The village did not announce itself.
There were no walls rising from the earth, no banners snapping in the wind, no guards watching from towers with narrowed eyes. The road simply softened beneath their feet. Stone gave way to packed dirt. Old wagon ruts faded as grass reclaid them, bending gently as though even the land here refused to hold scars for long.
Kael noticed the sound first.
Laughter.
It startled him enough that he slowed without realizing it. The sound was light—unrestrained, careless, the kind that carried without fear of being overheard. Children's voices overlapped and tangled, punctuated by the splash of water and the clatter of sothing dropped and hastily retrieved.
Sowhere nearby, tal rang against tal.
A hamr struck an anvil. Not hurried. Not frantic. Just steady, patient work.
Kael stopped walking.
The world had taught him to associate sound with danger. Shouts ant orders. Laughter often masked cruelty. Silence usually preceded death. But this—this was different. This was noise without urgency. Life unfolding without waiting for permission.
Jorah noticed his hesitation and glanced back. "You alright?"
Kael nodded slowly. "Yeah. Just… wasn't expecting this."
Jorah followed his gaze, listening. A grin spread across his face, unguarded and boyish. "I forgot places like this still existed."
Eira walked between them, her eyes scanning the village ahead. She didn't speak, but Kael saw the subtle shift in her posture—the way her shoulders loosened, the tension she carried like armor easing by degrees.
They entered the village without ceremony.
No one challenged them. No one watched them too closely. A woman hanging laundry glanced up, squinted at them briefly, then waved as though travelers appearing from the tree line was a normal enough occurrence to warrant no concern.
A man repairing a fence nodded once, polite but uninterested.
A child darted past them chasing a wooden hoop, laughing too hard to notice strangers at all.
Kael felt sothing strange settle in his chest.
He felt… unard.
Not physically—his blade rested where it always had, a familiar weight at his side—but internally. There was no role waiting for him here. No expectation. No prophecy tugging at his spine. No invisible pressure demanding he fix sothing broken before it shattered completely.
It was unsettling.
They found the inn near the village center, a broad, low building with windows thrown open to let out warmth and steam. The sign creaked gently overhead, its painted letters worn soft by ti.
Inside, the sll of stew wrapped around them like a welco. Herbs and root vegetables. Sothing slow-cooked and honest.
The innkeeper looked up from wiping a table—a broad-shouldered man with flour dusting his sleeves and a smile that ca easily. "Travelers?"
"Yes," Eira replied. "Just passing through."
"Well," he said, setting the cloth aside, "you're welco to pass through slower."
Jorah brightened instantly. "I like him."
The innkeeper laughed. "Most people do."
They took a table near the window. Kael sat out of habit with his back to the wall—then paused.
His fingers tightened on the chair.
Slowly, deliberately, he turned it around and sat facing the room instead.
The choice felt small.
It wasn't.
He could feel the openness of it, the vulnerability. No blind spots. No escape route calculated. Just presence.
The stew arrived in chipped bowls, steaming and thick. Kael lifted his spoon and took a bite.
He froze.
The taste wasn't extraordinary. No rare spices. No careful presentation. Just warmth and salt and care.
It tasted… good.
Not because it was exceptional.
But because it was made without fear.
They ate quietly, the clink of spoons and murmur of conversation filling the space between them. People ca and went. A farr with mud on his boots. A pair of won sharing bread and gossip. A tired man with ink-stained fingers who looked like he spent more ti writing than sleeping.
No one stared.
No one whispered.
Kael felt the tension slowly bleed out of him, leaving behind sothing unfamiliar and fragile.
After the bowls were cleared, Jorah leaned back and stretched. "I'm going to investigate local gossip."
Eira arched a brow. "You an flirt."
"I an gather valuable intelligence," Jorah corrected solemnly, already halfway to the bar.
Eira shook her head but smiled faintly. She rose a mont later to speak with the innkeeper about rooms.
Kael was left alone.
He hadn't realized how rare that was.
He stepped outside.
The afternoon had softened into gold. Shadows stretched lazily across the ground. At the edge of the village, children had gathered near a shallow stream, skipping stones. One noticed him and froze.
Kael stopped too.
For a long mont, they regarded each other—his stillness eting the child's curiosity. No fear. No awe. Just assessnt.
Then the child shrugged and turned back to the ga.
Kael exhaled.
He walked farther, stopping near the blacksmith's forge. The heat rolled toward him in waves. The smith glanced up, t his eyes, and nodded once before returning to his work.
No recognition.
No reverence.
No expectation.
Just existence.
"You look lost."
Kael turned.
Eira stood a few steps away, hands clasped behind her back. Her voice was gentle, but her eyes searched his face carefully.
"Not lost," he said after a mont. "Just… unused to this."
She joined him at the forge's edge, the warmth painting her skin in amber. "To being invisible?"
He considered it. "To being unnecessary."
Eira tilted her head. "You think that's a bad thing?"
"No," he admitted. "I just don't know who I am without the world ending around ."
She leaned her shoulder lightly against his.
"You're allowed to learn," she said.
The contact was subtle. Intentional. Grounding.
They stayed there as the light faded, watching the blacksmith finish his work and shutter the forge for the night.
Later, in his small room, Kael lay awake listening to the village settle. Doors closing. A dog barking once and then falling silent. The quiet wasn't threatening.
It was complete.
When sleep finally took him, the dream surprised him.
There was no blood. No void. No screaming threads.
He dread of a road that didn't fork. Of mornings that arrived without dread. Of days stacking neatly atop one another, unremarkable and unbroken.
He woke before dawn, heart steady.
Outside, the village slept.
Inside his chest, sothing fragile stretched—hope, cautious but real.
Far beyond the village, beyond ti and place, sothing ancient felt the shift.
Not power. Not threat.
Deviation.
Kael Vorrion was no longer moving as expected.
And peace, left uninterrupted, was dangerous.
The Source stirred—not in rage, but in preparation.
Because Kael was learning how to stay.
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