They did not argue in front of the army.That was the warning.
Marshal Garry Hawkinge and Wilfred Webstere stood beneath the campaign banner at dawn, speaking in low, even tones. No raised voices. No sharp gestures. Just controlled disagreement held inside formal posture.
Neither intended to concede.
The crater had widened again during the night. Not dramatically, but enough. The fracture veins along the left shelf—where Captain Edisone had fallen—had lengthened and curled inward. Reinforcement beams pced at dusk had shifted sideways under settling soil, their wedges pushed out of alignment.
Engineers were already re-hammering them into pce.
The wedges refused to hold.
“Reduce forward compression today,” Wilfred said clearly enough for nearby captains to hear. “Maintain range discipline. No diagonal pursuit.”
Hawkinge kept his gaze fixed forward. “We cannot stall.”
“We are not stalling.”
“We are yielding tempo.”
“We are preserving structure.”
A pause.
“Controlled pressure,” Hawkinge said at st. “No retreat.”
The horn signaled advance.
Infantry only.
The line descended the ridge with tighter spacing than yesterday. Not by a full pace—by inches. Shields overpped slightly more. Shoulder gaps narrowed.
Eiden felt it before steel met steel.
There was no breathing margin.
Across the field, the demon formation held exactly where it had recalibrated. The red-trimmed commander stood at the center again, posture banced, weight evenly distributed.
He was not looking at the crater.
He was looking at the human spacing.
Engagement began at the outer shoulder of the fracture zone. The first exchange was clean. Measured thrusts. Controlled blocks. No reckless surge.
Then the demon line advanced two paces in synchronized compression.
Not a shove.
A sustained lean.
The human line absorbed it.
Spacing tightened further.
His shoulder pressed into the rim of the shield ahead of him; he could feel the other man’s breath through the gap.
A captain on the right fnk called for counter-pressure. The humans leaned in response.
The sound changed.
There are yers of noise in battle—steel, breath, command.
This was deeper. Denser.
Weight accumuting without release.
Eiden shifted back half a step before the second compression wave hit.
The soldier behind him collided into his back.
Too close.
“They shortened intervals,” he said under his breath.
Rynn, two positions ahead, replied without turning. “I noticed.”
The red-trimmed commander raised two fingers.
The demon fnks advanced half a pace.
Not enough to break alignment.
Enough to stretch it.
The human center adjusted instinctively to maintain contact. The midline drifted left.
But the ground did not colpse.
That was worse than colpse.
No shear relieved the compression.
The weight remained in the formation.
A horn sounded from the demon side—three short notes.
Their front rank withdrew one pace.
Human momentum followed automatically.
The line extended forward into space.
Intervals elongated.
Then the second demon rank stepped into the space that had just been vacated.
Repcement.
Fresh mass.
The human front, already leaning forward, collided with density it had not prepared for.
A seam opened near the crater shoulder.
Small.
Subtle.
The red-trimmed commander did not attack the seam.
He stepped behind it.
Watching the second-rank human support.
A regional sub-captain—young, dark steel armor, voice sharp—stepped forward to plug the gap. He shouted for reinforcement.
The bde slipped beneath the rim of his shield.
Clean.
Precise.
The sub-captain fell before finishing the order.
The seam widened by inches.
The right fnk moved to correct it—too quickly.
Overcorrection.
Spacing fractured.
The demon line advanced in alternating pulses.
Left.
Pause.
Right.
Pause.
The stop-start motion jarred through his knees, never long enough to reset footing.
The rhythm broke symmetry.
Eiden felt it before it became visible.
“They’re desynchronizing us,” he said.
He said it before the second horn sounded.
Rynn deflected a strike, pivoting slightly to avoid collision from her rear. “Can you stabilize it?”
“No.”
A human horn called partial retreat.
Another horn contradicted it.
Signal fractured.
For half a breath, no one moved. That was the worst part.
That was where it broke.
Not ground.
Not shield.
Command rhythm.
The demon fnks pressed inward just enough to punish hesitation. Three humans fell in rapid succession along the misaligned right.
Not sughter.
Just removal.
The red-trimmed commander stepped back the moment correction began.
The human line disengaged unevenly. The final retreat signal unified too te to avoid thinning.
The ridge absorbed them.
Breathing hard.
Alive.
Reduced again.
Hawkinge descended halfway down the slope.
“Why did the right g?”
Silence.
Wilfred answered evenly. “Intervals shortened beyond tolerance.”
“We required cohesion.”
“You required compression,” Wilfred said. “You removed the sck.”
Hawkinge’s gaze flicked toward the crater. “It did not fail today.”
“No,” Wilfred said. “We did.”
No one answered. No one disagreed.
The statement lingered.
Across the field, the demon formation reset with mechanical precision. No celebration. No visible strain.
The red-trimmed commander stood centered once more.
He had not tested terrain.
He had tested timing instead.
Eiden watched carefully.
Yesterday: load.
Today: rhythm.
Rynn approached, helmet under her arm, sweat streaking her temple.
“They didn’t try to break us.”
“No.”
“They wanted to see how we fix mistakes.”
“Yes.”
“And?”
“We fix them slower each day. They don’t.”
Behind them, engineers began pcing white interval stakes along the ridge.
One muttered, “Stakes won’t fix men stepping too close.”
Another replied, “They’ll bme the ground anyway.”
Measuring tape stretched between units to define exact spacing.
Exact spacing.
Eiden studied the markers.
Compression happens under stress—never on ft ground.
A runner approached Wilfred. “Marshal requests mage augmentation tomorrow.”
Wilfred’s expression did not change. “What configuration?”
“Localized reinforcement pulses along the fracture shoulder.”
Eiden felt something sharper than fear.
Reinforcing unstable ground with mana under compression would not strengthen it.
It would concentrate the failure.
Wilfred looked toward the crater. Then toward Hawkinge.
“Localized pulses risk destabilization.”
Hawkinge’s response was measured. “Without pressure, we stagnate.”
Pressure.
Always pressure.
Across the field, demon engineers shifted mantlets inward by a measured span.
They were anticipating pulse radius.
The red-trimmed commander turned once before withdrawing behind yered ranks.
No triumph.
Only assessment.
Eiden remained at the ridge long after disengagement.
He repyed the rhythm in sequence.
Shortened intervals.
Forward lean.
Repcement rank.
Alternating pulses.
Signal dey.
Desynchronization.
They were not trying to crush the human line outright.
They were shrinking tolerance margins.
Each day, less space for error.
Less time between signal and response.
Rynn stood beside him.
“What happens if they keep narrowing it?”
“The mistake won’t be minor.”
“That’s vague.”
“It’s honest.”
“How rge?”
He looked at the fracture veins crawling along the crater shoulder.
“Large enough that we trigger it ourselves.”
Below, officers finalized diagrams for tomorrow’s engagement.
Localized pulses.
Measured compression.
Stabilization.
The word felt mispced.
Eiden closed his eyes briefly.
Three days without reset.
Crity remained.
That was dangerous.
His eyes burned when he blinked.
He had to repy the second horn twice in his head before the timing aligned.
Because when colpse came, he would not be confused.
He would understand precisely how it unfolded.
Understanding does not stop impact.
It only means you recognize it too te.
Across the darkening field, the red-trimmed commander vanished into disciplined ranks.
The ground had held today.
The line had not.
Tomorrow, they will reinforce both.
Reinforcement under stress doesn’t remove weight.
It drives it inward.
The fracture index was rising.
Not in the earth.
In command.
Tomorrow, they would pour mana into the seam.

