Chapter 166
Added 2025-11-15 18:20:29 +0000 UTCKana walked with her hood pulled low, the fading afternoon light catching the edges of her thoughts the way it caught the side of the roadâslanting, sharp, revealing things she wished she could ignore.
The capital loomed far to the northern direction, but her mind drifted northward, again and again.
Days had passed, yet the battle in the frozen north clung to her like a scent she couldnât wash off. The echoes of those five masked attackers. The cold certainty in the twinsâ mirrored eyes as they waited for her in the underground tunnelâwaiting as if they had known the girlsâ path better than the girls themselves.
Two things refused to align, no matter how she turned them.
Why did those five focus only on Suri and me?
And the twins in the tunnelâthe way they stood, perfectly still, identical down to the rhythm of their breathsâŚ
Who sent them? Why them? Are they even worth the trouble?
If itâs really the empire, then how did they know our exact movements? Was there a spy among the students⌠or the professors? Or from the adventurers?
The idea lodged under her ribs like a sliver of cold iron.
Or is it someone from the kingdom? Royal Knights or..
Her mind shifted to the dukeâhis rigid posture, the tremble in his fingers when sheâd confronted him.
No⌠he has no reason to target us. But yes⌠I might have scared him a little too much.
A humorless exhale escaped her.
It vanished in the cold.
But another thought shadowed the next.
What if someoneâs waiting for me at the southern gate?
The moment the idea formed, it felt wrongâheavy, almost prophetic. Kana had learned to trust that weight.
Which was why, at the very last moment, when she was already on the road leading south gate of the capital city, she changed direction.
She needed to reach Suri first.
Warn her.
Suri probably had less scouting illusions in the capital since there were some few unexpected situations in the north. Orphanage. Suri wouldnât deactivate her scouting illusion there. She would go there first.
After all, the two twins probably thought she would go the standard route, and if they had people there.. she would be hunted again. So Kana took the long path westâfarther, slower, safer.
Her nights became routine.
Light a fire.
Roast meat from her [Inventory]
Wrap her cloak tighter against the creeping cold that signaled she was in the kingdom now.
Sleep with one hand near a dagger, the other resting lightly against the ground, sensing tremors, breaths, presences.
Then came the fifth night.
Kanaâs eyes snapped open before her mind even caught up.
[High Awareness] flared through her nerves like a sharp jolt of lightning.
Movement.
Approaching.
Not fast.
Not stealthy.
A group.
Large.
Twenty?
She focused on her [High Awareness]
Over thirtyâŚ
Moving slowly, steadily, not trying to hide.
Wagons.
Four, maybe five.
Heavy wheels.
Merchants? Kana thought. Merchants usually travel in such numbers especially if they were carrying something expensive⌠or dangerous.
She stood by the fire, letting the flames cast her shadow long across the dirt as the wagons rumbled into sight.
The night seemed to brighten as lanterns swayed from the wagon frames.
Then a booming voice cut through the quiet.
âGood evening to you, Young Lady!â
A round-bellied man hopped off the leading wagonâand nearly tripped. His clothes were bright, an explosion of colors against the muted forest. A hat with a long feather drooped toward his ear. His cheeks flushed red from drink or cold, and a silver badge gleamed on his chest, reflecting firelight like a tiny captured moon.
A certified merchant.
The wagons halted behind him, guards shifting restlessly, metal clinking.
But the merchant wasnât looking at Kana.
He was staring hungrily at the meat roasting on her spit.
âI am Iman!â the man declared, spreading his arms grandly. âMerchant from the western town! My class is [Alchemist], seller of herbs, rare potions, and the occasional miracle if you pay enough!â
He beamed.
Kana simply ignored her lively introduction at first then he approached her.
âAnd you, young miss?â
Kana read the group againâsubtle breaths, posture, tension, heartbeat rhythms.
Nothing murderous.
Nothing dangerous intent.
Just tired guards and wagons carrying cargo heavy enough to strain their wheels.
She removed her hoodâslowly, respectfully.
âIâm Ana. Class: [Scout]. Iâm⌠currently lost on my way to the western gate of the capital.â She lied. All students from the academy after all were currently in the north.
One of the armored guards chuckledâa short bark of a sound.
â[Scout], lost? Thatâs a first.â
Iman immediately smacked the manâs arm.
âCanât you see sheâs still young?! Scouts donât start out perfect!â
He turned back to herâhis eyes crinkling with both amusement and calculation.
âYoung Miss Ana,â he said, voice lowering kindly, âwe too are heading to the western gate. If you wish, you may travel with us⌠and itâs safer that way.â
He pointed at her roasting meat.
âOf course⌠nothing is free. That would be our deal.â
Kanaâs stomach tightenedânot from fear, but from instinct. She weighed the possibilities swiftly.
Traveling with them meant cover.
It meant rest.
It meant fewer eyes noticing a lone girl on the roads.
And there was no malicious intent coming from them.
She nodded once.
Iman grinned and snatched up the meat eagerly.
âHow did you get such fresh meat?â he asked between delighted bites. âImpossible to transport without spoiling.â
âI hunted it,â Kana replied simply.
âOf course!â Iman boomed. âYouâre a [Scout], after all!â
The guards chuckled, the fire crackled, and the wagons creaked behind themâŚ
âŚ..
It had been two days since Kana joined the merchant caravan.
Two quiet, uneventful daysâat least on the surface.
Kana spent most of it resting in the dim, swaying warmth of the wagon. Her limbs still carried the exhaustion of the twins disaster, her senses sharpened but fatigued, her thoughts circling the same questions like wolves stalking the edge of a fire.
Most of the passengers were workersâlaborers dozing with arms folded, women knitting quietly, two young kids rolling dice on the wagon floor. But there were four hitchhikers riding with them as well. Three had paid their fare. The fourthâKanaâhad paid with roasted meat.
At dawn, just when the world softened into blue and gray, the wagon jerked and slowed. The creaking wheels groaned to a halt.
Kanaâs eyes snapped open.
One of the guards slid the wagon curtain aside.
His voice was loud and nervous.
âEveryone out!.â
The passengers inside did not look worried. They sighed, stretched aching joints, gathered their bags. They moved with the practiced motions of people who had done this many times before.
Kana frowned.
âThis seems too soon. We just stopped not long ago.â
A woman beside herâfortyish, hair tied back with a fraying green ribbonâgave her a small sympathetic smile.
âYou must be new here,â the woman said. âThis is Sunâs group territory. Bandits. WellâŚâ She lowered her voice. âBandits with rules. Going out is just a formality. Anyone who goes through here will need to pay.. like a gate entrance."
Kana stepped down from the wagon, boots sinking slightly into the cold dirt. Her breath misted in the faint light as she scanned the treeline.
Thenâ
She focused. [High Awareness] ignited like a rush of heat behind her eyes.
Sound sharpened.
Sight narrowed.
Thoughts stretched into perfect clarity.
Imanâs booming voice struck her ears immediately, even from across the clearing where the wagons had formed a loose semi-circle.
His loud, theatrical politeness was impossible to miss.
Opposite him stood a tall, broad man with a thick torso and sun-baked skin. His arms were crossed, and despite his heavy build, his steps were lightâtoo light for someone of his size.
A [Scout] type?, Kana guessed.
He swept the caravan with a bored, predatory glanceâand his eyes landed on her like a blade point.
Imanâs smile cracked.
The bandit leader pointed directly at Kana.
âThat one,â he said. âRed eyes. Iâll take her and you will all go. Safely.â
The clearing seemed to still.
Kana felt every heartbeat within ten meters. Felt the tightening of grips on weapons. Felt the tension flood through the guards behind her.
Several of them stepped forward.
âMerchant Iman!â one hissed. âWe canât hand her overââ
Another guard, the one who had teased Kana two days ago, now stood protectively in front of her, fingers WHITE on his sword hilt.
âWe pay tolls,â he growled. âWe followed your rules.â
Kana blinked, surprised by a small, warm ache in her chest.
Theyâre willing to fight for me?
Even though they barely know me?
She bit the inside of her cheek.
She didnât want them to.
Because she had weighed the battlefield in a single heartbeatâ
Bandits numbering around fifty.
A few archers hidden above.
Levels mostly 4 to 5.
Four of them probably around level 10.
Compared to what she had fought in the north, this wasnât even close.
It wasnât fear tightening her muscles.
It was something else.
A cold calculation.
This might be good.
Her coins need to be replenished after the amount she just spent.
Bandits always kept spoils nearbyâcoins, gear, sometimes artifacts.
And if they bring them to their main baseâŚ
She would also save this caravan.
Earn goodwill.
Earn additional coin.
Kana inhaled slowly.
A calm, measured breath.
Opportunity slid across her thoughts like the thin gleam of a sharpening knife.
The bandit leader drew closer, cracking his neck as he eyed her.
âI will take her,â Sun declared, licking his lips. âAs your passage fee. No one else will be hurt. You have my word.â
âYouâll come quietly,â he continued. âAnd no one needs to die. Tonight.â
âFine,â she said softly.
It didnât feel soft.
âI do not want anyone to be harmed⌠because of me.â
The guards behind her stiffened.
Sun smirked. âThatâs one way to put itââ
Kana stepped forward.
Just one step.
But that step carried a shift in the entire air.
Pressure.
Like a bowstring drawn silently to its limit.
The bandits felt it.
The guards felt it.
âPut a shackle onâ her!â Sun's voice suddenly turned into a high pitch sound earning a few giggles from men behind him.
âŚâŚ
Kanaâs hands were bound first.
Thick rope looped tight over her wrists, biting into her skin.
Then another length was thrown over her shoulder, pulled hard enough that she stumbled forward.
The bandits laughed at the small noise she let slipâhalf grunt, half annoyance.
They marched her through the narrow forest path, boots crunching leaves, the swaying lanterns on their hips throwing long, broken shadows among the trees. The smell of sweat, unwashed leather, and cheap tobacco clung to the air.
Kana walked calmly in the middle of them.
Or ratherâshe allowed them to think she was calm.
While one of the bandits behind her tugged her rope sharply, Kana muttered, voice low:
âTheyâre going to report you. For abducting me.â
Laughter erupted like a small storm.
One of the men with crooked, yellowed teeth leaned in close until she could smell the stale alcohol on his breath.
âOf course theyâre going to report us,â he sneered, as if proud of it.
Then he tapped the side of his nose, grinning wider.
âAnd we already paid them not to search for you.â
Kana felt something tighten in her chestânot fear. Disgust.
If she tells it to the duke⌠heâll take action, right?
Right?
Her jaw clenched.
She exhaled through her noseâa soft, controlled sigh. The rope scraped her wrist as she moved.
âWhere are you taking me?â she asked.
The bandits didnât hide their delight at her question.
Sunâtheir leaderâwalked ahead like he was leading a parade, not a kidnapping. His heavy build made the ground crunch beneath him, but his steps were too confident, too practiced. A predator used to be unchallenged.
He wiped sweat from his brow, chuckling.
âYou,â Sun said, turning enough to flash her a grin, âare going to be this batchâs finest product.â
Product.
The word was a blade driven into her ears.
âWeâre delivering you to the empire,â he continued. âThey pay the highest for rare goods. Young girls like you? Red eyes? Pretty face? Youâll fetch enough gold to retire on.â
Kana stopped walking for half a second.
Not visibly.
But inside her, something stilled.
A cold, precise quiet.
Selling their own people to the empireâŚ
Selling them as slavesâŚ
The rope around her wrist began to trembleânot because she was pulling.
But because her fingers were flexing, slowly curling into a fist.
They all deserve to die.
The thought wasnât shouted in her head; it was spoken. Calm. Certain.
The world seemed to hush in response.
The night wind paused.
The insects stopped chirping.
Even the banditsâ footsteps slowed for a brief, eerie heartbeat.
A faint pressure radiated from Kanaâs body, subtle yet undeniableâlike the moment before a thunderstorm when the air thickens, heavy with charged tension.
Sun stopped mid-laugh.
Every bandit within several meters felt a chill crawl up their spines. It prickled over their skin, ran cold fingers down their necks.
One by one, without meaning to, they turned toward her.
Kana lifted her gaze.
Her red eyes were half-lidded, unreadableâyet they glowed faintly in the shadows, a simmering ember behind calm expression.
Sun swallowed, throat bobbing.
For the first time since laying eyes on herâŚ
he wondered if they had chosen the wrong person.
Post note:
Hope you enjoy the chap!
Have a great weekend everyone! đ
Comments
Poor guys are gonna die ik I should feel bad but hey they put this on themselves đ¤ˇââď¸
Neaaa
2026-01-06 07:55:42 +0000 UTCAppreciate the feedback! I rarely do this but I should put some description to avoid confusion
Super_Dawg
2025-11-17 01:32:55 +0000 UTCTftc! A bit confusing suddenly jumping back in time 2 days. Personally I would try to avoid doing that too often but when you do definitely worth stating the time skip like "Kana - Two days ago." then jump into the story.
Rethyria
2025-11-16 00:15:22 +0000 UTC