
Kael Draven Estaran sat in a wine shop in his village. The shop had old wooden beams and shelves with bottles. It smelled like wine and wood. An old man named Fred, called Sir Fred by locals, cleaned a glass behind the counter. He had scars from his time in the military.
“Your dad doesn’t want you to join the Shadow Corps,” Fred said, looking at Kael, a tall handsome young man with short brown hair and blue eyes. Kael frowned. “I’m old enough to decide what I want.” he said. Fred put the glass on a rack and turned to Kael. “You can make your own choices. But the Shadow Corps is strange. I was in the military for years and don’t know much about them. They protect the royal family, that’s all.” Kael shrugged. “Protecting the royals doesn’t sound hard.” Fred shook his head. “The royals deal with dangerous things. You might have to die to protect them. Your dad wouldn’t want that, not after losing your mom.” Kael went quiet. His mom died when he was young. His dad, a blacksmith, used to make weapons for village guards and visitors. After her death, he stopped making weapons and stayed home, keeping to himself. Kael thought about how his dad had changed. Fred put a hand on Kael’s shoulder. “Just think about it.” he said, then went back to cleaning glasses. The shop was small, lit by lanterns. The shelves had bottles of different sizes and colors. Kael liked the place and had been coming here for years. The wooden floor creaked when he walked, and the counter was worn from use. The lanterns made shadows on the walls. As the night went on, the last customers left the shop. Kael started helping Fred close up. He picked up empty glasses from tables and wiped them down with a cloth. Fred counted money at the counter and locked the cash box. It was quiet outside, with only crickets making noise. Kael went to the windows and closed them, pulling curtains over them. Fred stacked bottles behind the counter. They worked without talking much, used to the routine. Kael finished closing the windows and walked back to the counter. Fred was putting away the last bottle. “All done, Sir Fred,” Kael said. “Good job,” Fred said, nodding. “Let’s lock up and go. It’s late.” As Fred started turning off the lanterns, the door opened with a loud bang. A group of men walked in. They wore dirty clothes and carried old weapons like knives and clubs. Their leader pointed a knife at Fred. “Give us the money,” he said. Kael stepped in front of Fred. His heart was pounding like a drum against his chest, but he kept his voice steady. The warm glow of the last lantern cast long, flickering shadows on the wooden floor as he reached out and seized the broomstick leaning beside the counter. His knuckles whitened around the handle. “We’re not giving you anything,” he said coldly, meeting the leader’s eyes without flinching. The man gave a barking laugh, teeth yellow in the lamplight. “Brave words for someone holding a stick.” Then, without warning, he lunged. Steel flashed through the air. Kael reacted instinctively, lifting the broomstick just in time. The blade scraped against the wood with a high-pitched screech, and he twisted his arms, knocking the knife clean out of the man’s grip. It clattered onto the floor, spinning to a halt near Fred’s feet. The man staggered back, clutching his wrist and snarling in pain. “You little—!” Before he could finish, another thug let out a yell and charged at Kael from the side. His boots thudded heavily against the floorboards. Kael spun, ducked low, and swept the broomstick hard at the man’s shins. The blow landed with a sickening thud. The attacker cried out as his legs gave way beneath him, sending him crashing headfirst into a table. The wood cracked on impact, and the man crumpled to the floor, groaning. Fred, wide-eyed but not frozen, snatched up a half-empty bottle from the counter. As a third thug lunged towards him, Fred swung the bottle with both hands. Glass shattered against the side of the man’s head, and he dropped like a sack of potatoes, blood trickling from his scalp as he rolled onto his back, dazed and whimpering. Two men remained, both now hesitating—uncertain, glancing at their fallen comrades. One, larger and breathing heavily, let out a grunt and charged at Kael with a roar, club raised. Kael moved fast. He jabbed the broomstick into the man’s stomach, making him double over with a loud wheeze. Without hesitating, Kael brought his knee up, then slammed his foot into the man’s lowered face. The thug dropped to the ground, eyes rolling back. The final man took one glance at the chaos—his leader clutching a broken wrist, two groaning bodies on the floor, and Kael still standing tall—and bolted for the door. “Oi!” Kael shouted, and in one smooth motion, he hurled the broomstick. It struck the fleeing man across the calves. The thug tripped, sprawling flat on his face with a grunt. Kael dashed after him, leapt forward, and landed a clean punch across the man’s jaw. The thug’s head snapped sideways and hit the floor with a dull thud. He lay still. The shop was quiet again. Kael was breathing hard. Fred looked at him. “You did good,” he said. “Let’s tie them up and call the guards.” They dragged the men to the back of the shop and tied them with rope. Kael felt okay about stopping the robbers. “See, I can handle myself,” he said to Fred. “My dad doesn’t need to worry.” Fred shook his head. “You’re strong, Kael. I taught you how to fight. But the Shadow Corps is different. It’s dangerous.” Kael didn’t agree. “The choosing ceremony is tomorrow. I’m going to sign up. If I get in, no one will tell me what to do. If I don’t, I’ll listen to you and my dad.” Fred looked at Kael for a long time. “It’s not my place to decide,” he said. “If your dad says it’s okay, I’ll take you to the city for the ceremony.” Kael smiled and nodded, his thoughts already racing ahead to the conversation he’d soon have with his father. He could almost see himself standing among the ranks of the Shadow Corps, a dream finally realized. “Thanks, Fred. I’ll talk to him tonight. He’ll understand.” "Let's get out of here, lad," Fred said, glancing at the overturned tables and scattered debris left behind by the bandits. "It’s been a long night, and tomorrow’s going to be even longer.”Latest Chapter
Epilogue
The cabin’s hearth crackled warmly, the scent of pine and wood smoke filling the small, sturdy room. Outside, snow blanketed the rolling hills, glittering under the afternoon sun, but inside, the air was alive with laughter, voices, and the quiet comfort of family. Years had passed since the war, since the Rift had been calmed, since Veridale had been rebuilt. The scars of battle remained in memory alone; the world outside was safe, thriving, alive.Kael sat at the head of the long wooden table, Reyna beside him, their four children bouncing with boundless energy, chattering over cups of hot cider. Their eldest, a boy with Kael’s dark eyes, attempted to wield a wooden sword, while the youngest girl laughed as she tried to mimic Reyna’s graceful movements with a tiny bow. Kael’s heart swelled in a way it never had during the chaos of war—here, among his family, the future felt tangible and bright.Uncle Fred, grinning, poured another cup of cider for Liam, who now ruled Storm
Chapter 126
Kael stood atop the steps of the Great Hall, his cloak catching the breeze, the Rift’s energy quiet now, simmering beneath his skin like a coiled serpent. The battlefield behind him was cleared, the corpses of Thorian, Elric, and Velreth gone, their armies either defeated or dispersed, broken in body and spirit. And the citizens, once cowering in fear, began emerging from the shadows, eyes wide with disbelief, hope slowly replacing terror.Reyna moved beside him, her hand brushing his arm, grounding him as she had so many times before. “It’s real,” she murmured. “We survived.”Kael’s jaw tightened. “Yes… but at a cost.” His gaze drifted over the square, the faces of those who had fought and bled with them, and the empty spaces where the fallen should have stood. Ember, bruised and bandaged, carried herself with quiet dignity, mourning her losses silently. Liam knelt beside the small memorial they had erected at the edge of the courtyard, placing a hand on the stone they had
Chapter 125
The moment Queen Lauren collapsed into Kael’s arms, the battlefield shifted. It wasn’t the sounds—the screams, the clash of steel, or the pulse of Rift storms ripping the air apart—that changed first. It was the atmosphere. A pressure. A pull. A force so ancient and venomous it made even the blood-soaked wind hesitate.Thorian had arrived.And with him… Elric.Kael lifted his head as a ripple of distortion split the sky in two. Lightning—red and sick with temporal corrosion—forked downward, slamming into the ground with a thunderous crack that threw soldiers and corpses alike into the air.From the crater emerged Thorian.His armour was a grotesque fusion of flesh and metal, fused with forbidden runes, pulsing as though alive. His eyes were nothing but voids—black pits drinking in the Rift’s light. Behind him, a tide of soldiers poured out of shimmering portals, twisted by his unnatural experiments.And then came Elric.The King stepped forward with calm
Chapter 124
Smoke and fire streaked the morning sky, and temporal rifts cracked across the battlefield, bending reality in chaotic pulses. Every soldier, loyalist or traitor, moved through distorted time, their steps unpredictable, their strikes doubled in speed or delayed in deadly hesitation.Kael stood on the shattered parapet of the central tower, sword in hand, the Rift pulsing violently beneath his skin. Ember flanked him, glaive raised, eyes burning with unyielding fury. Liam, Reyna, and Jared moved strategically among the troops, protecting civilians and striking down enemy forces wherever they could.“Stormhaven’s forces are splitting!” Liam shouted, dodging a rift-distorted volley of arrows. “They’re trying to flank us from the east!”Kael’s eyes narrowed. “Then we give them what they didn’t expect. Draw them into chaos—split them further.” His voice was steady, cold, and commanding, cutting through the roar of battle.The first wave of Thorian’s soldiers crashed again
Chapter 123
The battlefield around Dawnreach was a fractured chaos of smoke, fire, and the hum of the Rift. Kael’s forces clashed with Thorian’s soldiers, the ground trembling with every strike, every collapse of shattered stone. Ember moved like a living storm, cutting through enemy ranks despite her lingering wound. Liam coordinated flanking maneuvers with surgical precision, while Kyna darted from one skirmish to another, her spear and instincts saving countless lives.Amid the chaos, Kael’s focus was razor-sharp, every movement guided by the pulse of the Rift. Sweat stung his eyes, the metallic scent of blood heavy in his lungs. He moved with precision, a whirlwind of steel and energy, carving a path through the enemy while his thoughts remained tethered to the names etched in Archon’s journals.A distant sound—a high, resonant hum—caught his attention. The air shivered as if vibrating with invisible weight. Kael froze mid-strike. Reyna’s voice came sharp in his mind: “Kael… that’s
Chapter 122
Kael’s forces regrouped, panting and bloodied, but alive. Ember leaned against a crumbling wall, the sweat and ash streaking her face, her hands still trembling from the raw exertion of the northern assault. Kyna tended to the wounded, her own injuries barely acknowledged, while Liam coordinated reinforcements from the shadows. Reyna stayed close to Kael, her presence a steady anchor amidst the chaos.The Rift pulsed faintly under Kael’s skin, sensing tension, danger, and opportunity. Every step he took across the battlefield felt like a calculated gamble, every glance scanning for Thorian or any sign of Elric’s manipulation.A horn sounded from the horizon—deep, commanding, unmistakable. Thorian’s banner rose against the burning sky, his warship cutting through the remnants of smoke like a knife through silk.Kael straightened, jaw tight. “He’s here,” he murmured. “And he’s not alone.”Reyna’s hand found his, squeezing. “He wants something,” she said. “A negotiation
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