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New Beginning

  A soft knock stirred Klaus from sleep.

  It came again—careful, almost rehearsed—followed by a small, hesitant voice on the other side of the door.

  “Big brother… dinner’s ready.”

  Klaus groaned softly, one arm flopping over his face. “I’m coming,” he muttered, voice thick with sleep. “Give me a minute.”

  He cracked one eye open. Dusk light seeped through the wooden shutters, painting the room in tired orange. He stretched one arm upward, bones popping, and froze.

  The scar on his wrist caught the light.

  Klaus stared at it, pale, jagged, ugly. A brand rather than a wound—proof of who he once was.

  Two years had passed since the battle of Aegulus, a barren land between the province Hallosbel and Crowvale.

  The battle that the world called Hallosbel’s greatest failure.

  Not because of casualties. Soldiers were replaceable numbers. What shattered confidence was simpler and far uglier. Two Keepers had died.

  Hevert Alkantel.

  Arnold Ironfire.

  People in the province became discontent, especially with Duke Sebas Warhog.

  The King wanted an answer.

  The Keepers’ council fractured almost overnight, each faction scrambling to protect its own name. Reports were rewritten. Orders quietly denied. Decisions once made “for the greater good” suddenly had no author. Fingers pointed everywhere and nowhere at once.

  And the Duke? He had moved faster.

  He needed an explanation that didn’t compromise his authority. A sacrifice that would make the public swallow the loss and ease the King’s fury.

  Illumi had been perfect.

  A useless priestess, he declared. A failure of support. A burden on the battlefield. He said her judgment flawed, her presence meaningless. Convenient lies, repeated often enough to sound like the truth.

  The Keepers didn’t defend her.

  They stripped her title in silence, erased her name from their ranks, and let her vanish. No trial. No farewell. Just absence.

  Klaus sighed—memories of the battle were the oldest memories he could remember. His nineteen years of existence remain unknown to him, except for the book fully imprinted in his brain—the very foundation of his mindforger.

  He stood up and pulled on his long-sleeved shirt, hiding the scar, then lifted the Subjugator tag from the bedside table. A small plain silver plate carved a name, ‘Klaus Shaw.’

  He slipped it over his neck.

  For two years, Hevert’s gold—resting quietly in Klaus’s storage ring—had purchased him new life. A new identity.

  He bribed an officer of the Subjugator’s Alliance to falsify his name and registered as a Subjugator. His job was simple—complete a mission, to hunt, scout, gather materials, anything that a subjugator can offer.

  He’d also bought land. A small farmhouse on the outskirts of Pe’cha, a town at the edge of Crowvale. Beneath the towering town wall, the place was neither close to civilization nor wilderness.

  The smell of stew met him as he entered the dining room. The house was small—two bedrooms, a kitchen, a main hall, enough to accommodate a few visitors.

  Klaus sat and began eating without ceremony.

  Across from him, a young woman waited, posture straight, eyes flicking to him before lifting her spoon. Beside her, a six-year-old child mirrored the motion, careful and deliberate.

  They only ate once he did.

  To an outsider, it would have looked ordinary. A man, a woman, a child at dusk. Like a family.

  It wasn’t.

  The two were slaves.

  He’d bought them last year with five gold coins and a punch that had left a merchant sprawled in the dirt. Klaus still didn’t know why he’d done it. He’d never been soft. Never bothered by cruelty of the society.

  But seeing them beaten—truly broken—had triggered something sharp and inconvenient.

  The woman had tried to repay him in the only way she believed had value.

  Klaus had stopped her with a look.

  “You cook. You clean. You live,” he’d said. “That’s it. Don’t try anything else and I’ll throw you away.”

  Afraid of getting thrown out, the woman avoided crossing any boundaries after that.

  The girl smiled at Klaus, then immediately seemed to remember herself and stiffened, fingers twisting the hem of her dress. She glanced at her mother, then back at him, clearly weighing whether courage or fear would win.

  Klaus noticed and leaned back in his chair. “If you have something to say, say it. I don’t bite.”

  She swallowed. “U-uhm… big brother,” she began, voice barely louder than a whisper. “Can we… can we plant flowers in the front yard?”

  Silence settled over the table.

  Klaus raised an eyebrow. “Flowers?”

  She nodded quickly, words tumbling out now that she’d started. “The yard is really big, but it’s empty. Just grass. If we plant flowers, it would look… nicer. Happier.”

  Her mother stood so abruptly her chair scraped the floor. “I’m sorry—Master,” she corrected herself in a rush. “She spoke out of turn. She didn’t mean to ask for anything—”

  Klaus looked up at her, eyes sharp despite his relaxed posture. “What did you call me?”

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  The woman froze. Her lips trembled. “M-master—” She bit the word back. “I’m sorry. Klaus. I won’t say it again.”

  He exhaled slowly. “Good. I’ve told you already—I’m not a master. Those words make my skin crawl. You’re not here to serve me. You’re here to take care of this house. That’s all.”

  The girl tilted her head, clearly processing this in her own way. Then she suddenly climbed onto her chair and declared loudly, “Then—Master House! Will you allow your servant to plant flowers in the yard?”

  Klaus stared at her.

  Then he laughed, short and surprised. “That’s dangerous, you know that?”

  He waved his hand lazily over the table. Three gold coins clinked into existence, rolling to a stop near the girl’s plate.

  Her eyes widened. “Wah—! Is that magic?!”

  “Something like that,” Klaus said. “Looks like the house approved your request. Build a proper flower bed. Tomorrow morning, you two go to town. Buy tools. Buy seeds.”

  He glanced at the woman. “If there’s extra, buy food you actually like. Or clothes. I don’t care.”

  The woman stared at the coins as if they might vanish. “Th-thank you, Klaus. Truly.”

  “Thank you, big brother!” the girl said, nearly bouncing off her chair.

  Klaus reached out and patted her head, awkward but gentle.

  A slow, deliberate clap echoed from the doorway.

  Klaus turned toward the sound and paused. A young woman stood there in a teal dress, the fabric simple yet refined, giving her an air that was both elegant and deceptively innocent. For a heartbeat, he didn’t recognize her—then the posture, the eyes, the unmistakable attitude settled into place.

  “Well, isn’t this sweet,” Maddy said dryly. “If I didn’t know better, I’d think I walked into a proper family dinner.”

  Klaus sighed. “What brings you here, Maddy?”

  “Party meeting tomorrow afternoon. Same place,” she replied. “Shane wants everyone present.”

  “Understood.”

  Her gaze drifted back to the woman and child. “You really planning to keep this up? Playing house with slaves? When are you throwing them away?”

  The girl stiffened instantly, clutching her mother’s sleeve. The woman lowered her head, shoulders tight.

  Klaus didn’t raise his voice. “Never thought about it, yet.”

  “I don’t have problems with them, but…” Maddy sighed. “…they’re slaves. No names. They have nothing. People already whisper about you. Eating with them like this? They’ll think you’re unhinged.”

  He tapped the table thoughtfully. “Maybe they’re right.”

  Maddy frowned. “Then why—”

  “Tomorrow,” Klaus interrupted calmly, “I’ll take them to the church and give them names.”

  She blinked. “…You’re what?”

  “They don’t have names,” he continued. “That seems inconvenient.”

  “You’re really something,” Maddy said slowly. “Most people thought of them as properties—use when needed, throw when they’re no use.”

  “I still need someone to keep the house from collapsing,” Klaus replied with a faint smile. “Throwing them out now would be inefficient.”

  Maddy stared at him. “You’re insane.”

  “Possibly,” Klaus agreed.

  Petra peeked timidly from behind the entrance, “Are you done, Maddy?” Her voice was so small that even Maddy couldn’t hear it.

  Klaus noticed immediately. “You can come in, Petra. I don’t bite either.”

  She squeaked and vanished back behind the doorway.

  Maddy pinched the bridge of her nose. “Why is everyone around me like this?”

  Klaus shrugged. “Maybe your one of us.”

  “I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that comment.”

  As Maddy turned to leave, the girl peeked out from her mother’s arms. “Big brother… you’ll really give us names?”

  “Yes,” Klaus said. “So eat properly and sleep early. Tomorrow will be busy.”

  Her face lit up as if he’d promised her the world.

  Klaus stood and headed for his room. Before entering, he said, “I’m going back to sleep. Don’t wake me unless it’s important.”

  The little girl who’s busy eating looked at him, “You’ve just woken up, big brother. Why are you sleeping again?”

  Klaus looked back at the girl, “For grown-ups like me, sleep is a luxury.” He didn’t wait for the girl’s response and closed the door.

  He crossed to the wooden wall beside his closet, fingers brushing an unremarkable wooden plank. No hinges. No seams. He pressed his palm against it and murmured, almost lazily, “Mindforger.”

  The plank dissolved without a sound, not breaking or splintering, but simply ceasing to be. Beneath it yawned a narrow, slanted passage cut into the earth, smooth and deliberate. No stairs. Just a long incline that swallowed light.

  Klaus forged a torch with a thought. Fire bloomed in his hand, steady and obedient. He replaced the plank behind him, sealing the entrance, and began his descent.

  The air grew colder the deeper he went. After several minutes, even the torch seemed to struggle against the dark. Then he heard it—a low, hollow howl of wind, distant but constant.

  He fixed the torch into a torch holder within the wall.

  Flame leapt.

  One torch ignited another, then another, a chain reaction racing across the chamber. Light flooded the underground hall, revealing a space so vast that the house above would barely cover a quarter of it. The stone walls were clearly man-made, their rough cuts uneven and personal.

  At the far end stood rows of metal sheets at staggered distances. Some were dented inward. Others were pierced clean through. A few had been replaced recently.

  Klaus approached the central table and closed his eyes.

  “Mindforger.”

  Three weapons appeared at once, settling onto the table with familiar weight: a revolver, a Swiss Luger pistol, and a Lee-Enfield rifle.

  He picked up the revolver first, flipping the cylinder open. Three bullets remained.

  “Still sloppy,” he muttered.

  He raised the gun and fired.

  The nearest target rang sharply, the bullet punching dead center. Klaus adjusted his stance, breathing out slowly, and fired again. The second shot clipped the edge of the far plate, metal screaming in protest. The last round went wide, sparking uselessly against stone.

  Klaus lowered the revolver, tongue clicking in annoyance. “Tch. Dexterity’s still lagging behind perception.”

  With a thought, he summoned his status. The air before him shimmered, the familiar translucent screen unfolding in full—no shortcuts this time. He read it carefully, as if daring it to lie to him.

  Page 1 / 2

  Name: Klaus de Verde

  Race: Human

  Age: 21

  Class: Reaver

  Level: 172

  Party: House de Verde

  Coalition: Pe’cha Subjugator’s Alliance

  Description:

  The adopted son of House de Verde. A wanderer bound by promise, quietly dragged into a web of blood, contracts, and vengeance he never intended to touch.

  Status:

  Health: 35,000 / 35,000

  Mana: 19,100 / 19,100

  Stamina: 12,000 / 12,000

  Attributes (Free Points: 61):

  Strength: 329+

  Agility: 535+

  Endurance: 385+

  Intelligence: 449+

  Dexterity: 620+

  Charisma: 270+

  Coins:

  Gold: 3,232

  Silver: 4,798

  Bronze: 32

  Storage: >>

  Next Page >>

  Klaus stared at the Dexterity line longer than the rest. Then he snorted softly.

  “Six hundred twenty and I still miss the 250 feet plate,” he said dryly.

  Klaus hesitated for a breath, then tapped the + beside Dexterity. Ten points vanished into the stat with a faint chime.

  “Let’s see if that was worth the silver,” he muttered.

  The status screen vanished at a flick of his wrist. Klaus extended his hand, palm up. Six bullets formed between his fingers one by one, perfectly balanced, their metallic sheen catching the torchlight. He rolled his wrist, feeling their weight, then activated Trap Master.

  The familiar sting followed—a feeling of losing without gaining anything.

  Trap Master activated.

  1 Silver deducted.

  Again. And again.

  By the sixth notification, Klaus was rubbing his temple. “Six bullets, six silver. At this rate, I should start charging the targets for emotional damage.”

  Still, he loaded the revolver with practiced ease—no wasted motion. No hesitation.

  Two hundred feet—the second-farthest plate. He aligned the sights, steadied his breathing, and fired.

  The shot rang through the chamber, sharp and clean. Dead center.

  Klaus adjusted his stance and fired again. Same result. A faint smile tugged at his lips.

  He pushed it further. Two hundred fifty feet. The farthest plate, scarred and warped from months of abuse. The first shot struck true. He fired three more times. All hits—slightly off-center, but consistent.

  “Acceptable,” he muttered. “Still room to improve.”

  He set the revolver down and tested the pistols next. Accurate, reliable—but when he lifted the Lee-Enfield, the difference was immediate. The rifle felt right. Each shot landed squarely in the center, no drift, no hesitation, as if the weapon itself agreed with him.

  Klaus nodded once, satisfied.

  He dismissed the targets and walked toward the far end of the chamber, boots echoing softly. The second tunnel stretched ahead, flatter and wider, the sound of wind growing louder with every step. Cool air brushed his face. Light spilled in at the end.

  He emerged onto a sheer cliffside. Far above, the silhouette of Pe’cha’s town wall cut across the sky. Below—an endless sea of forest, dark and alive.

  Klaus stepped to the edge, coat fluttering, eyes sharp and unreadable.

  “Time to hunt,” he said—and jumped.

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