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Chapter 15 - Rebuilding the Shadow Hand

Seluvia smiled wide, her pride obvious, a rare warmth softening her sharp features. Petrus stood still and silent, presence radiating authority at the forest's edge.

His gaze moved from one of us to the next—though when his eyes found me, they lingered, heavy and searching. A moment longer than the others. Like he saw something the rest didn't—something buried deep, flickering beneath my skin.

And then, a nod. Approval. Quiet, but unmistakable.

He spoke quietly, but his words carried weight, sinking into the air like stones into still water. "You have learned the secret of true strength."

He paced slowly, hands clasped behind his back, boots crunching the brittle grass. "Individual strength will only take you so far. There is always someone stronger. Faster. More powerful." He paused, letting the truth settle. "And pride... pride is the enemy of true strength."

His gaze swept over us again, sharp and knowing. "No matter how strong you are... as long as

you have the courage to lean on each other, you will always have the strength to overcome."

He stopped, his silhouette framed by the sinking sun. "One battle doesn't win a war. But it earns you the right to keep fighting. To keep moving forward."

Petrus's voice softened, but the warning was clear, a shadow threading through his calm. "Those reflections you fought—those were what you could become if you chased power and ignored your bond as a team." He let his next words settle, heavy and deliberate. "Alone... you fall. And become a vessel for darkness."

Another long silence stretched out, the forest whispering around us—wind rustling leaves, distant birds calling. Then, finally: "You have grown into warriors far beyond the ones who first entered this forest. Keep honing your skills—together. No matter how hard the path becomes... you will prevail."

After passing the final test, our training was coming to a close. We decided to celebrate our hard work the best way we knew how—food and drink at a local inn, a chance to breathe after seven years of relentless grind.

We found a cozy spot in the corner, away from the clinking mugs and raucous laughter. Torglel clapped Laboritus on the back with a booming laugh and dragged him off to get drinks for everyone. Alythiel and I took a seat at the table, the wood worn smooth by years of use, the air thick with the scent of roasted meat and ale.

I glanced at her, the memory of the arena still sharp behind my eyes. "What was that you did back there?" I asked. "Helping me channel my magic."

Alythiel smiled faintly. "Magic is difficult, even when it's your affinity," she said. "You're just a vessel. But if you try to channel too much at once, it overflows—and that's when you lose control."

She paused, fingers trailing over the table's grain. "Your spell was too strong to hold alone. So I used a runic amplifier—think of it like... widening the riverbanks, just enough to hold the flood."

She made space for me to survive. I didn't know what it cost her. I didn't ask. But I wonder—if magic leaves echoes... can she feel how it almost consumed me?

I nodded slowly, the explanation clicking into place. Realizing—maybe for the first time—I should've paid more attention to Seluvia's lectures on magic, instead of dozing through them with Torglel snoring at my side.

"You know, Alythiel," I said, leaning back, "when we first met, I didn't know what to make of you. And I still don't understand why you continue to stand with us in this fight." I met her gaze, steady and open, and gave her hand a light pat. "But I'm grateful you do."

Alythiel opened her mouth to respond—but just then, Torglel slammed down four mugs of ale in front of us with a loud thud, foam sloshing over the rims. "Solari," he said, dropping into the seat next to me with a grunt, "settle a debate for us."

Laboritus slid into the seat across from us, giving his usual sharp nod. "Who'd win in a fight?" Torglel asked, his grin wide, eyes glinting with mischief. "A hydra or a dragon?"

I raised an eyebrow, taking a mug. "Depends on the dragon. Are we talking wrymling, adult, or ancient?"

Torglel waved a hand dismissively, ale slopping onto the table. "Like it bloody well matters! A dragon is a dragon, no matter what fancy name you slap on it." He took a long swig from his mug, then thumped it down, the sound echoing. "In fact, I took one head-on once. Nothing but my bare hands."

I shook my head, laughing, the memory vivid. "You were drunk and got into a bar fight with a Drakesang."

"Same thing," Torglel said, completely unfazed, wiping foam from his beard. "Drake, dragon, what's the difference."

Laboritus crossed his arms, voice dry. "What about that time we broke into the cultist lair? You said there were ten dragons then."

I pinched the bridge of my nose. "Dravix. They were Dravix."

Alythiel laughed then, the sound light and bright—like wind chimes in a soft breeze, cutting through the inn's din. "Torglel doesn't really know what a dragon is, does he?"

I smiled at her. "Not the slightest clue."

Torglel slammed his mug against mine, grinning wide. "May we fight a dragon and kick its scaly behind!"

I laughed and clinked his mug in return, ale sloshing again. "I'll drink to that."

We ate, drank, and shared stories late into the night—tales of near-misses, dumb luck, and victories hard-won. For the first time since our journey began, we had a truly peaceful moment. We weren't thinking about the path ahead of us. We weren't worrying about the dangers waiting out there. For one night, we were just... together. A family, bound tighter than blood.

The next morning, we left the forest behind, the canopy thinning as we stepped into open air. Seven years inside, but out here, only a week had passed—the world's time warped against ours. The landscape hadn't changed much—rolling hills, distant smoke curling skyward—but we had, carved anew by the forest's trials.

Torglel broke the silence first, his voice gruff as we trudged along. "What's next?"

I took a breath, staring out at the horizon where that smoke twisted like a signal. "We have no leads on Zolphan," I said. "Not yet. But the best way to find him is through rekindling the shadows."

Torglel gave me a sideways look, one brow arching. "Rekindling shadows?"

I smirked, but there wasn't much humor in it—more resolve than anything. "We rebuild the Shadow Hand."

His expression sobered, the grin fading as he shifted his hammer's weight. "Are there any of us left? Besides you and me?"

I shook my head. "I'm not sure." I clenched my fists until my knuckles whitened. "But we're going to find out." We were chasing ghosts with nothing but scars and a broken name.

We made our way back to the old base. The ruins hadn't changed. But neither had the ghosts.

They all died in these halls. And here we are—like fools trying to polish a gravestone into a crown.

We didn't say much on the way, the silence thick with memory. Too many ghosts lingered in these tunnels—comrades fallen, walls stained with the past. The air grew colder as we descended, the weight of it pressing against my chest.

As we approached the entrance, I slowed, my boots scuffing the dirt. The cold stone archway ahead, its jagged edges unchanged since the day we left. Only this time, we were coming back as the last of the line—survivors carrying a legacy on our shoulders.

I held up a hand, stopping Torglel. "Be on guard," I said quietly, my voice low but firm. "We don't know if the base is empty."

He nodded, drawing his hammer with a casual ease that didn't fool me—his grip was tight, ready to swing through hell itself if need be.

We entered cautiously, moving through the labyrinth of tunnels, torches long extinguished casting faint shadows. It was... clean. The bodies were gone, no trace of the sprawled corpses we'd left behind. The blood scrubbed away, floors polished to a dull sheen. No signs of the massacre that had torn this place apart lingered—only an eerie stillness remained.

Torglel broke the silence, voice a rough whisper. "I don't remember this place coming with maid service."

I almost smiled. The corner of my mouth twitched, but the unease held it back.

We made our way toward Arcainius's old office, the heart of what the Shadow Hand had been. I paused at the door, resting my hand on the old iron handle—cold, pitted with age. Memories flickered: Arcainius barking orders, maps sprawled across the desk, the hum of purpose. I pushed it open slowly, hinges creaking in the quiet.

Someone stood inside. Small. Still. Rearranging books with the calm of a man organizing his own eulogy.

"Kaelen," I said.

The name fell, and everything else stopped.

Torglel grinned wide, lowering his hammer with a thud against the stone. "Kaelen. You're harder to kill then I thought."

Kaelen turned. The scar across his ear was a clean memory—mine. His eyes still held that quiet, surgical intent. The twin daggers at his hips glinted, familiar and final. The most dangerous Diminari I'd ever met, all four feet of him a coiled threat.

And the first one to ever beat me in a fight.

That scar? I gave him that when we first met, a clumsy slash from a younger, brasher me. He'd tried to recruit me into the Shadow Hand back then, his voice smooth as silk, his stance unyielding. And I'd challenged him, cocky and green. I didn't stand a chance—his daggers had danced circles around me, that scar my only mark before he'd pinned me flat.

But Kaelen wasn't just another Night Talon. He was Arcainius's right hand, the top of the chain. Even among the Night Talons—the Shadow Hand's elite—he stood above them all. His specialization was Shade, the true assassins, masters of silence and precision. And Kaelen wasn't just an elite. He was the best—death in shadow, a legend whispered in the tunnels.

Their motto was carved into every blade they carried: One breath. One death. Kaelen didn't just live the creed—he defined it, every kill a testament to its truth.

Kaelen's eyes lingered on Alythiel and Laboritus before meeting mine. His jaw tightened.

"You're bringing outsiders into the Hand. We bled for these rules, Solari—even now, in ruin, they still matter." 

"They aren't outsiders," I said, meeting Kaelen's eyes. "They're new Whispers. Recruits—like we once were."

Kaelen's gaze sharpened. "What are you doing, Solari?"

I didn't blink. "Rebuilding."

Kaelen's fingers tapped once on the hilt of his dagger. A silent punctuation on a sentence of death. A vow, a challenge, a line drawn in the dark. "If you're serious," he said, his voice cold and measured, cutting through the air like a blade, "then as Arcainius's right hand, I invoke Certamen Noctis."

The words reverberated—not shouted, but felt. A call older than either of us. A tradition that turned men into myths, and friends into ash.

The words hit like a hammer smashing stone—final, unyielding, no turning back. A challenge to lead, steeped in Shadow Hand tradition: the strongest takes the mantle, no exceptions.

Torglel patted me on the shoulder, his hand heavy with confidence.

"This is nothing new," he said, with a grin that didn't quite reach his eyes. "Just don't forget who's in your corner, brother."

I didn't reply.

I knew he'd stand with me—

even if we faced Tharnak himself,

wreathed in fire, crowned in fury.

I never flinched from Kaelen's gaze—steady, unflinching, those dark eyes boring into me like they could see through to my core.

Kaelen's eyes narrowed slightly, a flicker of assessment. "It's the strongest that leads," he said. "Always has been. You know that."

I gave a slow nod, the weight of it settling in my bones. "I know."

It was tradition. And tradition doesn't care who walks out bleeding. Only that someone does.

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