A harsh wind ushered morn, its bite sweeping the camp, heavy with storm’s nearing st. Elias stood at the rim, eyes fixed where light bled faint over the edge—a csh of fate and fury. The hour bore down, unyielding, fed in nights of dread and steel. This day dawned raecter he’d faced in shadow.
Workers massed, faces etched by strife’s hard hand, yet their stance held firm as rock. Words were spent—deeds alone remained. Elias joined, heart a drum in his ribs, fears a tide he stemmed with each breath. This was their stand—yield now, and all they’d bled for turned dust.
Thomas stepped forth, voice a bde through the din. “This is it,” he said, stern and heavy. “We fight for what’s ours—what they’d grind to naught. Make it ring.”
Their roar rose, rough but alive, though Elias saw the flicker in their eyes—dread of the unknown, a chill he shared. Yet a fire burned deeper, kindled by the hands he’d gripped, the blood they’d spilled. They were one, a no storm could snap.
He clutched the chisel, its weight steadying his shake—not a craftsman’s tool now, but a mark of their will, scarred by steel it had met. The wind howled, dust swirling like ghosts of the fallen—ds whose silence spurred him still. He felt Thomas’s gaze, steady beside him, a brother in this bleak hour.
The storm’s growl neared, a beast they’d meet head-on. Elias straightened, its cmor a call in his marrow. They were set—or must be. The csh loomed, a wave to break them or bear them forth. He’d lead, not for old dreams, but for the men at his back—their scars, their breath, a bond he’d hold till it broke or bzed.
No cheer lingered—only the wind, the weight, the wait. They stood, a line against fate, and Elias faced it, chisel in hand, for the fight was theirs, whole or lost.