
The Carson mansion looked beautiful from the outside—white stone walls, tall windows, a driveway filled with expensive cars—but Leon knew better than anyone that a pretty shell could hide the ugliest rot.
He stood at the kitchen counter, sleeves rolled up, washing a mountain of plates even though it wasn’t his turn. It was never his turn, but somehow the responsibility always landed on him.
“Leon, hurry up!” Olivia Carson’s sharp voice echoed from the living room. “The guests will be here in ten minutes. Don’t embarrass our family like usual.”
Leon bit the inside of his cheek. He wasn’t part of their family, not really. Just a son-in-law they looked down on. A stray picked up off the street, according to Olivia.
“Yes, Mother,” he answered calmly.
“I told you not to call me that,” Olivia snapped. “My daughter might have married you, but you haven’t earned the right to call me anything but Mrs. Carson.”
Leon didn’t respond. He just rinsed another plate. Silence was easier—it kept him from saying something he’d regret.
Footsteps clicked behind him, slow and purposeful. Then came the familiar, disdainful exhale.
“Still not done? Pathetic.”
It was Derek Carson, the eldest son. Tall, smug, wearing a designer suit that probably cost more than Leon could earn in a month—if they ever let him work.
Derek leaned against the doorway like he owned the world. “Try not to embarrass Sophia today. She already suffers enough being married to you.”
Leon didn’t rise to the bait. Not today.
Derek’s smirk grew. “Look at you, washing dishes while the rest of us prepare for our business partners. If anyone sees you, they’ll think you’re the help.”
Leon finally turned, water dripping from his hands. “Then maybe you should let me get back to work.”
Derek’s brows lifted, offended. Before he could spit out another comment, a soft voice cut through the tension.
“Derek, leave him alone.”
Sophia stood at the hallway entrance, arms folded. She wore a simple light-blue dress, her hair tied up in a neat bun. She wasn’t dressed up for the guests yet, but she still looked effortlessly elegant.
Derek scoffed. “I’m just reminding him of his place.”
“His place is my husband,” she said firmly.
Leon’s chest tightened, but he didn’t look at her. If he did, he’d see the disappointment she tried so hard to hide.
Derek rolled his eyes and walked off. “Whatever. Just make sure he doesn’t ruin tonight.”
Sophia stepped into the kitchen and moved beside Leon, handing him a clean towel.
“You’re doing extra again,” she murmured. “You didn’t have to.”
“They asked,” Leon said.
“They demanded,” she corrected gently. “You’re not a servant, Leon.”
He gave a noncommittal shrug. “Doesn’t matter.”
Sophia looked at him for a moment, her gaze softening with something he couldn’t read. Pity? Worry? Regret?
Before she could speak again, Olivia’s shrill voice cut through the air once more. “Leon! Sophia! Get out here. People are arriving soon!”
Sophia exhaled, handed him the towel, then left the kitchen. Leon followed a moment later, wiping his hands.
The Carson living room was overflowing with lavish decorations—crystal vases, fresh flowers, gold-rimmed glasses. It looked like a magazine spread. The Carson family spared no expense when it came to showcasing their wealth. It gave them purpose, status, power.
All things Leon supposedly lacked.
Olivia looked him over with a disapproving eye. “Your shirt is wrinkled.”
“It’s the only one I have,” Leon said quietly.
“Excuses,” she muttered. “Stand in the back. Don’t speak unless spoken to. And don’t tell anyone you’re married to Sophia. They’ll think she’s lost her mind.”
Leon’s jaw tightened, but he nodded. It wasn’t worth fighting.
Sophia, standing beside her brother, shot her mother a glare. “Mom, stop. He’s not a child.”
“He’s worse,” Olivia snapped. “At least children have potential.”
Leon pretended not to hear. He stepped back, as ordered.
The doorbell rang.
Everyone straightened immediately. Derek ran his hand through his hair. Olivia plastered on a polite smile. Even Sophia’s posture shifted, becoming more formal.
A group of well-dressed businessmen walked in, followed by a sleek-looking couple. Laughter filled the room instantly as handshakes and greetings were exchanged.
Leon stayed in the corner like a shadow.
A man in a gray suit nudged another and whispered loudly, “Who’s that guy? The driver?”
Olivia laughed too quickly. “Something like that.”
Leon swallowed hard. He’d gotten used to it, but Sophia hadn’t. She shot him a quick look—half apology, half helplessness.
The businessmen moved to the dining area as the Carson family entertained them with drinks and empty flattery. Leon made himself small, waiting for instructions.
Eventually, Olivia waved him over. “Leon, go fetch more wine.”
“Yes, Mrs. Carson.”
He moved toward the kitchen when a hand grabbed his arm. Sophia.
She glanced over her shoulder to make sure no one was watching. “Are you okay?”
He forced a small smile. “I’m fine.”
“You shouldn’t let them walk all over you.”
He shrugged. “It’s temporary.”
Sophia frowned. “Temporary until when?”
Leon didn’t answer.
She reached out, fingers brushing his arm in quiet apology. “I’m sorry. For all of this. For them.”
Leon shook his head. “It’s not your fault.”
Before she could reply, Derek’s loud voice echoed through the hall. “Sophia! Our guests are waiting.”
She pulled back instantly, walls rising around her again. She stepped away, leaving Leon with the ghost of her touch lingering on his skin.
He grabbed the wine bottles and returned to the dining room. As he poured glasses, he felt the businessmen’s eyes on him.
“Your servant’s clumsy,” one of them chuckled when Leon’s hand shook slightly.
“He’s not a servant,” Sophia blurted out before anyone could stop her. “He’s—”
Olivia cut her off quickly. “He helps around the house. That’s all.”
Leon lowered his gaze. Sophia clenched her jaw, clearly frustrated, but she said nothing further.
Dinner went on with loud conversation about money, investments, and connections—things Leon had no place in. He slipped away after serving the final dish, retreating to the porch for air.
The sky was dark now, stars peeking through clouds. The quiet felt like a blanket after the noise inside. Leon leaned against the railing, finally letting his expression fall.
He hated feeling powerless. He hated watching Sophia defend him only to be silenced. He hated being treated like garbage by people who had no idea who he really was.
But most of all, he hated that he’d let it go on this long.
He closed his eyes, taking a deep breath.
A moment later, footsteps approached.
He expected Sophia, maybe coming to check on him again.
But a voice he didn’t recognize spoke.
“Leon Hale?”
He turned sharply.
A man in a dark coat stood at the gate, half-hidden in the shadows. His expression was unreadable, but his posture was stiff and tense, like someone carrying a secret too heavy to hold any longer.
Leon straightened. “Who are you?”
The man stepped forward, lowering his head respectfully.
“My name is Adrian Holt,” he said quietly. “I’ve been searching for you for years.”
Leon froze.
The man swallowed hard, eyes glinting with something close to fear—or reverence.
“You need to come with me, sir. Immediately.”
Leon frowned. “Why would I—”
Adrian’s next words hit him like a bolt of thunder.
“Because the War God’s Heir has been found… and it’s you.”
Leon’s breath caught.
Behind him, the door creaked open—and someone from the Carson family stepped outside, hearing just enough to change everything.
Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 7 – Leon Breaks Through
The shredded steel door screeched open as Leon forced his way through, his fingers dripping blood, knuckles torn raw. The metal curled around his arm like ripped paper, bending under strength no ordinary man should possess.Sophia froze, breath locked in her chest.Leon stepped inside the vault—slowly, steady, eyes wild with exhaustion yet sharp with awareness. Sweat dripped from his jaw. Blood—some his, some not—streaked across his temple. His shirt was ripped open at the shoulder, revealing deep gashes that were still bleeding.But he was standing.Alive.And furious.Adrian exhaled like he’d been holding his breath for years. “Holy hell… he did it.”Leon’s eyes were fixed on one person only.“Sophia,” he rasped, voice low and strained. “Step back.”His tone wasn’t weak. It was command. It was warning. It was the last thread of control he had.Sophia’s knees nearly buckled. “Leon… you’re bleeding—”“Step. Back.” His voice cracked, pained but sharp.She obeyed, stumbling behind a cra
CHAPTER 6 – The Thing Wearing Leon’s Jacket
Dust still swirled through the vault as the creature crouched in the center of the floor, its breath raspy and animalistic. Sophia stumbled backward until her shoulders hit a crate.“No… no, no, no…” she whispered. “That’s… that’s not Leon… That can’t be Leon…”Adrian stepped in front of her, gun already drawn, arms steady. “Stay behind me.”The creature lifted its head slowly.Its face was half-hidden beneath matted hair and streaks of dried blood. Its eyes—unfocused, feral—didn’t belong to any human. They glinted strangely in the flickering vault lights, pupils blown wide, tracking every movement like prey.It sniffed the air once.Then twice.A low, rattled growl escaped its throat.Sophia’s trembling hand flew up to her mouth. The jacket on the creature—the one Leon had been wearing earlier—hung loose around its twisted frame, smeared in what looked like blood and dirt.“Leon’s jacket… oh my god… Adrian, what—what did they do to him?” Sophia gasped.“That’s not him,” Adrian said s
CHAPTER 5 – The Man Outside
The vault was pitch-black the moment the heavy steel door slammed shut.Sophia’s scream echoed in the darkness long after her voice gave out.“Leon!” She pounded on the metal with both fists. “Leon! Open it! Leon!”But the vault didn’t respond. It was meant to keep entire armies out. Her hands might as well have been feathers.Adrian grabbed her wrists gently. “Stop. You’ll hurt yourself.”“I don’t care!” she sobbed. “He’s out there! He’s with that man— that thing— and you’re telling me to stop?!”Adrian stayed silent, breathing hard in the darkness.Sophia gasped between shallow breaths, trying not to fall apart. “Why did he tell us to close the door? Why would he stay out there alone? He doesn’t even have a weapon!”Adrian exhaled slowly. “Leon doesn’t stay unarmed.”“What does that even mean?”The vault hummed around them, a low buzzing from the ancient generators. A faint glow finally flickered above, weak lights struggling to warm the cold interior. Shadows stretched across the w
CHAPTER 4 – The Vault Intruders
The forest was so quiet Leon could hear the buzz of the vault’s old electricity humming behind him. The men who stepped out from the trees didn’t rush. They didn’t speak loudly. They moved with the calm confidence of people who killed for a living.Adrian’s hand slid toward his jacket, and Sophia instinctively moved behind Leon, gripping his sleeve so tightly her fingers trembled.The tallest intruder smirked. “Finally found you, Hale.”Leon didn’t flinch. “Who sent you?”“Oh, come on.” The man spread his arms as if greeting an old friend. “As if you don’t know how many people want your head.”Adrian stepped forward a little. “If you want to breathe for another ten seconds,” he said coldly, “start giving real answers.”Sophia tugged Leon’s sleeve. “Leon… who are they?”Leon didn’t answer. His eyes hadn’t left the men for even a second.The intruder glanced at Sophia with a slow, amused smile. “So this must be the wife. The Carsons really let you marry her? Surprising, considering—”Le
CHAPTER 3 – The Vault That Should Never Be Opened
For a moment, no one breathed.Not Leon.Not Sophia.Not Adrian.Not even Olivia, whose trembling hands clutched the doorframe as though the house itself might give way.Leon’s voice finally broke through the suffocating silence.“Say that again,” he said quietly.Adrian swallowed, phone still vibrating in his palm. “Your father’s vault. They found it. And—sir, they opened it.”Leon’s jaw tightened. A slow, cold heat spread through his chest, something dangerous, something old. He took a step toward Adrian.“How?” Leon asked. “The vault was sealed. Only—”“Only you could open it,” Adrian finished, voice strained. “I know. That’s why this doesn’t make sense.”Sophia looked between them, eyes wide. “What vault? What are you talking about?”Leon didn’t answer. He couldn’t—not until he understood what was happening. He turned back to Adrian.“Who opened it?” Leon demanded.Adrian shook his head. “Unknown. The message came from someone inside the old division. Whoever found the vault didn’
CHAPTER 2 – The Stranger Who Knows Leon’s Name
The silence between Leon and the mysterious man stretched, heavy enough to choke.Leon stared at him, unsure if he’d heard correctly. The War God’s Heir? It sounded ridiculous—like something from a movie. But the man’s eyes were dead serious.Before Leon could respond, footsteps scraped the porch behind him.Derek leaned halfway out the door. “What the hell is taking you so long—” He stopped, eyes bouncing between Leon and the stranger. “Who’s this?”Leon didn’t answer immediately. Adrian Holt stepped forward, posture stiff but respectful.“I’m here for him,” Adrian said calmly. “This is urgent.”Derek snorted. “For him? Why? You selling something? We don’t need whatever trash you’re peddling.”Adrian’s eyes shifted, sharp as a blade. “I’m not speaking to you.”Derek stepped toward him, puffing his chest like a guard dog. “This is my house. You don’t get to—”Leon lifted a hand. “Derek, go inside.”“What?” Derek blinked, thrown off by Leon’s tone. “Who do you think you’re talking to?”
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