From Deadbeat noble to Top Rank Swordsman-Chapter 79: Returned
Chapter 79: Returned
Snow fell again.
Thin at first, then heavy. As if the storm had been waiting for the gate to vanish before reclaiming its place. The cold returned with it—the real kind, not the still, dead chill of before. Breath misted in the air. Trees creaked. The world remembered how to breathe.
But the camp did not move.
All eyes were on Leon.
He stood at the edge of where the gate had once been, his cloak shifting in the wind, his back straight but not tense. There was no sword in his hand. No visible magic. And yet no one dared speak.
Elena moved first. She stepped beside him, searching his face, his posture, anything that might tell her what lingered beneath his skin now. "Do you remember what happened?"
Leon didn’t answer immediately.
Then: "Some of it. Not all."
He turned slightly, scanning the ridgeline where his troops stood ready. Some had lowered their weapons. Others still watched him like a stranger.
Kellen met his gaze. "Are you... still you?"
Leon gave no smile. No jest. Just a nod. "Enough to finish what we started."
That was enough for Kellen. He barked orders, setting the lines to shift back into a travel column. Mages resumed their rune-work, though more cautiously now. The forest’s silence had broken, but no one trusted it.
Naeve lingered at the edge, arms crossed.
"You crossed something. Even if only in thought. It leaves marks."
Leon looked to her. "You sound like you know."
"I’ve seen men who touched old magic. I know what it steals."
He stepped closer. "Then tell me. What do I look like to you now?"
Naeve tilted her head. "Like someone who’s been renamed. But not by choice."
Leon didn’t flinch. Instead, he looked to the place where the gate had been. He remembered the eyes. The crowned echo. The truth that had no blade.
"Then I’ll rename myself before they do."
Elena spoke again, softly, beside him. "And what will you be called?"
He was silent a moment.
Then, almost like a breath: "Witness."
The word rippled through the air, unspoken by any other. But heard. Felt. Carried.
The trees seemed to sway differently after that. The wind curled around the camp, not cruel, but curious.
Leon turned. "Break is over. We’re moving. We’ve still a march to finish."
And like that, the spell broke. Soldiers moved. Packs were lifted. The path forward cleared.
But as they marched on, no one dared walk too close to the centre line where Leon strode.
He didn’t notice.
Or maybe he did. And walked there anyway.
—
Far behind, in the place where the gate had once stood, a single line of bone remained half-buried in the snow.
It pulsed once.
Then stilled.
—
The snow deepened as they descended from the ridge.
What had once been the Ravine’s edge became rolling white hills, edged in frozen bramble and blackwood trunks that split like veins through the forest. The air held weight again—sharp, biting, real. But there was something else in it, too. Not scent. Not sound. A pressure. Faint. Like standing too close to thunder before it breaks.
Leon walked ahead, silent, unshaken. His hand remained loose by his side, never once drifting toward the sword at his hip. He didn’t need it now. Not because he was stronger—but because something older had begun to stir inside him. Not power. Memory.
And memory did not draw blades.
Behind him, Elena watched him from the second column.
She’d seen him wounded before. Broken. Furious. Even hollow. But never this still. The way he moved now wasn’t quiet—it was heavy. Like he was dragging something invisible behind him with every step. Something no one else could carry. And maybe something no one else should. freeweɓnøvel~com
"What did you see?" she whispered, though she knew he wouldn’t answer.
Because he hadn’t even told her what name the Eye had spoken when it blinked.
—
At the rear of the line, Naeve kept her hood low.
She counted their steps, their shifts in breathing, the way the birds didn’t return to the trees. She saw the tracks—how the snow didn’t quite settle in Leon’s footsteps. How his shadow sometimes bent the wrong direction at dusk. Just a little.
And then there was the crown.
She hadn’t seen it. Not really.
But she’d felt it. The pressure in her chest the moment he woke. Like something had looked at her through his eyes—and measured her.
She didn’t like being measured.
Especially not by gods pretending to be ghosts.
—
Night fell.
They made camp in a hollowed vale between old stone pillars, remnants of a road older than any kingdom still standing. Fires were lit low. Tents kept tight. Patrols doubled.
Leon did not sleep.
He stood at the edge of the firelight, eyes fixed northward—toward something none of them could see yet. Toward the place the Eye had whispered from.
He could feel it, still. Not in his skin. In his name.
He had lied when he said he remembered only part of it.
Truth was, he remembered more than he wanted.
The vault was never meant to open. It had no door, only watchers. And now, those watchers had chosen him—not because he was special, but because someone had to carry the weight forward.
Not for power.
Not for glory.
But for reckoning.
Leon exhaled, slow.
Then he whispered to the dark:
"If I am to bleed for what they did, I’ll do it with my eyes open."
Behind him, the fire cracked once.
And far below the snow, something turned.
—
At the outer rim of camp, a scout named Corin turned in the night. His breath caught. Not because of danger—he saw no enemy. No beast. No trap.
But because, for a second, the moonlit snow behind the trees shimmered wrong.
It bent.
Twisted.
Then settled again.
He shook his head. Rubbed his eyes. Nothing. The woods were as quiet as they’d been for hours.
Still, he reached for his whistle.
Then stopped.
Something in his bones told him not to call it.
Instead, he turned and resumed his watch, shoulders tight.
But the trees behind him whispered.
And buried beneath one of them, in soil that had once been bone, a root began to pulse—slow, deliberate, as if it, too, had woken from sleep.
—
Leon felt it.
Not fully. Not yet.
Just the edge of it. A change in the wind. A heartbeat not his own.
He turned his gaze slightly. Not toward the forest.
Toward the south.
Toward a place he had not been since he was a boy.
Where the Thorn Crest had first whispered to him.
He closed his eyes.
"I hear you," he whispered.
And something answered back.
Not in words.
In weight.
The next step had already begun.
—
And far to the south, in the quiet ruins of an old monastery swallowed by root and stone, a child no older than seven sat cross-legged beneath a canopy of dead vines.
She was alone.
Or seemed to be.
Around her, circles had been drawn—faint etchings in the stone, humming ever so slightly. Not protective. Binding.
She stared into the dark with eyes too calm for her age.
Then she tilted her head.
"He’s awake," she whispered.
A soft voice answered, low and echoing
"Then begin."
The child’s hand reached out, tracing the circle beside her with a fingertip. The stone burned faint gold.
And far above, the wind carried with it a sound no human could hear—
A chime.
Not of warning.
Of recognition.
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