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Chapter 10 - A Crown Of Ash

Austin, hold the perimeter. I'm coming down."

Jason cut the radio link. He looked down at Calvin, who was slumped against the wall, smiling peacefully despite his broken nose and dislocated shoulder.

"Get up," Jason ordered.

He hauled the cult leader to his feet, gripping him by the back of his bloody collar. He marched him out of the hallway and onto the upper walkway that overlooked the main Auditorium.

Jason stopped at the railing. Below him, the massive hall was packed with people. Twenty thousand survivors sat in the dark, shoulder to shoulder. Engineers, families, parents holding crying children.

But there was no sound. No crying, no whispering.

The rebels Austin had mentioned, the ones who dropped their weapons were standing in the narrow walkway and were looking up. The hostages were doing the same. Twenty thousand pairs of eyes were locked on the giant screen hanging above the stage.

On the screen, a loop was playing. It was the security footage of the last ten minutes. It showed Jason running up from the side of the tower like a spider. It showed him flipping over the drone's blade with impossible grace. It showed the moment he tackled Calvin in mid-air, moving faster than a normal person could track.

Text graphics flashed over the footage, highlighting his speed and reaction times.

Jason felt a cold chill.

He looked at the crowd. They weren't looking at him with fear or relief. They looked at him with a desperate hunger. They looked at him the way a drowning man looks towards the person standing on the shore .

"Do you see?" Calvin whispered, his voice wet with blood. He fell to his knees, bowing his head. "I told them the world would end, and it did. I told them a Savior would come... and here you are."

Jason looked at his squad near the stage entrance. Marcus, the giant soldier, was staring up at the screen, his weapon down. Even Austin, who was usually so composed, was looking up at the walkway with awe.

Damn it, Jason thought. Even my own men are buying it.

This was the real trap. The bomb was fake, just a test. But this? This was real.

Calvin had spent three years preparing these people. He preached that Earth was doomed and that a "Son of God" would save the faithful. Now, Earth was in ashes, and a man with impossible strength had just dropped from the sky.

The prophecy seemed complete.

Jason's mind raced. He now had two choices left.

Choice A: Deny it. Tell them it was a science experiment. Tell them he was just a soldier.

Result: The illusion breaks. The hope dies. These people, who just watched their families burn, would have nothing left. Despair would set in. And as Calvin's history showed, despair led to mass suicide.

Choice B: Accept the role.

Result: He validates a madman. He becomes a fake idol. But he keeps them alive.

Jason looked at the front row. He saw a mother clutching a toddler, her eyes wide, waiting for a sign. Waiting for permission to live.

Sigh

The truth doesn't matter anymore Jason realized, a heavy weight settling in his stomach. Right now, hope is the only currency we have left.

He tightened his grip on his pistol. He wasn't a god. He was a soldier. But if they needed a god to survive the night, he would carry that burden.

He shoved Calvin aside, leaving the "Prophet" kneeling in the shadows.

Jason stepped into the light at the edge of the walkway. The glare was blinding. The silence in the room was heavy. It was a suffocating pressure. One wrong word, and the crowd would riot.

Jason stood tall. He didn't raise his hands like a holy man. He didn't spread his arms.

He snapped his heels together and gave a sharp, perfect military salute.

​"Attention!"

​The command voice cracked like a whip. The weeping ceased. The praying stopped.

​"I am Captain Jason," he announced. "Calvin told you a god would come to save you. I'm sorry to tell you... I'm just a soldier."

​He let that hang in the air for a terrifying second. Then he gripped the railing.

​"But a god sits on a throne. A soldier stands on the wall. A god demands your worship. A soldier offers you his life."

​He scanned the sea of faces terrified, hungry and lost.

​"I cannot promise you heaven. I cannot bring back the Earth. But I make you this promise right now: No one dies tonight."

​His voice boomed, resonating in their chests.

​"As long as I stand, this colony stands. As long as I breathe, you are safe. I am not your deity. I am your shield !!"

For a second, there was silence.

Then, someone sobbed. It was a loud, ragged sound. Then another.

The crowd didn't cheer. They didn't scream his name. They wept. It was the sound of twenty thousand people letting it all out at once, releasing three days of terror. They weren't alone in the dark anymore. They had a leader.

Calvin, still on his knees, began to laugh and cry, his fanaticism confirmed.

Jason turned away from the edge. He felt exhausted, drained in a way that fighting never touched him. He felt the invisible weight of a crown settling onto his head, and it was heavy.

He walked back toward the stairs. Austin met him halfway up the ramp. The Vice-Captain had recovered his composure, but the respect in his eyes had changed into something absolute.

"Sir," Austin said, saluting. "The rioters in the lobby have surrendered. They... they're waiting for your command."

"Secure them," Jason said, his voice flat. "Lock Calvin in the brig. Put a double guard on him. I don't want him talking to anyone. And Austin? Pardon the workers. We killed the leaders, but we need the workers alive for what comes next. No more executions."

"Yes, Sir. And the civilians?"

Jason paused. He looked back at the weeping crowd one last time. He had saved them from the bomb. He had saved them from the rioters.

But as he looked at the sheer number of people, fifty thousand mouths to feed, he remembered the warning from the base's computer.

[Total Food Reserves: 700 Tons]

[Population: 51,223]

[Time to Starvation: 98 Days]

He had given them hope. Now he had to give them food.

"Get the department heads to the briefing room," Jason ordered, walking past Austin. "Scientists, engineers, agriculturists. Everyone."

​"Yes, Sir! What are your orders?"

​Jason didn't look back at the cheering crowd. He looked at the datapad in his hand, the numbers glowing in red: 98 Days.

​"The war was the easy part, Austin," Jason said, his voice grim. "Now the real work begins."

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