The Guardian gods
Chapter 556

Chapter 556: 556

Even amidst the quiet hum of the station, a rare opportunity arose for Rattan. He was granted access to a training area, a vast, cavernous space where some of the more advanced ratfolk units were undergoing drills. This was his chance to see his creations in action: the magi-tech armor and weapons he had painstakingly designed and forged.

As the ratfolk soldiers moved through their exercises, Rattan’s eyes, normally sharp with a perpetual engineering glint, narrowed in an almost predatory focus. He watched as a squad, clad in the sleek, composite plating of his armor, darted through an obstacle course. The embedded rune-circuits glowed faintly, a testament to the internal energy matrices he’d woven into their very structure. He noted the way the armor articulated, allowing for surprising agility despite its robust appearance. One rat-soldier, particularly adept, rolled under a simulated laser grid, the armored plates shifting with an almost fluid grace.

His attention then shifted to the weapons. A team of ratfolk, equipped with the arc-rifles he’d designed, laid down suppressive fire on holographic targets. The crackle of energy, bright and resonant, was music to his ears. He observed the recoil absorption, the energy consumption per shot, the effective range. He saw a rat-marksman take a precise shot, the beam lancing out to vaporize a distant projection, and a flicker of pride warmed him.

But pride quickly gave way to the relentless drive of the inventor. He wasn’t just observing; he was dissecting.

"The leg servo on that third one," he muttered to himself, leaning closer to a holographic display that tracked the soldiers’ vitals. "A slight drag on the return cycle. We could re-route the secondary power conduit for a fraction more torque on the upswing."

He watched another rat-soldier struggling to maintain a stable firing platform while moving. "The grip on the arc-rifle," he thought aloud, his fingers twitching as if to redesign it in the air. "It’s adequate, yes, but for sustained fire on the move, a more ergonomic, perhaps even adaptive, grip surface would distribute the recoil better across the paw."

His eyes darted from one detail to another. The subtle flicker of an energy shield on one armored rat-soldier seemed to dissipate a hair too quickly under heavy simulated fire. "The resonant frequency of the shield matrix," he mentally scribbled, "needs a slight recalibration to better disperse kinetic impact. Perhaps a tertiary harmonic oscillation point to create a more resilient bubble."

He even noted the ambient temperature within the armor. "Heat sinks," he concluded, "effective, but for extended engagements, particularly in warmer climates, we might need to explore a more aggressive thermal regulation system, perhaps even a micro-fluidic cooling array integrated into the under-suit."

Rattan was utterly oblivious to the world around him, lost in a whirlwind of schematics and calculations. The war, the waiting, the silent station—all faded into the background. Here, surrounded by the tangible proof of his ingenuity, his mind was a forge, already hammering out improvements, perfecting what was already impressive.

Today began like any other, but for Rattan, it was different. He’d finally decided: he’d request a dedicated station, a personal forge where he could tirelessly work on the improvements for his beloved armor. The designs were already swirling in his mind, the refinements almost tangible.

However, fate had other plans. A sharp, thunderous knock rattled his door. When he opened it, he was met by a towering rune-armored ogre, its imposing frame filling the doorway. The ogre’s voice was a low rumble, uttering only two words: "It’s time. Meet up in the assembly." Before Rattan could fully register the command, the ogre was gone, its heavy footsteps already fading down the corridor.

In an almost absentminded daze, Rattan began to gear up. He moved mechanically, his thoughts still caught between the sudden presure to face his nightmare, the battlefield. He didn’t even remember leaving his room; his awareness returned only when he felt the immense, compressed aura of the ogre army gathering in the main assembly hall.

With a soft incantation, Rattan cast a float spell on himself, rising effortlessly into the air. He joined the other mages already hovering above the assembly. They subtly shifted, putting more distance between themselves and him, a familiar reaction that Rattan barely noticed. It was nothing new.

The vast opening was enveloped in a tense silence. Then, Kaelen stepped forward, a figure of authority moving with grim purpose. A thunderous thud echoed through the chamber as the ogres, already disciplined, straightened further, their collective movement a ripple of armored might. Kaelen’s eyes, usually dead and unreadable, flashed with a fleeting, unidentifiable emotion, quickly veiled.

The mages hovering near Rattan scoffed at the disciplined ogres and Kaelen, their disdain palpable even without words. Far above them, hidden within the swirling clouds of arcane energy, the higher-tier mages remained utterly disengaged from the immediate proceedings. Their interest lay solely in Kaelen’s goal and action, observing how far he could push the boundaries and contemplating the most effective ways to aid him in achieving their goal.

Kaelen surveyed the silent, imposing ranks of the ogre army, a sea of rune-armored might. The expectant hush of the hall, the unwavering gaze of thousands, pressed in on him. He found himself utterly stumped, the grand, morale-boosting words he instinctively knew he should utter lost somewhere in the recent turmoil of his mind. The past few weeks had twisted away something deep within him, unnoticed but profoundly impactful.

He raised a hand, pointing towards the distant, war-torn landscape visible through the station’s massive viewing ports. "We..." he began, then caught himself, correcting his words with a grim resolve. "I have been assigned to bring the head of the Demon King, in charge of this part of the battlefield. It’s a nigh impossible goal."

His voice, though lacking the usual fire, carried a chilling honesty. "The enemy won’t just let us walk into their home and take their head. Our fight won’t even start here. Our main fight begins once we go beyond the Abyss Portal and step into the lands of our enemy. Before that, we have to go through their army, spread out over the corrupted land."

Kaelen’s gaze swept over the ogres, then briefly flickered towards the hovering mages. "This means," he stated, his voice devoid of emotion, "a lot of us will die before we even reach the portal. And many more will die even after we go beyond the portal, as we step into the enemy’s backyard."

Kaelen’s gaze intensified, sweeping across the assembled forces. His voice, though still lacking its former fire, now carried a raw sincerity. "I know you all have heard things about me, this last few weeks. True or bad, my only promise to you is that I will stand with you all till the end. We are to set aside our differences from now on and make sure to have each other’s back as we will need it."

Not far from the main assembly, in their own designated ready zones, the Ratfolk heard Kaelen’s words amplified through the station’s comms. A collective furrowing of brows rippled through their ranks. "Someone else having their back except for them themselves" was a concept so alien it bordered on the absurd. Their entire existence, particularly their role in this endless war, had conditioned them to expect nothing less than being sent out as the very definition of cannon fodder. They were expendable, a fact they had long ago internalized.

This new general, Kaelen, was indeed truly weird. Just two days prior, an unprecedented order had reached them: no longer engage the demons. Instead, they were instructed to take time to rest, heal up, and feed. It had been a bizarre command, utterly contrary to every expectation, but they weren’t about to refuse such an unexpected offering of respite. They had immediately, almost instinctively, seized the opportunity for rest, their weary bodies craving it.

It was only now, hearing Kaelen’s stark address and his unexpected pledge of solidarity, that the pieces began to click into place. The sudden rest, the unexpected concern for their well-being, and now this commitment to mutual support—it all pointed to a strategy far more intricate and demanding than simple attrition. They understood now why they had been given time to recuperate, and what the true, perilous goal of this general was. It wasn’t about wasting lives; it was about preparing every single soldier for a seemingly impossible objective where every life, even theirs, held a crucial, if temporary, value.

Across the corrupted lands, a subtle disquiet rippled through the demonic legions. At first, the sudden, uncharacteristic retreat of the ratfolk had caught them off guard. Demons, driven by instinct and endless hunger for conquest, initially tightened their defenses, bracing for a cunning trap or perhaps the re-emergence of the dreaded "Angel" . minutes bled into a day, then more, and still, nothing materialized.

A creeping hesitation began to temper their relentless drive. Their corruption of the land continued, expanding their vile dominion, but the usual fervor was tinged with a nagging uncertainty.

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