Rebirth of the Disgraced Noble-Chapter 118: To the Abyss

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Chapter 118: To the Abyss

Aden turned his gaze back to the Guildsman, his body language shifting from feigned exhaustion to a predatory stillness. The air in the doorway grew thick, the temperature dropping just enough to make the condensation on the man’s breastplate freeze into thin, jagged patterns.

"What were we doing?" Aden repeated, his voice low and smooth, like silk sliding over a blade. "We were sleeping. Then we were eating. Now, we are being interrupted."

The leader of the scouts felt a prickle of sweat run down his spine. He was an experienced veteran, a man who had faced Callow-Walkers without flinching, but the man in front of him felt... wrong. It wasn’t just the strength; it was the hollow, abyssal depth behind those sapphire eyes. It felt like looking into a well and realizing the bottom was staring back.

The two younger scouts behind him stepped back instinctively, their hands white-knuckled on their hilts. They didn’t see a slum-dweller; they saw the shadow of the mountain that had just screamed.

"The boys," the leader said, his voice cracking slightly before he regained his grit. He pointed a gloved finger toward the corner. "The one in the middle. His Resonance... it’s still settling. That’s a fresh breakthrough. A violent one."

Eren didn’t flinch. He remained on his knees, his red irises glowing with a dull, subterranean heat. The sheer arrogance in the boy’s gaze, the way he dismissed the two scouts as if they were mere insects, was enough to confirm the Guildsman’s suspicions. No normal child in Grey-Rock looked at a Guild veteran with that kind of cold, calculating hunger.

"My brother is a hard worker," Aden said, his tone final. "Is it a crime in Grey-Rock to reach the Attuned Realm in your own home?"

"It is when you set the horizon on fire," the man countered, though he didn’t move to enter. He knew better. If a fight broke out in this cramped space, he’d be dead before his sword cleared the scabbard. "Look, I don’t care if you’re a rogue noble or a lucky scavenger. The Guild-Master wants anyone with that kind of firepower on the Silver-Crest payroll. We’re losing men to the Gorge every hour."

He reached into a pouch at his belt and pulled out a heavy iron coin, tossing it toward Aden. Aden caught it without looking, his hand a blur of motion.

"That’s a Vanguard Token," the leader explained. "It guarantees a seat at the strategy table and a triple share of the spoils. If you’re the one who caused that flare, you’re the one we need at the front of the caravan. If you’re not... well, then you’re just a man with a very talented brother who’s about to get a lot of unwanted attention from the Inquisition."

Aden looked down at the iron coin. The Guild was desperate. They weren’t just looking for suspects; they were looking for shields. They wanted to throw his firepower at the Gloom-Creepers to save their own hides.

’He’s offering you a ticket to the slaughterhouse,’ the Entity whispered, a dark, melodic chuckle echoing in Aden’s mind. ’Tell me, Aden... are we the shield, or are we the wolf in the fold?’

Aden’s grip tightened on the coin until the iron groaned. He looked back at Eren, Reiner, and Armin. They needed the resources. They needed the status that came with a Guild contract to keep the vultures away from their door.

"The Silver-Crest Shipment," Aden said, his eyes locking onto the leader’s. "When does it move?"

"High sun," the man replied, a visible wave of relief washing over him. "At the South Gate. Bring your sword. And the boy, if he can still walk."

The Guildsmen turned and retreated, their pace much faster than when they had arrived. They didn’t look back until they were well down the street, disappearing into the morning fog.

Aden closed the door and leaned his forehead against the wood. The silence returned, but it was different now, charged with the electricity of a coming storm. He turned to the room, finding four pairs of eyes fixed on him. Three of flesh, and one of violet mist.

"Get your cloaks," Aden commanded, his voice devoid of warmth. "And Eren... keep your Resonance low. We’re going to war for our dinner."

The heavy oak of the door seemed to vibrate as the Guildsmen’s footsteps faded into the distance. Aden stayed pinned to the wood for a moment, the iron Vanguard Token biting into the palm of his hand. It was cold, heavy, and smelled of cheap ore, a far cry from the refined silver he’d spent the day before, yet infinitely more dangerous.

Lorelei shimmered back into visibility, descending from the rafters like a falling petal. Her violet eyes were fixed on the door, then shifted to Aden. "A triple share of the spoils," she repeated softly, her voice lacking its usual spectral lilt. "They aren’t paying for your skill, Master. They are paying for your life. They want a sacrifice to throw to the Creepers so the wagons can slip through the blood."

"I know," Aden said, pushing off the door. He tossed the iron coin onto the scarred wooden table, where it spun with a harsh, metallic ring before settling. "But they’re mistaken about who the sacrifice is."

Eren stood up. His movements were still slightly stiff, the new Attuned-level energy humming beneath his skin like a live wire, but the exhaustion in his face had been replaced by a sharp, feverish clarity. He looked at the coin, then at Aden.

"You’re taking me?" Eren asked. It wasn’t a plea; it was a challenge.

"You wanted to know why we were training in the dirt at four in the morning," Aden replied, his sapphire eyes locking onto the boy’s red ones. "This is why. The Attuned Realm isn’t a trophy, Eren. It’s a permit to survive the next few hours. If you stay here, the scouts will eventually come back with an Inquisitor. If you come with me, you’re a Guild asset. They can’t touch a Vanguard’s kin without a mountain of paperwork."

Armin and Reiner remained huddled, their eyes darting between the two. The domestic warmth of the soup and the tea had completely evaporated, replaced by the sterile, cold atmosphere of a war room.

"Lorelei," Aden turned to her, his voice dropping into a command. "Pack the remaining tubers and the dried meat. We aren’t coming back to this building today. If the shipment makes it through the Gorge, we keep moving toward the next waypoint. If it doesn’t... we vanish into the mountains."

Lorelei bowed her head, her translucent hands already moving toward the kitchen. She didn’t argue. She knew the look in Aden’s eyes, the look of a man who had stopped trying to fit into a home and had started calculating a battlefield.

Aden walked over to the corner and picked up his heavy traveling cloak, snapping it around his shoulders. He reached into the shadowed space beneath his bedroll and pulled out a long, cloth-wrapped bundle. As the fabric fell away, a blade of dark, matte steel was revealed. It didn’t reflect the morning light; it seemed to drink it.

’A Vanguard,’ the Entity whispered, a sound like dry leaves skittering over a grave. ’Leading a caravan of fools through a gorge of ghosts. Tell me, Aden... when the first throat is torn, will you remember you’re a protector, or will you let the scent of the Abyss remind you of what you truly are?’

’Shut up,’ Aden thought.

He turned to the boys. Reiner was shaking, his small hands gripped white-knuckled around Armin’s sleeve. Aden knelt in front of them, his presence softening just enough to stop their trembling.

"Listen to me," he said, his voice low and steady. "You stay close to Lorelei. You don’t speak to the adventurers. You don’t show your Resonance. To them, you are just refugees I’m escorting. Do you understand?"

They both nodded frantically.

"Eren," Aden stood up, looking at the eldest. "You stay on my left flank. If something comes out of the shadows, you don’t wait for my command. You hit it with everything you just discovered this morning. No hesitation. No mercy."

Eren gripped the hilt of the short-sword he’d kept since the old building. "I’m ready."

Aden took one last look at the cramped, leaking room. It was a miserable place, a ruin in a slum, yet for a few hours, it had felt like something more. He felt a brief, sharp pang of regret, but he crushed it instantly. The Ghost of Grey-Rock didn’t get to have a home. He only had the road.

"Move out, and Zero should remain in the shadows," Aden commanded.

He led them out into the street. The sun was at high-noon now, a pale, sickly disc hanging over the soot-covered city. As they marched toward the South Gate, the air grew thick with the sound of neighing horses, the clatter of armored wagons, and the nervous chatter of a hundred men preparing to walk into a nightmare.

The Silver-Crest Shipment was waiting. And so was the Abyss.

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