The forest remained hushed, the mist now curling away from the clearing like it, too, knew who ruled here.
Lucien stood motionless, his figure carved from the silence—tall, unbending, framed by the blood-soaked ground that bore witness to his triumph. Before him, Kane still knelt. But now, something had shifted. Not in Lucien. In Kane. Submission had calcified into something more dangerous. Obedience. Lucien's voice finally broke the stillness. Cold. Commanding. Drenched in pride. > "Rise, Kane. You no longer kneel for forgiveness. You kneel for purpose." Kane lifted his head slowly, bruised features hardening beneath the weight of Lucien's gaze. > "Yes… commander." Lucien didn't blink. His eyes, like polished obsidian, held no warmth. > "Your pride failed you. Your tactics failed you. And yet, here you stand. Not because of worth... but because I see use in you." Kane remained silent. He understood now: survival wasn't a right—it was permission. Lucien turned slightly, the wind catching the edges of his tattered cloak as he pointed to the east. > "The Envy faction, they're too dangerous to be left alone . They hoard whispers like riches. They speak in shadows and plot in corners—too cowardly to challenge us directly, too foolish to understand their place." He stepped closer to Kane, voice sharpened to a blade. > "You will go to them." Kane blinked. "…Alone?" > "Of course." Lucien's tone was clipped, almost amused. "You'll deliver a message. One only a broken man could carry." He leaned down now, so that Kane could see the fire behind the calm. > "Tell their leader this: Pride does not negotiate. We do not beg. We do not barter. We conquer." Kane swallowed. > "And if they refuse?" Lucien stood tall again. > "Then remind them what happened to you. Let your face be prophecy." A cruel smirk tugged at the edge of his lips. > "And if they still resist... burn their flags. Snap their bones. Drag their envy into the dirt." Kane's shoulders squared. The humiliation that had once weighed on him had been transformed—weaponized. He bowed his head, not in shame this time, but in dark allegiance. > "I will deliver your message, Commander Lucien. Word for word." Lucien nodded once, then turned his back. > "Good. Now go. Show them that even the fallen carry my voice." --- Silence. The kind that weighed on the lungs. The kind that made even the walls hold their breath. The Sloth leader lounged lazily on his throne of roots, eyes half-lidded, as if he might fall asleep mid-drama. The Lust leader stood tall, draped in crimson silk, her gaze sharp as a blade drawn in velvet. And Aira—trembling, heart pounding—stood before them both, her fists clenched at her sides. She couldn't feel her knees. Her vision swam. But her spirit— It ignited. A voice inside her, raw and unyielding, whispered: > I promised not to run anymore. I can do this. She took a breath, then snapped her head up. > "You expect me to sit quietly," she said, her voice rising like a sudden storm, "when I was going to be humiliated by those thugs you call subordinates?!" The words hung like fire in the incense-heavy air. A sharp inhale. A ripple of tension. The Sloth leader's inner voice stirred—an amused hum in the back of his mind. > Oh… now she's done it. Interesting. But he didn't move. He simply shifted his weight lazily, tossing a half-eaten fruit core toward a distant corner. The Lust leader, however, stepped forward. Slowly. Each step a performance. Her hips swayed with the grace of someone who knew exactly what power she held—on her lips, in her eyes, and between her hands. She circled Aira like a predator with time to savor the hunt. Then she spoke. Low. Controlled. Seductive with a razor edge. > "Bravery is such a fragile thing, darling. One moment it sings… the next, it chokes." She stopped just beside Aira, her breath brushing the girl's cheek. > "You think what they did was humiliation? No, no, sweet thing… that was foreplay." Aira's jaw tensed, but she didn't step back. The Lust leader smirked—pleased. > "You should thank me. My men saw value in you. Most girls with your look… they're ignored. But you? You made them curious." She leaned closer, whispering now. > "That curiosity could have made you powerful. Desired. Worshipped. Instead…" She flicked a single strand of Aira's damp hair off her shoulder with two fingers. "…you chose violence." She stepped back, voice rising again—this time to address the Sloth leader. > "This little rabbit doesn't understand the world she's in. She confuses fear with strength. Flesh with dignity. She bleeds too easily to play with wolves." Aira bit her lip. But her eyes burned—not with fear anymore, but with defiance. The Sloth leader yawned. > "Mmm… Maybe she's just not yours to play with." The Lust leader turned her head sharply, eyes narrowing. > "Then whose is she?" The room tightened. But the Sloth leader only chuckled softly and popped another berry into his mouth. > "That's what makes it fun, isn't it?" The mist was thinner now. The morning sun bled dully through the canopy, casting fractured light over Bjorn's broken body. The damp earth clung to him like a burial shroud, the bark of the cursed tree pressing coldly against his spine. Then—his eyes opened. Fully. Clear. Sharp. Dangerous. He stared upward, vision steady now, breath slow and controlled. The voices above him were still arguing. The Wrath leader's tone, always on the verge of combustion. The subordinate's—measured, infuriatingly calm. Bjorn's lips curled into a sneer. > "You should've taken me out when you had the chance." Silence. Sudden. Immediate. The two men turned. Bjorn didn't rise. Not yet. But his voice cut like ice wrapped in flame. > "You don't really think I'll accept being under you… or follow your orders, do you?" The Wrath leader's fists clenched. His boots scraped forward. > "You arrogant little—" His voice was already climbing, veins pulsing at his temple, but before he could finish the sentence— > "Enough." The subordinate cut in—calm, but loud enough to freeze the tension mid-swing. He stepped forward, locking eyes with Bjorn. > "We'll need each other. Maybe not now. But soon. You've seen what the witch sent already… and it's only going to get worse." Bjorn's eyes narrowed. > "Tch." The smart one's voice pressed on, more urgent now: > "Think straight. It's only six days until Walpurgis. Whatever game she's playing… it ends there. None of us are making it unless we start thinking beyond our factions." Bjorn moved. Slowly—gritting through pain—he pushed himself to his feet. The dirt clung to his clothes. Blood had dried across his side. But his stance was still proud, posture unbroken. He brushed off his shoulder, then turned—eyes locking on the Wrath leader. A smirk twisted across his face. > "Your wrath is so feeble… that some nonsense your underling says is enough to stop you from going into a rage?" The Wrath leader's eye twitched. Bjorn leaned in slightly, voice dropping. > "Tell me… is that how you lead? Bark loud… but wait for permission to bite?" The wrath leader surged forward but the smart one intervened between them. Bjorn's smirk still lingered when the Wrath leader's fury finally snapped. > "ENOUGH!" Before the smart one could finish his warning— WHAM!! A blur of motion. The Wrath leader's fist hammered into his subordinate's chest, lifting him clean off the ground and flinging him backwards like dead weight. He crashed into a nearby trunk with a sickening crack, bark and bone splitting in the same breath. The Wrath leader's eyes burned. His rage had spoken. Bjorn's smile vanished as the air thickened, charged with violent intent. No more words. Only motion. He moved first. Bjorn lunged with a tight left jab—wounded but precise. The Wrath leader deflected it with a brutal forearm and swung low—a haymaker aimed at Bjorn's ribs. Bjorn twisted—just barely—but the blow grazed him, pain bursting like lightning through his side. He didn't stagger. He stepped in. Elbow to jaw. The Wrath leader's head snapped sideways—but his grin only widened. > "Now that's more like it." Then hell broke loose. Both fighters surged forward at once—like beasts uncaged, fists and feet flashing in a savage blur. Every strike came with intent to maim. Bjorn ducked a hook and rammed his shoulder into the leader's gut, slamming him back into a tree—but was caught in a counter-knee that crunched into his sternum. He gasped. The Wrath leader grabbed him by the collar and slammed his head forward—headbutt. Bjorn's vision sparked white. But he responded with a wild swing upward—uppercut to the throat. The leader reeled—but didn't fall. They circled now, panting, bleeding, unblinking. Close. Intimate. This was no duel. This was murder, paused and resumed with every heartbeat. The Wrath leader lunged—Bjorn pivoted, grabbed his wrist mid-strike and yanked, slamming him into the ground, then dropping onto him with elbow after elbow. CRACK. CRACK. CRACK. Blood sprayed. But the leader bucked, roared, and reversed it—grabbing Bjorn's wrist, biting down hard until skin tore, then flipping him onto his back with raw, animal strength. He mounted. Fists rained down. Bjorn's lip split. His cheek burst open. But he raised his legs—wrapped them around the Wrath leader's torso, twisted sideways— THUD! They tumbled, rolled, and came up together. Bjorn's shirt was torn, blood streaked across his eye. The Wrath leader's nose was broken, breathing ragged. And yet—both smiled. No fear. No mercy. Just two animals who had nothing left to lose but wrath . They squared off again, no crowd, no rules. Just dirt. Blood. Bones. And rage.Latest Chapter
chapter 30: The Wolf Falls
The hammer came down.CRACK.For a single heartbeat, the entire world seemed to stop.Aira saw it.The brutal impact.The way Mia’s hammer crashed into Bjorn’s skull with a sickening sound that echoed across the burning camp.Bjorn’s body collapsed sideways into the mud like a puppet whose strings had been cut.“No—!”The word tore from Aira’s throat before she even realized she was screaming.Her legs moved on their own.She ran.Boots splashing through wet mud, slipping across blood-soaked earth as she forced her way deeper into the burning compound.The camp had become a nightmare.Rain-damp ground hissed beneath spreading flames as torn tents burned slowly despite the soaked soil. Smoke crawled low through the clearing, thick and choking, stinging Aira’s eyes as sparks drifted upward like dying fireflies.Injured Lust faction members scrambled everywhere.Some kicked mud onto the flames.Others dragged burning canvas away from nearby tents.The smell of smoke mixed with wet earth
Chapter 29:The Wolf Beneath the Crimson Moon
The camp had become a furnace.Rain-soaked earth hissed beneath the spreading flames as burning canvas collapsed inward, sparks drifting into the damp night like dying stars. Smoke clung low to the ground, thick and bitter, crawling through the torn tents and shattered lanterns of the Lust faction’s compound.Bjorn moved through it like a wounded animal refusing to die.Mia’s hammer roared past his face, the wind of it tearing through his tangled hair. He twisted aside, boots sliding in wet ash as the weapon slammed into the soaked soil with a violent crack. The ground shuddered. Bjorn answered with a low swing toward her ribs, but Mia pivoted smoothly, her body turning with the grace of someone who had fought countless battles. Her second hammer came in fast from the side.Bjorn raised his forearm to intercept.Pain exploded through his injured wrist.His guard faltered for half a heartbeat.The hammer glanced off his shoulder, forcing him backward through a curtain of smoke. His boo
chapter 28: a face to bite, a name to curse
They say beauty is a blessing. They lied. Beauty is a weapon — and I was born holding it. I bent the world with a glance,made gods and beasts alike kneel for a touch they could never keep. Even in this cursed realm, thrown here by that wrinkled witch, I believed my charm would conquer everything. But then came the two who would not look at me. Lucien ......pride carved into flesh. A man too immaculate to be tempted. And Bjorn......the broken wolf, silent, scarred, and maddeningly indifferent. Their refusal was a wound… and a challenge. I craved the taste of what denied me. To chase Lucien is to chase war......and I am not a fool who wastes her soldiers before Walpurgis. So I chose the smaller beast. The one who defies beauty itself. The one who makes my hunger feel human. --- The drums had gone quiet. Only the wind spoke now— a low, rhythmic moan that slipped between the torn veils and half-burned lanterns of the Lust camp. The moon bled down like an opene
chapter 27: the critic and the flame
The eve of Walpurgis dripped crimson beneath the moon. Its light seeped through the thin fabric of the Sloth faction’s tent — a slow pulse of red that moved like breath.Inside, the air was dense with the scent of herbs and burnt incense. The canvas walls sagged slightly, weighed down by damp mist. A small brazier hissed weakly in the corner, giving off a lazy glow that barely chased the shadows away.Aira sat on a mat, her fingers tracing the rim of a half-empty cup. The world outside murmured — distant laughter, the crackle of torches, the restless wind.Her gaze drifted toward the flicker of light that cut through the tent’s entrance.Bjorn’s name still echoed in her mind — captured by the Lust leader.Her heartbeat quickened. For a long moment, she didn’t move. Then, quietly, she began to rise.The shift of fabric, the creak of the floor mat — that was enough to stir the figure reclining on the couch nearby.Lan, the Slot
chapter 26: eve of the red moon
(volume 2)The night before Walpurgis bled quietly into the Lust faction's camp. Moonlight dripped through torn silk canopies and broken lanterns, painting everything in shades of pale desire and decay. Perfume and blood mingled in the air — sweet, cloying, wrong. Bjorn stirred. His body screamed in protest. Every muscle felt torn. His wrists were swollen and raw, skin rubbed bloody where the ropes had bitten too deep. He'd fought before — tried to break free when they first dragged him here — but exhaustion had conquered rebellion. Now he hung against the log, bound by thick cords slick with sweat and rain. His breath came in short, cracked bursts. His vision swam. The world around him was sound before shape — laughter, whispers, the faint rhythm of drums somewhere in the dark. He blinked. And then he saw them. Figures — dozens of them — forming a half-circle around him. The Lust
chapter 25: the strong survive
The night air was heavy, the echoes of music and drunken cheer still spilling faintly from the great hall. But outside the dojo gates, the mood was far colder.Seven disciples stumbled in through the courtyard, their robes dirt-stained, their lanterns dim. Faces grim, they bowed low before the dojo master, their leader stepping forward.Disciple (bowing, voice low):"Master… we searched the roads, the riverbank, even the shrines in the woods. Ashura… he was nowhere to be found."The words rippled through the silence like a blade.Lan clenched his fists, teeth grinding. His voice cracked with restrained anger as he turned to his father.Lan:"Father, this is why I told you to let me go myself! You think your disciples could bring him back? He's my brother — I would've found him!"For the first time since the duel, the dojo master rose fully from his seat. His presence silenced even the murmurs of the crowd still lingering in the hall. His eyes were sharp, unyielding, and his words rang
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