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Chapter 4 - The Lone Quill

The plaza reeked of iron and smoke.

It clung to the back of my throat, thick as tar, every breath making me gag. The cobblestones were slick with blood, sticky enough that my shoes squelched when I moved. It wasn't a city square anymore—it was a charnel ground, a butcher's table for the apocalypse.

Half the survivors were already gone, shredded by hounds too fast and too hungry for anyone to stop. Their screams still echoed faintly, overlapping with the wet tearing of flesh and the crunch of bone.

The rest of us? We weren't survivors. We were prey. Huddled together in a trembling knot behind Kael Arathis, clinging to his every move like he was Moses about to part the Red Sea. Every time his fist shattered a monster's skull, people cheered as if salvation itself had just landed among them.

And me?

I was busy trying not to throw up.

My hand trembled around the pen-dagger, its faint glow almost swallowed by the gore coating its blade. Every swing was sloppy. Every stab was guesswork. The hounds didn't die cleanly when I fought them—they died like mistakes corrected with too much ink, blotchy and desperate.

And yet… I was still standing.

Alive.

That had to count for something, right?

Kael surged forward again, his body moving with terrifying precision. His black hair, streaked with silver, whipped as he spun and drove his fist straight through a wolf's ribcage. The monster howled once before collapsing into a heap of twitching limbs.

His movements weren't just effective—they were beautiful in a brutal way, every strike deliberate, efficient, final.

The crowd roared like spectators at an arena. Hope clung to him like a crown.

Then the system chimed.

[Kael Arathis has slain 27 enemies.][Kael Arathis has earned Bonus Reward: Stat Boost +5.]

The notification rang like a fanfare. Survivors gasped, murmuring, "He's getting stronger… the system's rewarding him…"

I swore under my breath. "Of course he gets bonuses. Plot armor much?"

My own kill count? A pathetic three.

…Okay, two and a half. That last one had technically tripped over a broken paving stone before I stabbed it. But still—alive was alive.

Another hound burst from the smoke, claws skittering across broken concrete. Its eyes locked on me, and in a single bound it was airborne, jaws wide.

I froze.

Its teeth sank into my shoulder—no, they didn't.

The words flashed before me, cold and sharp.

[Sentence: The hound ripped off Ishaan's arm.]

[ Rewrite? (Y/N)]

I slammed Y.

Reality shivered. The sentence unraveled like a line of bad prose struck through with red ink.

[Sentence: The hound's jaws snapped shut on empty air.]

The beast blinked in confusion, its maw clamping on nothing.

My pen-dagger moved almost on instinct, sliding up beneath its jaw. The blade sank in like paper tearing, and hot blood splashed across my face. The hound gurgled once before crumpling.

I staggered back, chest heaving.

The system paused—longer than usual.

Then, a new message burned across my vision.

[Participant Ishaan Reed has earned Title: The Lone Quill.]

The words echoed across the plaza like a stadium announcement.

Heads turned. Survivors froze mid-scream. Even Kael halted mid-strike, eyes narrowing as the glowing letters hung above me for all to see.

"The Lone what?" someone muttered."Who's Ishaan Reed?" another whispered.

A ripple of confusion spread through the crowd. My stomach dropped.

Then, another system message followed.

[The gods are watching.]

A chill spidered down my spine.

And then—whispers.

Not from people. From somewhere deeper, stranger. Voices only I seemed to hear.

[A God of Stories chuckles at the irony.][A Battle Deity scoffs at your cowardly tactics.][An Unknown God leans closer, intrigued.]

The words slithered through my skull, cold and intimate. Each one carried weight, like ancient eyes pressing against my soul.

My mouth went dry.

The gods. Actual gods. Watching. Betting. Commentating.

On me.

"You."

Kael's voice cut through the whispers like a blade.

I looked up. He was staring at me across the battlefield, eyes sharp enough to carve stone. His fists still dripped blood from his last kill, but he didn't seem to notice.

"That trick you just pulled." His tone was low, dangerous. "What was it?"

Fear twisted in my gut. Every rational part of me screamed to shut up, to play small, to vanish into the crowd again.

But something darker pushed to the surface. Something reckless.

My lips curved into a smirk.

"Wouldn't you like to know, Hero?"

For the first time since I'd seen him, Kael's expression faltered—not surprise, not anger exactly, but something sharp and ugly. His gaze darkened.

This wasn't admiration.This wasn't brotherhood.

This was rivalry.

Another surge of hounds crashed into the square, black shapes tearing through the haze. Kael dove back into the fray, fists glowing faintly as if the system itself fueled his every strike.

But for the first time, the crowd didn't just chant his name.

Whispers spread like sparks.

"The Lone Quill… what kind of Title is that?""Did you see? He killed one just now, right in front of us.""Maybe he's like Kael too… maybe there's another one…"

Their eyes followed me.

For the first time in my life, I wasn't invisible.

And that terrified me more than the monsters.

Then jagged letters bled across my vision, written not in system-blue but in something darker, rawer.

[Unknown Origin: "The Quill writes his first line. Let's see if you survive the draft."]

The words pulsed once, searing into my skull, then faded.

My throat tightened. My heartbeat hammered against my ribs.

Unknown Origin. Again. Watching me. Speaking only to me.

I glanced around desperately, but no one else reacted. No one else had seen it.

Just me.

The system's voice thundered, shaking the square.

[First Hour: 30 minutes remaining.]

The ground trembled beneath my feet.

From the shadowed streets beyond the plaza came a deeper growl, heavier than thunder, shaking the air itself. Windows rattled. The bloodstained cobblestones quivered.

The true boss was coming.

Kael straightened, his eyes burning brighter, fists clenched at his sides. To him, this was destiny. His story.

But me?

I tightened my grip on Inkslayer, the pen-blade pulsing warmly in my palm. A smirk tugged at my lips despite the fear twisting my gut.

Because Kael could have his hero's tale.

I wasn't here to play second fiddle.

This time, I wasn't going to let the Hero steal my spotlight.

Not now.Not ever.

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