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Blade of the Silent Oath
Blade of the Silent Oath
Author: Praise
The Weight of an Oath
Author: Praise
last update2025-08-09 08:24:51

The rain had not stopped since before dawn. It ran in crooked threads down the stone steps of the Moonveil District Arms Hall, pooled in the hollows between cobblestones, and soaked the banners until they clung limp against their poles. Beneath the eaves, Kael Ruan stood still, the damp creeping into his bones, a new-forged badge cold in his palm.

He was twenty-four, the youngest ever sworn as Arms Keeper of Moonveil, and the weight of that truth pressed heavier than the rain. Across the courtyard, Master Renji watched him from the covered walkway, eyes unreadable, arms folded within his soaked robe. The old man’s hair had gone more silver than black this year, but the steel in his gaze had not dulled.

Kael bowed once, low. “It’s done.”

Renji’s reply was a grunt, though there was pride buried in it. “Then you know there’s no turning back.”

The badge in Kael’s hand pulsed. Cold light bled across its surface  letters forming where there had been none.

 [Silent Oath System Activated]

Oath Energy: 0/100

Core Blade Slots: Shadowsteel (Locked), Frostvein (Locked), Dawnpiercer (Locked)

Techniques: Oath Cut (Locked), Sword Recall (Locked)

The voice was not heard so much as felt, reverberating along his spine. It offered no warmth, no ceremony only the plain fact of a bond forged.

Another line of text shimmered, vanishing before he could draw a breath: “A vow is a blade. Both will cut you if you drop them.”

Moonveil City spread below the Arms Hall like a painted scroll: curved roofs gleaming with rain, market canopies sagging under water’s weight, the black sweep of the outer wall against the grey horizon. The city was a jewel of the Eastern Reach  and like any jewel, there were cracks invisible to the untrained eye.

Kael had been born in the narrow alleys of the Dockside Quarter, the son of a smith who never bent to the Syndicate. He had watched his father’s shop burn, the guards turn away, the merchants pretend they had seen nothing. That memory had driven every step that brought him here.

The Duskbane Syndicate was the largest of Moonveil’s shadows, its reach extending from the wharves to the high tables of the Council of Merchants. Led by Lord Thaven Duskbane, it thrived because the law’s hands were tied  or bought.

Kael meant to cut those hands free.

The Arms Hall bell tolled once, deep and resonant. A messenger strode across the wet flagstones, bowing to Renji before pressing a sealed tube into Kael’s hand.

He broke the wax. Inside was a short note, written in hurried, uneven strokes: “Dockside. East wharf. Three wagons. Tonight.”

No signature. No seal. But Kael knew the hand  it belonged to an old informant who had never once wasted his time.

Renji’s eyes narrowed. “What is it?”

“A chance to do my duty,” Kael said, tucking the note into his sleeve.

By nightfall, the rain had eased to a fine mist. Lanterns burned low along the dockside, their light catching on wet planks. The smell of the river was sharp in Kael’s nose as he slipped into the shadows between warehouses.

The wagons were there  three of them, pulled tight against a boarded storage hall. Men in grey coats moved between them, their boots muffled on the slick boards. One pried open a crate and grunted, lifting something that glinted even in the weak light.

Kael stepped closer, keeping to the shelter of a jutting wall. Soulsteel.

Even from a distance, he could see the pale, web-like veins running through the metal, could feel the faint hum of it against his skin. This was not steel mined from any honest earth. It was forged from the essence of the dead, bound by rites whispered only in the oldest, darkest corners of the empire.

“Enough to buy the whole district,” a voice said behind him.

Kael turned  too late. A half-circle of guards closed in, their lacquered cuirasses reflecting the lamplight. At their head was Captain Morren, a man Kael had once seen drinking with Lord Thaven in full view of the market square.

“Step away from the wagons, Keeper,” Morren ordered, hand resting on the pommel of his sword. “You’ve no authority here.”

“Smuggling Soulsteel is a hanging crime,” Kael replied.

Morren’s mouth twisted. “And accusing the Council’s favored merchant is a career-ending one. Stand down.”

By morning, the wagons were gone.

The summons came before midday. The Bureau’s seal glared red on the parchment: Kael Ruan, Arms Keeper of Moonveil District, is hereby ordered to appear before the Hall of Justice on charges of illegal seizure of merchant property.

Renji read the notice twice before setting it down with a sigh. “They’re moving faster than I thought.”

“I’m not backing down,” Kael said.

“You swore to uphold the law,” Renji reminded him, “and the law can be a snake that bites the hand holding it. If you grip too tightly, it will bite deeper.”

Kael stepped into the rain-silvered courtyard. A small crowd had gathered at the market square below, voices low but urgent. He raised his badge high enough for them to see.

“I will bring Lord Thaven Duskbane to judgment,” he said, his voice carrying over the rain. “By blade and blood, I swear it.”

The Silent Oath struck like a hammer inside his chest.

[High-Risk Oath Quest Issued]

Objective: Convict Thaven Duskbane before the next full moon.

Penalty: Oath Energy drain to death.

Somewhere in the city, Kael thought he heard laughter  low, cold, and patient.

That night, he found her waiting by the Arms Hall gates.

Liara Fen was not supposed to be in Moonveil at all. Daughter of Governor Fen Shuyi, her life should have been all court banquets and silk. But her eyes told a different story  sharp as drawn steel, watching the street for threats.

“You’ve made a dangerous promise,” she said, without greeting.

“I’ve made the only promise worth making,” Kael replied.

She studied him for a moment, then stepped closer, lowering her voice. “Thaven’s wagons have been carrying more than Soulsteel. People are vanishing  beggars, debtors, even apprentices from the Iron Guild. The guards say they ran away. I think they went into the vaults and never came out.”

“The Sunken Vaults,” Kael said.

Liara’s eyes flickered. “If you go there, you won’t be walking into the dark alone. You’ll be walking into its mouth.”

Kael glanced toward the distant lights of the Dockside Quarter. The rain had stopped, but the air smelled of the river  and something else, faint, like cold ashes.

Above Moonveil, the clouds thinned just enough for the moon to glance down, pale and watching.

Somewhere beneath the city, something old stirred, and smiled.

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  • Broken Promises

    The bell at the Arms Hall tolled at dawn, its deep chime echoing across Moonveil’s streets. Kael Ruan stood in the courtyard, cloak damp with mist, eyes fixed on the gates. Messengers had ridden through the night, their reports all the same: attacks in the outer districts, vanishing patrols, witnesses describing gold eyes glowing in the dark.The Hollow Emperor was no longer whispering from beneath the stones. He was moving through the city.Liara Fen joined him, her hair tied back, daggers at her belt. “The Dockside Quarter is burning. Families are fleeing toward the central square. If we don’t hold them there, the streets will choke on panic before nightfall.”Kael’s jaw tightened. “Then that’s where we go.”Inside the council chamber, Master Renji sat stiff-backed, his cane across his knees. The faint golden threads in his eyes had faded since the burning of the tether, but his voice was weaker than before.“You can’t be everywhere,” he said. “The Emperor knows that. He’ll strike w

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  • Ground of Choosing

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  • The Thread Beneath the Skin

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