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Chapter 123: The End of the Trial

The jungle released

slowly, branches and vines pulling back like guards stepping aside for a soldier who had walked through a war and co out the other side. The sunlight hit my face all at once, warm and golden, and I had to squint against the sudden brightness after so long beneath the green canopy.

I stopped at the edge of the tree line.

The village clearing stretched out before , not Wayford, but the encampnt where the knights had made their base. Tents stood in neat rows, their canvas walls pale against the green grass. Smoke rose from cookfires, carrying the sll of bread and sothing savory that made my stomach growl despite everything.

Knights moved between the tents, so carrying supplies, others tending to wounds, a few sitting in small circles with their heads bowed and their shoulders heavy. The battle was over, but the weight of it still pressed down on everyone who had survived.

...And the children.

They were there too, small figures scattered across the encampnt, so sitting alone, so huddled together, so being led by the hand toward tents where food and blankets waited.

I saw Lily sitting on a log near the largest tent, her knees pulled up to her chest, her eyes fixed on the ground. I stood at the edge of the clearing, my boots still in the shadow of the trees, and I looked at all of them.

Seraphina was near the command tent, her black hair pulled back from her face, her blue eyes sharp as she gave orders to the knights who gathered around her. Her voice carried across the clearing, cold and efficient, and the knights nodded and saluted and scattered to their tasks like leaves before a storm.

Cassian stood a few feet away from her, his golden-blue eyes scanning the encampnt with the easy confidence. His arms were crossed over his chest, and his face was calm, but I saw the way his gaze lingered on the children, his jaw tightened when one of them flinched at a sudden sound.

Ren was there too, sitting on a barrel near the center of the camp, his sword laid across his knees, his eyes half-closed against the sun.

Elena and Dorian were nearby, their weapons cleaned and sheathed, their bodies still carrying the marks of the battle bandages wrapped around arms and shoulders, limps that would heal and scars that would not.

They were all here.

All alive and waiting.

The grass was soft beneath my boots, and I felt a hundred eyes turn toward

as I crossed the clearing. The knights who had been working stopped what they were doing and stared. The children who had been sitting alone lifted their heads and looked.

Then Lily saw .

She was on her feet before I could blink, her small legs carrying her across the grass faster than I thought possible. Her face was pale and her eyes were red and her cheeks were wet with tears that had not yet dried, but she was running, and she did not stop.

"Leo!"

Her voice was high and cracking, and it cut through the noise of the encampnt. She hit

with enough force to make

stumble, her small arms wrapping around my waist, her face pressing into my stomach hard enough that I felt her tears soaking through my shirt.

"You’re back. You’re back. You’re back." The words ca out in a rush, muffled and broken, and she said them over and over as if she was afraid I would disappear if she stopped.

I crouched down and wrapped my arms around her, and I felt the others coming before I saw them. Tobin’s footsteps were heavy and angry, but when he reached , his arms were shaking and his face was wet and he did not say anything at all.

He just pressed himself against my side and held on like I was the only solid thing in a world that had turned to water.

Sera appeared at the edge of the group, her golden eyes fixed on my face, her small hands clasped in front of her.

I reached out and pulled her into the circle, and she ca without resistance, her small body fitting against my other side. The other children from Wayford gathered around us, pressing close, their hands reaching for my arms and my shoulders and my hands, as if they needed to touch

to believe that I was real.

"...I’m here," I said, and my voice was thick. "I’m not going anywhere."

Ti passed. The children slowly pulled away, one by one, their tears drying on their cheeks, their breathing steadying.

So of them laughed—small, fragile sounds that broke my heart and nded it at the sa ti. So of them just sat beside , their shoulders touching mine, content to be close without needing to speak.

Ren found

then, walking over with a grin. Elena and Dorian followed close behind, their expressions softer.

"You look like shit," Ren said, stopping in front of .

"I feel exactly like shit," I said.

"That’s an improvent."

He reached down and pulled

to my feet, his grip strong and warm, and before I could say anything, he pulled

into a rough hug that knocked the breath out of my lungs. His hand slapped against my back hard enough to bruise, and I heard him laugh.

"You did good, kid," he said against my shoulder. "Really good."

Elena hugged

too, her body thin and hard against mine. "Don’t ever do that again," she said, her voice sharp, but her hands were gentle when she pulled away.

Dorian just nodded at , his massive hand landing on my shoulder and squeezing once. It was enough.

Cassian appeared behind them, his golden-blue eyes warm, his arms crossed over his chest. He looked at

for a long mont, and then he grinned—a wide, boyish grin that made him look younger than he was.

"So," he said, "I hear you have a sword art now."

I blinked. "How did you—"

"Ren tells everyone everything," Cassian grinned. He threw an arm around my shoulders, his weight solid and grounding. "Seraphina told

what you did in the laboratory," he added, his voice dropping.

"She said most people would have run, but you didn’t. She’s proud of you, and I am too." He squeezed my shoulder before adding with a smirk, "Don’t let it go to your head. You’re still a brat."

The children had gathered around us while we were talking, their eyes wide, their faces curious. I looked down at them, at their pale cheeks and their tired eyes and the small, fragile smiles that were starting to appear at the corners of their mouths.

"..I have to go now," I said. The words ca out heavier than I intended, and the smiles faded. Lily grabbed my hand, her fingers cold and small, and Tobin crossed his arms again, his jaw tightening.

"Go where?" Lily asked, her voice small.

"Not far," I said. "But I can’t stay here."

"But... but you just got back."

I crouched down so that I was at eye level with her, and I took her hands in mine. Her fingers were trembling, and I held them steady.

"Listen to ," I said. "All of you."

The children leaned closer, and the knights fell silent, and I felt the weight of their attention pressing against my shoulders like a hand that was not quite there.

"You are going to be okay," I said. "I know it doesn’t feel like that right now. I know it feels like the world ended and no one told you how to keep living in it. But you are going to be okay."

I looked at Lily.

"Seraphina and Cassian are going to take care of you. They’re going to find families for you, good families, people who will keep you safe and feed you and make sure you have blankets when it’s cold."

I looked at Tobin.

"And you’re going to be angry. That’s okay. You’re allowed to be angry. But don’t let it eat you. Don’t let it turn you into sothing you’re not."

I looked at Sera.

"And you... you all are going to be fine."

I took a breath.

"I have to go," I said again. "But I’m not leaving you alone. You’re going to be with people who care about you. People who will protect you. And maybe soday, when you’re older, we’ll see each other again."

Lily was crying, her tears falling onto our joined hands, but she did not argue. She just nodded and squeezed my fingers and let go.

Ren stepped forward, his grin back in place, though it was softer now. "Don’t worry about the kids," he said. "We’ll take care of them. Won’t we, Cassian?"

Cassian nodded, his golden-blue eyes warm. "They’ll be safe with us. I promise."

Elena crossed her arms. "And if anyone tries to hurt them, they’ll have to go through ."

Dorian grunted in agreent.

I looked at them—these knights who had followed

into hell, who had fought beside

and bled beside

and carried

when I could not walk. I did not have words for what I felt. I did not think there were words.

"Thank you," I said. "...All of you."

Ren waved his hand. "Don’t get sappy. You’re making it weird."

I laughed.

The knights began to move.

They gathered the children, loading supplies onto wagons, checking their weapons one last ti. The sun was still high, but the shadows were growing longer, and I knew that they wanted to be on the road before nightfall.

Ren mounted his horse, his sword at his hip, his face set in a mask of calm competence. Elena and Dorian flanked him, their eyes scanning the tree line for threats that were no longer there. Cassian rode at the front of the column, his golden-blue eyes fixed on the road ahead.

Seraphina gave one last order, her voice sharp and cold, and then she turned her horse and followed the others.

The wagons began to roll, their wheels creaking on the dirt path, and the children waved from the backs of the carts, their small hands fluttering like birds trying to take flight.

Lily and the others waved at

as they went.

I stood at the edge of the clearing and watched them go.

The wagons grew smaller and smaller, and the figures on horseback beca shapes, and the shapes beca specks, and the specks disappeared into the trees.

Then they were gone.

The clearing was empty now.

The tents were gone, and the cookfires were cold, and the only sound was the wind moving through the grass and the distant call of birds in the jungle. I stood alone in the silence, and I let it wash over .

I have to go now.

My ti here was ending. I could feel it. My soul was pulling against the walls of this world, and there was not much ti left. But before I left, I had sothing else to do.

A promise I made a long ti ago. I had to pay him a visit before I went.

I turned and looked toward the eastern horizon, at the mountains that rose in the distance, at the path that led away from this place.

"...Ti to finish my promise," I said.

_

I walked into the trees, and the shadows swallowed , and the clearing fell silent. I moved deeper into the jungle.

The path beneath my feet was the sa path I had stumbled through months ago, bleeding and broken and barely conscious. The stream I crossed was the sa stream where I had collapsed, face-down in the mud, too weak to lift my head, too tired to care if I lived or died.

The black hair that fell across my face was streaked with white now, marking

in ways that no wound ever could. The katana at my hip had a na—Tempest—and it had tasted blood, more blood than I wanted to rember.

I walked through the jungle without hurry, my boots soft on the fallen leaves, my hand resting on Tempest’s hilt. The stream appeared through the trees, its surface glittering in the afternoon light, and I stopped at its edge.

This was the place.

I rembered the way the water had felt against my face, cold and sharp, pulling

back from the edge of unconsciousness.

I rembered the taste of blood in my mouth, the ache in my bones, the way my body had scread with every movent. I rembered looking up and seeing the shadow move between the trees, too fast, too dark, too hungry.

I rembered the... fear.

I had been afraid that night. Not of death—I had died before, and it was not as terrifying as people believed, but of becoming nothing. The thought of failing before I had even begun, of waking up in a strange world only to be torn apart by the first monster that crossed my path, that was what truly terrified .

That fear had saved . It had made

run when I should have fought, hide when I should have stood my ground. But it had also left a scar, a mark on my soul that I had carried through every training session, every battle, every mont of doubt.

I was here to burn that scar away.

I found him deeper in the jungle, past the stream and the fallen log and the cluster of rocks that looked like teeth growing from the earth.

The Night Terror was sleeping.

Its massive body was curled beneath an overhang of stone, a dark mass of shadow and sinew that seed to drink the light from the air around it.

Its fur—if it could be called fur was black and matted, streaked with grey in places where age or battle had left their marks. Its claws, long and curved, rested on the ground in front of its snout, each one longer than my fingers.

Its breathing was slow and deep, a rumble that vibrated through the earth beneath my feet, and I could see the mana in its core pulsing faintly through its skin, a dark and hungry light that never quite went out.

Grade 3. High rank.

I had been an Initiate when I first fought him. Barely able to hold a sword. He had torn through

like I was paper, and I had survived only because Mia had found

and pulled

back from the edge.

Now I was Elite Low. Two sub-ranks below him.

But I was not the sa person who had crawled through the mud and prayed for death.

I stepped out from the trees.

The Night Terror’s eyes snapped open. Two yellow circles of fire, cold and hungry, stared at . They locked onto

imdiately, and the creature’s lips pulled back from its teeth in a snarl that was more instinct than threat. Its mouth opened, revealing rows of teeth that curved inward like hooks, layered three deep, each one serrated.

I stopped walking and let him look at .

"Rember ?" I asked.

The Night Terror did not answer. But sothing flickered in those eyes, sothing that might have been recognition. Or maybe it was just hunger.

"Probably not," I said. "Why would you? I was nothing to you. Just another piece of at that got away."

I took a step forward.

The Night Terror rose to its feet, its massive body unfolding from the shadows like sothing being born from the dark. Its shoulders were higher than my head, and its claws scraped against the stone as it shifted its weight, and the growl that rumbled from its chest was deep enough to feel in my bones.

"You took sothing from ," I said.

I took another step. "...You took my certainty."

The Night Terror lunged.

It was faster than I rembered.

The claws ca at my head in a blur of black steel and shadow, and I felt the wind of the strike against my face as I stepped back, just out of reach. The creature’s montum carried it past , and I watched it recover, turning with a grace that should not have been possible for sothing so large.

I did not draw Tempest.

The Night Terror lunged again, and this ti I did not dodge. I t it head-on, my body dropping low as its claws passed over my head, and I drove my fist into its throat.

The impact jarred my arm, and the creature coughed—a wet, hacking sound—and stumbled back. Its eyes were wide now, confused, as if it could not understand why this prey was not running.

"You’re used to things running from you," I said. "Aren’t you?"

I stepped forward.

"But I’m not running anymore."

The fight moved through the jungle like a storm.

The Night Terror was strong, stronger than , and its claws could tear through stone if they hit their mark. But I was faster, and I was smarter, and I had been trained by a man who had killed things twice this creature’s size with nothing but a sword and the will to keep swinging.

I let him chase .

I led him through the trees, weaving between trunks and leaping over roots, and every ti he got close, I slipped away. Every ti he swung, I was not there. Every ti he roared, I answered with silence.

"You want to kill ?" I called over my shoulder. "You’ll have to catch

first."

The Night Terror roared again, and the sound echoed through the jungle, and the birds that had not already fled took to the sky in a panic.

I smiled.

I let him catch .

Not because I was tired—though I was, a little, but because I wanted him to feel hope. I wanted him to think that he had won, that the prey had finally made a mistake, that the chase was over. I stumbled on a root and fell to my knees, and the Night Terror was on

in an instant, its claws raised, its mouth open, its teeth gleaming in the dappled light.

I looked up at him.

"Gotcha," I said.

I drew Tempest.

The blade ca out of its scabbard in a silver arc, too fast for the creature to track, and I drove it into the soft flesh beneath its jaw. The steel bit deep, and black blood sprayed across my face, and the Night Terror scread, a sound of pain and fury and sothing that might have been fear.

I rolled out from under him and ca to my feet, and I watched him thrash. The wound was not fatal. I had not aid for anything vital. I had just wanted him to bleed.

"See?" I said, wiping the blood from my eyes. "Not so easy now, is it?"

The Night Terror’s eyes were wild now, its breath coming in ragged gasps, its body trembling with pain and rage. It did not understand. It had never been hunted before. It had always been the hunter.

I raised Tempest.

"Let’s try that again."

We fought for what felt like hours.

The Night Terror threw everything it had at —claws and teeth and shadows that pooled at its feet and lashed out like whips. It was desperate now, fighting not to kill but to survive, and that made it more dangerous than it had been at the start.

But it also made it predictable.

Desperate things always did the sa thing.

They threw themselves at you, again and again, hoping that brute force would be enough. They did not adapt. They did not learn. They just kept swinging, kept biting, kept clawing, until there was nothing left.

I let him tire himself out.

I dodged and weaved and blocked, but I did not strike. I let him chase , let him swing at shadows, let him roar until his throat was raw and his lungs were burning.

And when he finally stopped, when his chest was heaving and his legs were shaking and his eyes were no longer wild but hollow, I walked toward him.

"Done already?" I asked.

The Night Terror tried to raise its claws. They barely lifted off the ground.

"...I’m not."

I killed him slowly.

Not because I enjoyed it—though so part of , the part that had watched Mia die in my arms, the part that had buried Roran’s head beneath a willow tree, took a dark satisfaction in watching him suffer—but because he deserved it.

He had killed people. Dozens of them, probably. Travelers and hunters and anyone else who had been unlucky enough to cross his path. He had eaten them and slept and woken up hungry again, and he had never once thought about the lives he had taken.

I wanted him to think about it now.

I cut his legs first, slicing the tendons behind his knees so that he could not run. He collapsed with a sound that was half-roar and half-whimper, and I stood over him and watched the blood pool beneath his body.

"Scared?" I asked.

His eyes were wide, and his breath ca in short, sharp gasps.

"Good."

I cut his claws next, one by one, severing them at the base so that he could not swipe at . He tried to bite, but I stepped back and let him snap at the air, and when his jaws closed on nothing, I stepped forward and cut his cheek.

"Rember the stream?" I asked. "Rember the boy who couldn’t fight back?" I did not know if he understood. I did not care. "You should have finished

when you had the chance."

I raised Tempest one last ti, and the soul flas flickered along the blade, hollow purple light that pulsed with hunger, with rage, with the weight of everything I had lost.

"This is for ," I said. "And for everyone else you killed. For the boy I used to be."

I brought the blade down.

The Night Terror died with its eyes open.

Its body lay in the dirt, black blood pooling around it, its chest still and its heart silent. The jungle was quiet now; the birds and the insects and the wind had all gone still, as if they were holding their breath.

I stood over the corpse, my chest heaving, my hands shaking. Tempest was dark with blood, and the soul flas had retreated back into my chest, sated for now.

I did not feel victorious. I did not feel satisfied. I just felt... empty.

But it was a different kind of emptiness than before. Not the hollow ache of grief, not the cold void of loss.

Just... stillness.

I knelt beside the creature’s head and looked into its eyes.

"I hope you found what you were looking for," I said. "Because I found what I needed."

I felt it then—the pull in my chest, the tug at the edges of my consciousness, the thread that had been drawing tight since I left the encampnt finally snapping.

My ti was ending.

I looked down at my hands, and I could see the light bleeding through my skin, faint at first, then brighter, then so bright that I had to look away. The edges of my body were dissolving, turning to gold and amber and sothing that felt like the warmth of a sumr sun.

It’s ti...

I stood up and looked around the clearing. The trees were the sa trees. The sky was the sa sky. The stream still murmured in the distance, indifferent to my departure.

I had co to this world as a victim, lost, afraid, running from everything that had ever hurt . I was leaving as sothing else. Sothing that had been broken and rebuilt, again and again, until the cracks had beco part of its strength.

I thought about Roran, about the way he had smiled at the end, about the words he had said.

You will be stronger than .

I thought about Mia, about the warmth of her hand on my cheek, about the amber of her eyes, about the way she had said my na like it was a prayer.

Thank you for coming for .

I thought about the children I had saved, about the ones I had not, about the lives I had taken and the lives I had protected.

I will carry you with . Every step. Every fight. Every breath.

The light grew brighter, and my body grew lighter, and I felt myself rising, floating, dissolving into the warmth that surrounded .

The jungle faded.

The trees disappeared, and the sky disappeared, and the ground beneath my feet disappeared, and there was nothing left but the light and

and the silence of a world that was letting

go.

I closed my eyes.

Thank you, I thought. For... everything.

...And then there was nothing.

_

The boy who had co to this world bleeding and afraid walked into the light and did not look back.

He left behind a village of graves and a jungle of mories and a promise that he had kept, in the end, even when it cost him everything.

...And sowhere, in a place that was not quite a place, a being who had been waiting for him smiled and opened its arms and welcod him ho.

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