Kael's POV
We left Thornwick before dawn on the fourth day, our entire lives packed into two canvas bags and a small wooden cart. My father had sold everything we couldn't carry, his prized anvil, his collection of masterwork tools, even my mother's silver locket that he'd worn around his neck for seven years. We walked down the dirt road leading away from the village without looking back, though I heard shutters closing as we passed and felt the weight of fearful eyes following our departure. "Where are we going?" I asked, struggling to keep pace with my father's long strides. "East," he said simply. "To the frontier settlements beyond the Whispering Woods. Places where people are too busy surviving to worry about Scripts and prophecies." The frontier. Even I knew what that meant, lawless territories on the edge of civilization where the Church's influence was weak and life was brutal. Monsters roamed more freely there, bandits preyed on travelers, and people disappeared without anyone asking questions. It was where exiles and criminals went to escape their pasts. It was perfect for an Error of Fate. We walked for three days through forests that grew progressively wilder. My feet developed blisters that burst and reformed. My father shared his food with me without complaint, though I noticed he was eating less than half of what he gave me. At night, we made small fires and he taught me things he'd never bothered with before. "Hold the knife like this," he instructed, placing a small blade in my hand and adjusting my grip. "If something attacks you and I'm not there, you aim for the eyes or throat. Don't try to fight fair, there's no such thing when survival's at stake." I practiced the motion over and over while he watched. The knife felt heavy and strange in my seven-year-old hand, but I forced myself to keep training until my arm ached. "Good," he said quietly. "Again." On the fourth day, we encountered other travelers. A merchant caravan had stopped at a crossroads, three covered wagons circled defensively around a cooking fire. Armed guards watched us approach with hands on their weapons, but their leader, a heavy-set woman with shrewd eyes, waved us over. "Travelers? Rare to see folks on this road. Where you headed?" "East," my father replied carefully. "Looking for work." She studied us for a long moment, taking in our worn clothes and meager possessions. Her gaze lingered on me, and I saw her eyes narrow slightly. Could she tell? Could she sense what I was? "Blacksmith, by the look of your hands," she said finally. "We could use repairs. One of our wagon axles cracked yesterday. Fix it, and you can travel with us for protection. These woods aren't safe for a man and child alone." My father agreed immediately. He worked through the afternoon while I sat nearby, watching the caravan guards practice their drills. They moved with the confidence of people following their Scripts, warriors blessed with combat prowess, scouts gifted with enhanced senses, defenders whose destinies made them supernaturally resilient. I was watching one guard demonstrate a sword technique when a girl about my age approached. She had silver hair tied back in a practical braid and moved with unusual quietness. "You're staring," she said bluntly. I realized I had been. "Sorry. I was just watching how he moves. It's like dancing, but sharper." She sat down beside me without asking permission. "I'm Mira. My Script says I'll be the Silent Blade someday, greatest assassin of the generation. I'm supposed to start training soon." The name registered immediately, I remembered her from the Ceremony, remembered her parents weeping with joy. "That sounds impressive." "I guess." She picked at the grass between us. "Mostly it sounds lonely. Assassins work alone, always in shadow. My Script says I'll never have true friends because I'll never be able to trust anyone completely." She looked at me with those sharp gray eyes. "What's your Script say about you?" My throat tightened. "I don't have one." I expected her to recoil, to call for the guards, to reveal me as the Error I was. Instead, she tilted her head with genuine curiosity. "You're that boy. The one from the Ceremony. Everyone was talking about it." She paused. "Does it hurt? Not having a destiny?" No one had ever asked me that before. They'd called me cursed, dangerous, an abomination, but no one had asked if it hurt. "Yes," I admitted quietly. "It's like being invisible while everyone can see you. Like being told you don't matter by the universe itself." Mira nodded slowly. "My Script tells me I'll kill someone I love when I'm seventeen. It's already written. I'll betray them, murder them, and there's nothing I can do to change it because that's my destiny." She met my eyes. "So maybe having no Script isn't the worst thing. At least you're not forced to do something terrible." We sat in silence for a while, two children burdened by fate in opposite ways. "Maybe we're both cursed," I said finally. "Maybe," she agreed. "But at least we're honest about it." That evening, as the caravan settled for the night, I overheard the guards talking. "That boy with the blacksmith," one muttered. "Something's wrong with him. Gives me the chills." "An Error," another confirmed. "I can feel it. No Scriptlines at all. Like looking at a hole in reality." "We should tell the captain. Errors attract Scriptbeasts and corrupted fate. He's dangerous to have around." My father must have heard them too because he woke me in the middle of the night. "We're leaving," he whispered. "Quietly. Get your things." We slipped away from the sleeping caravan like thieves, abandoning the protection we'd barely begun to enjoy. My father moved quickly through the dark forest, and I struggled to keep up, branches catching my clothes and roots threatening to trip me with every step. "Why did we run?" I asked when we finally stopped to rest. "Because I know what happens when people start talking about Errors being dangerous," he said grimly. "They convince themselves that killing you is the righteous thing to do. I won't let that happen." We traveled alone after that, avoiding other people entirely. The Whispering Woods grew darker and stranger the deeper we went. Trees twisted into unnatural shapes. Mist clung to the ground even at midday. Twice we heard screams in the distance and hid until they faded. On the seventh day, we finally emerged from the forest and saw our destination. Ashenvale, the frontier settlement that would become our new home, sprawled across a rocky hillside like a wound in the landscape. Rough wooden buildings huddled behind a palisade wall that looked barely capable of stopping a determined goat, let alone the monsters that prowled these lands. Smoke rose from dozens of chimneys, and even from a distance, I could hear the sounds of hammers, shouts, and something that might have been music or might have been fighting. "It's not much," my father said. "But it's a start." We walked down the hill toward Ashenvale, toward whatever future waited for a blacksmith and his cursed son in a place where destiny's rules held less power. I didn't know it then, but this would be where everything changed. Where I would meet the boy who would become the Hero. Where I would train, grow stronger, and dare to hope that maybe, just maybe, I could earn my place in a world that had no place written for me. Where I would plant the seeds of my own destruction. Behind us, the Whispering Woods rustled with wind or whispers or perhaps the laughter of gods who already knew how my story would end.Latest Chapter
Chapter 31: The Church's Return
Commander Thane arrived at the Academy six weeks into the term, bringing news of another corruption outbreak requiring my deployment.I was summoned to Headmaster Valen's office to receive a briefing, Aldric insisting on accompanying me despite this being Church business rather than Academy matter. The office was impressive, walls lined with portraits of legendary heroes who'd graduated from the Academy, their Scripts manifesting as subtle glows around painted figures.Thane stood beside the Headmaster's desk, his expression carrying the clinical focus I'd learned to associate with deployment orders. "Error. Good. We have a situation that requires immediate response.""What kind of situation?" I asked, the void already anticipating what came next."Corruption outbreak in the eastern mining districts. Not as extensive as Millbrook but concentrated in a small area, approximately twelve confirmed cases of Script inversion. Standard containment isn't working, and the corruption is spreadi
Chapter 30: The Breaking Point
Sera's training session proved more revealing than I'd anticipated, though not in ways she intended. We met in a private practice ring at dusk, when most students were at dinner and observation would be minimal. She arrived wearing combat practice gear, her Unbreakable Will Script marks glowing faintly on her arms, radiating the kind of confidence that came from knowing destiny favored you absolutely. "I expect professional instruction," she said immediately, not bothering with pleasantries. "No holding back because I'm nobility or female or Script blessed. If I'm paying for your time with official requisition, I expect full value." "You'll get exactly what you need, which isn't necessarily what you want." I selected practice weapons, tossing her a standard blade. "Your problem is that Unbreakable Will makes you rigid. You believe your destiny means you can't be broken, so you don't learn to bend. When someone applies enough pressure in unexpected ways, you shatter instead of flexin
Chapter 29: The Forbidden Partnership
News of my sparring effectiveness spread through the first year class over the following weeks, bringing steady requests from students struggling with their Script development.Garrett returned regularly, his Rising Flame Script finally manifesting properly after learning to trust instinct over overthinking. Others followed, students whose destinies required combat competence but whose natural abilities lagged behind Script promises. I worked with them methodically, identifying problems, providing unconventional opposition, helping them develop techniques their Script enhanced instructors couldn't teach.The irony wasn't lost on me. The Error with no destiny was helping the blessed develop theirs, the void assisting fate itself became stronger. But each session also let me study Scripts up close, understand their patterns and structures, feeding knowledge to the hunger growing inside me.I was careful never to pull at their Scripts, never to let the void reach out during sparring sess
Chapter 28: The Consumption Experiment
The knowledge from Scholar Davos's journal consumed my thoughts for days after discovering it, the void humming with possibilities I'd never considered before.I could absorb corruption because corruption was broken destiny, inverted Scripts that had nowhere else to go. But what about intact Scripts? What about the pure fate energy radiating from every blessed student walking through the Academy? Could I pull that in too, consume destinies themselves rather than just their corrupted remnants?The hunger grew stronger daily, the void stretching toward Script bearers with intensity I struggled to suppress. During combat practice, during weapons maintenance, during sparring sessions, I felt it reaching toward the fate energy surrounding me, wanting to test whether Elara's techniques could be replicated.I needed to experiment, but carefully, secretly, in ways that wouldn't immediately alert Professor Thrain or other security focused faculty. The Academy's Script bearers were too valuable
Chapter 27: The Library's Secret
A month into the Academy term, I discovered the restricted section of the library entirely by accident.I'd been sent to retrieve a reference manual Professor Marcus needed for his advanced combat theory class, one of the few errands that took me into academic spaces normally forbidden to attached personnel. The library was massive, five stories of books and scrolls and ancient texts preserved through Script enhanced methods. Students filled the reading areas, studying their destinies and the heroes who'd fulfilled theirs before.I found the manual quickly but took a wrong turn returning, ending up in a hallway I didn't recognize. The architecture changed here, older stone instead of newer construction, dim lighting suggesting these sections saw little traffic. Curiosity, one of the few emotions the void hadn't completely consumed, pulled me deeper.At the hallway's end stood a door marked with Script wards and a sign reading "Restricted Section, Faculty Authorization Required." The w
Chapter 26: The Night-time Visitor
Three weeks into the Academy term, Mira appeared at my window in the dead of night.I woke to the soft scraping of her knife against the lock, a sound so quiet anyone without my constant void enhanced awareness would have missed it completely. She slipped through the window like shadow made flesh, her Script of Silent Blade developing rapidly, turning her into the assassin destiny demanded she become."You shouldn't be here," I said without sitting up, voice flat in the darkness. "If you're caught in attached personnel quarters after hours, you'll face disciplinary action.""Good thing I won't be caught then." She sat on the edge of my narrow bed, close enough that I could see her face in the moonlight streaming through the window. "I came to see if there's anything left of you worth saving, or if the void finally won completely.""The void won the moment I absorbed corruption from forty seven people at Millbrook. This is just delayed recognition of that victory." I sat up, studying h
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