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The echoes of the old woman's screams still clung to the air, a phantom wail that refused to fade even after her charred remains were nothing but ash scattered by the wind. Aira was deeply traumatized. She could still see it—the way the flas licked at the frail body, the way her flesh blackened and curled, the way the villagers cheered, their faces twisted in cruel excitent as if they were enjoying so grand festival. The horror of it all gnawed at her, poisoning her thoughts like a festering wound.

She barely ate. She barely spoke. When her mother called her na, she responded out of habit, not out of will. She was not here. No, she was still trapped in that mont, standing before the pyre, watching a kind and innocent woman be burned alive for a cri she didn't commit. And no one—not a single soul—thought it was wrong. Except for her.

But what could she do? She was just a powerless peasant girl in a world that didn't even care about her existence.

The Price of Sin and the Price of Survival

Not long after the noble's visit [Once every year a small group of nobles co to each village to take a look not at their starving and suffering subjects but inspect the crop they have grown], a new problem arose: the village was struggling to pay its taxes.

The land had not been kind this year. The harvest was smaller than expected, the soil tired from years of abuse. But the nobility didn't care. They wanted their due. And so did the church.

The church demanded indulgences—coins to buy forgiveness for sins. People flocked to the priest, handing over what little they had, begging for salvation. The priest accepted their offerings with a smile, his own robes embroidered with silver and gold. The weight of their desperation never seed to touch him. He took the coins, muttered his prayers, and dismissed them like they were nothing more than flies buzzing around a feast.

But Aira's family had nothing left to give.

The winter had been harsh, the fields had suffered, and their livestock had grown weak. Her father had already sold so of their agre belongings just to buy enough grain to last them through the cold months. They were on the edge of starvation.

And the punishnt for not paying for taxes was unspoken, yet everyone knew. The noble's n arrived days later, ard and impatient.

Aira watched in horror as they dragged a man from his ho, throwing him to the dirt. He begged for rcy, pleaded for another chance. His family sobbed, clutching at the soldiers' legs, but their cries were ignored.

The noble's n did not kill him.

No. That would be too kind.

Instead, they beat him in front of the village, breaking bones and splitting skin, until his face was nothing but a swollen, unrecognizable ss. His screams echoed through the village, yet no one stepped forward. And when they were done, they left him there, a bleeding, gasping wreck.

No one helped him.

Because helping him would an defying the nobles. And defying the nobles ant suffering the sa fate.

Aira's stomach twisted as she turned to look at her mother. Her lips trembled, her hands shaking as she clutched the hem of her clothes. Her mother's face was blank, void of any emotion, but Aira could see the fear in her eyes. The silent terror of a woman who knew that next ti, it could be their family suffering that sa fate.

As the soldiers left, the villagers returned to their routines as if nothing had happened. The man's own family eventually ca to drag his broken body back inside their ho, but no one spoke of what had transpired. No one dared to voice their anger. Even the children, who had initially cried at the sight, were silenced by their parents, ushered inside and told to forget.

Because this was normal.

This was how the world worked.

Aira clenched her fists so tightly her nails dug into her palms, drawing blood. Her breathing was shallow, her body trembling with helpless rage.

She wanted to scream, to cry, to demand why no one fought back. But she already knew the answer.

Fighting back ant death.

She knew that the nobles, the priests, and the powerful ruled over them without rcy. They were nothing but worms to be crushed underfoot. This world was made that way. She had made it that way. And she had never thought of what it would truly be like to live in it.

It was a world where the poor existed only to serve, to suffer, to endure. Where their bodies belonged to the nobles, their faith to the church, their lives to forces beyond their control. A world where justice did not exist, where fairness was a joke, where suffering was the only constant.

And she was trapped in it.

She was powerless.

For now.

But that would not always be the case.

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