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Tidegarde: Lacuna
– I am not your enemy, – Sineus said, his voice even.
The man laughed, a short, harsh bark devoid of humor. – Your coat says otherwise. Your boots say otherwise. The way you stand, straight as a parade pike, says otherwise. – He gestured with the pistol. – On your knees.
Sineus did not move. The woman to his right adjusted her aim, the rifle’s sights centering on his chest. The third figure, a burly man in the window, remained a silent, menacing silhouette. This was a test. To kneel was to accept the role of a captive nobleman, to confirm their prejudice. To stand was to risk a bullet. He held the man’s gaze.
– I am hunting the thing that did this, – Sineus said, his voice low and clear. – The weapon that un-makes the world.
That gave the leader a moment’s pause. The angry fire in his eyes was banked by a flicker of surprise, then suspicion. The woman, Elina, tilted her head, her expression less hostile than analytical. She was judging him, weighing his words against the evidence of her own eyes.
– Big words for a man in a fine coat, – the leader sneered, recovering his balance. But the absolute certainty was gone from his voice. He took a step closer, the pistol never wavering. The smell of ozone was stronger now. – What would an aristocrat know of un-making? You only know how to take. Your kind, the Lodge, the French dogs – you are all the same. You cut and carve history to suit your appetites, and you leave this poison behind for the rest of us to choke on.
He knew of the Lodge. This was no simple revolutionary. This was a man who understood the secret war. This was an Alchemical Carbonari. This was Alessandro Volpe.
– I have left the Lodge, – Sineus stated. It was a simple fact, but saying it aloud felt like another betrayal, another thread cut loose. – I act alone.
– A rogue butcher is still a butcher, – Alessandro shot back. He gestured with his chin toward the Orphic Compass, still clutched in Sineus’s hand. – What is that? Another one of your tools for trimming the past?
– It is a guide, – Sineus said. – It points to the voids. To the Lacunae.
Alessandro’s eyes narrowed. He knew the term. He took another step, his gaze fixed on the perfect, black sphere. He was close enough now that Sineus could see the fine lines of exhaustion around his eyes, the permanent black stains under his fingernails. This was a man who worked with his hands, a man who built things. And a man who had seen too much.
– You hunt them? – Alessandro asked, his voice a low growl of disbelief. – Why? A sudden fit of conscience? Did you finally see the bill for all your clean, quiet work in the palaces?
Every word was an accusation, and every accusation was true. Sineus felt the weight of the agent in the Winter Palace, the clean excision, the duty he had performed without question. It felt a lifetime ago. He thought of Pyotr, of his mentor’s shattered mind. The price of this war was no longer an abstract concept.
– I saw what the Lethe Mortar does, – Sineus said, his voice dropping. – I saw it doesn’t just cut. It annihilates. I saw the hole it leaves in the world.
The woman, Elina, took a half-step forward, her rifle lowering a few centimeters. The name of the weapon had struck a nerve.
– You saw it? – she asked, her voice quiet but intense. It was the first time she had spoken.
Sineus met her gaze. Her eyes were a deep, steady brown, filled not with Alessandro’s fiery anger, but with a profound, settled grief. – I saw it unmake a village west of Smolensk. I saw the Lacuna spread.
A heavy silence fell over the ruined square. The wind picked up, sending a swirl of grey dust across the cobblestones. Alessandro looked from Sineus to Elina, a silent conversation passing between them. The third man in the window had not moved, had not made a sound. He was pure discipline.
– My town was west of Smolensk, – Elina said, her voice barely a whisper. The statement hung in the air, heavy and cold as lead.
Alessandro’s expression hardened again, but the focus of his anger had shifted. He looked at Sineus, truly looked at him, and for the first time, he seemed to see past the fine wool of his coat.
– Even if you speak the truth, – Alessandro said, his voice tight, – why should we trust you? You are one of them. You were born to a world of lies written on the backs of my people. Your word is worthless here.
He was right. Sineus understood it with a clarity that was as sharp and painful as a shard of glass. His title, his name, his education – everything that gave him authority in his old life was a liability here. These people had been fighting a war against his world long before the French had crossed the border. To them, he was not a rogue agent seeking to save the Empire. He was just a different flavor of tyrant. Words were not enough. His honor was not a currency they accepted.
He had to give them something else. A different kind of proof.
The dust of forgotten lives settled on his shoulders. The grey, empty sky offered no judgment.
He had to give them something they could not deny.
A Fragile Truce
His word was worthless. Alessandro Volpe was right. In this grey, broken town, his name was a liability and his honor was a foreign currency. He was a ghost with nothing to offer but the truth, and the truth was not enough. The Italian’s pistol remained steady, a dark punctuation mark at the end of a death sentence. Elina Petrova’s rifle was a rigid line of judgment. The third man, silent in the window, was an unmoving shadow. They were a closed circuit of grief and anger, and he was the intruder.
– On your knees, – Alessandro repeated, his voice flat.
Sineus did not move. He had knelt to his Tsar. He had bowed to the Patriarch. He would not kneel here. Not to this. He had made a choice in the dust of his ancestors’ library, and that choice had a price. This was part of it. The cost was everything he had been.
– Escort me to your hideout, – Sineus said. It was not a request. It was a statement of the next logical action. – My proof is not for the open street.
Alessandro’s eyes narrowed. The sheer audacity of the command, spoken by a man with three guns trained on him, seemed to momentarily short-circuit his rage. A flicker of something – amusement, or perhaps a grudging respect for nerve – crossed his face before the mask of the hardened revolutionary fell back into place. He gave a sharp, almost imperceptible nod.
The man in the window vanished. Elina lowered her rifle but kept it ready, its muzzle pointed at the ground a meter in front of Sineus’s feet. Alessandro gestured with his pistol. – Walk.
They moved through the dead town, a small, tense procession. Sineus led, his back a perfect target. Alessandro followed five paces behind, his steps silent on the cold ash. Elina walked to his left, her gaze sweeping the ruined rooftops, a soldier on watch. They were a unit, their movements economical and practiced. He was the foreign object in their machine. A frayed thread on his own coat cuff, torn during his flight from Moscow, caught his eye. It was a small, stupid detail, a reminder of all the other, greater threads he had severed.
The hideout was not a building, but a hole. A collapsed cellar beneath what had once been a tannery, the entrance hidden by a sheet of rusted iron. Alessandro slid the metal aside, revealing a dark maw that smelled of damp earth, ozone, and hot metal. He gestured again with the pistol. Sineus descended a set of steep stone steps into the earth.
The space was cramped and alive. It was the absolute opposite of a Lodge sanctum. There were no sterile vaults or silent archives. This was a workshop, a laboratory, a den. A small, roaring forge cast a pulsing orange glow over everything, its low hum a constant vibration in the floor. Workbenches were buried under brass gears, spools of copper wire, and strange, half-finished clockwork devices. Blueprints showing complex schematics for artillery shells and handheld tools were tacked to the soot-stained brick walls. The air was thick with the sharp, chemical tang of strange reagents. This was a place where things were made, not preserved.
Alessandro shoved him toward a sturdy wooden crate. – Sit.
Sineus remained standing. He had been escorted, not captured. It was a fine distinction, but it was the only ground he had to stand on. He unslung the heavy saddlebag from his shoulder and set it carefully on a workbench cluttered with tools and metal shavings. The Carbonari watched his every move, their suspicion a palpable force in the cramped space.
– You wanted proof, – Sineus said, his voice quiet in the humming workshop. – Words are not proof. I understand.
He reached into the bag. The tension in the room snapped taut. Elina’s rifle came up. Alessandro’s pistol was instantly level with Sineus’s chest. Sineus moved with deliberate slowness, his hands in plain sight. He wrapped his fingers around the cold, dense sphere within the bag. He drew it out.
He placed the Orphic Compass on the workbench.
It sat there in the flickering forge-light, a perfect sphere of solid, polished night. It absorbed the light, reflecting almost nothing. It was a hole in the visual world, twenty-five kilograms of impossible density. Its presence seemed to drink the sound from the room, the hum of the forge suddenly muted.
Alessandro stared at it. He did not move for a full ten seconds. He was no longer a revolutionary holding a gun. He was an inventor, an artisan, looking at a masterpiece of forbidden craft. He knew what it was. He knew what it meant. He slowly lowered his pistol, placing it on the bench beside a set of calipers.
– Where, – Alessandro breathed, his voice a hoarse whisper. – Where did you get this?
The question was not an accusation. It was awe. It was the professional jealousy of a master craftsman.
– I took it, – Sineus said. He had to give them the whole truth. This was the price of an alliance. He was trading his last secrets for a chance. – From a lead-lined vault in the Lodge armory in Moscow. It was the price of my exit.
Alessandro circled the workbench, his eyes never leaving the Compass. He reached out a hand, then hesitated, his fingers hovering just above the sphere’s flawless surface. He could feel its low, resonant hum without touching it. He looked at Sineus, and the raw anger in his eyes had been replaced by a complex, warring expression of disbelief and calculation. The distrust was still there, a hard kernel of hate for Sineus’s class, his accent, his entire world. But it was now overlaid with the undeniable fact of the object on the table. No loyalist of the Lodge would ever be allowed to touch this, let alone steal it. The act was so profound, so absolute in its treason, that it was its own kind of truth.
– This is not a tool for butchers, – Alessandro said softly, more to himself than to Sineus. – This is a cartographer’s instrument. It reads the wounds.
– It does more than that, – Sineus said, seizing the opening. He did not wait for permission. He began to speak, his voice low and precise, the words stripped of all emotion. He laid out the intelligence as he would for a general staff meeting. He described the Chronos Telescope, the Lodge’s device for seeing into the memory of the past. He described his observation of the French unit west of Smolensk.
He gave them the numbers. The hard, undeniable metrics of the new war.
– The weapon is a Lethe Mortar. Its shell detonates mid-air, releasing an alchemical agent. The area of effect is approximately a 500-meter radius. It does not cut memory. It does not sever a single thread. It annihilates the script itself.
He saw Elina flinch at the word. Her knuckles were white where she gripped her rifle.
– The result is a Lacuna, – Sineus continued, his gaze fixed on Alessandro. – A void. But it is not a static scar. It is cancerous. It actively consumes the adjacent reality. I measured the spread rate. It is approximately two meters per minute.
Alessandro stopped circling. He stood perfectly still, his face a mask of intense concentration. He was processing the data, running the calculations in his head. The revolutionary was gone, replaced by the scientist.
– Two meters a minute, – Alessandro repeated, his voice a low murmur. He looked at the blueprints on the wall, then back at Sineus. – It doesn’t just erase. It eats. It’s a self-fueling reaction. The energy released from the annihilated memory powers the expansion.
– Yes, – Sineus confirmed. – The French have not created a weapon. They have created a plague. They are not conquering territory. They are unmaking it.
A heavy silence descended on the workshop, broken only by the soft hiss of the forge. Elina slowly lowered her rifle, leaning it against the wall. The fight had gone out of her, replaced by a vast, hollow emptiness. She now had the physics to explain her grief. Her town had not been captured or burned. It had been eaten.
Alessandro walked back to the workbench. He looked from the impossible black sphere of the Compass to Sineus’s face. The last of his fiery anger had burned away, leaving only the cold ash of strategic reality. This threat was bigger than empires, bigger than revolutions. An expanding void that consumed memory would consume everything, indiscriminately. It would consume his workshops, his people, his cause. It would unwrite the future he was fighting to build.
He picked up his pistol from the bench, but he did not point it. He checked the mechanism with a practiced motion and tucked it into his belt. It was a gesture of finality. A decision made.
– We have a common enemy, – Alessandro said, his voice flat and devoid of any warmth. He looked at Elina, who gave a single, slow nod. Her eyes were fixed on Sineus, her expression unreadable. – For now.
The truce was offered. Not with a handshake, but with a shared, grim understanding. It was a partnership born of necessity, a fragile bridge across a chasm of blood and belief.
– The terms are simple, – Alessandro continued, his voice all business now. – You have knowledge the Lodge protects and a way of seeing the world that my instruments cannot replicate. We have a network, workshops, and weapons they do not understand. You give us your intelligence. All of it. In return, we give you shelter, resources, and the muscle to act on it. This is not a friendship. It is a transaction. Your life, for your knowledge. Is that clear?
– It is clear, – Sineus said.
He felt the shift in the room. The weight of their hostility had not vanished, but it had been redirected. He was no longer the target. He was now a component in Alessandro’s machine. A tool. He had traded one form of servitude for another, but this time, it was a choice he had made. He had given up his most valuable asset – his secret knowledge – for a chance to fight. The price was leverage. He had none left.
He was no longer isolated. He was interdependent. The feeling was not one of comfort, but of a new and profound vulnerability. He was tied to these people now, his survival linked to their own. A new thread, coarse and uncertain, was being woven.
The low hum of the forge filled the silence. The sharp smell of ozone was now the smell of a shared, desperate purpose.
Alessandro picked up a strange, half-finished rifle from the bench, its stock a skeleton of brass and wood. He slid the bolt home with a sharp, definitive snap.
– Good, – he said, his eyes glinting in the firelight.
They were prey. And everyone was a hunter.
Caught Between Hammers
The journey through the blighted forest was a journey through a dead lung. For two days, they had moved through a world bled of all color, guided by the low, discordant hum of the Orphic Compass in Sineus’s saddlebag. The trees were grey and brittle, their branches like the bones of starved animals. They snapped with no wind. The ground was a fine, pale dust that looked like ash but felt cold as grave dirt, muffling their footsteps in an unnatural quiet. No birds sang. No insects droned. There was only the crunch of their boots and the thrum of the black sphere, a vibration that promised they were getting closer to the void.
Alessandro moved with a hunter’s economy, his eyes constantly scanning the skeletal woods. The sharp, chemical smell of ozone clung to his leather apron, a strange and alien scent in this dead place. He paused, holding up a hand. Sineus stopped beside him, his own hand resting on the hilt of his sword. The silence pressed in, a tangible weight. It was not an absence of sound, but the presence of a profound and hungry quiet.
– We’re being watched, – Alessandro whispered, his Italian accent turning the words to sharp-edged stones.
Sineus did not need his companion’s warning. He could feel it. A shift in the script of the world. A new set of threads, pulled taut. He scanned the ridge to their left. Nothing but grey trunks and pale dust. But the feeling was undeniable. A predator’s focus. He had felt it a hundred times in the ballrooms of the Winter Palace, the silent regard of a rival or a spy. This was different. This was not the gaze of an intriguer. It was the gaze of a wolf.
Then he saw them. Five shapes, detaching themselves from the grey landscape. They wore the dark green greatcoats of the Lodge’s enforcers, their movements a fluid, disciplined dance of encirclement. They were not rushing. They were simply closing a net. At their head was a tall man with a jagged scar that ran from his left temple to his jaw. Even at a hundred meters, Sineus recognized the cold, relentless purpose in his posture.
– Kurov, – Sineus said, the name a block of ice in his throat.
– A friend of yours? – Alessandro asked, his hand moving to the strange, brass-fitted pistol at his belt.
– The Lodge’s hound, – Sineus answered. – Their best hunter. He was sent to bring me back. Or to put me down.
Janusz Kurov raised a hand, and his men froze, rifles held at a low ready. He was giving them a chance to surrender. It was the only courtesy he would offer. The air grew thick with unspoken threat. A single, severed thread of a spider’s web, torn from its anchor, drifted between two dead branches, a fragile, useless thing.
– I don’t like our chances, – Alessandro muttered, his eyes darting from Kurov’s men to the dense woods behind them. – Five of them. Two of us.
– The odds are not in our favor, – Sineus agreed, his mind racing. Kurov would not be reasoned with. He was an instrument of the Duma’s will, as single-minded as a headsman’s axe. To fight was suicide. To surrender was to end his mission. That left only one option.
– Run, – Sineus said.
They broke from the path, plunging into the thickest part of the skeletal forest. A sharp crack echoed behind them. Not a rifle shot. A signal. The hunt had begun. They ran, the cold dust kicking up around their boots. Branches, brittle as old bone, clawed at their coats. Alessandro cursed in a low, steady stream, his breath pluming in the cold air. They vaulted a petrified log, its bark peeling away in grey sheets. The sounds of pursuit were faint but steady. Kurov’s men were not sprinters; they were trackers, relentless and patient. They would wear them down.
They ran for what felt like an hour, their lungs burning with the cold, dead air. The forest thinned, opening onto a narrow track that cut through the blighted landscape. A road. A chance for speed. They stumbled onto it, gasping for breath.
And froze.
Ahead of them, not two hundred meters down the track, was another patrol. Ten men. Their uniforms were the dull, familiar blue of the French army. They marched in a tight formation, bayonets fixed, their faces grim and hard. They had not seen them yet.
Sineus felt a cold knot tighten in his stomach. Kurov was behind them. The French were in front of them. They were caught between the two closing jaws of a vise. The grey, overcast sky seemed to press down, the lid on a box with no escape.
– Out of the fire, – Alessandro breathed, his voice tight with disbelief. He drew his pistol, the metallic click loud in the silence. – And into the forge. Which one, aristocrat?
It was not a choice. It was a triage. They could not fight both. They could not outrun both. Sineus looked at the French patrol, then back in the direction of Kurov’s unseen hunters. The Lodge would not be fooled. Kurov would not be stopped by a trick. But the French… they were soldiers, operating on orders and training. Their reality was simpler. More fragile.
– The French, – Sineus said, his voice low and urgent. The price of his choice was a terrible risk: he had to trust this cynical Italian to protect him while he was defenseless. – I can stop them. Buy me a moment. Cover our retreat.
Alessandro stared at him, his dark eyes wide with a mix of alarm and morbid curiosity. – Stop them? How?
– Just be ready to run, – Sineus said. He did not wait for an answer. He closed his eyes.
The world of grey dust and blue uniforms vanished. The sound of Alessandro’s ragged breathing faded. Sineus let it all go, sinking into the current of the world’s true script. He reached out with his mind, his senses expanding beyond his body. He saw the luminous threads of memory that made up the forest, the road, the men. He ignored the dark green threads of Kurov’s approaching squad. He focused on the knot of blue up ahead.
He found the patrol leader, a sergeant with a thick mustache and a memory-script bright with the simple duties of his day. Sineus ignored the man’s history, his name, his family. He searched for the most recent, most fragile thread: the memory of the path they were walking. It was a thin, shimmering line of light, barely five minutes old, detailing the turns and contours of the track they had just followed.
It was a simple, functional memory. Easy to isolate. Easy to cut.
Sineus focused his will into a single point of cold, sharp intent. He grasped the shimmering thread. For a fraction of a second, he felt the sergeant’s simple confidence, the certainty of his direction. Then, with a thought, he severed it.
The thread snapped.
It was an invisible act, silent and clean. But to Sineus, it felt like a physical blow. A wave of dizziness washed over him, and a sharp pain lanced behind his eyes. He stumbled, his eyes flying open. The grey world rushed back in, stark and cold.
Alessandro grabbed his arm, steadying him. – What did you do?
Sineus looked down the track. The French sergeant had stopped dead. He was looking around, his face a mask of sudden, profound confusion. He looked at the road behind him, then at the road ahead, as if he had just been dropped there from the sky. He turned to his men, his mouth opening and closing. The patrol faltered, their disciplined line breaking as they looked to their leader for an order that would not come. Their command integrity had shattered.
– Now, – Sineus gasped, the world still swimming at the edges of his vision.
They didn’t need another word. They plunged back into the forest, leaving the confused French patrol behind them on the road. From the woods behind them, a sharp whistle cut through the air – Kurov, realizing his prey had changed direction. But it was too late. The moment of confusion Sineus had bought was all they needed. They ran, their feet finding purchase on the dead earth, the shouts of two different languages fading behind them.
They ran until the shouts were gone, until the only sound was the rasp of their own breathing and the pounding of their own hearts. They finally collapsed in a deep thicket of grey, thorned bushes, hidden from view. Sineus leaned against the trunk of a dead tree, his head spinning. The pain behind his eyes was a dull, steady throb.
He had done it. He had used his ability not as a tool of sterile excision in a quiet palace, but as a weapon in a desperate scramble for survival. He had severed a man’s memory of his own path, turning his mind into a cage. The act felt dirtier. More real.



