The war room was quieter than usual.
Cassiel stood at the center of the map table, his grey eyes fixed on the shifting lines of the enemy's patrol routes. His quill hovered over a scroll, frozen mid-stroke. The data was wrong. It had been wrong for weeks. Every time he thought he had mapped a pattern, the enemy shifted. Every time he thought he had found a weakness, it closed.
"They are learning," he said finally.
Phenex looked up from his carving. "Who is learning?"
"The enemy. Beelzebub. It is adapting. Changing its patterns. Countering our strategies."
"That is what enemies do."
"Yes, but it is doing it faster than it should. Faster than any system should be able to adapt." Cassiel set down his quill. "Something is wrong."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean there is a variable I have not accounted for. Something that is feeding the enemy information. Something that is guiding their responses."
Phenex set down his carving. The crystal bird was almost complete, its wings spread, caught in the moment before flight. "You think we have a traitor."
"I think we have a leak."
"That is not the same thing."
"It is not. But it is close."
Phenex was silent for a long moment. Then he nodded. "What do you want to do?"
"I want to find it. And I want to plug it."
---
The search began at dawn.
Cassiel moved through the watchtower like a ghost, his grey eyes scanning every corner, every shadow. He interviewed the survivors one by one, asking the same questions in different ways. He cross-referenced their answers with the data he had collected. He looked for inconsistencies, for contradictions, for anything that did not fit.
He found nothing.
"Maybe you are wrong," Adara said. She stood in the doorway of the lower chamber, her arms crossed. "Maybe the enemy is just getting smarter."
"Enemies do not get smarter. They get more desperate. There is a difference."
"And what if there is no leak?"
"Then I am wasting time."
Adara's eyes narrowed. "You are not wasting time. You are being careful. There is a difference."
Cassiel almost smiled. "You sound like him."
"Like who?"
"Ashai."
Adara's jaw tightened. "I do not sound like him."
"You sound exactly like him. It is unnerving."
She opened her mouth to respond, then closed it. A flicker of something passed across her face. Not quite a smile. Not quite.
"Find the leak," she said. "Then we will talk."
---
The second search was more thorough.
Cassiel enlisted Ya'ara's help. She was the only one who knew the watchtower's secrets; the hidden passages, the forgotten chambers, the places where the stone remembered older things.
"There is something here," she said, her hand pressed against a wall in the lowest level. "Something that does not belong."
She pushed. The stone gave way.
Behind the wall was a small chamber. It had been sealed for centuries. The air was thick with dust and the scent of old magic. In the center of the room, a single object sat on a pedestal.
It was a mirror. Or what had once been a mirror. The glass was cracked, tarnished, covered in a thin film of grey residue. But something moved beneath the surface. Something that watched.
"What is that?" Cassiel asked.
"I do not know."
"Then why did you bring me here?"
"Because it is watching us."
Cassiel stepped closer. The mirror's surface rippled. A face appeared; not his own, but something older, something colder.
You should not have come here, the face said. Its voice was the sound of breaking glass.
"Who are you?" Cassiel asked.
I am what remains. I am what was left behind.
"Left behind by whom?"
By the ones who built this place. The ones who sealed me here.
"Why?"
Because I knew too much.
Cassiel's hand tightened on his quill. "Knew too much about what?"
The face smiled. It was not a warm expression.
About the nature of the enemy. About the weakness in their design. About the thing that they fear most.
"Tell me."
Why should I?
"Because I am asking."
The face studied him. Its eyes were ancient, patient, hungry.
You are not the one I am waiting for, it said.
"Who are you waiting for?"
The face did not answer. It simply faded, leaving Cassiel alone with the cracked mirror and the weight of unanswered questions.
---
Michael was waiting in the war room.
"Find anything?" he asked.
"Something," Cassiel replied. "I am not sure what."
"Show me."
Cassiel led him to the sealed chamber. The mirror was still there, its surface still rippling with faint, grey light.
"Stay behind me," Michael said.
He stepped forward. The mirror's surface rippled. The face appeared again.
You, it said. I have been waiting for you.
"Who are you?"
I am the one who remembers. The one who sees. The one who knows.
"Knows what?"
The truth.
Michael's hand tightened on his broken sword. "What truth?"
The face smiled. It was not a warm expression.
The truth about your brother. The truth about your faith. The truth about the war you are fighting.
"Tell me."
Your brother is not your enemy. He is your reflection. Everything he does, you have considered doing. Everything he feels, you have felt. You are not fighting him. You are fighting yourself.
Michael's breath caught. "That is not true."
It is true. You know it is true. The doubt you carry in your heart is the same doubt that destroyed him. The only difference is that he acted on it. And you did not. Yet.
Michael's hands trembled at his sides. "Who are you?"
I am what you fear. I am what you cannot escape. I am the shadow of your own soul.
"And what do you want?"
I want you to stop running.
The face faded. The mirror went still.
Michael stood alone in the darkness, his reflection staring back at him.
---
He did not sleep that night.
He sat at the edge of the watchtower, staring out at the Rift. The purple glow reflected in his silver eyes. His broken sword lay across his knees.
"You should not be here," a voice said.
Michael did not turn. "Neither should you."
Azrael stepped out of the shadows. His form was a silhouette of deep space and forgotten starlight. His wings were vast shadows. His hourglass hung at his side, the sand falling upward.
"I have been watching you," Azrael said.
"I know."
"You have been struggling."
"I have been surviving."
"Surviving is not the same as living."
Michael's jaw tightened. "What do you want?"
Azrael moved closer. His ancient eyes studied Michael's face.
"I want you to understand something," he said. "Your brother is not your enemy. He is your teacher."
"My teacher?"
"He is showing you what you could become. He is showing you the cost of doubt. He is showing you the weight of pride." Azrael paused. "Learn the lesson. Or repeat the mistake."
"I do not need a lecture."
"I am not lecturing. I am warning."
Michael looked up. His silver eyes met Azrael's ancient gaze.
"Warning me about what?"
"The path you are on. The road you are walking. The end that awaits you if you do not turn back."
"I am not turning back."
"Then you will fall."
Michael's hand tightened on his sword. "I have already fallen."
"No. You have stumbled." Azrael leaned closer. "Falling is when you stop getting up."
He stepped back. The shadows swallowed him.
Michael sat alone, staring at the Rift, his brother's reflection burned into his mind.
---
The Long Night continued. The Rift pulsed. The Remnant endured.
In the watchtower's lower chamber, Adara stood with Ashai at her side. They were watching the eastern horizon, where the first hint of false dawn was beginning to break.
"This is not going to get easier," Ashai said.
"I know."
"This is not going to end well."
"I know."
"Then why are you still here?"
Adara turned to him. Her silver eyes were steady, unwavering.
"Because I am not done yet."
Ashai studied her face. He saw the fear there, the hope, the love that she had finally learned to name.
"Neither am I," he said.
They stood together, watching the dawn.
