
As the bullet tore through Kael Voss like fire and ice at the same time. He hit the wet concrete hard, tasting blood and the bitter copper of failure,rain mixed with the leaking fuel from the blown-up van, turning everything into a filthy, stinking mess. His team,his brothers,had sold him out for a bigger paycheck,he’d seen it in their eyes right before the shots came. All those years of dirty work, the bodies he’d left behind because the mission demanded it, and this was how it ended,not with glory instead regret.
Flashes hit him as his vision blurred,a village in the mountains where he’d followed orders and cleared the “threat.” A kid no older than fifteen who had only been in the wrong place. He’d told himself it was necessary,that ruthlessness kept the world spinning. And now choking on his own blood, Kael realized how hollow that sounded. “Sorry,” he rasped to no one, the word lost in the downpour then darkness took him. He suddenly woke up screaming. Not on that cold concrete, but on cracked stone that smelled dust and old incense,the air thick, heavy with the metallic tang of blood that wasn’t all his. Kael pushed himself up, muscles burning like he’d been rebuilt wrong,stronger in places, but aching in others. His left leg twinged with that old limp from Sarajevo. It had followed him here,wherever it was. Shouts echoed through the ruined hall,torchlight flickered on crumbling walls carved with forgotten battles and winged figures. Men in dark imperial armor were dragging bodies out, laughing as they looted,one of them spotted him and raised a sword. “Another scavenger! Finish it!” Kael moved before thinking,his body reacted like the old days agent instincts mixed with something hotter, wilder. He grabbed the man’s wrist, twisting hard. Bone snapped. The sword fell into his hand and drove it forward, feeling it bite flesh. Blood sprayed. Another soldier charged; Kael slammed into him with strength that shouldn’t have been possible, caving in ribs with a single brutal elbow. Panic surged,he wasn’t in control,something inside him roared, ancient and hungry. Three more fell in quick, ugly seconds, throats opened, skulls cracked against stone,the power felt too good, like fire in his veins,but it also hurt, like his skull was splitting open. Then he saw the last one. A young soldier, barely out of boyhood, pressed against a pillar with his hands up. His sword lay forgotten on the ground. Wide eyes full of terror. “Please, I have a sister, I didn’t want this. Mercy” Kael’s blade hovered at the kid’s throat. His hand shook,as the rage screamed to finish it. They’re all threats. End it clean,but that village kid’s face flashed again,the regret from Earth clawed at him, fresh and raw even in this new nightmare. He lowered the sword. “Run,” Kael growled, voice hoarse. “Before I change my mind.” The boy didn’t hesitate,he bolted through a shattered doorway, footsteps fading into the night. Kael staggered back, chest heavy,what the hell was happening? This wasn’t his world,these weren’t his missions. His arms itched faint glowing runes crawling across his skin like living tattoos. Pain lanced through his head again. Then a cold, mechanical voice echoed directly in his mind: [War System Activated. Vessel Integration: 12%.] [First Kill Threshold Met. Minor Essence Gained.] [Level 1 – Level 2. Basic Combat Instinct Unlocked.] Kael laughed, a broken sound that turned into a cough. “System? What kind of fucked-up joke” The world tilted, his vision swam with crimson edges,the power that had carried him through the fight drained away all at once, leaving him hollow and shaking, collapsing against the altar stone, the scar on his cheek stinging like it was fresh. Somewhere outside, horns blared,more soldiers were coming,and whatever he’d just become it was already breaking him. He closed his eyes, breathing ragged, and whispered to the empty temple, “I don’t know if I deserve another chance,but if this is it don’t let me fuck it up again.” The ruins answered only with silence and the distant sound of marching boots.Latest Chapter
Chapter 8: Campfire Confessions
The fire crackled low in the deep cut of the ravine, throwing shaky shadows on the rock walls. They’d settled for the night in a tight spot maybe a dozen of them now, the rest of the cell scattered to safer holes. Lirael had ordered no big flames, but they needed the heat after the retreat. The air smelled of damp stone, woodsmoke, and the faint metallic tang of blood that still clung to their clothes. Kael sat on a flat stone, leg stretched out, chewing on a strip of tough jerky that tasted like old boot. His headache had eased to a dull throb, but the new Echo Strike trait still buzzed faintly under his skin like a bad wire, sending occasional phantom twinges through his muscles.Mira poked at the flames with a stick, sending sparks dancing upward into the narrow strip of night sky visible between the ravine walls. Garrick Ironfist sat across from him, beard singed at the edges, nursing a bandaged thigh with a sour look. Lirael kept to the edge of the light, sharpening a dagger with
Chapter 7: The Dwarf’s Debt
The Legion came faster than anyone expected.Three days after the outpost job, patrols started sweeping the eastern ridges like angry hornets. That spared kid must’ve sung loud and clear descriptions of the limping demon with the bloody sword had spread. Lirael pulled the whole camp out in a hurry, but the retreat turned ugly quick. Arrows whistled through the trees. Men and women fell screaming. Kael ran with the rest, satchel slung tight, his bad leg burning like fire with every stride.“Keep moving!” Mira shouted ahead of him, axe out and bloody.They were nearly at the narrow gorge that would hide them when a big squad cut them off. Ironfist dwarves, by the look of them stocky, armored in heavy plate, axes and hammers swinging. These weren’t regular Legion grunts. These were the Iron General’s enforcers, the ones who crushed rebellions under their boots.Kael got separated in the chaos. One minute he was covering a wounded scout, the next a massive dwarf barreled straight at him,
Chapter 6: Infiltration Gone Wrong
Dusk came on slow and heavy, painting the ravine in bruised purples and grays. Kael fell in behind Lirael’s small crew as they slipped out, his bad leg already complaining with every uneven step. The minor boost he’d felt before had worn off completely, leaving him raw and off-balance, like he was still borrowing someone else’s body. Mira moved ahead of him, silent as smoke. No one said much. They never did when he was around.Two nights of hard travel brought them to the Legion outpost. It wasn’t much just a cluster of timber buildings and a rough palisade wall stuck in a clearing like an ugly scar. Torchlight flickered along the top, and a couple of watchtowers loomed over it all. Thirty soldiers, maybe. Enough.Lirael crouched beside him in the brush, her voice barely a breath. “Courier tent’s the squat one in the middle, attached to the captain’s quarters. You go alone. We hit the east gate as a distraction in twenty. Get the dispatches. Bring the captain back breathing. No noise.
Chapter 5: The Spymaster’s Offer
Morning light filtered weak and hazy through the ravine, doing little to chase away the chill that clung to Kael’s bones. He hadn’t slept much after the nightmare. Just tossed on that threadbare blanket, staring at the alien stars until they faded, his head still throbbing from the experiments and that divine vision. *Missing. Not dead.* The words stuck like a burr in his mind. He was a glitch wearing someone else’s skin, and every ache in his left leg reminded him how poorly the fit was.The camp was already stirring. People moved like ghosts boiling weak broth, mending gear, whispering about the skirmish yesterday. Garr, the stocky one with the missing ear, shot him a sideways glance as he passed, muttering something to a woman nearby. Suspicion hung thick. Kael didn’t blame them. He’d brought trouble with that spared soldier, and they all knew it.He pushed himself up, wincing as the limp flared fresh. The minor strength boost from the System had worn off overnight, leaving everyth
Chapter 4: Glitch in the System
The resistance camp was nothing like Kael expected. Tucked deep in a narrow ravine where the trees grew thick and the rocks hid everything from above, it was a scattered mess of patched tents, smoldering cook fires, and wary-eyed people who looked like they’d been running for months. Maybe years. Makeshift walls of fallen logs and thorny brush circled the place, but it felt more like a desperate hideout than a real stronghold. Smoke hung low in the air, mixing with the smell of boiled roots and unwashed bodies. Kids with hollow cheeks stared at him as he limped in behind Mira’s group. No one cheered their return. They just nodded grimly and went back to sharpening blades or tending wounds.Mira had given him a curt warning at the edge of camp. “Stay out of trouble. Rest that leg. We’ll talk more at dawn if you’re still here.” Then she disappeared into a larger tent with the other fighters, leaving him to fend for himself. The stocky man with the missing ear someone called him Garr tos
Chapter 3: First Blood, First Mistake
Dawn dragged itself in slow and mean, all gray light and damp chill that sank straight into Kael’s bones. The forest didn’t care about his situation. It just kept stretching on, thick with old pines that smelled like sap and rot, branches clawing at his cloak as he limped forward. His stomach had been empty for too long. The last of that dried meat from the temple was gone hours ago, chewed down to nothing and still leaving his gut twisting with angry hunger. The waterskin sloshed light at his hip. Not enough. Never enough in this fucked-up new world.Every step with his left leg sent a dull, familiar fire up his thigh. That Sarajevo limp had hitched a ride across whatever void had dumped him here. The body he wore felt stronger in the arms and chest, like someone had pumped extra iron into the frame, but it came with cracks. Aching seams. A constant reminder that he wasn’t built for this place. Not really. He was just squatting in someone else’s broken vessel.“Keep moving, you basta
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