
The sun beat down on the town square, but it didn't feel warm. To Kaelen, the light felt like a spotlight on his failures. He stood at the very back of the line, his shoulders hunched, trying to make himself small. His shirt was filled with lots of patches and thin threads.
A heavy hand slammed into his shoulder, sending a jolt of pain through his thin frame. "Move back, scum," the guard growled. The man’s armor was polished so bright it hurt to look at. "The elite families are coming through. Clear the path for people who actually matter." Kaelen stumbled back into the sand. He didn't argue. He had learned long ago that his voice carried no weight in a place like this. He simply watched as the noble children marched past, their robes heavy with beautiful, well Crafted silk and gold, their faces clean and full of a future he couldn't imagine. At the center of the square sat the Mana Ball. It was a clear, haunting sphere that seemed to breathe with a light of its own. It was the judge, the jury, and the executioner of every soul in the Empire. When Caspian Vance stepped onto the stage, the air seemed to go still. Caspian didn't walk; he swaggered. When he pressed his palm to the glass, the sphere shined brightly than anyone's own. A golden roar erupted, shaking the ground beneath Kaelen’s feet. From the light stepped a lion made of living flame, its mane flickering like a forge. "S-Rank!" the announcer’s voice cracked. "A Golden Lion!" The crowd went into a frenzy, a sea of cheering faces. Caspian looked down from the stage, his eyes scanning the crowd until they landed on Kaelen. A slow, cruel smile spread across his face. He hopped down, the golden beast trailing behind him, following its master. Caspian stopped inches from Kaelen. He looked at Kaelen’s worn boots, then slowly kicked a pile of dirt over them. "Look at that," Caspian sneered, his voice loud enough for everyone to hear. "The dirt finally found its home. Why are you even here, Kaelen? You’re wasting the air of your betters." "I have a right to be here," Kaelen whispered, though his heart was racing. Caspian leaned in, his breath smelling of expensive wine. "You have the right to rot. Stay in the gutter, scumbag. It’s where you fit." He pushed past Kaelen, his friends laughing as they followed. Kaelen stood there, the dust settling on his skin, feeling the heavy lump of shame in his throat. By the time Kaelen reached the ball, the sun was going down. "Next," the announcer said, not even looking up. Kaelen placed his hand on the cold glass. He closed his eyes, thinking of the empty pantry at home, and the way his stomach cramped from hunger. He begged the ball for a miracle. A faint, pathetic grey light flickered inside the sphere. "Rank E," the announcer muttered with a long sigh. "Scumbag status. Move along." The laughter that followed was loud and humiliating. Kaelen pulled his hand away as if the glass had burned him. As he walked down the steps, a small sound caught his ear. In the "reject" stalls, where the broken and weak beasts were kept, a tiny shadow-cat with wet fur sat shivering. Kaelen felt a pang in his chest. He walked over and touched the bars. The creature looked up with wide, lonely eyes and licked his finger. Its tongue was rough, but its touch was the first kind thing Kaelen had felt all day. "I'll take him," Kaelen said to the guard. "Take the trash," the guard laughed, tossing him a frayed rope. "Matches your rank perfectly." Kaelen led the small beast through the market. He found Mila waiting by a fountain. She looked like a dream in the middle of his nightmare, her hair soft in the twilight. "Kaelen!" she breathed, reaching for him. She looked at the small beast, then at the look in his eyes. She didn't have to ask. Kaelen leaned down and pecks her on the cheek. His lips lingered for a second, drawing strength from her scent. "I'm going to change this, Mila. I'm going to get us out of this dirt. I promise." "I just want you safe," she whispered, her eyes shining with unshed tears. "Please, don't do anything reckless." "I'll be fine," he lied. He walked home to the shack he shared with his parents. The air inside was thick with a foul dcent. His father didn't look up from his cup. "E-Rank," his mother spat, her voice like a knife. "Another mouth to feed and nothing to show for it. You’re a curse on this house." Kaelen ignored her. He walked to the corner where his sister, Elara, lay. She was curled under a thin blanket, her breathing was normal but she looked so small, so fragile, as if a strong wind might carry her away. "Kaelen?" she coughed, her hand trembling as she reached for him. "I'm here, Elara," he said, sitting on the floor and pulling her hand to his chest. It felt like holding a bundle of dry sticks. "Did you get a big beast?" she asked, her voice a tiny thread of sound. "The biggest," Kaelen said, his voice thick with a lie. He nudged the shadow-cat toward her. "He’s a special one. He’s going to help me get you the medicine you need. You just have to wait for me, okay? Just a little longer." "Come back," she whispered, her eyes fluttering shut. "Please... just come back." Kaelen stood up, his face hardening into a mask. He couldn't stay here and watch her fade away. He walked to the Hunter’s Guild, his E-Rank badge feeling like a heavy against his chest. The man behind the desk didn't even look at him. "E-Rank? We have a pest control job in the East Woods. Rats and slimes. Twenty gold pieces. Take it or starve." "I'll take it," Kaelen said. Kaelen sighed, another peanut. He walked into the woods as the moon rose. He found the entrance to the dungeon, a stone archway carved into the side of a hill. Usually, a Level E dungeon glowed with a soft, peaceful blue. But as Kaelen approached, his blood ran cold. The portal was a shining red, something different from what he has ever seen. "Something's wrong," he whispered. The shadow-cat at his feet let out a low, shaky howl and tried to pull away. But Kaelen thought of Elara’s pale face and Mila’s promise. He took a deep breath and stepped into the red light. The moment he crossed the threshold, a massive slam echoed through the woods. The doors crashed shut, sealing him inside. The air in the tunnel was freezing. From the darkness ahead, a massive shape uncoiled. It stood over ten feet tall, the creature had it's bone poking out and rotting muscle. It held a large axe. It was an A-Rank Bone Crusher. Kaelen’s heart hammered against his ribs. He looked at the monster, then at his own empty hands. He had been sent here to die. The demon let out a roar that vibrated in Kaelen's marrow. It stepped forward, the ground cracking under its weight, its red eyes locked on the scumbag who dared to enter its den. Kaelen backed up until his spine hit the cold, the door. He was trapped in a tomb and the only thing he could do was tremble in fear.Latest Chapter
The S-Rank Gatekeeper
The silence after the battle felt heavier than the fighting itself. Cold water rippled around dozens of broken bodies. Blood floated in thin crimson streams across the knee-deep water. The first sector had become a graveyard. Thirty elite Goons. Defeated and crushed. Left floating among the ruins of their failed ambush. Kaelen stood motionless in the center of the destruction. His breathing remained steady. His iron sword dripped blood. The Void remained absent. Lyra cleaned her silver daggers against a fallen guard's cloak. She tried not to stare at Kaelen. But it was difficult. "Are you injured?" she asked quietly. Kaelen glanced down at a shallow cut along his forearm. Nothing serious. Nothing worth mentioning. "No." Lyra sighed. Of course. The answer would always be the same. No matter how much blood covered him. No matter how many bones cracked. No matter how exhausted he became. The answer was always no. Kaelen stepped over a floating body and continued fo
Raw Flesh and Iron
The deeper they descended, the more the Sunken Vault revealed its true nature. Everywhere Kaelen looked, he saw signs of suffering. Old shackles bolted into walls. Iron cages left abandoned in alcoves. Faded scratch marks carved into stone. People had died here. A lot of people. Purple light from the Void-Nullifying Stones cast everything in a sickly glow. Kaelen could still feel their effect. The emptiness inside his chest remained. Only silence. A silence he was slowly growing accustomed to. Ahead of him, the tunnel widened. The first major level of the Vault. The flooded prison district. Cold water stretched across the entire chamber. It reached nearly to their knees. Every step produced loud splashes. Every movement felt heavier and slower. The ceiling arched nearly thirty feet overhead. Broken bridges crossed sections of the flooded chamber. Ancient prison doors lined both sides. Most hung open. Some remained shut. Many had rusted away entirely. Lyra carefully scanned the d
The March to the Vault
Dawn arrived without warmth. Dark clouds smothered the sky above the capital. Cold rain hammered rooftops and stone streets. Thunder rolled somewhere beyond the distant mountains. The entire city seemed wrapped in grey. A fitting morning for what awaited below. Kaelen and Lyra moved through the abandoned outskirts of the old district in silence. This part of the city had been forgotten long ago. Ancient buildings leaned against each other. Broken statues stared blankly through curtains of rain. Weeds pushed through cracked stone roads. Yet beneath those ruins, something dangerous was hidden. The Sunken Vault. Neither spoke as they crossed the final street. The rain soaked their cloaks. Water dripped from Lyra's silver hair. Kaelen walked ahead with steady steps. His mask concealed his face. His iron sword rested across his back. Several knives remained hidden beneath his cloak. Eventually the ancient entrance appeared. It was enormous. Two massive iron gates stoo
The Preparation Night
The capital never truly slept. Even beneath the streets, far below the noble districts and military patrols, the city remained alive. The sound traveled through stone. Distant carriage wheels. Faraway bells. The muffled pulse of countless lives moving overhead. But none of it reached the forgotten crypt hidden deep within the old sewer network. Here, there was only darkness. The air smelled of damp stone and old dust and in the center of that forgotten place, a small fire crackled softly. Orange flames danced across the darkness. Long shadows stretched over the walls. One shadow belonged to Lyra. The other belonged to Kaelen. Neither spoke. The silence wasn't uncomfortable. It was simply heavy. The kind of silence that existed before a storm. The kind soldiers experienced before battle. The kind people shared when both understood tomorrow might kill them. Kaelen sat atop a cold stone block. His mask rested beside him, his face was exposed. The firelight flickered across his shar
The Trap Revealed
The sewer tunnel fell silent. Water rushed through the ancient channels. Drops fell from rusted pipes overhead. Lord Silas Vance remained chained to the thick iron pipe. His body trembled from the aftermath of the Void-drain. Blood stained his expensive clothes. His face had become swollen. His breathing sounded wet. Yet despite everything, he suddenly began to laugh. The sound echoed through the darkness. Lyra immediately frowned. There was something wrong with it. Something unstable. Silas slowly raised his head. Dark blood dripped from his lips. His eyes no longer looked frightened. They looked mad. The noble began coughing. Blood sprayed onto the sewer floor. Then he laughed again. Harder this time. Kaelen stood motionless in the black water. His mask concealed everything. Only his black eye remained visible. Silas's laughter bounced through the tunnel like the cackling of a dying man. "The Sunken Vault." He laughed again. "Oh, this is beautiful." Lyra
The Sewers Interrogation
The sewers beneath the capital felt like another world. Far above, the city still blazed with emergency lights and military alarms. The soldiers searched. The Association hunted. But down here, only darkness existed. Ancient brick tunnels stretched endlessly through the earth like veins. Black water flowed through narrow channels carved centuries ago. Rusted pipes lined the walls. The air smelled of rot, mold, and stagnant water. Every sound echoed. Every drip lingered. Kaelen stood motionless in the center of the tunnel. Cold water reached his boots. His black cloak hung heavily from his shoulders. His Deep-Iron mask concealed every trace of emotion. Only the faint pulse of black veins beneath his skin betrayed the monster lurking underneath. A few feet away, Lord Silas Vance was chained to a massive water pipe. The noble looked miserable. The expensive silk clothing that had once impressed wealthy merchants was soaked with sewer water and blood. His carefully groomed
You may also like

Dragon Covenant
Camellia29.6K views
The Strongest Son-in-law
VKBoy30.2K views
Immortal Universe
Shin Novel 19.2K views
Harem Ethics 101
Z.R. Wake59.6K views
Resurrection of the Primordial Demon
S. Sage295 views
The Mage Who Defied the Gods
CHICHI107 views
DRAGON EMPEROR
omolaayo171 views
The Son-in-Law Apocalypse Revenge
Sunnies180 views