The highway stretched dark and empty under a sky full of stars, the kind that looked too bright and too close after living so long under broken ceilings. Tony walked in the middle, Lila on his left, Elias on his right, their footsteps falling into a quiet rhythm that almost felt like music if he listened hard enough. The packs were light on their backs, but the silence between them was heavy, full of things no one wanted to say out loud yet.
Tony kept his hands in his pockets, fingers brushing the trombone bell wrapped in cloth. He didn't dare hum again—not after what happened with Darius. The memory of the flames dying with one clap still made his palms tingle. He glanced sideways at Elias, who walked with that calm breeze always circling him, like the air itself was his bodyguard. "You've fought S-Class before?" Tony asked, voice low. Elias nodded once. "Not really, just once" Lila looked over at him, her face lit by faint moonlight. "You never told me the details." "Didn't want to worry you," Elias said simply. "Most were raiders like Darius. Thought their Title made them untouchable. Learned different." Tony swallowed. "And you beat them?" "With help sometimes. With wind mostly. It's not about being stronger. It's about being smarter. Or faster. Or meaner when it counts." Tony thought about the clap again—how it felt sharp and right, like the perfect end to a bad song. "I didn't plan it. I just… did it." Elias gave a small smile. "That's how the good ones start. Instinct first. Control comes later." They walked on for another hour, the road climbing gently toward an old overpass that looked like it might collapse any day. Vines hung from the cracked concrete like green ropes, and the wind carried the faint smell of smoke—not campfire smoke, but something sharper, angrier. Elias slowed. "We're not alone." Lila's hand went to her water skin. "More raiders?" "Worse," Elias said. "Listen." Tony listened. At first he heard only crickets and distant night birds. Then, underneath it, a low crackle—like fire eating dry wood. It grew louder, closer, until a figure stepped out from under the overpass, flames curling around his shoulders like a living cloak. The man was shorter than Darius but twice as mean-looking, eyes glowing orange, teeth bared in a grin that promised pain. "I am Kael Draven," the man called, voice rough and hot. "Ashen Lord. S-Class hunter. This stretch is mine. You pay the toll in blood or ash. Your choice." Lila tensed, water already swirling at her feet. Elias raised his hands, wind sharpening into blades. Tony felt the same spark from before ignite in his chest—fear, yes, but also something clear and bright, like a note waiting to be played. Kael laughed, ash exploding from his palms in thick black clouds that blocked the stars. "You think water and wind can stop me? I am the smoke that chokes cities. The ash that buries armies." He thrust both hands forward. A wall of burning ash rushed at them, hot enough to blister skin from twenty feet away, thick enough to blind and smother. Tony didn't think. He just acted. He took one step forward, drew a deep breath, and hummed—low, steady, the same note he'd used on the beasts but sharper now, edged with purpose. The sound rolled out like a wave, invisible but heavy, pushing against the ash cloud. The flames flickered, confused, the smoke twisting away as if trying to escape the vibration. Kael's grin faltered. "What—" Tony clapped once. The sound cracked like a whip. Vibrations slammed into the ash wall, shattering it into harmless gray flakes that drifted down like dirty snow. The force kept going, hitting Kael square in the chest. The Ashen Lord staggered back, flames snuffing out, eyes wide with shock. He dropped to his knees, coughing black smoke, hands shaking as he tried to summon fire again. Nothing came. Lila stared. Elias stared. Even the night seemed to hold its breath. Tony lowered his hands, breathing hard, a wild grin spreading across his face. "One hum. One clap. That's all it took." Kael looked up, face twisted in rage and fear. "What are you?" Tony met his eyes. "Someone you shouldn't have tried to burn." Lila moved fast, water ropes wrapping Kael's wrists and ankles. Elias called a gust that pinned him flat against the concrete. The Ashen Lord struggled, cursing, but the fight was gone from him. "We tie him," Lila said. "Leave him for whoever finds him next." Elias nodded, pulling rope from his pack. "He'll think twice before hunting again." They worked quick and quiet. When Kael was bound and left under the overpass, still coughing ash, the three of them stepped back onto the road. Tony looked at his hands, then at Lila and Elias. "That… happened again." Lila gave him a small, proud smile. "Yeah. It did." Elias clapped him on the shoulder. "Keep practicing. The road's long. And you're just getting started." They walked on, the stars bright overhead, the night quiet except for their footsteps and the soft hum Tony couldn't quite stop making under his breath. The road remembered. And now it had a song.Latest Chapter
under the big top
The big top's entrance flap parted with a soft rustle, and Tony stepped inside first, heart thumping like a drum in his chest. The inside glowed with string lights draped like spiderwebs, casting warm yellow spots over sawdust floors and faded posters of acrobats who probably never saw the end of the world. Tables ringed the center ring, piled with fresh bread, canned fruits, and even some roasted meat that smelled like heaven after days of dry rations. About thirty people and creatures milled around—humans with tired smiles, a few mutants on leashes that looked more like pets than guards, all chatting and laughing as if the apocalypse was just a bad dream.Seraphina Lune waited in the center, pink hair shining under the lights, her smile wide and genuine now, no smoke or tricks in sight. She clapped her hands together once, and the chatter died down. "Welcome, darlings! Come in, sit down. You look like you've walked through hell and back. Let me fix that."She waved them to a table,
Pink smoke and bad ideas
The three of them had been walking since the ice rain, legs heavy but spirits strangely light, when the road decided to play a trick. One minute they were passing rusted billboards promising long-gone roller coasters, the next minute a sagging big top rose out of the dark like a drunk uncle who refused to leave the party. The circus tent was battered, red-and-white stripes faded to pink-and-dirt, poles leaning like tired soldiers. Fairy lights still blinked in weak yellow pulses along the entrance arch, powered by who-knows-what stubborn generator. Music—scratchy calliope notes—floated out, cheerful and wrong, like laughter at a funeral.Tony stopped first. "That's… a circus."Lila tilted her head. "In the middle of nowhere. After the world ended. Sure. Why not."Elias's breeze tightened around them. "Patrols," he murmured. "And they're not normal dogs."They crept closer. Two shapes padded along the perimeter fence—huge, too huge. German shepherds maybe, once. Now their fur grew in p
Rain of ice
The train wreck lay quiet now, the six wolf-mutants scattered like broken toys across the gravel. Tony's heart still hammered from the fight, but the new creature—the one that used to be human—stood tall in the moonlight, claws flexing, second mouth hissing on its throat. The pack circled it, growling low, welcoming their newest member.Lila stepped forward. "Stay back," she said, voice calm but iron-hard.Tony and Elias moved behind her without a word. The air around Lila began to change. It grew colder, sharper. Tiny beads of moisture lifted from the grass, from the puddles, from the very breath they exhaled. The humidity in the night air thickened, then pulled toward her like iron to a magnet. She raised both hands, fingers spread, and the water answered.It came fast.Droplets from every direction rushed in, spinning into a tight, swirling sphere above her palms. The sphere grew, darkening, until it was the size of a basketball, then a beach ball, then bigger still. The air itself
Train wreck
The road had curved away from the highway hours ago, dipping into what used to be a small rail yard. Twisted tracks snaked through tall grass and broken gravel, leading to a long line of rusted train cars that looked like a giant metal snake someone had chopped into pieces. One engine lay on its side, half-buried in dirt, its front smashed open like a cracked egg. The cars behind it tilted at strange angles, windows gone, roofs peeled back by time and weather. Vines crawled over everything, thick and dark green, turning the whole wreck into a green-and-rust jungle under the moonlight.Tony walked slower here, eyes wide, taking it all in. The air smelled wet and sour, like old metal mixed with rotting leaves. Crickets chirped in the grass, but not many—too quiet for a place this overgrown. Lila stayed close on his left, water skin already uncapped, a thin stream ready to whip out if needed. Elias walked on the right, breeze always moving around him, listening to things the rest of them
Flames
The highway stretched dark and empty under a sky full of stars, the kind that looked too bright and too close after living so long under broken ceilings. Tony walked in the middle, Lila on his left, Elias on his right, their footsteps falling into a quiet rhythm that almost felt like music if he listened hard enough. The packs were light on their backs, but the silence between them was heavy, full of things no one wanted to say out loud yet.Tony kept his hands in his pockets, fingers brushing the trombone bell wrapped in cloth. He didn't dare hum again—not after what happened with Darius. The memory of the flames dying with one clap still made his palms tingle. He glanced sideways at Elias, who walked with that calm breeze always circling him, like the air itself was his bodyguard."You've fought S-Class before?" Tony asked, voice low.Elias nodded once. "Not really, just once"Lila looked over at him, her face lit by faint moonlight. "You never told me the details.""Didn't want to
Dusk
Dusk wrapped the highway in soft purple shadows, the air cool and thick with the scent of rust and distant rain. Tony walked between Lila and Elias, backpack straps digging into his shoulders, every step crunching on cracked asphalt that felt like walking on old bones. The settlement lights faded behind them, and ahead the road twisted through overgrown cars and vines, like nature was slowly eating the world back. Tony's mind raced with the new power humming inside him, a secret song waiting to burst out, but he kept it locked tight, focusing on the rhythm of their footsteps instead.Lila glanced over her shoulder every few minutes, eyes sharp and worried, her hand hovering near the water skin at her hip as if ready to pull a flood from thin air. Elias walked with easy grace, the breeze around him whispering secrets only he could hear, his face calm but alert. Tony felt a little safer with them, like they were a small team against whatever the night might throw, but the quiet made his
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