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CHAPTER TEN — KARA VANE, THE BROKEN SHIELD

  Steel rang against steel in the gray light of dawn.

  Kara Vane moved like a fortress given will—each step

  deliberate, each strike efficient, brutal, final. Her

  shield absorbed the blow of a bandit’s axe with a

  thunderous crack, the impact shuddering up her arm.

  She didn’t flinch. She answered.

  Her sword drove forward in a short, precise arc,

  punching through leather and bone. The man

  collapsed without a sound.

  She didn’t watch him fall.

  Kara never did.

  The battlefield—if such a small, miserable skirmish,

  deserved the name—lay scattered across the ruined

  road. Six bodies. Three still breathing, groaning

  softly. She ignored them too. Mercy was a luxury for

  those who still believed in kings.

  She stood alone among the fallen, heavy armor

  scarred and dented, cloak torn at the hem. Long black

  hair spilled loose down her back, damp with sweat.

  Her eyes—ice-cold, piercing blue—scanned the tree

  line with a vigilance that never rested.

  No ambush.

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  No witnesses.

  Good.

  She wiped her blade clean on a corpse and sheathed

  it with a sharp, practiced motion. The shield followed,

  slung across her back despite its weight. Kara

  exhaled slowly, steadying herself.

  Once, she would have been proud of this work.

  Once, she would have done it for the crown.

  A bitter curl touched her lips.

  Former royal guard.

  That title still tasted like rust.

  She had stood at the king’s side—closer than most,

  trusted more than many. She had bled for him. Killed

  for him. Watched friends die with his banners

  reflected in their eyes.

  And when the whispers began—when proof surfaced

  of conscription camps, of System manipulation

  sanctioned at the highest levels—she had done the

  unthinkable.

  She had questioned him.

  The betrayal had been swift.

  Efficient.

  A closed-door tribunal. Charges of treason. An

  execution order quietly signed and quietly leaked.

  Only her rank and reputation had bought her enough

  warning to flee.

  The king had called it justice.

  Kara called it cowardice.

  Now she walked without banners, without oaths—her

  armor too distinctive to enter cities safely, her shield too recognizable to sell. She took contracts that didn’t

  ask names. Protected caravans that didn’t ask

  questions.

  And lately—

  Lately, she had heard rumors.

  A man defying the System. A territory claimed

  without royal sanction. A leader surrounded by

  powerful women who chose him.

  Rebellion wrapped in inevitability.

  It should have been nonsense.

  It wasn’t.

  Kara adjusted her grip on her shield as she moved

  toward the rise overlooking the distant settlement.

  Smoke curled upward—orderly, deliberate. Guard

  rotations visible even from here.

  Not a bandit town.

  Not a royal garrison.

  Something… in between.

  Her instincts stirred, sharp and uneasy.

  At the edge of the hill, she stopped.

  Below, she could see them.

  A tall man at the center—calm, grounded, presence

  unmistakable even at a distance. Around him, women

  who moved with purpose and confidence: a mage

  whose posture radiated intellect and restraint; a

  demon girl whose gaze burned with fervent devotion;

  a shadow that seemed to detach itself from reality

  itself.

  A formation without chains.

  Kara felt something twist in her chest.

  Jealousy—not of affection, but of belonging.

  She had spent so long being a shield for a king who

  never deserved it.

  What would it mean… to protect something that did?

  Her hand tightened around the leather strap of her

  shield.

  Below, as if sensing her gaze, the man looked up.

  Their eyes met.

  Even at this distance, the impact was immediate.

  He didn’t reach for a weapon.

  Didn’t posture.

  He simply held her gaze—measuring, unflinching.

  Not a king.

  Something else.

  Kara Vane felt the weight of her past press against

  the edge of a potential future.

  She didn’t know it yet, but the path she had been

  walking alone was about to end.

  And for the first time since her betrayal—

  She welcomed the thought.

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