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The Mask Behind The Mask.

Rambosa City. Three days after the Kaelith rescue.

The rchant District was louder than Kai rembered.

It was not the usual hum of comrce, the kind of background noise that any thriving trade hub produced.

This was different. It carried an edge. A tension in the air that Kai could taste the mont he walked through the main gate.

He was in his Aron disguise, as always. Black suit, black mask, hands in his pockets.

The persona that the people of Rambosa had co to associate with dragon-killing heroics, impossible business deals, and the kind of quiet authority that made even Guild Masters sit up straighter.

But today, sothing was wrong.

The stares were different.

People were still looking at him, yes. They always did. The man in the black mask was impossible to miss. But the usual mixture of awe, curiosity, and admiration that accompanied those stares had been replaced by sothing else.

Sothing closer to suspicion.

’What happened here?’

He walked down the main street, keeping his pace relaxed, his posture unchanged. Two rchants who had been talking near a fruit stall stopped mid-sentence when they noticed him. Their eyes followed him for a beat too long before they turned back to each other and resud whispering.

Kai caught fragnts.

"...saying the timing is too convenient..."

"...disappeared right after the Shadow appeared in the north..."

"...nobody has ever seen them in the sa room, have they?"

His stride did not falter. His expression behind the mask did not change. But internally, a cold sensation settled in his chest.

’They are connecting the dots.’

He turned the corner toward the Undead Market Company warehouse and found Leo standing outside the entrance, pacing back and forth with the nervous energy of a man who had been waiting for hours.

The mont Leo spotted him, the relief on his face was imdiately replaced by sothing far more concerning.

Dread.

"Sir." Leo rushed toward him, his voice low and urgent. "We need to talk. Inside. Now."

"You seem distressed."

"I am beyond distressed, sir. I am three als away from a complete nervous breakdown."

Kai looked at him for a mont, then nodded and followed him through the warehouse doors.

...

The interior of the warehouse was exactly as Kai rembered. Wooden crates stacked in neat rows, trade manifests pinned to a board on the wall, and the faint scent of preserved herbs that Leo used to keep the storage area clean.

Sophia was already inside, seated at the work table with her hands clasped tightly in her lap. The mont Kai entered, she stood up and bowed, but the expression on her face mirrored Leo’s.

Sothing had gone very wrong while he was gone.

Leo closed the warehouse doors, checked through the window to make sure no one was loitering outside, and then turned to face Kai with the posture of soone delivering a eulogy.

"Sir, there is a woman in Rambosa who has been asking questions about you."

"People ask questions about Aron regularly. That is not new."

"No. Not about Aron." Leo swallowed hard. "About the connection between Aron and the Shadow of Victims."

The warehouse went silent.

Kai’s hand, which had been casually adjusting his cuff, stopped.

"Explain."

Sophia spoke first, her voice steadier than Leo’s but carrying the sa undercurrent of alarm.

"Her na is Mira Thorne. She is an information broker who operates out of the northern quarter of the rchant District. She has been in Rambosa for about two weeks, and in that ti, she has been interviewing rchants, guild mbers, guards, and tavern owners. All of them about the sa topic."

"Which is?"

"The hero Aron disappeared from public view around the sa ti the Shadow of Victims beca active in the Jaun Land. She has been building a tiline. And the tiline, sir, is uncomfortably accurate."

Kai did not respond imdiately.

He walked to the work table, pulled out a chair, and sat down. He crossed one leg over the other and rested his chin on his fist.

’An information broker. Not a spy. Not an agent of the Empire or the Kingdom. A private operator who makes money by uncovering secrets and selling them to the highest bidder. The most dangerous kind of person for soone like .’

"What exactly has she uncovered?"

Leo pulled a folded piece of parchnt from his coat pocket and placed it on the table.

"We did not steal this. One of our rchants, Henrik, was approached by her two days ago. She asked him questions about the Undead Market Company, specifically about how Aron beca connected to the business. Henrik told her the standard story, that you were an investor and a business partner. She seed unsatisfied. After the conversation, Henrik found this on the table where they had been sitting."

Kai picked up the parchnt and unfolded it.

It was a handwritten tiline. Clean, organized, and devastatingly thorough.

The entries read:

Day 1: Shadow of Victims first reported in the Jaun Land. Sa week, a masked adventurer nad Aron registers at the Rambosa Guild House.

Day 14: Duke Eloit sends four hundred soldiers to the Jaun Land. All are killed. Shadow of Victims claims responsibility. Two days later, Aron begins selling Eye for Eye artifacts through the Undead Market Company. Product origin: unknown.

Day 30: Duke Eloit deploys four Calamity-class Dragons. The Dragons turn on Rambosa. Aron walks into the burning city alone and kills all four. Title acquired: Dragon Slayer.

Day 31: Shadow of Victims begins building a city in the Jaun Land. Aron disappears from Rambosa for three weeks.

Day 60: Aron returns to Rambosa with a recruitnt notice for rchants. Destination described as a "frontier settlent." All recruited rchants are directed to the Jaun Land. The Shadow of Victims’ city, Valdris, begins receiving human rchants.

Day 75: The Shadow of Victims sends a diplomatic envoy to King Desmond. Aron disappears from Rambosa for the entire duration of the diplomatic summit.

Day 90: Aron reappears. The sovereignty agreent is signed. The timing of every disappearance matches a public action by the Shadow of Victims.

At the bottom of the parchnt, in neat handwriting, was a single question:

"Who is Aron?"

Kai read it twice. Then he set the parchnt down and looked at the wall.

’She has been here for two weeks. Two weeks, and she has already reconstructed a tiline that connects every major event between my two identities. The disappearances. The artifact supply chain. The dragon fight. The diplomatic summit. She has not found proof, not yet, but she has built a case that any intelligent person could follow to its logical conclusion.’

"Sir?" Leo’s voice was barely above a whisper.

"How many people has she spoken to?"

"At least thirty that we know of. rchants, guild clerks, tavern owners, even a few of the city guards who were present during the dragon attack. She approaches people casually, like she is just making conversation, but every question she asks leads back to the sa place."

"Has she spoken to either of you directly?"

Leo and Sophia exchanged a glance.

Sophia answered. "She tried. She ca to the warehouse four days ago and asked to speak with the owners of the Undead Market Company. Leo told her we were closed for inventory."

"And she accepted that?"

"She smiled, said she understood, and left. But she ca back the next day. And the day after that. She is persistent."

Kai drumd his fingers against the table.

’She ca back three days in a row. That is not casual curiosity. That is a thodical investigation. She wants to confirm her theory, and the only people who can do that are the two humans who interact with both Aron the rchant and the Shadow of Victims the dungeon lord.’

He looked at Leo.

"She knows you work for both."

Leo went pale.

"Sir?"

"Think about it, Leo. You are listed as the primary operator of the Undead Market Company, a business founded and backed by Aron. You also travel regularly to the Jaun Land, a territory controlled by the Shadow of Victims. Any investigator worth their salt would have connected those two facts within a day."

Leo sat down heavily on a crate.

"So she is not just investigating Aron. She is investigating us."

"You are the thread. You and Sophia are the bridge between my two identities. If she pulls hard enough on that thread, the entire disguise unravels."

Sophia’s hands tightened in her lap.

"What do we do, my Lord?"

The title slipped out before she could stop it. She caught herself imdiately, her eyes widening.

"Sir," she corrected. "I ant sir."

Kai looked at her, then at Leo, and then at the closed warehouse doors.

’That. That right there is the problem. They have been living between two worlds for months. In Valdris, they kneel before the Shadow of Victims and call their Lord. In Rambosa, they work for a masked rchant nad Aron and call sir. The act has beco second nature to them, but the seams are showing. One slip of the tongue in front of the wrong person, and the entire operation is over.’

He stood.

"Where is she now?"

"She rents a room above the Silver Quill tavern in the northern quarter," Leo said. "She spends most of her mornings at the tea house across from the Guild Hall, watching the foot traffic."

"Watching for ."

Leo nodded slowly.

"We think so."

Kai walked to the window and looked out at the street. The afternoon sun was high, and the rchant district was at its busiest. Hundreds of people moving between shops, carts rolling over cobblestone, and the distant sound of a blacksmith’s hamr ringing through the air.

Sowhere out there, a woman with a tiline and a sharp mind was putting together a puzzle that Kai had never wanted anyone to solve.

’I have two options. The first is to eliminate the problem directly. Sanovere could make her disappear without a trace. No body, no evidence, no questions. But that creates a different problem. Information brokers do not work alone. They always have dead-man’s switches, cached docunts, and partners who know to start asking louder questions if they go silent. Killing her might stop the imdiate threat, but it could also amplify it.’

He turned from the window.

’The second option is to let her continue and control what she finds. Feed her a narrative that explains the coincidences without revealing the truth. A cover story that satisfies her curiosity and makes her investigation a dead end.’

He sat back down.

’But there is a third option. One I do not want to think about but need to.’

He looked at his hands. The hands of Aron. The hands of the Shadow of Victims. Two identities occupying the sa body, and the distance between them was shrinking every day.

’Do I even need the Aron persona anymore?’

The thought hit him harder than he expected.

’When I created Aron, it was a tool. A way to operate in human cities without revealing what I really am. The mask, the suit, the voice, all of it was designed to be disposable. Sothing I could throw away the mont it stopped being useful.’

He leaned back in the chair.

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