
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 Prophecy of the Destroyer
The valley was quiet, but inside the new house, the air felt heavy and thick. Kaelen hadn't let Lyra leave as easily as he’d planned. He had caught her, but still could not shake the feeling in him, is she dense or just slow to think? Now, he had her pinned against the wall of the main room. His hand wasn't on her throat, but it was pressed hard against the wood right next to her head. The black veins on his arm were pulsing, casting a faint light on her silver hair. Kaelen’s head recoiled slightly as he looked at her, his eyes searching her violet depths for a lie. He opened his mouth to speak, but for a moment, the words wouldn't come. He felt a lump forming in his throat, a mix of the years of misery he had endured and the sudden horror of what she was saying. "You followed me all the way here," Kaelen said. His voice sounded croaky and scratchy "Why? What is the exact reason your clan wants you to kill me?" Lyra didn't struggle. She looked up at him with those piercing eye
The Assassin’s Eye
The gold Kaelen had brought back from the deep dungeons was a lot, and it opened doors that had been slammed in his face for years. He didn't go back to that rusted house. He found a high-end inn on the edge of the merchant district. The floors were covered in soft rugs, and the bed was filled with feathers. But as he sat on the edge of the mattress, Kaelen realized he couldn't sleep. The silence was too loud. For four years, his ears had been tuned to the sound of monsters breathing in the dark. "It’s a waste of coin," Erebos grumbled in his mind. "You’re sitting on a soft bed like a king, but you’re still holding your breath like a rat." "I'm not used to being safe," Kaelen whispered. "Safe?" Erebos laughed. "You’re never safe. Look at the window." Kaelen didn't move his head, but his eyes shifted. The curtains were closed, but a tiny sliver of moonlight was cutting through the gap. Suddenly the light changed direction, into his room. A cold presence filled the room. It
Shattering the Status Quo
The lobby of the Mage Association was filled with light and the sound of chattering voices. High-ranking mages walked around in expensive robes, they looked crazily rich, their chests out, their heads held high. In the center of the hall, a crowd had gathered around a large, raised platform. On top of it sat a new Mana Ball, larger and clearer than the one in the town square. "Make way! Make way for Lord Caspian!" a voice shouted. Kaelen stood at the edge of the room, his tattered black cloak pulled tight. Through the gaps in the crowd, he saw Caspian and Mila. Caspian was wearing fresh armor, and he looked like a man who owned the world. Mila was at his side, her hand tucked into his arm, looking at the mages with a wide, fake smile. "He’s going for a re-evaluation," someone whispered nearby. "They say his Golden Lion has grown twice its size since the East Woods incident." Caspian stepped up to the platform. He looked at the administrator, a middle-aged man with thin gl
The Curse of Slumber
Kaelen didn't wait for the guards to recover. As the crowd began to scream and scramble away, he turned on his heel and walked. He didn't run. He didn't need to. “That's it, runaway little boy, you are good at it.” Caspian shouted, Kaelen kept shut, just walking away. "You should have killed him," Erebos hissed in his mind. The beast sounded hungry, his voice scraping against Kaelen’s thoughts. "The blond one. I could feel his heart fluttering like a trapped bird. One squeeze, Kaelen. That's all it would have taken." "Not yet," Kaelen whispered. "I have to find Elara." He left the music and everything behind, he can't lie to himself that he was not hurt—hid heart feels shattered but he will show all of them, they should sit back and watch. He walked toward the edge of town, where the houses grew smaller and the roads were dirty. The air here was always choked. He reached his house. It looked worse than he remembered. The roof was sagging, and the door was hanging by a sing
The Ghost in the Cloak
(4 years Later) Kaelen walked out of the dungeon, light was the first thing that hit him. It was too bright, and it hurt his eyes. Kaelen stood at the mouth of the cave, squinting at a world he hadn't seen in four years. The air smelled just like how he remembered. He pulled his heavy black cloak tighter around his shoulders. The cloak was tattered at the bottom, stained with the blood of things that didn't have names, but it was thick enough to hide the man he had become. Under the dark cloth, his body was filled with muscles, his skin marked by the ink-colored veins that never went away. He bad become a different man. "It’s too quiet out here," Kaelen whispered. His voice was gravelly, a sound he barely recognized. "That is because nothing is trying to kill you for once," Erebos said in his mind. The beast sounded bored. "Go on. Walk. I want to see if they still smell like fear." Kaelen began to walk. He felt like a stranger in his own skin. As he reached the main road le
The Silent Years
Kaelen woke up on the hard ground. He didn't know how long he had been asleep, but his body felt like it had been crushed under a mountain. Every time he moved, his skin felt like it was being pulled apart. The black veins on his arms were still there, pulsing with a dim, dark light. "Get up," a voice said. It wasn't a sound in the room. It was Erebos, speaking directly into the back of Kaelen's mind. The voice was cold and had no pity. "I can't," Kaelen wheezed. He tried to push himself up, but his arms shook and he fell back down. "Everything hurts. I think I'm dying." "You already died," Erebos said with a dry laugh. "I brought you back. Now, stand on your feet. There is a beast coming from the shadows. If you don't kill it, it will eat what is left of you, and I will have to find a new host." Kaelen forced his eyes open. The dungeon was different now. The walls were wet and covered in a thick moss. The air felt heavy. He could hear a scratching sound coming from the dark
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