Then the general did something unexpected. She knelt. Her golden fingers, designed to crush stone, gently touched a withered seed Kael had in his pocket. “We were forged to destroy,” she said. “But a machine can be remade.”
That night, the valley did not see a battle. They saw a miracle. The Golden Army marched into the barren fields and, following Kael’s instructions, used their spears to till the frozen earth. They carried water from the melted snows of the Crystal Mountains in their golden helmets. They did not fight; they plowed, they sowed, they built irrigation canals. the golden army
But the army did not attack. It did not salute. The lead warrior, a woman with a crown of golden laurels, stepped forward. Her voice was not a roar but a soft, melodic chime. “Child of rust and grease,” she said. “Why have you awakened us?” Then the general did something unexpected
The general looked at him. “From what?” “We were forged to destroy,” she said
In the heart of the Velvet Valley, where the moss grew in shades of emerald and sapphire, there was a legend older than the oldest oak. It spoke of the Golden Army—a legion of twelve thousand warriors, not of flesh and bone, but of solid, sun-bright gold. They were forged by the first Sorcerer-King to protect the valley from a nameless, creeping shadow that lived beyond the Crystal Mountains. For a thousand years, they slept in a cavern of silence, waiting for the signal.