The illegal lantern fire guttered flat. People cried out and dropped to the ground.
A voice emerged from the Saint Engine, layered and calm.
"Honus Redtree."
His name rolled through the street with cathedral weight.
"By authority of the Directorate, you are recalled for containment."
Honus felt every year of his life settle onto his bones.
Behind him, Edda whispered, "Can you fight it?"
He looked at the Saint Engine.
At the caged glow in its chest.
At the people huddled behind him.
At the upper windows where hundreds of faces now watched from darkness.
Mara stood on the balcony twenty-three stories above, one hand at her throat.
Honus raised his right hand.
The red cloth fluttered though there was no wind.
"No," he said.
Edda's face fell.
Then Honus smiled, and it was a grim old thing with blood in its teeth.
"But I can make it remember me."
The Saint Engine charged.
And Honus Redtree, last hero of a world that had forgotten how to kneel to anything but fear, stepped forward to meet it.