
“Any last words?”
The one-armed swordsman asked, raising his blade above the head of a weak and frail-looking boy—now blindfolded.The boy felt the urge to laugh. He didn’t know why he was being executed, but he had never wanted more than this. Still, he had to ask.
“Why exactly am I being beheaded? Because I survived—alone?”
The one-armed man frowned at the question, though he had no answer for it either.
“Because the strongest weapon of this society lies in slumber while I remain awake? And you all consider it an embarrassment—that I might tell people I was the only one to survive the Veyne?” the boy added, scoffing.
“No one even knows my name. No one cares. Killing me for this so-called embarrassment won’t wake your General from his slumber.”Two other men nearby—one with a mustache and the other wearing an eye patch—exchanged glances, silently acknowledging the truth.
The eye-patch man barked, “Prepare to die now, boy!”
Did I say I wasn’t prepared? the boy thought.
The mustached man cleared his throat, pulled out a rolled parchment, and began reading aloud—for no one in particular.
How useless.
No one cares.
“Name: Won, Age: 14, Rank: Flintshade—hereby sentenced to death for abandoning his comrades and betraying them in the Veyne.”
“What an excuse to kill someone as vulnerable as me,” Won grinned.
If you just want to kill me, then kill me. Why dress it up with a pathetic excuse? he thought bitterly.
The one-armed man growled at the audacity of the frail boy kneeling before him.
“How dare you speak of the General in that tone! You're dying because you brought this upon yourself.”
Won gritted his teeth, resisting the urge to stand and sever the man’s remaining arm.
Even blindfolded, he could see everything. It no longer surprised him. He’d gotten used to it during the last Veyne.
He didn’t know how he acquired this heightened perception, but it had happened after he killed the massive humanoid monster with a billion eyes encircling its head. His senses had sharpened—he could now hear distant sounds clearly, if he focused.
That monster had been the boss of the Veyne—the same one that sent the General into his deep slumber after slaughtering many.
Won had realized only too late that he couldn’t meet the creature’s gaze. He still wondered whether the General was truly that powerful— why wouldn’t he just realize the simple thing even a kid like him did.
If he were as normal awakened as us, he would have died by now.
Won had picked up the General’s sword, which felt as heavy as his blood-drained body, and closed his eyes. He had thanked his own lightness as he leapt from stone to stone, slashing the beast wherever he could.
When it finally collapsed, he drove the blade through its chest, where the magic heart pulsed, an expensive item to everyone. He had heard, selling a magic heart could give him a full month of fancy meals.
As the creature fell, its minions—identical but smaller—emerged from the shadows and bolted toward him. He felt an immense surge of energy in his chest that made him squeeze his eyes shut.
Whoa.
Did I just see them—with my eyes closed?“I’ll figure that out later. First, let’s fight,” he’d muttered.
A mere Flintshade rank like him had slain all those beasts alone—and then collapsed.
Normally, a Veyne would disappear once its boss was defeated. But this one stayed open for a full day—until Won awoke to find the General still breathing, though in deep slumber.“If you had only confessed to harming the General, we might have let you go,” the eye patch guy retorted.
Come on, you idiots. I don’t have the power to put the General into a coma, Won thought.
“Why would I confess to something I didn’t do?” he asked quietly.
“You were the only one who survived. Who else could have harmed him?”
“Exactly. I was the only one. And there’s no one alive to say whether I did or didn’t. Isn’t it one of your own laws to give the benefit of the doubt? You have no witness against me—except the General himself. So why not wait for him to wake before killing me?”
“You didn’t seem like you wanted to live earlier. Why the sudden talk?”
Right. I always wanted to die. There was never a point in living. So why am I hesitating now, at death’s door? Am I afraid?
“Let’s get this over with. I have to pick up my kid from school,” the eye-patch man said, annoyed.
School, huh? How sweet? A place I never even dreamed of entering—and you’re rushing there after killing an orphan?
Years have passed, society has advanced, but this idiotic law to behead Veyne ‘traitors’ remains. I’ll admit, it’s less painful than being shot or thrown into a monster cage but—ugh. So this is how I die.
About three decades ago, monsters began pouring out from flaming, hollow portals known as Veynes. Around the same time, some youths awakened with strange powers and extraordinary vitality & stamina. They came to be called Ashen.
By the age of 15, they'd normally get awakened. If they wouldn't, and there wouldn't be any chance of them getting awakened in the future.
Once a rank was assigned, it was difficult to climb higher, though some cases existed. Even a low rank could secure a decent future, as awakening itself was seen as a rare gift.Newly awakened youths under fifteen were tested and, based on their results, they were sent to instance veynes for training. Once they get selected based on their worth for doing the job, he would get admitted to Meteor Ashen Technical—an academy for training Ashen.
Unlike other training sessions, the General himself had joined Won’s Veyne. As the highest-ranked Ashen, his presence had shocked everyone. Yet, everyone in that Veyne died. A mere test in instance veyne for examining the new awakened had ever been so deadly. That the General had been in slumber for 14 days while Won survived—it was more than suspicious.
There were only 3 Generals in the nation right now. And the General whose deep slumber was executing Won was the strongest of all them.
Betrayal during a Veyne raid was considered one of the gravest crimes. The government never clearly defined what “betrayal” meant in the law. Even newly awakened youths weren’t spared under this harsh system. They would just make up whatever suit the term to meet their desired justice.
Corruption runs deep—in bone and blood, Won thought.
Who asked that feeble General to join my Veyne anyway?
It had been supposed to be the weakest Veyne, since Won’s awakening rank was the lowest.
Who knew my first training session would cost me my head?
I never even set foot in that academy…
“Can I ask one last question?” Won said, assuming this would be the final time he spoke.
“Speak,” the mustached man permitted.
“No one... no one knows I survived, other than a few officials, right? Not a single civilian?”
Won wanted the truth—his last request.
“Why? Do you have someone you want to meet before dying?” the one-armed man asked, tone slightly soft.
Won shook his head, grinning. He might’ve waved if his hands weren’t bound. “There’s no one,” he shrugged slightly. “You still haven’t answered my question.”
Silence.
Silence is the best answer, they say, Won mused.
So, I’ll vanish from the earth with no one ever knowing. Not that anyone knew I existed anyway.
Footsteps.
Closer.
Heavier.
How many people are coming?
Something felt off. No one is allowed during an execution.
“Get ready,” the one-armed man said, raising his sword one last time. Won closed his eyes.
“Three…”
A countdown to death? Won smirked.“Two…”
“One…”
The door creaked open. Won felt the blade graze his neck—but stop.
“What is it? Who authorized your presence?” the mustached man demanded.
Won turned his head and, through the blindfold, sensed the presence of 15 people in military uniforms.
“The General has woken up. He has requested the boy—alive. Immediately.”
“The General is awake?” the eye-patch man echoed, stunned.
Took him a long time. Won shrugged, thinking to himself.
Won wondered—was that reaction from joy, or just shock?
He stood up by himself and stepped toward the military officers, raising his bound hands, getting eyes from every corner now.
Seems like I am saved for now.
“Surely your General wouldn’t want to see the only survivor in restraints like these,” he said.
“Didn’t know you had such a sharp tongue,” the man in the middle said in a low voice, untying Won’s hands and removing the blindfold.
Won glanced one last time at the three men behind him, grinning, and walked away with the soldiers.
“Kid,” the middle officer whispered, “your real test starts now.”
Won frowned but said nothing.
“You’ll face a master-ranked veyne alone—after your little chat with the General. Don’t get cocky just yet.”
Latest Chapter
The Heir of the Monarch
The entire cohort stood at the mouth of the branching tunnels. Won stole a glance at Noah, his eyes wide and vacant, but he was moving. Won didn't have time to coddle him. He raised his arm, signaling the team to split according to the plan they had discussed in hushed whispers.Ramiro nodded grimly. He didn't speak, using hand signals to confirm the divisions.Noah didn't wait for Ramiro’s instruction. Like a moth drawn to a flame, he moved to stand directly beside Won. Leo shifted back into his physical form, his invisibility fading like mist. The teams were set: Won, Leo, and Noah formed Team 1, tasked with the main central tunnel. Orson and Julie were Team 2, heading into the left passage. Ramiro and Mikasa made up Team 3, taking the right.From the maps they had managed to scrap together, they were fairly certain all three paths eventually merged into a single grand chamber. The tunnels were lined with small rooms and stone cottages, each guarded by Gnasher’s chosen knights.Ever
The Silence of the Seer
When the cohort finally reached the brutal goal Ramiro had set, Won called a meeting, giving everyone a heads-up that this wouldn't be a typical strategic briefing.Everyone was present just in time, gathered in the dim light of their hideout. Won stood in the center of the circle, his expression unreadable. He looked at his friends—and spoke very casually.“Tell me, how would you feel if none of these Veynes or monsters existed anymore? What if the world went back to the way it was before all this madness started?”The question was so bizarre and out of place that it didn't even shock them. It felt like a dream being spoken aloud in a graveyard. Noah scoffed a bitter, hollow laugh and turned his face away. He clearly thought Won had finally snapped under the pressure. But Orson and Leo’s faces turned deadly serious. “Is that even possible?” Julie asked, her voice trembling slightly.Won shrugged, his eyes wandering to the ceiling. “I never said it was possible. It’s just a hypotheti
The Divided Soul
Won stood in front of Emma, his silhouette a long, jagged line against the moon-washed pavement. The street was empty now, the body of the drunkard having been dragged into the deeper shadows where the rats would find it. Emma sat on the cold ground, her back against a crumbling stone pillar.Won had his arms crossed over his chest, his eyes tired from months of sleepless hunting, yet focused on the girl like a hawk on a wounded rabbit.Emma looked strangely calm now. She tucked a few loose strands of blonde hair behind her ears and looked up at Won.“If I tell you everything,” she said, her voice small but steady, “do you promise to keep it within yourself?”Won raised a brow, a flicker of dark amusement crossing his face. He looked at her with a strange, mocking expression. “You think you’re in a position to ask me for a favor, Emma? You’re a spy caught in the act.”“I just don’t want the others to think of me as a betrayer,” she said, her grey eyes shimmering with a faint, desperat
Messenger in the Dark
Some days flew by, the passage of time marked only by the shifting of the moon and the steady rhythm of combat. Each member of the cohort threw themselves into training, pushing their bodies to the absolute limit. Following Won’s advice, they abandoned the safer streets of the Sacred City and traveled to the Dark City ruins to hone their edges.They still didn't have a solid plan to attack Gnasher. Ramiro had set a brutal benchmark: until they could collectively kill two hundred SS-rank monsters in a single week, he wouldn't even consider them ready. They all knew the truth, though. Even if they reached that goal, the chance of killing Gnasher was barely one percent. The other ninety-nine percent was just a long, painful way to die.At one midnight, the Sacred City was silent.A girl was walking through a very narrow alley, her footsteps light against the damp stone. Even though the main part of the city was asleep, the dregs of the population were still awake. Drunkards leaned agains
Missing Gap
Won and Leo lay flat on their backs in the middle of the Dark City’s desert. The sand beneath them was coarse and cold, retaining none of the day’s heat. The silence was absolute now, the violence of the foxin hunt replaced by the rhythmic sound of two pairs of lungs fighting for air.“You came here often?” Won asked, his voice barely rising above a whisper.“Not just me. Orson as well,” Leo said, finally pushing himself up into a sitting position. “I lost count of how many times we crossed into this sector just to look for you.”Won didn’t say anything. He kept his eyes fixed on the moon, feeling the weight of Leo’s words. “Won?” Leo asked after a long pause. “What did you actually do in these past five months?”Won closed his eyes, the images of blood-soaked alleys and bloody nights flashing behind his eyelids. He didn't answer. Instead, he forced a different question into the air—one that had been rotting in his mind since he first saw the monster in his visions.“It’s killing me t
Sharpened Edges
Won sat at the highest point of the clock tower, his legs dangling over the edge of the weathered stone. The moon tonight was a monster of its own—a giant, luminous sphere that bathed the Sacred City in a cold, clinical glow. It was far brighter than the moon of Earth, turning the ruins into a landscape of stark whites and deep, bottomless blacks.He pulled the parchments from his cloak and spread them across his lap. He frowned as his eyes moved across the lines. The language was a mess of jagged symbols and ancient script that he couldn't even begin to translate. But the drawings... the drawings spoke for themselves.Won squinted, his stomach turning. One page depicted a circle of hooded figures, their faces obscured by shadow, feasting on slabs of raw human flesh. Another showed a row of severed heads placed meticulously before a roaring bonfire, their mouths frozen in silent screams as if they were reciting some unholy prayer.It was dark magic. Vile, ancient, and undeniably powe
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