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Morning did not arrive with revelation.

It ca with cold.

Kael woke before the sun, breath fogging faintly as he stared into the dim blue-grey of pre-dawn. The fire had burned itself into a bed of ash soti in the night, warmth long gone, leaving only the mory of it behind—like everything else lately.

He lay still, listening.

Jorah's breathing was rough and uneven a few steps away, sprawled in a way that suggested he'd fallen asleep mid-thought. Eira sat awake near the ashes, knees drawn up, cloak wrapped tight around her shoulders. She wasn't watching the horizon.

She was watching Kael.

He hadn't realized how used he was to being monitored—by enemies, by fate, by tilines that bent around his mistakes. This was different. Her gaze wasn't sharp. It wasn't asuring.

It was quiet concern.

"You're awake," she said softly.

"Been awake," he replied. "Just didn't move."

She nodded, as if that made sense. Maybe it did.

The silence between them wasn't awkward. It wasn't heavy either. It felt… earned. Like the aftermath of sothing hard survived rather than sothing avoided.

Kael sat up slowly, joints stiff, chest still sore in a way no wound could explain. He brushed ash from his sleeve and stared at the faint light creeping into the sky.

"I don't feel different," he admitted.

Eira tilted her head. "Different how?"

"Like soone who's finished sothing," he said. "Everyone talks about revenge like it's a chapter you close."

"And?"

"It feels more like a door I walked past," Kael said. "Still there. Just… behind now."

Eira considered that. "So doors don't lock. They just stop calling your na."

He glanced at her, surprised.

She shrugged lightly. "I've had a few like that."

They sat together as the world slowly rembered how to exist—birds stirring, wind moving through grass, the distant echo of life continuing despite everything that had ended.

Jorah groaned suddenly. "If this is one of those monts where you both achieve emotional clarity before breakfast, I'd like to formally request we delay it until I've eaten."

Kael snorted. "You slept through the emotional clarity."

"Figures," Jorah muttered, pushing himself upright. "Story of my life."

Eira rose smoothly, already scanning their surroundings, habit reasserting itself. Kael noticed how easily she shifted between stillness and readiness. He wondered—briefly—how many storms she'd survived quietly.

They broke camp without ceremony.

No speeches. No declarations. Just movent forward.

The road ahead bent toward the lowlands, where mory grew thin and the world's distortions beca more subtle—and more dangerous. Places where nas were forgotten, events misrembered, people erased without ever knowing it had happened.

Places tied to the Source.

Kael felt it now, faint but persistent. Not a pull. Not a threat.

A pressure.

Like sothing watching from behind glass.

"You feel it too, don't you?" Eira asked as they walked.

"Yes," Kael said. "It's not pushing anymore."

Jorah frowned. "That's worse, isn't it?"

Kael nodded. "It's adapting."

For the first ti, that thought didn't ignite fear or anger. It sharpened him instead.

They reached the edge of a shallow valley by midday, overlooking a settlent that should not have existed—at least, not according to Kael's mories. The buildings were familiar in style, but wrong in detail. Streets bent at angles that made the eye slide off them. The air humd faintly, like a song rembered incorrectly.

Jorah squinted. "This place gives a headache just looking at it."

Eira's jaw tightened. "It's a convergence zone."

Kael exhaled slowly. "A place where the world tried to fix a contradiction."

"aning?" Jorah asked.

"aning," Kael said, "soone like passed through here once—and the world chose to forget."

They stood there for a long mont.

Then Jorah cracked his knuckles. "Well. Let's go introduce ourselves to reality's coping chanism."

Eira shot him a look. "Carefully."

"Carefully," Jorah agreed solemnly.

As they descended into the valley, Kael felt sothing settle in him—not resolve, not certainty, but permission. To move forward without pretending the past hadn't scarred him. To exist without needing to justify his survival.

The Source had underestimated that.

It still saw him as a variable to be corrected. A threat to be managed.

What it didn't understand—what it could not model—was a man who no longer needed revenge to define his purpose.

Kael walked on, shoulders squared, eyes clear.

Behind them, the past stayed where it belonged.

Ahead, the war waited.

And this ti, Kael Vorrion would et it whole.

You are reading CHRONO BLADE:The hero who laughed at Fate Chapter 84 - 84 — The Quiet After the Storm on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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