She watched.
That alone marked the difference between a soldier
and a survivor.
Below, the settlement moved with purpose—guards
rotated without shouted orders, patrols overlapped
cleanly, civilians moved without the hollow fear she
had seen in royal lands. There was tension, yes, but it
was contained, disciplined.
This was not chaos pretending to be freedom.
This was structure without a crown.
She adjusted her stance, letting her presence become
obvious. Stealth would have been easy. She chose
visibility instead.
The reaction was immediate.
The shadow moved first.
Kara felt it before she saw it—a pressure shift, a
displacement of air behind her. She pivoted, shield
coming up in a smooth arc as a dagger glanced off its
edge, sparks snapping into the morning light.
Nyx landed lightly a few paces away, crouched, tail
flicking once.
“Bold,” Nyx said, eyes bright. “Most people don’t
announce themselves like that.
Kara didn’t lower her shield. “Most people aren’t here
to hide.”
A flicker of interest crossed Nyx’s face.
Moments later, the others arrived—not rushing, not
panicked. William walked at the center, axe resting
against his shoulder, gaze already assessing. Sylraen
flanked him, calm and calculating, arcane energy
barely restrained beneath her skin. Mirexa followed
close, eyes shining with unsettling intensity.
William stopped ten paces away.
“Name,” he said.
No threats. No titles.
Kara respected that.
“Kara Vane,” she replied. “Former royal guard.”
The air changed.
Sylraen’s eyes sharpened. Nyx’s posture shifted,
weight redistributing. Mirexa tilted her head,
curiosity edging into reverence.
William studied her armor, her shield, the way she
stood ready without being aggressive.
“Why are you here?” he asked.
Kara met his gaze squarely. “Because I don’t kneel to
kings who hide behind the System.”
A pause.
Then William nodded once.
“Good answer,” he said. “But answers aren’t enough.”
She almost smiled
They led her beyond the settlement’s edge, to a
natural clearing scarred by old combat—cracked
stone, churned earth, lingering mana residue. This
place had tested others before her.
Nyx hopped onto a fallen pillar. “Rules are simple.
You face us—not all at once. Show restraint,
judgment, and resolve.”
Sylraen added, “And understand this is not about
victory.”
William stepped forward last. “It’s about whether you
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belong.”
Kara rolled her shoulders, settling into her armor.
“Then let’s begin.”
Nyx came first.
Fast. Relentless. Blades flashing like shards of night.
Kara absorbed the assault, shield ringing again and
again as she pivoted, stepped, redirected. She didn’t
chase Nyx—she waited, forcing the assassin to
overextend.
When Nyx finally committed, Kara moved.
A shield bash that cracked the air. A sword pommel
strike aimed to disarm, not kill.
Nyx flipped back, laughing breathlessly. “Okay.
You’re fun.”
Next came Sylraen.
The ground iced over in a heartbeat.
Kara advanced anyway.
Spatial distortions twisted her path, forcing her to
adapt on instinct alone. She took hits—frost biting
into her armor, gravity shifting mid-step—but she
never lost balance.
She never broke formation.
Sylraen watched with keen interest as Kara used her
shield not just as defense, but as anchor—grounding
herself against magic meant to unmake footing itself.
“Impressive,” Sylraen murmured.
Mirexa stepped forward last.
No spells at first.
Just presence.
Pain thickened the air, a pressure that crawled
beneath the skin. Kara felt old wounds ache, scars
burn, exhaustion press in.
She pushed through it.
“I’ve endured worse,” Kara growled. “From men who
wore crowns.”
Mirexa’s smile softened. “Yes,” she said. “You have.”
Then—
William.
He didn’t rush her.
Didn’t overpower her.
He tested her.
Each exchange measured. Each strike probing—not
her strength, but her discipline. Kara felt it keenly: he
wasn’t trying to break her
He was trying to see where she would bend.
She held.
Even when her arms trembled. Even when her breath
burned.
Finally, William stepped back.
“That’s enough.”
Silence settled over the clearing.
Kara lowered her shield slowly, chest heaving. Sweat
ran down her spine, armor heavy, muscles screaming.
William approached, close enough now that she could
see the quiet intensity in his eyes.
“You weren’t here for shelter,” he said. “You weren’t
here for power.”
“No,” Kara replied hoarsely. “I was here for purpose.”
He extended his hand.
“We don’t swear oaths here,” William said. “You
choose. Every day.”
Kara looked at his hand.
Then at the women who stood with him—not owned,
not subdued, but aligned.
She clasped his forearm.
“I choose to protect,” she said. “Not a throne. Not a
symbol.”
“Us,” William replied.
Nyx grinned. Mirexa’s eyes shone. Sylraen nodded
once, approval unmistakable.Kara Vane straightened, shield settling against her
back like it finally belonged there.
For the first time since her betrayal—
She stood for something worth guarding

